The issue at bar concerns the validity of a trustee’s sale under a power of sale contained in a deed of *396 trust. Originally plaintiff Lopez alone sought to restrain such sale. When a demurrer to his complaint was sustained with leave to amend, Lopez filed an amended and supplementary complaint seeking to set aside the trustee’s sale conducted during the interim; joining as plaintiffs were the Bautistas who sought an order permitting them to intervene. A demurrer to this amended pleading was likewise sustained with leave to amend; the Bautistas’ motion to intervene was denied. A third and supplementary complaint, joining the Bautistas as plaintiffs (despite the denial of their previous motion), was thereupon filed; a demurrer thereto was sustained without leave to amend, and permission to intervene was again denied the Bautistas. The appeal is from the judgment dismissing the action. 1
Since we are called upon to decide whether the facts alleged afforded any legal ground upon which to hold the trustee’s sale invalid, such facts will be stated largely in the language of the complaint as last amended. On November 20, 1956, the Bautistas entered into a written agreement with defendants Bell and Jarrett for the purchase of the real property in question, the total consideration being $25,000. The Bautistas made a down payment of $13,000, a portion of which was advanced by Lopez at the Bautistas' request, and title to the property was eventually placed in Lopez’ name. At the same time he also executed a deed to defendant Western Mutual, as trustee, as security for the unpaid balance of the purchase price. Defendant Bell allegedly knew of all these latter facts.
Also, as part of the contract of sale, on November 20, 1956, Lopez executed his promissory note payable to defendants Bell and Jarrett for $12,000 to secure payment of the aforesaid deed of trust. Thereunder payments of $750 were due semiannually, including interest at 6 per cent. It is alleged that thereafter “each of the subsequent semi-annual payments of $750.00 on said note was paid to the defendant Mary V. Bell, long after the duo date thereof and the semi-annual instalment due February 16, 1960, was actually paid on or about the 23rd day of May, I960”; on July 29, 1960, however, “there was paid to the defendant Mary V. Bell $485.06 to apply on the semi-annual instalment due on August 15, 1960.” It is then alleged that “on each of the occasions when said semi-annual instalments fell due, the defendant Mary V. Bell wrote to the Bautistas requesting payment of said payments *397 and plaintiffs are informed and believe that the defendant Mary V. Bell never at any time communicated with the plaintiff Teodoro Lopez in reference to said payments” save and except that, pursuant to notice from defendant Bell, a notice of default from Western Mutual mailed to Lopez at Brawley, California, was returned unopened.
According to further allegations of the complaint as amended, notice of such default was recorded on or about September 13, 1960; after a lapse of three months, as provided by the governing statute (Civ. Code, § 2924), the trustee on December 22 caused a notice of sale to be filed and published wherein it was stated that the August 15, 1960, instalment was unpaid and declaring that the entire principal of the note ($7,890.70) was delinquent. It is alleged, however, that plaintiffs had no communication regarding either the notice of default or sale until January 13, 1961 (14 days before the date of the sale) when defendant Bell offered the Bautistas $3,000 for a quitclaim deed; the next day this offer was increased to $5,000. The Bautistas then mailed to the trustee the balance of the August instalment ($364.94), which sum was retained by the trustee until January 24 when the defendants’ attorney offered to return plaintiffs’ money order. Plaintiffs’ request for a postponement of the sale for 30 days, which would permit them time to raise the balance due, was also declined.
Finally, it is alleged that plaintiffs were lulled into a sense of security by reason of the acceptance of the several instalments without any notice from the defendants insisting upon prompt future payment thereof. As a further ground for the relief sought, plaintiffs allege that the property was bid in by defendants for $9,500 although the market value at the time of sale was $50,000.
Although plaintiffs’ pleading suggests otherwise, we are satisfied that full compliance was had with the procedural requirements contained in the applicable statute (Civ. Code, § 2924) respecting notice of default and sale. Section 2924b provides for the giving of personal notice to any person formally requesting the same, but there is no allegation that such notice was requested. “The only requirements of notice of sale essential to the validity of a sale . . . are those expressly and specifically prescribed by the terms of the instrument and by the provisions of the applicable statutes.”
(Lancaster Security Inv. Corp.
v.
Kessler,
Nor should the sale be set aside because the final bid was assertedly inadequate. Indeed, plaintiffs concede that mere inadequacy of price, however gross, is not alone enough
(Stafford
v.
Russell,
Since
Boone
v.
Templeman,
This is not to say that defendants by proper pleading and proof may not ultimately establish what was expected of them under the circumstances; but the sole question for present determination is the sufficiency of the facts to constitute a cause of action. Although there are cases holding that the mere acceptance of one payment after its maturity does not constitute a waiver of the right to declare a forfeiture (see citations in
Boone
v.
Templeman, supra,
As noted at the outset of this opinion, the appeal is from the judgment of dismissal as to Lopez only; although the order denying the motion to intervene is an appealable one
(Bowles
v.
Superior Court,
The judgment is reversed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 24, 1962.
Notes
The judgment declares inter alia that "said action is dismissed and that plaintiff [Lopez] take nothing by this action. . . ."
While it does not appear that the contract in the present action expressly provided that "time is of the essence, ’ ’ use of the precise expression is not always necessary to make it so. See
Skookum Oil Co.
v.
Thomas,
