123 P. 356 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1912
Action to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the payment of a promissory note in the sum of $3,500.
It appears from the findings that on December 4, 1908, defendant Parsons executed and delivered to one L. E. Jones a note and mortgage which was made the subject of the action; that upon delivery thereof Jones paid to Parsons the sum of $1,000, agreeing orally to pay him $1,000 in ten days, and the balance in thirty-five days; that on February 11, 1909, Jones paid to Parsons an additional $250, making in all $1,250, and no more, received by Parsons in consideration of the note and mortgage; that prior to the making of this last payment, to wit, on December 29, 1908, Jones sold and, by an instrument executed in writing and duly recorded, transferred the note and mortgage to plaintiff, who paid Jones the full face value thereof; that plaintiff acquired the note and mortgage without notice of any existing equities or defenses *452 thereto. Upon these findings the court gave plaintiff judgment for $1,250 and interest, from which he prosecutes this appeal, claiming that judgment should have been entered thereon for the full face value of the note.
As the note was secured by a mortgage, it was non-negotiable (Meyer v. Weber,
The judgment is affirmed.
Allen, P. J., and James, J., concurred.