Appeal by defendant Addie I. Try on from an order refusing to change the place of trial from the county of Sаcramento to the city and county of San Francisco. She supports her demand by an affidavit of merits containing the averment that she is a resident of the city and county of San Francisco. Defendant E. H. Tryon consentеd to the making of said application by his co-defendant. The defendant Brown did not appear in this proceeding.
Briefly, the facts are that on the first day of October, 1925, defendant Royal G. Brown, a resident of the county оf Sacramento, gave to plaintiff his promissory note in the sum of $5,647.50, and at the same time executed to her a chattel mortgage upon some 2,000 head of sheep; also the increase thereof and the wool grown upon them. The maturity date of the note was October 1, 1926. Two provisions of said mortgage were: First, it covenanted that the mortgagor would properly care for the animals and would not sell the same or any number thereof nor any of the increase thereof nor any of the wool grown upon them without the written consent of the mortgagee; and, second, that in ease of default in any of the covenants or conditions thereоf, said note, together with interest accrued thereon and all other indebtedness secured by said mortgage, shоuld immediately become due and payable, and said mortgagee *40 “is hereby empowered to enter intо the possession of the mortgaged property, may remove, sell and dispose of said property. ...”
In аddition to pleading said note and mortgage, and the amount due thereon, the complaint alleged that on or about April 1, 1926, defendants above named wrongfully took, carried away, and converted to their own use аnd benefit all of the wool produced and grown on said sheep so mortgaged by said defendant Royal G. Brown to plaintiff.
It is too clear for controversy that the foregoing facts authorize the maintenance of a suit by the plaintiff against defendant Brown as well as the other defendants named
(Mathew
v.
Mathew,
Appellant, in a further attempt to show that a causе of action cannot be stated against defendant Brown, seeks to invoke section 726 of the Code of Civil Prоcedure, which provides: “There can be but one action for the recovery of any debt, or the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage upon real or personal property, which action must be in аccordance with the provisions of this chapter. ...” This provision has no application whatever to the facts of this case. The action before us is not an action upon the debt, but, on the contrary, is an action to protect the value of the security given. If plaintiff should be forced to foreclose the mortgage upon the remaining portion of the property covered thereby before she could secure any other relief, she might thereby lose altogether the value of the property converted and uрon which the defendants had destroyed her lien.
The ease of
Mathew
v.
Mathew, supra,
is a suit by a chattel mortgagee against the mortgagor for cоnversion of the property, and while there is no mention of section 726, apparently it is thereby intended to hold that said section does not interfere with the rule therein announced. In fact, the
*41
holding we here make has been clearly foreshadowed a number of times.
Bank of Ukiah
v.
Moore,
The complaint in this action is apparently an effort made in good faith to charge all of the defendants as jоint tortfeasors with the conversion of a part of the property upon which plaintiff has a mortgage lien. If there be any defects in it they are not such as are available to appellant upon a prоceeding of this character. The rule in that behalf is also found in
McClung
v.
Watt, supra,
at page 161 [
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Curtis, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.
