57 Cal. 309 | Cal. | 1881
This action was brought by John Gr. Ayres, plaintiff, against J. Bruce Palmer, J. C. Palmer, Martha L. Palmer, and Edward Field, defendants, to foreclose a mortgage made to secure the payment of a promissory note for $23,000, with interest, etc.
J. Bruce Palmer is the son of J. C. Palmer, J. C. Palmer and Martha L. Palmer are husb'and and wife, and Edward Field is the father of Mrs. Palmer.
It appears from the record, that, in 1857, J. C. Palmer was the claimant of a tract of land situated in Alameda County, called the ex-Mission of San Jose; and on the 22nd of June of that year, for a nominal consideration, conveyed by deed all of his interest therein to his father-in-law, the defendant Field; that the claim of title to the land was finally rejected by the United States tribunals; but by an Act of Congress, passed March 3rd, 1865, persons in possession of any portion of the
As will he observed, nothing was expressly said in the power of attorney as to the execution of a promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness, and a doubt seems to have arisen in
The debt contracted in the name of Beard to the Odd Fellows Bank becoming due, the bank threatened to foreclose the mortgage given to secure its payment. At the same time, some stock transactions which J. C. Palmer had been carrying on in the name of his son Edward F. Palmer were pressing him, and the son Edward himself was laboring under financial embarrassments. Under these circumstances, the plaintiff in this action, at the request of the Palmers, agreed to pay off the mortgage debt for them to the Odd Fellows Bank, and to discharge the stock debts of J. C. and Edward F. Palmer, and did do so; in consideration of which Edward F. Palmer, as the attorney in fact of Field, executed a deed for the mortgaged premises to J. Bruce Palmer, and the latter thereupon executed to the plaintiff the note and mortgage in suit, and then reconveyed the premises to Field. The transaction was made known by the agent to Field, who made no objection thereto. Field soon after came out on a visit to his daughter, and before leaving California conveyed the land by deed of gift to her, and thereupon took from her and her husband a mortgage thereon to secure payment of $17,434, due from them to him. The deed and mortgage last mentioned were executed May 8th, 1877.
Field and the Palmers now seek to repudiate the transaction with the plaintiff, and claim, in the first place, that the deed to
Wc will briefly notice these points in the order stated:
The argument upon which it is sought to sustain the position first assumed by the appellants is, that the power of attorney from Field to Edward F. Palmer did not authorize the latter to convey the land without consideration, and that as J. Bruce Palmer paid nothing for the conveyance to him, he got no title by the deed, and therefore mortgaged none to the plaintiff. To adopt this view, we should have to stick in the bark, and close our eyes to the real transaction. This can hardly be expected of a court of equity. The making of the deed to J. Bruce Palmer was a part of the mode adopted by the Palmers and the plaintiff for the execution of the mortgage—the consideration for which was the payment by the plaintiff of the Palmer debt to the Odd Fellows Bank, thus discharging the bank’s mortgage on the property, and the cancellation of J. C. and Edward F. Palmer’s indebtedness to the plaintiff, amounting, in the aggregate, to the sum of $23,000. This was sufficient consideration to support the transaction.
The power of attorney from Field to Edward F. Palmer was executed in December, 1867. At that time, the legal title to the mortgaged property was in the Government of the United States. But Field, by virtue of the Palmers’ possession of the land, and of the deed from J. C. Palmer, had filed an application to purchase it from the Government, under the Act of Congress, to which reference has been made, and thus expected to obtain the legal title; and did so by the patent issued April 11th, 1868. The power of attorney must be read in the light of these facts, and also in the light of the further facts, that from first to last the Palmers remained in possession of the land without payment of rent, improved it at their own expense, and mortgaged it repeatedly for the benefit of the family, in precisely the same manner as was adopted in the present*315 case; and all this with the knowledge of Field, and without objection on his part. Indeed, J. C. Palmer himself testified that the “ land was in the family, and considered in the family all alone;.” Again: “ This mortgage to the Odd Fellows Bank entered into and formed a part of the $23,000. Mr. Ayres took it up and paid the full face of it. He paid it at the request of us generally—among us a family matter—to save it from foreclosure.”
The language of the power of attorney was broad enough to authorize the attorney in fact to mortgage the title conveyed by the patent; and in view of the facts as testified to by the Palmers themselves, there can be no doubt that such was the intention of Field at the time of its execution. That by virtue of the power of attorney, Edward F. Palmer did mortgage this title, through Beard, to the Odd Fellows Bank, for the benefit of the Palmer family, clearly appears; and that the fact was made known to Field and assented to by him, is equally apparent. It was this very debt, thus created and thus sanctioned, that formed in part the consideration for the mortgage to the plaintiff. Concerning the latter, Edward F. Palmer testified: “ He (Field) was informed afterwards about this. I do not remember, and cannot tell, how long after. Mr. Field was out here afterwards. I cannot say that he objected to it. I do not know whether he ever objected to it. He never objected to it to me. The manner of doing it was suggested by previous mortgages which I had executed in the same way. * * * I have generally informed him on all business matters that I have transacted. I cannot answer any more fully than that. I do not think that I wrote to him immediately about the mortgage to Mr. Ayres. I do not know. He came out here soon after that. It is probable he knew all about it, because when he arrived here he spent his visit with us. He visited one daughter, and then came down and stopped at our house. * * * He greeted me very cordially. * * * I do not remember whether I had written him about this mortgage before he came out. I expect he was notified. He made no complaint to me when he came out about it,”
It is worthy of remark, that Mr. Field was not examined as a witness on the trial of this case, nor was his deposition taken.
Judgment and order affirmed.
McKee, J., and McKinstry, J., concurred.