74 Cal. 250 | Cal. | 1887
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed for the reasons given in the decision by Department Two, filed June 27, 1887.
Sharpstein, J., Searls, C. J., McFarland, J., Temple, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.
The following is the opinion of Department Two, above referred to:—■
The plaintiff’s intestate, some time prior to October, 1876, lent defendant Henry P. Mc-Nevin a sum of money, for which he received as security some shares of stock. On the 19th of July, 1877, McNevin assigned to defendant L. P. Drexler his interest in the stock above mentioned, in consideration that Drexler would assume the payment of his debts due to Casserly on said stock. This assignment Drexler ac
Drexler, in his answer, set up the assignment to him, the notification to Casserly of this assignment, the tender to Casserly and its refusal by him, as they are set forth herein, and averred his willingness and readiness to pay, and then offered to pay into court the amount due Casserly, as the court should direct, upon Casserly’s delivering to him the stock held by him as security.
J. F. Eagan, on the 18th of February, 1879, filed a complaint in intervention, in which he averred an assignment to him by Drexler of the stock held by Casserly as security, and also of all claim for damages by Drexler for the conversion of the stock thereinafter mentioned. He then goes on to aver the facts showing a conversion by Casserly, which are the facts .above set forth by Drexler in his answer, and the further fact that Casserly refused, upon the tender made him in September, 1877, to accept the said amount tendered, and deliver the stock to Drexler. Casserly demurred to the complaint of Eagan, which was overruled. He then answered the complaint last mentioned, denying the conversion averred.
The cause was tried, and judgment rendered against Casserly in favor of Eagan for the sum of $15,225, and costs. Casserly moved for a new trial, which was denied. This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment and order above mentioned.
Casserly held the stock as a pledge. He so states in his complaint; and under section 2924, Civil Code, having it in his possession, as it was personal property, it was a pledge whether the title passed to him or not.
. The lien of a pledgee is extinguished when a tender of the amount due on the debt is made according to law and its refusal by the pledgee. (McCalla v. Clark, 55 Ga. 53; Ratcliff v. Vance, 2 Mill Const. 239.) Upon
Was the tender in this case made in accordance with law? It was of the whole amount—principal and interest—due to Casserly. The demand made at the same time that the stock pledged be delivered to him, conceding it to be a condition, was one which he had a right to impose, as it was concurrent with the payment of the money in accordance with Casserly’s promise in his letter of July 21, 1877, to Latham and King, the agents of Drexler, that on payment of the money, he would transfer the stock, which latter was communicated by Latham and King to Drexler. The announcing of such condition did not vitiate his tender. It is so declared in section 1498, Civil Code. (See Wheelock v. Tanner, 39 N. Y. 481.)
The tender was made in time. The code (sec. 1490, Civ. Code) provides that where an obligation fixes thé time for its performance, an offer of performance must be made at that time, within reasonable hours, and not before nor afterward. But where an obligation does not fix the time of performance, an offer of performance may be made at any time before the debtor, upon a reasonable demand, has refused to perform. (Sec. 1491, Civ. Code.) The obligation of McNevin was to repay the advances after a reasonable time, whenever he should be thereunto requested by the plaintiff. This was averred
“Where delay in performance is capable of exact and entire compensation, and time has not been expressly declared to be of the essence of the obligation, an offer of performance, accompanied with an offer of such compensation, may be made at any time after it is due, but without prejudice to any rights acquired by the creditors, or by any other person in the mean time.”
We are of opinion that the tender is good under this last section, as the interest offered was compensation for the delay.
It is said that the plea of tender by Drexler is insufficient for the reason that he did not bring the money into court. We think the plea is sufficient without bringing the money into court. This is so held in Kortright v. Cady, 21 N. Y. 343, 354, 366; 78 Am. Dec. 145. The authorities referred to in the cases just cited in the opinions of Davis, J., and Comstock, C. J., sustain this rule. The plea here is in accordance with section 1495, Civil Code, and it is expressly provided by section 1504, Civil Code, that an offer of payment duly made, though the title to the thing offered be not transferred to the creditor, stops the running of interest on the obligation, and has the same effect upon all its incidents as a performance thereof. One of these incidents is the discharge or extinction of the lien. The rule laid down in Kortright v. Cady is the same. (21 N. Y. 353, 366; 78 Am. Dec. 145.)
The tender was not objected to by Casserly when made. The lien having been extinguished, Drexler was
. We cannot see how an attachment by Teresa McNevin, a third person, with whom Drexler had no connection or privity, could justify the plaintiff’s intestate in his detention of the stock.
The stock was the property of Drexler when it was attached, subject to the lien for the debt due to Casserly, and the attachment of it as the property of H. P. McNevin gave him no right to detain it from Drexler, when a proper tender had been made and refused.
The answer of Drexler was in effect an action to redeem. In such action, whether the right is enforced by an action of trover or by a bill pure and simple to redeem, the pledgee will be responsible to the pledgor for depreciation in the value of the pledged property, after a tender of the amount due and the refusal by the pledgee. (Griswold v. Jackson, 2 Edw. Ch. 461; Jackson v. Griswold, 4 Hill, 522; Hathaway v. Fall River National Bank, 131 Mass. 14; Hancock v. Franklin Ins. Co., 114 Mass. 155.) Eagan’s complaint in intervention set forth the right to redeem, as well as did the- answer of Drexler, and in fact, more fully by stating; a case of conversion. The action of trover is a very usual mode of enforcing a redemption of a pledge. (See Jones on Pledges, sec. 561.)
We are of opinion that the complaint, in intervention by Eagan was regular and within the statute. (Code Civ. Proc., see. 386.)
We find no error in the record,,and the judgment and .order are affirmed.
McFarland, J., and Sharpstéin, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.