58 Cal. 6 | Cal. | 1881
Department One:
The demurrer to' the complaint ought to have been sustained.
The mortgage sued upon contains the following stipulation:
“ As security for the payment to said mortgagee of the sum of twenty-one hundred dollars in the gold coin of the United States of America, on the sixteenth day of September, A. D. 1881, with interest thereon, at the rate of ten per cent per annum, according to the terms and conditions of a certain promissory note of even date of this mortgage, in the words and figures following, to wit:
“$2,100.
“San Beenaedino, Car, September 16th, 1879.
“ Two years after date, without grace, I promise to pay to Edward Brodribb, guardian of W. H. Brodribb, or order, the sum of two thousand one hundred dollars, payable only in gold coin of the United States, for value received, with interest thereon in like gold coin, at the rate of ten per cent per annum from date, payable monthly, until paid.”
By the terms of the mortgage the lien was to be foreclosed only when the principal sum named in the promissory note became due. The parties might have agreed that the mort
It may be suggested that the facts alleged in the complaint, among which are the making of the note, and that the sum of seventy dollars interest is due upon it, would justify a judgment at law for seventy dollars, and therefore the demurrer was properly overruled. In response—without determining but that a demurrer to a complaint in equity will properly be sustained because the facts alleged show that the plaintiff has a complete remedy at law—it is enough to say that the complaint in the case before us shows on its face that the Court below had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, to wit, an alleged indebtedness of seventy dollars.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with direction to the Court below to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.
in Bank:
This case arises out of an action to foreclose a mortgage for four monthly installments of interest, amounting to seventy dollars, alleged to be due and unpaid upon a promissory note which has not become due, and the payment of which is secured by the mortgage.
Neither the note nor mortgage contains any agreement for foreclosure of the mortgage on default of the payment of interest. In the absence of such an agreement the mortgage can not be foreclosed until the note shall become due. (Brodribb v. Tibbets, supra.)
Judgment reversed.