247 P. 516 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
Action by plaintiff to quiet title to sixty and a fraction acres of land situate in Madera County. Defendant *683 pleaded a mortgage lien on the premises involved. Plaintiff had judgment subject to the mortgage and appeals from that part of the judgment establishing defendant's lien.
The complaint alleges that on the seventh day of February, 1924, plaintiff became and ever since has been the owner of the tract of land above referred to, and further that defendants (there being some fictitious persons named as defendants) claim to have some estate, right, title, or interest in, to, or against said property, or some portion thereof, but that such claims of defendants, and each of them, are without any right whatever and are subject and subordinate to the rights and claims of the plaintiff. The answer of the defendant, Nellie Dinwiddie, sets up a certain mortgage on the premises described in the complaint, said mortgage being dated September 22, 1920, for the sum of $6,565, payable three years after date, interest at seven per cent per annum, said mortgage being executed by Andrew McKibben and Nancy J. McKibben, alleged to be the owners of the premises referred to in plaintiff's complaint at the date of the execution of said mortgage, and that said mortgage constituted a first lien on said real estate, and that plaintiff's interest in said land is subsequent and subject to the lien of said mortgage. The answer also denies that the claim and interest of the said Nellie Dinwiddie is subordinate or subject to the plaintiff's claims.
The transcript shows that on or about the twenty-second day of September, 1916, E.I. Voorheis and Sarah E. Voorheis, his wife, then being the owners of the real estate referred to in plaintiff's complaint, executed a note and mortgage for the sum of $6,565, payable three years after date. This mortgage covered the lands and premises described in plaintiff's complaint. This mortgage was duly recorded and thereafter, and on or about the fifth day of December, 1917, assigned to Amanda E. Dinwiddie and Nellie Dinwiddie, and by them assigned to one Sherman Gail, and by the said Sherman Gail reassigned to Amanda E. Dinwiddie and Nellie Dinwiddie as joint tenants. After the execution of the mortgage just mentioned, known as the "Voorheis mortgage," the real estate referred to was sold and conveyed to Andrew McKibben and Nancy J. *684 McKibben, his wife, who, on or about the twenty-second day of September, 1920, executed to Nellie Dinwiddie a mortgage on the lands described in the first mortgage and the premises involved in this case, to secure a note in the sum of $6,565, payable three years after date, the "Voorheis mortgage" herein referred to being past due and unpaid. This mortgage, called the "McKibben mortgage," was not recorded until on or about the fifteenth day of November, 1922. In the meantime, and on or about the sixteenth day of March, 1921, Andrew McKibben, the mortgagor, conveyed the land in question to Margaret P. Van Hoosear. Thereafter, and after the recording of the McKibben mortgage, Margaret P. Van Hoosear and William S. Van Hoosear, by deed of gift, conveyed the property in question to their son, Burr S. Van Hoosear, who, on or about February 7, 1924, conveyed the land to the appellant, H.S. Craig. The Voorheis mortgage referred to herein was not satisfied of record until on or about the fifth day of March, 1924, a date subsequent to the time when the plaintiff and appellant took title to the property. The Voorheis mortgage was satisfied of record at the request of William S. Van Hoosear on behalf of appellant. After the satisfaction of the Voorheis mortgage had been entered of record, the plaintiff instituted this action to quiet title. The satisfaction of mortgage recites that "the Voorheis mortgage has been fully paid by renewal thereof," the renewal being by way of the mortgage executed by the McKibbens and set up in the answer of the defendant Dinwiddie.
Plaintiff's claim is based principally upon the provisions of section
Any inquiry on the part of the plaintiff would have elicited the information that the Dinwiddie mortgage was given simply as a renewal of the Voorheis mortgage. It was not given in payment and no release or satisfaction of the Voorheis mortgage was ever entered other than that solicited by the plaintiff and the Van Hoosears, which was obtained in the language we have quoted, which was followed immediately *687
by this action to quiet title. Any reasonable or prudent man would have made inquiry to ascertain the facts concerning the two mortgages and, under such circumstances, we think section
[3] The debt in this case was at all times kept alive. There is no pretense that the McKibben note and mortgage was given as an additional note and mortgage or other than as claimed by the respondent. The form or procedure followed perhaps differs somewhat from the usual method of renewing notes, but the substance was exactly the same, and by the execution of the new note and mortgage payment of the old note was suspended until the maturity of the new note, and thus leaving the respondent standing precisely where she stood before the mortgage was renewed, as far as priority is concerned. (Tolman v. Smith,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Finch, P.J., concurred.