95 Cal. 548 | Cal. | 1892
In this case the plaintiff gave one notice of appeal from the judgment and from the order denying its motion for a new trial, and one transcript of the record would have sufficed for both appeals, but two transcripts of the same record have been filed; one labeled “ Transcript on appeal from the judgment,” numbered 14346, and the other labeled “ Transcript on appeal from order refusing new trial,” numbered 14345, thus apparently making two cases of what is practically one.
All errors assigned and referred to in the argument are presented by the appeal from the order, and to that I shall confine my attention.
The objections urged by the respondent to the right of the appellant to be heard on this appeal are untenable. The order denying a new trial was made and entered June 21, 1890, and the notice of appeal designates it as of that date. After the appeal had been taken and perfected, the appellant, on the 19th of January, 1891, obtained a nunc pro tunc order of the superior court amending its order of June 21,1890, by adding a recital to the effect that the motion for a new trial was based
Another objection of the respondent to the consideration of the errors assigned (which relate solely to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings) is, that the bill of exceptions contains no specifications of the particulars in which the evidence is alleged to beinsufficient.
The plaintiff in framing his bill of exceptions prefaced his specifications with this statement: “ Plaintiff says that the evidence introduced on said trial is insufficient to support said decision, and said decision is against law in the following particulars.” The respondent claims that because this statement embraces two distinct grounds of motion he was not apprised by the following specifications whether the attack upon the decision was on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to sustain it, or on the ground that it was against law. But we think that whatever view may be taken as to the distinction between a decision against evidence and a decision against law, and however ambiguous the expression above quoted may be held to be, the specifications by which it was followed in this bill of exceptions were amply sufficient to remove the ambiguity, and apprise the defendant that the real ground of attack upon the decision was insufficiency of the evidence to justify the findings of the court, to the effect that he was a bona fide purchaser without notice and for a valuable consideration.
The case as presented entitles the appellant to a hearing on the merits.
This action is to foreclose the vendor’s lien of the plaintiff on the Sorrento for said amount. The defendant Foltz suffered judgment by default. Her co-defend
The evidence, as above stated, is sufficient to sustain the finding of the court that he purchased in good faith, without any previous knowledge of the fact that his vendor had not fully paid her vendor, the plaintiff. But. this is not sufficient to make out his defense. It was also necessary for him to show that he had paid for the land before he received notice of the vendor’s lien, and this he had not done. The only payment he was to make was by conveyance of the house and lot which he exchanged for the Sorrento, and that he had not done before notice. The fact that he had placed Mrs. Foltz in possession was immaterial so long as he held the title as security for the balance due. If, upon receiving notice of the amount of her indebtedness to plaintiff, he had paid it, there is no doubt that he could have enforced repayment from her. The amount so paid would simply have been deducted from the valuation placed on her interest in the Sorrento, leaving her indebted to him on the house and lot that much more, secured, like her note for $650, by the title which he held, and its collection enforceable by the same means.
The authorities cited in the appellant’s brief amply sustain the proposition that notice before payment is equivalent to notice before purchase, and that when there has been a partial payment, before notice to a second vendee of the' original vendor’s lien, he is affected pro tanto as to the residue. It is unnecessary to repeat these citations here.
There is no direct and explicit finding that respondent paid for the Sorrento before notice of plaintiff’s lien, nor is there any general finding which very clearly embraces such fact, though finding 3 was perhaps intended to embrace it. If the fact is not found, the judgment is erroneous; if it is found, the finding cannot be sustained. Upon either hypothesis the appellant is entitled to a new trial.
Harrison, J., McFarland, J., Sharpstein, J., Paterson, J., De Haven, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.