Wiley v. Santa Rosa Bank

71 P. 441, 138 Cal. 301, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 672
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 3030.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 71 P. 441 (Wiley v. Santa Rosa Bank) 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
Wiley v. Santa Rosa Bank, 71 P. 441, 138 Cal. 301, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 672 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

This is an appeal by the administratrix of the estate of James N. Wiley, deceased, from an order con *302 firming the sale of land situated in Kings County, to the Santa Rosa Bank. The facts necessary to an understanding of the points presented by the appeal are as follows: On October 7, 1898, the bank recovered judgment in the superior court of Sonoma County for $1,015.83, against James N. Wiley, and on October 8, 1898, by due proceedings under section 674 of the Code of Civil Procedure this judgment became a lien on the lands then and at the time of his death owned by Wiley, situated in Kings County; these lands were the subject of the sale above referred to. Wiley died intestate August 10, 1899, and letters duly issued, and on October 23, 1899, the bank, respondent here, presented its claim, as such judgment creditor, which not being allowed, the bank brought suit on its claim December 13, 1899, and recovered judgment in an action against the administratrix for $1,151.55, payable in due course of administration, and filed said judgment in the matter of the said estate. On August 28, 1900, the bank, as judgment creditor, proceeded under section 1530 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by petition in the probate court, to obtain an order of sale of said land, setting forth in said petition in much detail the condition of the estate and all the facts and proceedings by which it became a judgment creditor originally, and by which it obtained a lien on the said land, and the subsequent proceedings relating to filing its claim after the death of deceased, the rejection thereof, and subsequent judgment thereon,—in short, a complete history of the proceedings in the estate and the relation of the bank as creditor. In its petition the bank asked that the “administratrix be directed to sell said land to pay the claim and judgment lien of petitioner, and that this petitioner be authorized by said order to bid thereon, and apply the proceeds or amount of its bid therefor on the judgment petitioner obtained against said administratrix, or that such other or further order may be made as is meet in the premises. ’ ’ On November 14, 1900, the court made an order of sale pursuant to the petition, adjudging that the whole amount of unpaid claims against the estate was $1,479.35, of which the judgment of the bank amounted to $1,150.50; that there are no funds out of which to pay said claims; and that it is necessary to sell said lands for the purpose of paying petitioner’s claim and other claims. The sale was ordered at public or private sale to the highest *303 and best bidder for cash. Notice of sale was duly given, and in the return it was reported that the sale was made on May 4, 1901, at which Edna M. Wiley “became the purchaser, for $1,100, she being the highest and best bidder.”

It was also reported that the bank bid $1,145.55, “but added a proviso to their bid which your administratrix is advised renders the bid void. Said bid of the Santa Rosa Bank as aforesaid is herewith returned for the opinion of the court on its validity.” The condition attached to the bank’s bid was, that it “shall be required to pay the necessary expenses of the sale of said lands, and shall give a receipt for the amount of said purchase price, to be credited on the claim and judgment lien said bank has against said estate and property in payment of the same.” On June 3, 1901, pending the hearing on the return of sale, the bank filed a petition in the said matter, praying that the proceeds of the lands sold be applied in payment of its alleged claims. At the final hearing of the return the administratrix took the position that the bank bid was properly rejected, because it was conditional, and because the bank claims the right to apply its bid in discharge of its claim and lien. The court in its order confirming the sale found that the bid of the bank was the highest and best bid; that the bank had a proved claim against the estate in an amount greater than the sum bid for the land by it; that “said claim is a valid lien upon said lands; . . . and that said bank had a right to bid for said lands, and to have the amount of its bid, less the necessary expense of sale, credited on its said claims by reason of its said lien upon said lands.” The court thereupon confirmed the sale to the bank, and ordered a conveyance to be made to it as payment of its claim.

Appellant’s contention is, that the bank obtained a general lien on the Kings County land, under section 674 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and this lien continued only two years, and expired by limitation October 8, 1900, and there was therefore no lien on November 19, 1900, when the land was ordered sold, nor when it was subsequently sold. It is urged that the lien cannot be restrained or extended by the court so as to take effect upon particular real estate (citing Freeman on Judgments, sec. 342); that the running of the lien cannot be stopped, except as provided in section 671 of the Code of *304 Civil Procedure. (Isaac v. Swift, 10 Cal. 81. 1 ) It is further contended that the judgment first obtained by the bank, and which became a lien for two years on the land, was merged in the second judgment obtained against the administratrix, and the lien under the first judgment was thereby lost; that the judgment enforced by the court was this second judgment, under which no lien could arise. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1504.) It is contended also that a judgment is not a specific lien on any particular real estate of the judgment debtor, but is a general lien; that the only way it could have been made a specific lien was by levy of execution in decedent’s lifetime, which was not done, and hence section 1505 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which only authorizes sale where execution is actually levied upon property of the decedent before his death, does not apply. Further, that this section sustains appellant’s contention that all other judgments (i. e. where no execution has been levied), whether supported by general liens or not, are denied the right to resort to specific property, and are payable only in due course of administration out of the general assets of the estate, as provided in section 1643 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that the priority given to judgments so obtained against the testator in his lifetime, as provided in subdivision 4 of that section, was in lieu of any superior right by general liens which such judgment creditor had acquired against the testator; that the creditor might have made his lien specific in the lifetime of the debtor by levy of execution, “and the penalty of his laches is the denial of his right to proceed further after the death of the judgment debtor,”—i. e. if the debtor had died the day after the lien attached it would he gone.

If the lien of the bank was not lost, the order confirming the sale and authorizing the bank to apply its claim in payment of its bid was clearly within the provisions of sections 1569 and 1570 of the Code of Civil Procedure. “At any sale, under order of the court, of lands upon which there is a mortgage or lien, the holder thereof may become the purchaser, and his receipt for the amount due him from the proceeds of the sale is a payment pro tanto.” (Sec. 1570.) “The purchase money must be applied, after the necessary expenses of sale, first, to the payment and satisfaction of the mortgage

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P. 441, 138 Cal. 301, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiley-v-santa-rosa-bank-cal-1903.