62 P. 459 | Cal. | 1900
Mrs. Bryan, the guardian of the persons and estates of her five minor children, under an order of the court mortgaged their interest in certain real estate, amounting to an undivided five-twentieths, to secure a loan of $9,500. Mrs. Bryan individually and her five adult children also mortgaged their undivided interest in the same real estate, amounting to fifteen-twentieths thereof, to secure
The question here presented involves the validity of the mortgage given by the guardian under the order of the court. To support the claim of the invalidity of the mortgage, it is first insisted that the petition for permission to mortgage addressed to the court is void upon its face. By this petition the court is asked to order a loan of $10,000, and the various items going to make up this sum total are set forth in detail, as, for example, an item of $5,000 claimed to be due the guardian, as money expended by her in the care, support and maintenance of the minors, and which, it is alleged, is a charge against their estate. There is also an item of $2,500, which, it is alleged, is required to pay off a mortgage then resting on the property, which mortgage was given by the father of the minors during his life. It becomes unnecessary to enumerate the other items alleged in the petition going to make up the sum total of $10,000, although it may be said they include costs of the proceedings in guardianship "and an estimated attorney’s fee. Upon the hearing the court made an order allowing the guardian to negotiate a loan of $9,500. This attack by respondents upon the validity of the proceedings leading up to the mortgage is essentially a collateral attack, and for this reason those proceedings must appear to be void on their face or the attack can avail nothing.
What particular facts are essential to be set forth in a petition to allow a mortgage to be given, in order to give a court jurisdiction to make an order thereon, we will not here decide, for it is not necessary. Even if it be conceded that in the present case some of the items set forth in this petition, going to make up the sum total, were not a legal charge against the estate of the minors, yet, upon the other hand, there is no doubt but that some of these items were a proper charge against that "estate, and this fact gave the court jurisdiction of the proceeding, and, upon proper notice given of the hearing, power to make the order it did make. For this reason the order here made is not void upon the ground of a
It is next claimed that the order to mortgage is void because it purports to create a joint indebtedness of these five minors for the entire sum, and a single blanket mortgage is given to secure that indebtedness. We have no doubt but that the court was wanting in power to make an order for a mortgage which would bind the interest of each minor for the entire loan, and, if the necessary construction of this order was to bind each minor to that end, it could not stand. But a fair and reasonable construction of the order may be made, which will make it valid, and that construction we are bound to make. Each minor owned an undivided one-twentieth of the real estate, and it will be held in support of the validity of the order that each minor’s interest in the estate is only bound as security for one-fifth of the amount of the debt, and upon the payment of that amount his interest will be released from the effect of the mortgage. As to the general legal principle here involved, see Neary v. Godfrey, 102 Cal. 338, 36 Pac. 655.
Section 1578 of the Code of Civil Procedure originally failed to provide for the giving of a promissory note by the guardian as evidence of the debt created under order of the court; but a short time before this loan was effected the statute was amended, whereby a guardian was authorized and directed to give the mortgagee a promissory note for the amount of the money loaned. Compliance was not had with this provision of the law in this case, and, while the failure to comply with the law may be said to have been a substantial departure therefrom, yet we do not deem the departure jurisdictional. The attack here made upon the mortgage being collateral, no mere error or irregularity in the proceeding, however important or substantial, will invalidate the mortgage. The section itself so declares, and we hold this
We concur: Harrison, J.; Van Dyke, J.