Yndart v. Den

48 P. 618, 116 Cal. 533, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 585
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 165
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 48 P. 618 (Yndart v. Den) 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
Yndart v. Den, 48 P. 618, 116 Cal. 533, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 585 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Chipman, C.

This is an appeal from the final judgment given in favor of the plaintiff upon foreclosure of certain four mortgages of real estate. The appeal is taken on the ground, as claimed in appellants’ brief, that the clause in each of the notes, secured by the mortgages respectively, relating to interest was illegal and void, in attempting to give a penalty for nonpayment of interest; and that the decree is excessive, and for an amount beyond what the plaintiff was rightly entitled to recover.

One of the notes bears interest at ten per cent per annum, and three bear interest at eleven per cent per annum, payable in each case semi-annually. In each of said notes the following provision is found: “If any installment of interest be not paid when due, the amount of such installment shall bear interest at 20 per cent per annum from the time the same was due until paid; or at the option of the holder of this note, in default of payment of interest at the times herein provided, the whole sum, principal and interest, shall be due and payable.”

Demurrer to the complaint was interposed and overruled, but defendants failed to answer, and their default was entered. Ho point is urged on the demurrer. The [536]*536notes were all past due when the action was commenced. Appellant contends:

1. The deferred installments of interest cannot bear a greater rate of interest than the principal debt; 2. If interest is allowed on deferred installments, by implication it must be limited to the legal rate; 3. If the penalty clause in the notes is void, no interest on deferred payments of .interest can be recovered.

1. Appellant relies in support of his first contention upon the provision of section 1919 of the Civil Code, as construed in the case of Savings etc. Soc. v. Horton, 63 Cal. 105; and Dean v. Applegarth, 65 Cal. 391. It is claimed that these cases decide that it is not competent for the parties to contract that interest upon interest can be legally enforced or fixed beyond the rate to be borne by the principal. Section 1919 reads as follows: “The parties may, in any contract in writing whereby any debt is secured to be paid, agree that if the interest on such debt is not punctually paid, it shall become a part of the principal, and thereafter bear the same rate of interest as the principal debt.”

It is replied by respondent to the point that the cases upon which appellant relies “ do not seem to have been elaborately argued, or the question carefully considered, .... and we may consistently say that, if not directly overruled, they are rejected as barren.” The question is an important one, and should be definitely settled if it has not been.

The case of Savings etc. Soc. v. Horton, supra, is not fully reported; the provisions of the note are not given nor is the scope of the complaint stated; no synopsis of the briefs is given, nor are the facts stated in the opinion. The opinion is rendered per curiam, and two of the justices dissented, but upon what grounds does not appear. It was a default decree, and was reversed because in excess of the claim made in the complaint. The opinion concludes as follows: “The attention of the court below is directed to section 1919 of the Civil [537]*537Code in computing interest upon the interest which is not punctually paid. That section declares that the parties may agree that it shall become a part of the principal, and thereafter bear the same rate of interest as the principal debt. [Italics are in the report.] This appears to us to be the limit.” There was a petition for rehearing denied.

It would seem fair to conclude that the note there in question at least provided for payment of interest upon interest at a rate greater than that fixed for the principal, but wdiether it provided also, as in the notes here in question, that the interest upon the interest was not to become a part of the principal, but to run independently of the interest on the principal, cannot be assumed.

The case of Dean v. Applegarth, supra, was more fully reported. The terms of the note are stated to be: “That the principal was to bear interest at one per cent per month, and it was agreed that in case default should be made in the payment of any of the interest as stated above, that such installment or payment thus in default should bear interest from the day of maturity until payment, at the rate of two per cent per month, compounding monthly.” It was also provided that at any time during such default the entire unpaid balance of the principal sum should, at the option of the holder of the note, and not otherwise, become due and payable, and the principal sum so due and payable should bear interest thereafter at the rate of two per cent per month, compounding monthly until paid. When the action was commenced the note, by its terms, had become due, and it did not appear from the complaint that any option was made in any way by plaintiff (mortgagee) prior to the commencement of the action, at which time the note by its terms was due. As to the interest on the principal sum compounding at the increased rate of two per cent, the court said the provisions of the note did not apply because the option had not been exercised except by bringing the suit after the maturity of the note. The court said: “As to the interest on interest [538]*538in default, when default was made in the payment of any monthly installment, it had become due and payable. No election was required to make that so. The plaintiff under the contract had a right to have such installment unpaid bear interest. But it cannot be made to bear interest at a rate greater than that borne by the principal debt (Civ. Code, sec. 1919), which in this case is one per cent per month. This is the construction placed upon section 1919 of the Civil Code in Savings etc. Soc. v. Horton, supra. The section 1918 of the Civil Code is limited by section 1919. The latter section applies specifically to agreements to pay interest on interest, and its particular words cannot be controlled by the general language of the preceding section, which refers to a different subject, and can have full application without affecting the provisions of the section which follows it." The decision of the court below was reversed because more interest was allowed than should have been.

In the case in 63 California, supra, Mr. Justice Thornton and Mr. Justice Myrick dissented, but in the case in 65 California, supra, Mr. Justice Thornton delivered the opinion in which Mr. Justice Myrick concurred. We must, therefore, assume that the dissent in the earlier case was on other grounds, and that the point under discussion was presented in both cases and duly considered.

The provisions of the notes in the particular now being examined are apparently the same; in both cases the interest on the defaulted interest was to bear interest until paid at the increased rate, and was not by the terms of the notes to become part of the principal sum. The rule laid down in Dean v. Applegarth, supra, has stood unquestioned in this court since 1884, so far as I have been able to discover, until the case of Thompson v. Gorner, first decided in Department (Cal., April 19, 1894), 36 Pac. Rep. 434, and finally in Bank, 104 Cal. 168, 43 Am. St. Rep. 81, in which respondent claims a different rule was laid down. In the case' [539]*539just referred to the note provided as follows: “With interest thereon (the principal sum) ....

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 618, 116 Cal. 533, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yndart-v-den-cal-1897.