112 P. 274 | Cal. | 1910
In April, 1895, Sierra Valleys Railway Company, a California corporation, having taken the statutory steps for the authorization by its stockholders of a bonded indebtedness, caused one thousand bonds of one thousand dollars *692 each, falling due in twenty years, with interest coupons attached, to be signed by its president and secretary. It also executed and delivered to the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, as trustee, a mortgage or deed of trust of all its property to secure said bonds and coupons. Three hundred of the bonds were duly issued to Henry A. Bowen.
This action was commenced by the trustee to foreclose the security, it being claimed that the said trustee had exercised the option granted to it by the mortgage or deed of trust to declare the principal sum due in advance of maturity upon default, continuing for six months, in the payment of interest. Other breaches of the conditions of the instrument securing the bonds were alleged. The Boca and Loyalton Railroad Company and Cora Chambers Pool were made defendants, and were alleged to claim an interest in the property. It is alleged that Bowen, also named as a defendant, was the owner and holder of a number of overdue interest coupons, which had been detached from the bonds originally owned by him, said bonds having passed into the ownership of Nevada-California-Oregon Railway, a corporation.
Bowen answered and cross-complained, seeking a foreclosure and the payment to him of the amount due on his coupons.
The court found that certain coupons including those held by Bowen had matured more than four years prior to the commencement of the action, and that any claim thereon was barred by sections
The coupons in question were in the usual form, each consisting of a simple promise to pay to bearer, at a given date and place, the sum of thirty dollars, being six months' interest on one of the bonds. In the absence of any provision to the contrary in the bonds, or in the instrument securing them, it is undoubtedly the general rule that such coupons are independent obligations, and that, at least when they have been detached from the bonds and transferred to others than the *693
holders of the bonds, the statute of limitations begins to run from the time of their maturity. (Short on Law of Railway Bonds, sec. 75; Jones on Corporation Bonds and Mortgages, sec. 267; Amy
v. Dubuque,
But, says the appellant, if this be the true doctrine, there are provisions in the mortgage or deed of trust taking the present case out of the general rule. *695
He points in the first place to article 10, reading as follows: "It is further provided and agreed that the party of the first part (Sierra Valleys Railway Company), for itself, its successors and assigns, doth hereby absolutely and irrevocably waive the benefit or advantage of any and all valuation, stay, appraisement or redemption law or laws, respecting liens or mortgages to be foreclosed by action or suit, and of all laws now existing or hereafter passed, which but for this provision would prevent the absolute and unconditional sale of the premises hereby conveyed, by a court or by the trustee, without suit. . . ." This is claimed to constitute a waiver on the part of the debtor of the right to plead the statute of limitations. Assuming the effectiveness of such waiver, if the railway company had undertaken to make one, we do not find in the language quoted anything which purports to waive the defense in question. The provision is quite plain and has reference to matters not connected in any way with the statute of limitations.
The further point is made that under the terms of the instrument securing the bonds and coupons, the holder of coupons had no independent right to proceed by action to collect the amount of his coupons or to foreclose the security therefor. If this be so, the defense of the statute of limitations would, of course, not be applicable, since a claim cannot be barred by limitation until the lapse of the statutory time after the claimant had a right to proceed by action to enforce his demand.(Swamp Land Dist. v. Glide,
In the absence of any provision to the contrary, default may be taken advantage of by the holder of a single bond or coupon. (Short on Law of Railway Bonds, etc., secs. 376, 398; C. V.R.R.Co. v. Fosdick,
The appellant relies also upon the provision of article 8 as follows: "It is hereby further provided and agreed that no action shall be commenced or prosecuted against said Sierra Valleys Railway Company, party of the first part, *697 upon any of the coupons annexed to said bonds or otherwise, at law or otherwise, except by the said trustee, unless the said trustee, after having been duly requested in writing, and having been fully indemnified as hereinafter provided, shall fail or neglect for three months so to do . . ." It is apparent that this clause does not prevent the coupon holder from bringing an action. It expressly protects his right to do so in the event that the trustee shall, after proper demand made, fail for three months to bring an action. It is always in the power of the coupon holder to make such demand and he cannot, by failure to make it, extend indefinitely the period of limitation. It is true that his right of action is by this clause deferred for three months, after demand, and the statute should therefore not be held to run against him for this period after the maturity of the coupon. But allowing to the appellant the period of four years and three months after the maturity of each of the coupons sued upon, he would still, at the date of the commencement of this suit, have been too late to institute his action.
The appellant claims that the instrument providing security for the bonds and coupons is a deed of trust, rather than a mortgage, and from this premise draws the conclusion that the only sale that could be had was one by the trustee, rather than, as directed by the decree, one by a commissioner appointed by the court. We need not inquire whether this conclusion would follow, since we have no doubt that the instrument is to be construed as a mortgage. It is described in the bonds as a mortgage. The instrument itself has no provision for reconveyance; it prescribes neither manner of nor notice for a sale by the trustee; it refers to "the lien or encumbrance hereby created"; and, in various references to its own terms and effects, used the expression "this mortgage." There appears to be no good reason for holding that the instrument was not a mortgage, as it purported to be. (See Earle v. Sunnyside Land Co.,
Finally, the appellant raises the point that the defense of limitation was waived by reason of the fact that the various cross-defendants did not raise this defense by demurrer, but set up the bar of the statute by answer. The contention is that, under sections 433 and 434 of the Code of Civil Procedure, *698
an objection specified in section 430 as ground of demurrer (except want of jurisdiction or failure to state facts), must, if it appears on the face of the complaint, be taken by demurrer, or be deemed to be waived. (Tingley v. Times Mirror Co.,
The record presents no other points requiring notice.
The judgment is affirmed.
Angellotti, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.