Opinion
This action concerns the competing claims to priority of two deeds of trust on a residence. We conclude that the trial court correctly
I.
The property which is the subject of this lawsuit was owned by Richard and Sharon Larscheid, a married couple. Richard Larscheid (Larscheid) was a real estate salesperson employed by Richard Morrell, a real estate broker, promoter and investor in Contra Costa County. Larscheid’s job was to solicit funds from investors. Starting in 1978 or 1979, Larscheid frequently solicited funds from defendant Thomas Cacciola for investment in various real estate ventures. Cacciola, a real estate and insurance broker from Pittsburg, was a longtime friend of both Richard and Sharon Larscheid. Over a period of approximately three years, Richard Larscheid induced Cacciola to invest large sums of money in a number of real estate investments. At the same time, Morrell was soliciting and obtaining funds for investment from defendant Peter Vetrano, a retired restaurant owner and friend of Cacciola. By the end of 1980, Cacciola had given approximately $229,000 to Morrell and Larscheid for investment purposes which was still not repaid, and Vetrano had given about $200,000, also unrepaid. Virtually none of the amounts invested by Cacciola and Vetrano with Morrell and Larscheid was secured. By January 1981, Morrell and Larscheid had ceased making interest payments on the amounts they owed, and some of their previous checks had been returned by the bank on which they were drawn due to insufficient funds.
Larscheid persuaded Cacciola and Vetrano that they could recoup the funds they were owed if they made one more large-scale investment, to complete the construction of two projects Morrell and Larscheid had been unable to finish. Cacciola and Vetrano eventually agreed to furnish $270,000 as part of a “joint venture” with Morrell and Larscheid; in return, Larscheid agreed to use his own personal residence as security for this amount. Larscheid then executed and delivered to Cacciola a promissory note secured by a second deed of trust on his home in Danville, in the principal amount of $364,000. This deed of trust was supposed to be in second position behind a $200,000 first deed of trust held by the Bank of America. Richard Larscheid had signed the promissory note and the deed of trust for both himself and for his wife Sharon, in accordance with his usual practice. Both Richard and Sharon Larscheid testified at trial that Richard habitually signed his wife’s name on her behalf on deeds to property, deeds of trust and checks, and that she had never objected to this longstanding practice.
Morrell went bankrupt in April 1981, and work on the project was halted. On August 10, 1981, not having received any payment from Larscheid, Cacciola recorded the deed of trust.
In the interim, the Larscheids had arranged for a loan in the amount of $200,000 from plaintiffs Joan Clar, Dorothy Siner, Aaron Kobel, Sam Rasmussen, Katherine Rasmussen, Vada Morgan and Harriet Morgan. On or about August 19, 1981, the Larscheids entered into a loan agreement with plaintiffs pursuant to which a promissory note for $200,000 was to be secured by a second deed of trust on the same property as that securing the Cacciola/Vetrano deed of trust, namely, the Larscheid’s personal residence in Danville. The promissory note and deed of trust on this loan were executed and delivered on August 21, 1981, and recorded on August 28, 1981. Like the Cacciola deed of trust, this trust deed was supposed to be in second position. In this case, Sharon Larscheid did sign the promissory note and deed of trust herself. Because of Cacciola’s prior recordation of his deed of trust pursuant to the “gentleman’s agreement,” however, plaintiffs’ deed of trust was actually in third position.
The Larscheids defaulted on all three of the obligations secured by their residence. On November 5, 1981, Cacciola recorded a notice of default and election to sell under his second deed of trust. Thereafter, plaintiffs filed their complaint to avoid the lien of the Cacciola deed of trust. The action was tried to the court, which rendered its memorandum of decision in favor of Cacciola and Vetrano, and entered judgment thereon. This appeal followed.
II.
Plaintiffs argue that they have , standing to challenge the validity of the Cacciola deed of trust. We disagree.
Plaintiffs’ position is unsupported by any case law, including that which they cite. The cases interpreting section 5127 and its statutory predecessors have held that unauthorized gifts, sales or encumbrances of community property are not void, but voidable, and this only at the instance of the other spouse or his or her personal representative.
(Harris
v.
Harris
(1962)
In
Vaughan
v.
Roberts, supra,
The other case cited by plaintiffs,
Wolfe
v.
Lipsy, supra,
We conclude that plaintiffs had no standing to challenge the validity of the Cacciola note and deed of trust. Section 5127 was designed to protect a spouse from the unauthorized alienation or encumbering of marital property by the other spouse; it has never been interpreted in such a way as to provide a means whereby a third party creditor of the married couple may challenge and void instruments signed by only one of the spouses. Therefore, there was no error in the trial court’s judgment confirming the validity of Cacciola’s deed of trust. 2
III.
Defendants Cacciola and Vetrano filed a cross-appeal contending that the trial court erred in not awarding them attorney fees as the prevailing party. Defendants argue that if plaintiffs had been successful in this lawsuit and then sought to foreclose on their deed of trust, that defendants, in order to prevent foreclosure and protect their equity in the property, would have been required to pay off the secured debt including the attorney fees incurred by plaintiffs in the foreclosure proceeding. Defendants urge that since payment of plaintiffs’ attorney fees would have been a condition of redemption, defendants should be awarded their fees under the reciprocity provisions of section 1717. 3 The argument is without merit.
Defendants cite two cases in which the reciprocal attorney fees allowance of section 1717 was extended to allow parties not in privity to recover their attorney fees despite the lack of a direct contractual relationship.
(Saucedo
v.
Mercury Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1980)
Moreover, the basic premise of defendants’ argument is flawed. The decisions in
Saucedo
and
Wilhite
were based on the fact that if the nonassuming
In conclusion, we decline defendants’ invitation to extend the reciprocal attorney fees provisions of section 1717 to situations such as the present case, in which competing lienholders with entirely separate deeds of trust are litigating their respective priorities with respect to a single piece of property, and no relationship of privity or principles of equity would render inapplicable the well established rule which precludes an award of attorney fees to prevailing parties unless provided for by agreement or statute.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise indicated.
We note that even if plaintiffs did have standing as subsequent lienholders to challenge the validity of the Cacciola trust deed, the trial court’s decision that Richard Larscheid was authorized to sign the Cacciola note and deed of trust on behalf of his wife was supported by substantial evidence in the record showing that the Larscheids had a longstanding practice between themselves in which Richard Larscheid signed his wife’s name to important legal and financial documents, and that she was aware of and accepted the benefits of this practice. In addition, there was substantial evidence in the record to support the conclusions that the note and trust deed appeared regular on their face, that Cacciola had no reason to know that Sharon Larscheid had not actually signed the documents, that the delivery of the disputed note and deed of trust to Cacciola was complete and unconditional, and that the deed of trust was supported by ample consideration.
Civil Code section 1717 provides in pertinent part as follows: “(a) In any action on a contract, where the contract specifically provides that attorney’s fees and costs, which are in
