14 P.2d 758 | Cal. | 1932
THE COURT.
Defendants appeal from a judgment in an action for declaratory relief, decreeing that a certain mortgage held by plaintiff constitutes a lien on certain described real property prior to any claim of defendants. The facts are not materially in dispute, and are as follows:
In 1922 the Southern California Chemical Company, a California corporation, owned certain real property in the city of Los Angeles. On May 1st of that year the chemical company leased the property in question at a stipulated monthly rental for a period of three years to the Great Western Gypsum Company, an Arizona corporation. The lease contained the following provision:
"The Chemical Company hereby agrees that the Gypsum Company shall have, and does hereby give an option to purchase the herein demised premises at the dates, and for the sums following, to-wit:
"For the sum of $22,000.00 cash if said option is exercised on or before May 1, 1923;
"For the sum of $23,000.00 cash if said option is exercised on or before May 1, 1924; and
"For the sum of $24,000.00 if said option is exercised on or before May 1, 1925."
The lease expressly provided that the lessee should not let the premises nor assign the lease without the written consent of the lessor. Another clause provided that the lease should be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the successors and assigns of the parties, provided that no assignment should be made without the written consent of the lessor. The lease was properly recorded December 7, 1922.
In 1924 the lessee, the Great Western Gypsum Company, executed certain promissory notes in favor of Theodore S. Chapman, H.H. Merrick, E.M. Chapman, T.L. Chapman, J. Gorin and J.H. Eaton, and simultaneously therewith, on August 5, 1924, executed, as security for said notes, a mortgage upon certain real and personal properties in this state *423 and in the state of Nevada. Among the other properties included within the terms of the mortgage was "all of the right, title and interest of the mortgagor, in and to that certain Indenture of Lease made the first day of May, 1922, by Southern California Chemical Company . . . to the mortgagor herein, granting a leasehold estate with option to purchase that certain lot or parcel of land described as follows:" (Here follows a detailed description of the leased premises.) At the end of the provision containing the list of the properties included within the mortgage appears this clause: "It being the intention of the mortgagor to mortgage to the mortgagees, all of the property of the mortgagor now held by it, of whatsoever nature, real, personal or mixed, and wheresoever situate." This mortgage was properly recorded in Los Angeles County both as a real and chattel mortgage on August 16, 1924.
On August 9, 1924, H.H. Merrick, one of the mortgagees, conveyed and assigned all of his right, title and interest in and to the mortgage to DeWitt-Blair Realty Company. This assignment was properly recorded August 16, 1924.
On February 13, 1925, just a few months before the lease of the gypsum company was to expire, that company assigned, with the written consent of the lessor, all of its interest in and all of its rights under the lease to the DeWitt-Blair Realty Company. This assignment was properly recorded on February 13, 1925. The realty company was now one of the mortgagees of the lease and was also the assignee thereof. The trial court found, and under the circumstances there can be no doubt of the correctness of said finding, that the realty company at the time it accepted the assignment "had notice, actual and constructive, of the said mortgage of August 5, 1924. . . ."
On February 16, 1925, before the option contained in the lease had expired, DeWitt-Blair Realty Company exercised the option, and secured from the lessor chemical company a conveyance of the fee. This conveyance was properly recorded April 17, 1925. On February 17, 1925, the realty company conveyed the property to L.M. Boughton, who in turn, on February 26, 1925, conveyed the property to John T. Martin. The trial court found that neither Boughton nor Martin paid anything of value for the property, and that both had "actual and constructive notice of the said *424 mortgage of August 5, 1924, and of the fact that said mortgage was a lien upon the indenture of lease of May 1, 1922, and upon the option to purchase contained therein".
Based on these facts the trial court held that the mortgage of August 5, 1924, constituted a lien on both the lease and option; that when the DeWitt-Blair Realty Company with full knowledge of all the facts exercised the option and secured a conveyance of the fee, the mortgage became a lien on the fee title prior to any claim of the realty company; that Boughton and Martin secured no greater rights than were held by the realty company. It is the correctness of the conclusion that the mortgage constitutes a lien on the fee that is challenged on this appeal.
Stripped of all unnecessary facts, the problem involved can be simply stated as follows: An owner of a lease containing an option to purchase the fee, mortgages the same to secure a debt. Thereafter the lessee-mortgagor assigns the lease to a third party who has full knowledge of the mortgage. The third party exercises the option and secures a conveyance of the fee. The ultimate legal question to be determined is whether or not under such circumstances the lien of the mortgage attaches to the fee in the hands of the third party or those who take with notice, from the third party.
Before this question can properly be determined it is necessary to determine several preliminary problems, viz.: First did the mortgage cover the option as well as the lease? Second, was the option a mortgagable interest? Both of these questions must be answered in the affirmative.
[1] We have no doubt of the correctness of the trial court's conclusion that the mortgage did in fact include and was intended to include the option as well as the leasehold interest. The language above quoted from the mortgage, both in the clause specifically describing the lease and in the general covering clause, can leave but little doubt that the parties intended the option when the lease was mortgaged. Even if this were not the fact the same result would follow from the proper application of section
Considerable portions of the briefs of counsel are devoted to a discussion of the question as to whether or not an option is an "interest in land". There are apparently two lines of authority on this subject, one holding that before its exercise the owner of an option based on a consideration has an equitable interest in the land, the other line of cases holding that the owner of such an option before its exercise has no interest, equitable or otherwise, in the land. The existence of these two lines of authority was recognized by this court in the case of Smith v.Bangham,
[3] Appellants seek to distinguish these cases on the ground that although ordinarily an option to purchase constitutes a real covenant running with the land, it cannot be so classified in the instant case because here the lease contained a stipulation against assignment without the consent of the lessor. It is contended that the mortgage of the lease which apparently was made without the consent of the lessor, violated this provision, and that the effect of such a provision is to make the covenant a personal one. We do not believe that either of these conclusions is correct. In the first place we do not believe that a covenant against assignment contained in a lease is violated by the giving of a mortgage on the lease. It hardly needs citation of authority to the principle that covenants limiting the free alienation of property such as covenants against assignment are barely tolerated and must be strictly construed. Thus it has been held that a covenant against assignment is not violated by an assignment from one cotenant to another. (Randol v. Scott,
Moreover, even if the mortgage did violate the covenant against assignment, we do not see how that fact could operate so as to make the option covenant a personal one. [4] The assignment of a lease in violation of a covenant against assignment without the consent of the lessor is nevertheless a binding assignment which passes the leasehold estate, and with which runs all covenants touching the land. Such an assignment in violation of the covenant is, however, subject to the option in the lessor to forfeit the lease. The only remedy for the breach of such a covenant would be the exercise by the lessor of his option to forfeit the lease. (Buchanan v. Banta,
1. That the mortgage of the lease included the option and constituted a lien thereon. This result follows either because the option was specifically or impliedly included within the mortgage, or because the covenant of option ran with the leasehold interest.
2. That the option covenant, inasmuch as it does not involve personal trust, confidence or credit, is a real covenant running with the reversionary interest, and any lien thereon binds the grantees and assigns of the lessor who took with notice of the mortgage.
[5] Now we turn to a discussion of the final and most important question involved, and that is whether or not the lien of the mortgage on the option, attached to the fee when the DeWitt-Blair Realty Company acquired the fee by exercising the mortgaged option, and had actual as well as constructive knowledge of the mortgage held by plaintiffs. It must be remembered that although the DeWitt-Blair *428
Realty Company was not one of the original mortgagees it became a mortgagee shortly after the execution of the mortgage by virtue of the fact that on August 9, 1924, H.H. Merrick, one of the mortgagees, assigned all of his right, title and interest in the mortgage to that company. Later that company also became the owner by assignment of the mortgaged lease and option. When the DeWitt-Blair Realty Company exercised the option and secured the fee it had actual as well as constructive knowledge of the existence of the mortgage lien on the option. Under such circumstances we can see no escape from the conclusion that both from the standpoint of law and equity the lien of the mortgage attaches to the fee. No case directly in point seems to have been decided in this state, but we are not without analogies in this state and cases from other jurisdictions. It has twice been held by this court that the lien of a mortgage on a contract to purchase real property attaches to the fee acquired by the completion of the contract of purchase by an assignee of the mortgagor with notice of the mortgage. (Benedict v. Peppers,
In cases from other jurisdictions it has been held that a lien on an option or pre-emptive right attaches to the fee title acquired by the exercise of the mortgaged right, whether such mortgaged right is exercised by the mortgagor or by his assignee with notice. In Boon v. Kent,
In Mackenzie v. Building Loan Assn., 28 Canada Supreme Court Rep. 407, Austin and Arthurs leased certain lands to Thompson for a period of twenty-one years with an option to purchase any time within the first ten years. Thompson mortgaged the lease to the Building Loan Association. Thereafter, by mesne assignments, the lease *430 was transferred to Mackenzie, subject to the mortgage. Mackenzie exercised the option and secured the fee from one Britton who had acquired the interest of the lessors. Under the law of Ontario, where the land was located, the fee owner can collect rents from either the lessee or the mortgagee of the lease. Mackenzie sought by this action to collect rents from the Building Loan Association on the theory that it was only a mortgagee of the term. The mortgagee contended that the lien on the lease and option attached to and became a lien on the fee when the option was exercised by one with notice of the mortgage. The court affirmed the contention of the mortgagee Building Loan Association, and held that the mortgage lien on the lease and option became a lien on the fee, prior to any claim of Mackenzie, when the option was exercised by one with notice of the mortgage.
In Harsh v. Sutton,
"Upon the contention that A.W. Sutton and Joseph Sutton had no title at the time they executed the mortgage in question, Frank Glover, who was the original owner of this bond assigned the bond prior to the date of this mortgage to A.W. Sutton and Joseph Sutton, they thereby became the equitable owners of these premises subject to the payment of the amount due McDavid for the balance of the purchase money due him, and the mortgage which they gave at that time became a lien and attached to their equitable interest, whatever it may have been, and if thereafter they had obtained the title from McDavid by the payment of the *431 amount due McDavid and obtained a deed therefor, their mortgage contained [containing] the words mortgage and warrant would have attached to and become a lien on the title which they then acquired, and Frank Sutton who obtained the bond by assignment from them after this mortgage was placed upon record could obtain no greater rights in the premises than they had at the time it was assigned to him. And by completing the payment of the amount due on the McDavid bond he obtained his title through the specific performance proceeding from McDavid, subject to the mortgage executed by A.W. Sutton and Joseph Sutton; and the contention that A.W. Sutton and Joseph Sutton had no interest in the premises which could be made subject to a mortgage at the time they executed this note and mortgage is not tenable. . . . To permit the assignee of the original bond to secure these premises with this lien of record thereon merely by paying the amount due on the original bond would be inequitable and unjust. The record discloses that the present owners of the premises purchased the same with this mortgage on record and they were required to take notice thereof, and cannot be heard to say that they did not know this mortgage was not paid; the title they took was subject to it; it was their duty to ascertain the rights of the parties therein."
In Bank of Louisville v. Baumeister,
(1) The purchase-money mortgage of Mrs. Bullitt. All parties apparently conceded that this lien was entitled to priority over all the other liens; (2) The lien of Olds on the lease and option became a lien on the fee when the option was exercised; (3) The lien of the Bank of Louisville was declared subject to the lien of Olds; (4) The lien of Baumeister was declared subject to the other three liens. On *432 appeal the Bank of Louisville contended that Olds had no lien on the fee, for the reason that all he had was a lien on an option. The court held, however, that the lien of Olds on the lease and option became a lien on the fee when the fee was acquired by the exercise of the option by one with knowledge of the mortgage.
In Yellow Chief Coal Co. v. Preston,
From the reasoning in the above cases it clearly follows that the trial court herein correctly held that the mortgage constituted a lien on the option, and that when the option was exercised by the DeWitt-Blair Realty Company, with actual and constructive knowledge of the mortgage, the interest acquired by the Realty Company by the exercise of the option became subject to the lien of the mortgage. The transferees of the Realty Company likewise having actual and constructive knowledge of the mortgage, of course, stand in no better position than the Realty Company.
The appellants with some confidence rely on the case of Ludy
v. Zumwalt,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Rehearing denied.