139 Cal. App. 311 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1934
From a judgment in favor of plaintiffs foreclosing a mortgage they have appealed from the last paragraph of the judgment and have brought up the judgment-roll only.
On the sixteenth day of March, 1926, the defendants G. E. Ellingson, Herbert W. Schmidt, Mary L. Schmidt, his wife, I. Pelsner and May Pelsner, his wife, executed their note to Martin T. Sayre and Josie D. Sayre. To secure the payment of that note they also executed a mortgage on real estate in Los Angeles County. On the eighteenth day of February, 1928, the note and mortgage were assigned to the plaintiffs. On the eleventh day of November, 1927, I. Pelsner and May Pelsner, his wife, and G. E. Ellingson, being the record owners of the real estate, conveyed it to Equitable Realty Company, a corporation. The deed recited, among other things: “Subject to a mortgage of record securing a note for :$32,000 (the note in suit) which said mortgage the grantee herein by the acceptance of this deed assumes and-agrees to pay.” The Equitable Realty Company did accept the deed. On September 8, 1931, there had been paid on the principal $3,750. The interest had been paid down to March 16, 1931, otherwise the payments of principal and interest were in default and the plaintiffs commenced this action. On the ninth day of May, 1931, the plaintiffs executed a partial release. In their complaint the plaintiffs named the mortgagors as defendants and they also named the grantee of the mortgagors.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the deficiency judgment, if any, entered herein, upon and after the sale of said real property, shall first be satisfied from the property of the defendant Equitable Realty Co., to the extent that such property shall be sufficient for such purpose and that no execution for said deficiency judgment or any part thereof shall issue against the property of the defendants G. E. Ellingson, I. Pelsner and/or May Pelsner unless the property of the said defendant Equitable Realty Co. shall be insufficient to satisfy said deficiency judgment, in which event the plaintiffs may have execution against the property of said defendants G. E. Ellingson, I. Pelsner and May Pelsner, or either of them, for any part of said judgment remaining unsatisfied.” The plaintiffs freely concede, and in their brief they state:
“It has been frequently held that the assumption of a mortgage by the mortgagor’s grantee renders the grantee the principal debtor and the mortgagor his surety to pay the debt. (Williams v. Naftzger, 103 Cal. 438 [37 Pac. 411]; Hopkins v. Warner, 109 Cal. 133 [41 Pac. 868].) The assumption of the debt obligates the mortgagor’s grantee to hold the mortgagor harmless. (Beach v. Waite, 21 Cal. App. 304 [131 Pac. 880]; Tompkins v. Powers, 106 Cal. App. 464 [289 Pac. 685].)” Nevertheless they contend: “In the case at bar, the court below attempted to compel appellants, assignees of the mortgagees, first to exhaust their remedies against the grantee of the mortgagors, who assumed the mortgage, and this was made a condition precedent to the enforcement of the defiéiency judgment against the mortgagors. This clearly denies to the mortgagees their right unconditionally to enforce their contract
In support of the judgment, there being nothing showing to the contrary this court is bound to assume that from the time these plaintiffs became the owners and holders of the note and mortgage they received payments of interest from the Equitable Realty Company and received a payment of principal, $3,750, also from it; and that these plaintiffs had notice of the assignment of the real estate to the Equitable Realty Company. From the time
In their next point the plaintiffs state: “The stay of execution upon the judgment for the deficiency against the respondents is (a) burdensome and inequitable to the appellants and (b) unauthorized under the provisions of section 681a of the Code of Civil Procedure.” Instead of being burdensome and inequitable we have shown above that the judgment was entirely equitable. If it was burdensome it was not unlawfully burdensome. Section 681a limits a stay of execution. It is perfectly clear that this ease does not come within the purview of that section. The trial court did not stay the execution but properly limited the manner of its use.
We find no error in the record. The judgment is affirmed.