30 P.2d 586 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1934
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *213
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage. The decree of foreclosure gave judgment against The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Inc., for any deficiency remaining after sale of the mortgaged property, but not against the other defendants. We will hereafter refer to The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Inc., as the defendant, and to the other defendants as the respondents. The appeal is taken from that portion of the judgment which refused judgment for a deficiency against respondents. An appeal by certain defendants was decided in Fishback v. J.C. Forkner FigGardens, Inc.,
Horace Fishback owned forty acres of land in Fresno County. On March 15, 1922, defendant had an oral option to purchase this property and an adjoining forty acres belonging to one Sexauer for $57,800. A writing was given to H.E. Vogel, E.O. Thompson and C.M. Thompson, since deceased, whereby they were given an option to purchase the two tracts from defendant for $58,800. The option contained the following:
"The entire price to be paid for said above described real property is Fifty Eight Thousand Eight Hundred and No/100 . . . dollars ($58800.00), payable as follows:
"$2000.00 cash as above mentioned,
"$14800.00 on the exercise of this option.
"Balance on or before five years at 7 per cent interest, payable annually.
"Releasure clause privilege of one acre or more upon payment of sum of One Thousand Dollars ($1000.00) per acre. *214
"This option is given by The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Inc. and accepted by H.E. Vogel and C.M. E.O. Thompson according to the terms and conditions of deeds, notes and mortgages and escrow instructions now in the hands of the San Joaquin Abstract Co. relative to the land described herein and said papers are hereby referred to and made a part of this option except as to the amount to be paid upon the exercise of this option.
"Title to be perfect. Grant, bargain and sale deed to be executed and delivered by the said ____ to H.E. Vogel and C.M. and E.O. Thompson, or their assigns, on or before the 15th day of June, 1922, together with an abstract showing a good merchantable title provided, however, that the sum of $14800.00 is paid at said date; but if said sum is not paid on or before the said 15th day of June, 1922, then this contract to be of no effect, and in that event the said sum of $2000.00 is to be returned by The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Inc., to H.E. Vogel and C.M. and E.O. Thompson."
This option was exercised on June 20, 1922, and $14,800 paid by the purchasers. Defendant had previously paid Fishback $2,000, also the additional money he required, and gave him a note secured by a mortgage in the sum of $21,000. It also gave Sexauer a note and mortgage for $21,000. It received deeds to the two properties from the respective owners and simultaneously conveyed the properties to H.E. Vogel, Bernal L. Vogel, E.O. Thompson and C.M. Thompson. The deed to the Fishback property contained the following:
"Subject to a mortgage of date March 15, 1922, upon the above described land given by The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Incorporated to Horace Fishback to secure a note of even date therewith for twenty one thousand and no/100 Dollars ($21000.00) due on or before five (5) years from date, with interest at seven (7) per cent per annum, which said mortgage and note said second parties assume and agree to pay."
Appellants have many assignments of errors as to rulings of the trial court on objections to the introduction of evidence. These may be divided into three general classes. First, objections sustained excluding documents used in the Sexauer transaction. Second, objections sustained excluding *215 some of the documents pertaining to the Fishback transaction. Third, objections sustained to questions which sought to elicit information that experience had proven the accuracy of records of the county recorder as to the mailing of recorded instruments.
[1] The Sexauer transaction was not involved in the instant litigation and documents concerning it alone were properly excluded from the evidence in this case. We have examined the proffers of proof made in connection with the papers concerning the Fishback transaction and can find nothing material that was not admitted in evidence or conceded by counsel. The questions seeking to prove the accuracy of the county records by past experience were clearly improper. An employee in that office testified that she mailed the deed from defendant to appellants, addressed "H.E. Vogel, Fresno, California." This was direct evidence on the question which appellants sought to prove by the experience of the office. We find no prejudicial error in the rulings of the trial court on objections to questions of counsel.
[2] Appellants urge that the answers admit that respondents assumed the mortgage to Fishback and that such an admission is binding on the court. The second amended complaint, upon which the action went to trial, plead the assumption of the mortgage indebtedness by setting out in haec verba the paragraph of the deed we have quoted. At the close of the case appellants were permitted to file an amendment to conform to the proof, in which it was alleged that respondents "assumed and agreed to pay the note in favor of Horace Fishback". The allegations of this amendment were denied by operation of law. (21 Cal. Jur. 189.) The answers alleged that it was not a part of the agreement of sale that the purchasers were to assume and pay the mortgage indebtedness and that the quoted clause was inserted in the deed without their knowledge or consent; that the grantees never at any time agreed directly or indirectly to pay the mortgage. We think these allegations sufficiently put the questions in issue.
[3] Appellants urge that the emphasized portion of the following finding is inconsistent with the remaining portion and is a conclusion of law and not a finding of fact that will support the judgment. "That said deed contained a *216 provision that said grantees assumed and agreed to pay the indebtedness secured by the mortgage from The J.C. Forkner Fig Gardens, Inc. to Horace Fishback; that said grantees, however, did not know that said assumption clause was in said deed;neither did they assume or agree to pay said indebtedness." One portion of the finding is not inconsistent with the other. As to the objection that the emphasized portion does not find a fact but merely states a conclusion of law, it should be sufficient to observe that this portion follows the exact language of the amendment to the second amended complaint and is responsive to its allegations. If it is a conclusion of law in the finding it is a like conclusion of law in the pleading. A conclusion of law in a complaint states no issuable fact upon which a finding is necessary. While the findings are not a model of excellence, when read as a whole they sufficiently dispose of the issues presented and support the judgment.
[4] Appellants urge that the findings and judgment are contrary to the evidence for two reasons: first, that respondents are bound by the covenant in the deed to assume and pay the mortgage note, and, second, that they agreed to pay the note in the option because the purchase price of the two tracts of land was stated at a unit sum of $58,800.
Appellants rely upon the cases of White v. Schader,
Respondents seek to avoid the application of these rules by urging that the agreement to assume and pay the note and mortgage was inserted in the deed without their knowledge or consent; that they did not know of its existence or presence in the deed until 1929, seven years after its execution and delivery; that they made no promise to pay the mortgage note. They urge that under well reasoned and ample authority there can be no liability for a deficiency *217 under these facts, which the trial court found to be true. We have been cited to no California case deciding the precise question here presented.
In the case of Blass v. Terry,
The rules thus announced find support in numerous cases, among which the following may be cited: Elliott v. Sackett,
These cases are also authority for our concluding that there was no ratification of the mortgage indebtedness assumption clause of the deed by respondents and that they were not estopped by it from asserting that they did not promise to pay the note.[5] There is no merit in the argument that respondents should have commenced an action for reformation of the deed by the elimination of this clause. The deed was filed for record by a title company and was never in the physical possession of respondents. They did not discover the existence of this clause until 1929. There is nothing in the record here showing when the original complaint was filed. When the record on appeal is incomplete we must assume that the omitted portions would support the judgment. We must then presume that the complaint was filed before respondents discovered the assumption clause in the deed. A suit to reform the instrument was not then necessary.
[6] The above-cited cases are also authority for the conclusion that the rule that "A purchaser must be held to have notice of everything which appears on the face of the deeds under which he buys" (Watson v. Sutro,
There are numerous cases holding that a statement in a contract of purchase of the full purchase price which included the amount of a mortgage indebtedness is not of itself a promise to assume and pay such indebtedness. (Hibernian Sav. Soc. v. Dickinson,
The option was not carefully drawn. Any conclusion that the three respondents signing it promised to pay the entire purchase price of $58,800 by paying $16,800 cash, and paying the two mortgage notes each in the sum of $21,000, could only be supported by a bare inference. An equally strong, if not much stronger, inference may be drawn from its language supporting the opposite conclusion, which is the one reached by the trial court. In Mah See v. North American Acc. Ins. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Barnard, P.J., and Jennings, J., concurred.
A petition by appellants to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 3, 1934.