123 Cal. 689 | Cal. | 1899
Action for an accounting. Defendant demurred to the complaint on the grounds: 1. Insufficiency of facts; 2. Want of jurisdiction of the subject of the action. The court sustained the demurrer and gave defendant judgment dismissing the action from which plaintiff appeals. The complaint sets forth the following facts: Plaintiff and defendant are corporations organized under the laws of California, having their principal place of business at San Francisco. On and after January 15, 1892, plaintiff was and now is the owner of a certain salmon cannery situated in the district of Alaska, and until possession thereof was given to defendant plaintiff was operating said cannery; about January 15, 1892, plaintiff made its note to defendant for twenty-five thousand dollars, payable January 15, 1893, with annual interest at ten per cent; at the delivery of said note and to secure the same, and as part of the transaction, plaintiff executed an instrument in writing purporting to transfer to defendant certain personal property then at or near said cannery and then being used by plaintiff in operating the same; as part of the same transaction it was mutually agreed that defendant should take possession of said cannery and of said per
1. Respondent contends that the complaint does not state a cause of action against it. The contention of respondent is, that the complaint shows that certain property was mortgaged to secure the payment of twenty-five thousand dollars; that after the time fixed in the original agreement for payment the mortgaged property was surrendered to respondent, an accounting was had and a new agreement made, which recites that the respondent “is now the owner” of the property and proceeds to state the terms upon which the same would be sold to appellant; that this recital is conclusive evidence of the fact that appellant had, prior to the date of the agreement, transferred the property to respondent; that this recital operates to estop appellant from
As we read the complaint, the averments of which are admitted by the demurrer to be true, defendant came into possession of the property as security for the payment of the original indebtedness of twenty-five thousand dollars; no transfer of the property other than as a mortgage is alleged or anywhere in the complaint appears, and plaintiff alleges ownership of the property at all the times mentioned. At the accounting upon the first season’s use of the property by defendant a balance was still due defendant. A new agreement was then entered into, which, taken in all its parts, bears, we think, inherent evidence that defendant was not in fact the owner of the property, although the agreement begins with the recital that defendant “is the owner” of the property. But, conceding that the contract bears no visible earmarks of a mortgage, still, if the fact be, as the complaint alleges and the demurrer admits, that it was entered into for the purpose of securing to defendant the payment of the balance then due to it, no form of words, however adroitly used to conceal this purpose, can estop plaintiff from pleading and proving the fact. As was said in Russell v. Southard, 12 How. 139: “To insist on what was really a mortgage, as a sale, is in equity a fraud, which cannot be successfully practiced under the shelter of any written papers, however precise and complete they may appear to be.” It is settled beyond controversy that though a deed be absolute in form, yet if in fact it be intended by the parties to it as security for the payment of money or the performance of any lawful act, it is a mortgage; and we know of no principle of estoppel which can be invoked to prevent the fact from being disclosed. It is the real character, not the form, of the instrument to which the court will look. (Civ. Code, secs. 2924, 2925; Husheon v. Husheon, 71 Cal. 407; Campbell v. Freeman, 99 Cal. 546; Taylor
The demurrer admits the allegation that plaintiff is the owner of the property, that the agreement was for the purpose of securing the amount mentioned in it, and, that being so, the argument of respondent based upon its assumed ownership of the property is unavailing. The fact may be as respondent claims, but that fact must be put in issue and tried as an issue of fact.
The claim of respondent that where time is of the essence of the contract the vendee can claim no right when he has failed to pay or to tender payment within the stipulated time, proceeds upon the assumption that the relation of vendor and vendee exists. But this is mere assumption, based upon the recital of the contract that respondent “is the owner” of the property and that it imports merely a right in appellant to purchase. But the complaint alleges, and the demurrer admits the fact to be, that the relation is that of mortgagor and mortgagee. The clause as to time being of the essence cannot “end appellant’s rights,” as is claimed by respondent, for the reason, if no other, that the complaint alleges that respondent held and operated the property, during the canning seasons following that of 1893, under the agreement as it had done in 1893 and 1893.
3. Respondent contends that the court was without jurisdiction. This contention is made upon the ground that the action is in part to redeem from a mortgage upon land, and therefore is not within the jurisdiction of the superior court of this state, the property being in Alaska (Const., art. VI, sec. 5); and that no accounting can be ordered until the court shall have first determined that respondent is a mortgagee, which latter it has not
The principle of equity is that generally the decree operates in personam, and operates in rem only by virture of some statute conferring jurisdiction; and if the court has jurisdiction of'the person of defendant the decree may run against him though it may affect property outside the jurisdiction of the court. In Sutphen v. Fowler, 9 Paige, 280, the court compelled the execution of a deed to land situated outside the jurisdiction of the court where the defendant was within its jurisdiction. In Smith v. Davis, 90 Cal. 25, 25 Am. St. Rep. 92, this court upheld the appointment, by the decree of a superior court, of a trustee in respect of lands situated in Washington territory and directing him to' execute the trust. In this case numerous illustrations are given of the decrees of equity courts acting in personam and only collaterally in rem. In further illustration of the principle see Smith v. Smith, 88 Cal. 572; Le Breton v. Superior Court, 66 Cal. 27; White v. Adler (Cal. 1896), 42 Pac. Rep. 1070.)
The judgment should be reversed.
Britt, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is reversed. Henshaw, J., Temple, J., McFarland, J.