White v. Horton

97 P. 70, 154 Cal. 103, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 306
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 2077.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 P. 70 (White v. Horton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Horton, 97 P. 70, 154 Cal. 103, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 306 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

*104 HENSHAW, J.

The appellants Horton, to secure the payment of a promissory note, had executed a mortgage upon a lot of land in the county of Los Angeles. Subsequent to the execution and recordation of this mortgage, the husband made a declaration of homestead upon the mortgaged property for the benefit of himself and family. Thereafter, the defendant and respondent Ednah J. Menner recovered a judgment against the defendant George C. Horton for the sum of four thousand dollars with interest and costs. The note secured by mortgage becoming overdue and being unpaid, an action to foreclose was commenced by plaintiff. While this action was pending the judgment creditor, Ednah' J. Menner, under the provisions of sections 1245 to 1259 of the Civil Code, caused appraisers to be appointed to value the homestead, her judgment not having been satisfied. The appraisers placed a valuation upon the homestead exceeding ten thousand dollars, but further reported that the property could not be divided without injury to the whole thereof. Thereupon proceedings were taken whereby the matter was certified to the court in which the foreclosure action was pending, under stipulation that upon sale of the mortgaged premises the rights of Menner under her judgment should be considered and determined. The court in giving judgment in the foreclosure proceedings decreed a sale of the property, and out of the funds derived from the sale awarded the mortgagee the amount due upon the mortgage, with interest and costs. Next, out of the funds it decreed that the judgment of Ednah J. Menner should be satisfied, and that any funds remaining should be paid over to the owners of the property. No question arises as to the regularity of any of the proceedings, and the single proposition propounded goes to the correctness of the court’s disposition and distribution of the funds accruing from the sale of the homestead.

By appellants it is contended that upon sale of the homestead they were entitled to five thousand dollars, which was wholly exempt from execution sale, attachment, or any other form of legal' seizure, saving that, if the value of the residue of the property was not sufficient to pay the mortgage debt, recourse could be had against the five thousand dollars to make good any deficiency. Since here there has been a sale of the homestead and the court is dealing with money in hand, *105 it matters not whether it be said that the family is entitled to the five thousand dollars as a homestead exemption fund, which fund may be subject to reduction to satisfy the mortgage debt, or whether it be said that the mortgage shall first be satisfied, and that the owners of the homestead shall have the next five thousand dollars as an exempt fund. However stated, the actual result will always be the same, and in either ease, under appellants’ contention, the judgment creditor has no lien or claim upon the homestead property, or upon the fruits of its sale, until after the demands of the mortgagee have been fully satisfied and five thousand dollars have been exempted and set apart for the use of the family. Upon behalf of respondent it is contended that sections 1237 et seq. of the Civil Code entitle the family to an exemption of but five thousand dollars; that whether they mortgage property at a time when it is impressed with a homestead, or whether, as here, they mortgage property upon which a homestead is subsequently declared, the result is the same, and that result is that they have mortgaged the homestead exemption, as distinguished from the homestead itself; that in satisfying that mortgage, where the rights of other creditors are involved, resort shall first be had to the exemption, and that five thousand dollars shall first be applied in satisfaction of the mortgage debt. No authority is cited in support of the declaration that a mortgage upon a homestead is a mortgage to be first satisfied out of the exempt five thousand dollars which the law allows. Indeed, considering the policy of the law, which most strongly favors homesteads, this statement upon its face does violence to that policy. A case like the present, where the homestead has been converted into money, and where the question, as here, turns upon the order of the distribution of the fund, has not previously come before this court. But similar eases involving the disposition of homestead lands have repeatedly been presented, and in every instance the conclusion has been contrary to the contention which the respondent urges. One of the early cases was that of McLaughlin v. Hart, 46 Cal. 638. Hart and his wife executed a mortgage to plaintiff to secure the payment of a promissory note. Subsequently, Hart, to secure his own debts, executed other mortgages upon the land, in which his wife did not join, to defendants Pierce, Shedder, and Piquet. Hart and his wife had filed a declaration of home *106 stead covering fifty acres of land mortgaged to plaintiff. The subsequent mortgages to Pierce, Shedder, and Piquet did not affect the homestead.' Defendants Pierce, Shedder, and Piquet filed a cross-complaint, asking to have their mortgages foreclosed, and urging that plaintiff should first be compelled to resort in satisfaction of his mortgage to the homestead property, under the application of the equitable doctrine that where one creditor has several securities to which he can resort, and another creditor has a lien on but one of those securities, the latter may compel the former first to exhaust the securities upon which he, the latter, has no lien. But by its decree the trial court exempted the homestead from sale unless it should be found necessary to have recourse to it to satisfy the mortgage of plaintiff, and denied to the defendants any right to compel a sale of the homestead, to the end that the funds might be first applied in extinguishment of plaintiff’s mortgage debt. This court upheld the judgment of the trial court, saying: “The liens of the junior mortgagees upon the outside lands were created by him alone and without her (the wife’s) consent, and to hold that these latter mortgagees may, for their own benefit, compel a sale of the homestead to satisfy the McLaughlin mortgage, would be in effect to create a lien in favor of the junior mortgagees upon the homestead of Mrs. Hart without her consent.” Treating this case in terms of money instead of land, the same doctrine is invoked by appellants, and the same answer must be made as was made in that case. The Menner debt is a debt of the husband and not of the wife, incurred after a homestead had been placed upon the property. To hold that the mortgagee must first exhaust the homestead fund of five thousand dollars, would be, in effect, to create a lien in favor of the judgment creditor upon the homestead of Mrs. Hart without her consent, and deprive her of her homestead exemption for a debt not her own, and for the payment of which she had in no way bound the homestead property.

So, again, in Barrett v. Sims, 59 Cal. 615, Sims had executed a mortgage upon the property to defendant Clarke. Subsequently he executed a deed to defendant Beckman of the property, reserving therefrom a strip twenty-five rods wide, upon which he filed a declaration of homestead. Sims being indebted to plaintiff, the latter commenced an action, sued *107 out a writ of attachment, and levied upon the right, title, and interest of the defendant Sims in the land.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chase v. Bank of America
227 Cal. App. 2d 259 (California Court of Appeal, 1964)
In re Shelton
102 F. Supp. 629 (W.D. Washington, 1952)
In Re Fox
16 F. Supp. 320 (S.D. California, 1936)
Martin v. Hildebrand
212 P. 618 (California Supreme Court, 1923)
Bachman v. Hurtt
184 P. 709 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P. 70, 154 Cal. 103, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-horton-cal-1908.