14 P.2d 510 | Cal. | 1932
THE COURT.
This is an action to subject the unexpended balance of a building loan to an equitable lien in favor of a materialman. Defendants A.W. Menkins and Violet Menkins, his wife, were owners of a lot, upon which they desired to erect an apartment house. They secured a loan of $16,000 from defendant Meline Bond and Mortgage Company, secured by a first deed of trust on the property, recorded June 26, 1928. Two other trust deeds in the amount of $6,000 each were also recorded in favor of other persons, on July 23, 1928. These instruments were all recorded prior to the commencement of the work and were therefore prior to mechanics' liens. During the period of construction a number of payments were made to laborers and materialmen, including plaintiff. In March, 1929, the building was completed. The amount then due plaintiff was $2,705.04. Further sums for labor and materials were owing to other parties. The balance of the loan, $3,535.63, was insufficient to cover them all. Plaintiff and other claimants filed liens against the building. The defendant mortgage company thereupon, as permitted by its loan contract with the owners, kept the said balance, using it to reduce the amount of the principal and interest due on the loan. Thereafter the owners defaulted, and defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company, trustee under the first deed of trust, elected to sell the property. Plaintiff then commenced this action to enjoin the sale and to subject the unexpended balance in the loan fund to a lien in its favor. Other mechanics' lien claimants were joined as defendants.
The encumbrances, i.e., the first, second and third deeds of trust, were greater than the value of the property, with the result that the mechanics' liens were worthless.
The theory of plaintiff was that it had relied upon the loan in extending credit to the owners, and that the facts of the case were such as to justify the imposition of the *449
lien under the rule of Smith v. Anglo-California Trust Co.,
[1] The Smith case, as appears from the foregoing quotation, was decided upon the dual grounds that the owner and the lender were estopped by their conduct to withhold the fund, and that the claimants had an equitable lien thereon. The essential basis of the opinion is the justifiable reliance upon the fund by the lien claimants. If similar reliance appears in the instant case, the former decision is controlling.
The trial court found, in substance, that plaintiff in supplying its materials relied solely upon the personal credit of defendant owners, and not upon any representations or conduct of defendant mortgage company; and that the latter defendant made no representations and did nothing to influence the furnishing of the materials. We are of the opinion that these findings are not supported by the record. Witnesses for plaintiff included H.F. Hopkins, credit manager, B.R. Simms, the salesman who solicited the contract, and H.W. Simmons, collector. The sole witness for defendant mortgage company was J.T. Zeeman, in charge of its *451 escrow department. Defendant suggests that the court believed its witness and disbelieved contrary statements of plaintiff's witnesses. However, disregarding all evidence upon which there is conflict, the following facts appear from the testimony: The defendant owner requested plaintiff to furnish materials for the job, and plaintiff proceeded to investigate, first, the credit of said defendant, and, second, the encumbrances on the property. Discovering that the owner was insolvent and that the property was burdened with an indebtedness in excess of its value, plaintiff refused to take the contract. The defendant owner then informed plaintiff that a building loan had been obtained from the mortgage company and that materials and labor would be paid for out of the fund derived from said loan. Witnesses for plaintiff testified that they checked this fact by several conversations with Zeeman, and the latter admitted having one phone conversation with Hopkins to this effect. The deed of trust evidencing the loan was on record, and this was checked by Hopkins. During the progress of the work several payments were received by plaintiff from Zeeman, i.e., from the escrow. Zeeman himself testified that in a conversation with Simms and the owner he said that the mortgage company would pay plaintiff after satisfactory completion if there remained enough money to cover the other claims; and that in another conversation with Simms just after completion of the building he said that the company would pay all claims against the job if the various laborers and subcontractors would prorate their claims.
Despite the denial of Zeeman that any promise was made, prior to completion of the building, to pay any of the claims, the evidence set forth above brings this case clearly within the rule of Smith v. Anglo-California Trust Co., supra. There was in that case no greater evidence of justifiable reliance upon the fund than appears herein. The distinguishing facts of the two cases are not, in our opinion, significant. The principal difference urged by defendant is that in the Smith case the conflict was between the administratrix of the borrower and the lien claimants, while in the instant case the borrower, Menkins, makes no claim to the balance. It may be noted that here, by the application of the balance to the reduction of the loan, the borrower profited. However, the equitable considerations are identical *452
with those presented in the former case. The defendant mortgage company, having received the benefit of plaintiff's performance in the form of a completed building and therefore a more valuable security for its note, is not justified in withholding or appropriating to any other use money originally intended to be used to pay for such performance, and relied upon by plaintiff in rendering its performance. The theory of equitable lien, as laid down in the Smith case, is quite broad (see 17 Cal. L. Rev. 411), and it is fully applicable to the instant case. (See, also,Community Lumber Co. v. Chute,
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the lower court to make findings and enter judgment in favor of plaintiff in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Rehearing denied.