68 P. 1020 | Cal. | 1902
This action was brought upon a promissory note executed by James M. Bryan and his wife, Dollie L. Bryan. Since the commencement of the action, James M. Bryan has died, and the case is continued against Dollie L. Bryan, as administratrix, and also against her personally. The note was executed by both husband' and wife on the third day of June, 1893, for $10,000, with interest at the rate of nine per cent per annum, compounded annually. In the answer, as one defense, and in a cross-complaint, the defendant avers that on the eleventh day of December, 1893, James M. Bryan and Dollie L. Bryan executed for Herbert Craft, who was the payee in the note, a deed of trust conveying to George H. Craft and E. R. Craft, as trustees, certain lands as security for the payment of the note. The terms of the trust deed are stated in full in the pleadings. It is also charged that the note so secured by the trust deed was duly assigned to the plaintiff, the Herbert Craft Company, which is a corporation, and subsequently thereto, to wit, on the thirteenth day of June, 1896, the said trustees, in pursuance of the trust deed, sold the lands described and conveyed therein and thereby to the Herbert Craft Company for the sum of $10,000. It is averred that thereafter the corporation, acting through George H. Craft and E. R. Craft, sold the said lands to Martha B. Grinnell for $12,500. The defendant seeks an accounting, and claims the right to have the profit made by the Herbert Craft Company credited upon the indebtedness. This suit is brought to recover the sum which remains due on said promissory note after the sale by the trustees giving credit for $10,000, the amount realized from the sale by the trustees.
A feeling of doubt as to the remedy they were entitled to, if any, must have affected defendant’s attorneys when the pleadings were drawn. The facts are apparently stated fully and in detail, and in the answer and cross-complaint the defendant insists that the sale to the Herbert Craft Company is void, and that she, or the estate, is entitled to
It is said that the learned judge of the trial court based his ruling upon the proposition that a trust deed given to secure a debt is not a mortgage within the terms of section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and therefore a personal action to recover the debt can be maintained without first exhausting the security. I think this was error, but, if the general proposition were admitted, it would not follow that in such a suit the debtor might not show that the trustees had conveyed the property to the creditor under such circumstances as would entitle him to an account of profits made, and have such profits credited on his debt. As to the main proposition, it is true section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure in terms refers only to indebtedness secured by mortgage. But if a trust deed given as security for a debt can be treated as a mortgage, it must follow that it is within the policy established by section 726. That such deed may be so treated, and an action for foreclosure maintained upon it, was expressly held in Felton v. Le Breton, 92 Cal. 457, 28 Pac. 490. Mr. Justice Harrison, speaking for the court, said: “An absolute conveyance of property by a debtor to his creditor, in trust that he may sell the same, and out of the proceeds discharge the debt, is, in effect, only a mortgage with a power of sale, and the grantee may treat it as such, and, instead of making a sale under the power, may go into a court of equity for a foreclosure and sale under a decree; and whenever such course is pursued his relation to the trust property is the same as that of a mortgagee in the foreclosure of an ordinary mortgage.” That is, the mortgagee could, in case of such foreclosure, bid at the sale, and become a purchaser, although the deed authorized and directed
As to the other contention—that defendant is entitled to an accounting, and to have credited upon the debt any profits made upon the purchase by the corporation plaintiff— that also must be sustained. Conditions somewhat similar were recently considered in the case of Copsey v. Sacramento Bank, 133 Cal. 659, 85 Am. St. Rep. 238, 66 Pac. 7, 204, and it was held that such a sale was not void, but was voidable; at least upon a showing of any unfairness or advantage taken. The facts in this ease differ from the case there considered in at least one very important respect. There the facts in reference to the position and relation of the trustees to the creditor existed and were known to the trustor at the time the deed was made. Here the trustees were apparently impartial at the time, and wholly disinterested. They were trustees of an express trust, which is strictly within the provisions of the Civil Code in reference to the relation. Without the consent or knowledge of the trustors, they became
It is objected that the pleadings are insufficient to authorize such relief. All the necessary facts are stated in the answer and in the cross-complaint. Instead of a demurrer, a motion was made to strike the pleadings from the files. The ground upon which this motion was sustained was that a personal action can be maintained without reference to what had been done with the property conveyed in trust to secure the debt, and that such accounting could not be had in such personal action. Under the circumstances the defendant’s counsel are excusable in not asking for leave to amend.
Upon the pleadings here considered it cannot be held that defendant is barred by laches.
The point is made that it is not averred in the answer and cross-complaint that Herbert Craft, the payee named in the note, accepted the trust deed as security. The plaintiff, as Ms assignee, having purchased at the trustee’s sale, is in no position to make the point.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in pursuance of this opinion.
We concur: McFarland, J.; Henshaw, J.