28 Cal. 520 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
- In January, 1863, the defendant Hunt, as plaintiff, commenced an action in the District Court in El Dorado County against the plaintiff E. P. Culver, as defendant, to recover the amount of two promissory notes, and to foreclose a mortgage
The object of this action was to perpetually enjoin the defendants from selling on the execution so issued the property selected and claimed as a homestead.
The appellants’ counsel admit that if Hunt’s judgment became a general lien on the real property of the judgment debtor in the countjt, before the time of the filing of the homestead claim, then it would not be proper to restrain the defendants, and we do not understand the respondent’s counsel as maintaining that the j udgment found for the defendants can be upheld, unless on the ground that the judgment in the foreclosure case, from the time it was first docketed, became a lien on §11 the real property of the debtor in the county not exempt at the time from execution. So that the question to be decided is divested of all complications.
A judgment becomes a lien on the .real estate of the debtor only by force of the statute, and depends for its existence upon conditions of statutory origin. For the recovery of any debt or the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage lien upon real estate or personal property the statute declares there shall be but one action. The statute then further provides: “ In such action the Court shall have power by its decree or judgment to direct a sale of the encumbered property (or of such part thereof as shall be necessary) and the application of the .proceeds of the sale to the payment of the costs and expenses of sale, the costs of suit, and the amount due the plaintiff.” (Prac. Act, Sec. 246.) To this extent this section is substanstantially as the section was prior to the amendment of it in 1860. In a foreclosure case under the statute, as it formerly stood, a judgment in personam might be rendered against a debtor for the amount due, as well as a decree for the sale of the premises mortgaged (Englund v. Lewis, 25 Cal. 348, 349, and the cases there cited); and when a judgment in personam was rendered .in an,action of foreclosure, it was held in Chapin v. Broder, 16 Cal. 422, that when such judgment was dock
The two hundred and' forty-sixth section of the Practice Act as amended in 1861 (Laws 1861, p. 306) contains an additional provision which reads as follows : “If it shall appear from the Sheriff’s return that there is a deficiency of such proceeds, and a balance still due to the plaintiff, the judgment shall then be. docketed for such balance against the defendant or defendants personally liable for the debt, and shall from the time of such docketing be a lien upon the real estate of the judgment debtor, and an execution may thereupon be issued by the Clerk of the Court, in like manner and form as upon other judgments, to collect such balance or deficiency from the property of the judgment debtor.” If it be assumed that the recovery obtained on the 20th of May, 1863, was a judgment in personam, followed by a decree of foreclosure' and sale, the fact that the debt, to recover which the action was brought, was secured by mortgage, and the further fact that the action was to make the money due by a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises, operated to limit the plaintiff to his remedy to the premises mortgaged, until the same should be exhausted. When exhausted by a sale thereof under the decree, and a balance is ascertained in the mode prescribed to be still due to the plaintiff, the judgment shall be docketed for such balance, and shall from the time of such docketing be a lien upon the real estate of the judgment debtor, and an execution may thereupon be issued in like manner and form as upon other judgments. If this was the only statutory provision relating to the creation of a lien by judgment, we apprehend no question would be made as to the point of time determining its inception. But the two hundred and fourth section of the Act, which has reference to judgments in personam generally, provides that from the time the judgment is docketed it 'shall become a lien on all the real property of the judgment debtor, etc., and that the lien shall
Until the judgment was docketed for the balance due the plaintiff, the premises in controversy did not become encumbered by the judgment, and before then it became, the plaintiff’s homestead, and consequently was not subject to be sold on the execution issued for the balance due on the judgment.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.