261 F. 575 | 9th Cir. | 1919
(after stating the facts as above). The question argued is whether or not the mortgagee, which took over the property described in the lease, made itself liable for the payment of the rent to the lessor, or the.assignee of the lessor. The position of the plaintiff in error is that the fact of possession is a reasonable and practical test, and that a mortgagee, who chooses to take possession and enter into the leased premises, and use and enjoy the same, becomes in effect, whether or not in name, the tenant, and as such should bear the burdens of the tenant. On the other hand, defendant in error takes the ground that under the facts of the case there never has been privity of estate between the trust company and the insurance company, and that the obligations of the Peterson lease to the building company, to which the trust company was not a party, cannot be imposed upon the trust company. It is in evidence that the trust company protested against assuming the attitude of an assignee, and by word and act endeavored to relieve itself from the obligation of paying rentals under the lease for the time for which recovery is asked in this action, This, in our opinion, becomes a relevant consideration.
A circumstance to he noted, too, is that the mortgage or deed of trust was put on record before the insurance company made the loan to Peterson and took the mortgage as security, and the insurance company had notice of the mortgage of the trust company. When Peterson assigned the lease to the building company, he executed a mortgage securing the same mortgage debt that was secured by the real estate. The provisions in the instrument, that upon full performance of all the conditions and obligations of the note and mortgage the assignment should be void and of no effect, afford additional ground for regarding the assignment as in reality a mortgage securing the same mortgage debt that the real estate secured. Again, in the foreclosure proceedings which were instituted by the insurance company against Peterson, the lease assigned is described as a mortgage, and upon sale the real estate and the leasehold interest were sold as a whole.
From many cases which have considered the question, we refer to those which appear to be based upon the better reasoning. In Johnson v. Sherman, 15 Cal. 287, 76 Am. Dec. 481, the court, through Chief Justice Field, said:
“The question, then, is this: Is Sherman liable for the rents from the date of his possession in March, 1855, to the date of his assignment to Jeffries in August following? The evidence discloses that this assignment was taken as security for the loan of i?5,000. All the parties admit that this was its object. Sherman so alleges under oath in his answer. Brown testifies to the same thing. The lessors were aware of the character of the transaction, and were not, therefore, in a position to assert rights founded upon the absolute form of the instrument. The admissibility of parol evidence to show that a conveyance or assignment absolute upon its face was intended as a mortgage is no longer an open question in this state. * * * The assignment is then to be treated, though absolute on its face, as in fact a mortgage, and the question of law thus presented is whether, as mortgagee of the term in possession, Sherman was liable upon the covenants of the lease. In England there is no doubt that he would be held liable. There a mortgage is in fact, and not merely in form, a conveyance of the estate, vesting in the mortgagee a title to the premises, defeasible until condition broken, but absolute afterward. The covenants of the lease running with the land, their performance of course devolves upon the assignee, whether tlie assignment be taken as security or by way of purchase. Williams v. Bosanquet, 1 Brod. & Bing. 72. In New York, where a mortgage is treated as a mere security, the legal title remaining in the mortgagor, the mortgagee out of possession is not bound as assignee, but in possession he is liable as such. The possession is there considered as in some respect affecting the title. * * * In this state a mortgage is regarded as a mere security, and not as a conveyance vesting in the mortgagee any estate in the land either before or aJ'ter condition broken. As a security for a debt, default in the payment does not change its character. Payment after default operates to discharge the lien, equally with payment at the maturity of the debt. * * * Nor can possession under the mortgage affect the nature of the mortgagee’s interest; it does not abridge or enlarge his interest, or convert what was previously a security into a seizing of the freehold; it does not change the relation of creditor and debtor, or impair the estate of the mortgagor, hut leaves the rights and interests of the parties exactly as they existed pre*580 viously. Possession talten by consent of the owner, or by contract with him, may confer rights as against third parties; but they are independent and distinct from any;- rights springing from the mortgage, from which they derive no support, 'in thus holding we only carry the doctrine that a mortgage is a mere security for a debt to its legitimate and logical result.”
The court treated the title to the property as remaining with the mortgagor, whether possession was taken or otherwise, and concluded that it advanced only one step beyond the New York cases by holding that a mortgagee of a term in possession is not liable as assignee upon the covenants of a lease. In Dutton v. Warschauer, 21 Cal. 609, 82 Am. Dec. 765, the court, again speaking through Chief Justice Field,_ affirmed the principle announced in Johnson v. Sherman, supra.
In Cargill et al. v. Thompson et al., 57 Minn. 534, 59 N. W. 638, the court assumed that one Sprague, mortgagee, was in possession under an assignment by way of mortgage of rentals to Sprague, and that.Sprague collected the rents and entered the premises and made repairs, yet held that the mortgage created no privity between Sprague and plaintiff in the case; that the mortgage passed no estate in the land, but gave only a lien. To the argument that the situation was different with the mortgagee in possession, that he has such an estate as makes him liable upon the covenants running with the land, the court, through Gilfillan, C. J., cited the New York cases (Astor v. Hoyt, 5 Wend. 603; Moffatt. v. Smith, 4 N. Y. 126) as not altogether satisfactory, and adopted the rule in California, as announced in Johnson V. Sherman, supra. The court said;
“We do not see bow tbe mere act of tbe parties, of going into possession and consenting to or acquiescing in it, can bave tbe effect to pass tbe mortgagor’s estate to tbe mortgagee. Tbe latter, being let into possession under and because of tbe mortgage, is in only for tbe purpose of it, to wit, for security. *, * * Tbe fact that the possession is added, as a further security, to tbe security which tbe mortgage of the title gives him, cannot change the lien of tbe mortgage into an estate. The right of tbe mortgagee remains a mere lien, though the power to enforce it against the profits issuing from tbe lands is placed in his bands by letting him into possession. If an estate arises in tbe mortgagee, it is real estate, though the debt of which it is only an incident is personalty. Gan tbe debt and tbe right of possession be severed? May tbe mortgagee assign tbe debt as personalty, and retain tbe right of possession as realty?”
The court assumed that an absolute assignment of the rents for the entire term of the lease is in effect an assignment by the lessor of the lease itself, bringing the assignee into privity with tire lessee, putting him for the purposes and term of the lease in the place of the lessor, subjecting him to the burdens of the covenants on the part of the lessor, and entitling him to the benefits of the covenants on the part of the lessee enforceable during the term, and held that the assignee became the owner of rents, to apply them for the benefit of the lessor toward satisfaction of his debt. “His relation to them,” said the court, “is the same as that of the mortgagee of the land towards the legal title — that of one holding a lien; and, if he .can maintain in his own name a suit to collect them, it must be as a trustee. He is not therefore, an assignee so as to be liable on the covenants in the lease.”
In Calvert et al. v. Bradley et al., 16 How. 580, 14 L. Ed. 1066, the
Washburn on Real Property, § 747, refers to the rule that in England a mortgagee of the lessee’s interest is regarded as an assignee and liable accordingly, though he may not have entered, as concurred in by the courts of New Hampshire and perhaps some other states. But he points out that in California, because of the peculiar character of mortgages iti that state, it has been held that the mortgagee of a term would not be liable upon the covenants in the lease. He regards the weight o f authority as seeming to be that such mortgagee becomes re-; sponsible as assignee when he takes possession under his deed, but not before.
In McKee v. Angelrodt, 16 Mo. 283 (1852), the Supreme Court of Missouri considered the liability of a person to whom a lease has been, assigned by way of mortgage for the payment of rent to the lessor, without such assignee ever having possession of the premises leased. The court reviewed the leading English cases, and recognized the general rule that a mere legal ownership does not make the assignee liable in such cases, without some evidence of his possession or actual agency, and regarded the better rule as holding that the mortgagee of the term of years, who has not taken possession, has not all the legal right, title, and interest of the mortgagor, and therefore is not treated as a complete assignee, chargeable upon the real covenants of the assignor. The court did not attempt to state what rule should be applied where the circumstances show that the mortgagee had taken possession, but their general view seems to have been that, to create any liability to payment, possession in the assignee is essential, and yet that, where there has been assignment of a lease by way of mortgage, such assignment becomes a mere security for the payment of the money, and cited Eaton v. Jaques, Doug. 455, to support the argument that where there has not been possession the assignee of a lease by way of mortgage is not liable to the lessor for rent, and quoted Eord Mansfield in this way:
“Tlie mortgagee never asks -whether the rent be paid; he only looks to his security, and when the principal and interest he paid he reassigns. But, if the plaintiff is right, a mortgagee might be called upon, years after such reassignment, for arrears or breaches of covenant during' reassignment. The consequences would be terrible.”
In Teal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 242, 4 Sup. Ct. 420, 28 L. Ed. 415, the Supreme Court held that under the laws of Oregon a mortgage is a mere security for a debt, and that the mortgagee is not entitled to the
We regard the assignment of the lease of the Peterson estate to the building company as really but a mortgage, and, as airead}7 indicated, as securing the same mortgage debt that had been secured hy the real estate. The instrument recites that upon—
“full performance of all the conditions and obligations of said note and mortgage, and upon the full discharge by said Peterson of all indebtedness to said insurance company accruing under said note and mortgage, this assignment shall be void and of no effect, and thereupon and in that event said company is to reassign to said John H. Peterson and Ona It. Peterson all of its right, title, and interest in and to said lease now acquired under and by virtue of this assignment.”
While taking possession becomes an important matter in determining the rights of the parties, nevertheless it is not conclusive evidence of a complete assignment, so as to make the assignee chargeable on the covenants of the assignor. When it is remembered that there was no assignment of the lease to the trust company, and that the relationship between the trust company and the building company was in its répresentative capacity, and was taken with the intention of protecting the bondholders, for whom it acted, and at the special instance of the building company, we conclude that there never was a privity of estate between the trust company and the insurance company, and that it would be unjust to impose the burdens of the lease made by Peterson to the building company upon the trust company.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.