105 P. 614 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1909
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage. The promissory note to secure which the mortgage was given became due July 13, 1900, and would be barred by lapse of time July 13, 1904. The complaint was filed October 14, 1907. Defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that the action was barred by the statute of limitations; the demurrer was sustained and defendant had judgment accordingly. The appeal is from this judgment.
The contention of appellant is that defendant acknowledged the indebtedness in writing before the statute had run, and hence the court erred in sustaining the demurrer. The complaint alleged that no part of the principal or interest *525 of the note had been paid except interest to October 13, 1899. Paragraph XI of the complaint is as follows:
"That subsequent to the first day of March, 1904, and prior to the thirteenth day of July, 1904, to wit, on or about the first day of April, 1904, said defendant C. S. Stephens voluntarily rendered and delivered to the assessor of the said county of San Joaquin the statement required by the provisions of section 3629 of the Political Code of the state of California, for the purpose of assessment of property owned by him or in his possession or under his control on the first Monday in March, 1904. That said statement was in writing and was signed and subscribed by the said C. S. Stephens, and was made by him under oath, which oath was subscribed to the said statement, and that said statement purported to set forth all property subject to taxation, owned, claimed, possessed or controlled by him at 12 o'clock noon on the first Monday in March, 1904, and which had not already been assessed that year, and that said statement among other property listed as belonging to the said C. S. Stephens, designated and described the real property hereinbefore described, and that by and in said statement it was by said C. S. Stephens in writing stated and declared that the said real property was subject to the lien of the mortgage above alleged, and that a mortgage upon said real property was held by the mortgagee above referred to in the sum of five thousand dollars (5,000), and that the interest of the mortgagee under said mortgage in and to the premises therein and hereinabove described was pursuant to said statement assessed to this plaintiff for the fiscal year for which said statement was rendered as aforesaid, and that this plaintiff paid the taxes under such assessment."
The acknowledgment relied upon was made before the statute had run, and if sufficient the action was in time. Section
Upon the question as to the character of the acknowledgment or promise, our supreme court has held that it must be a direct, distinct, unqualified and unconditional admission of the debt which the party is liable and willing to pay. (Pierce v. Merrill,
In Kyle v. Wells,
In Farrell v. Palmer,
Appellant makes a distinction between an acknowledgment or promise given before the statute has run and one given after it has run, which latter was the case in Biddel v. Brizzolara,
It is further claimed that, conceding the rule to be as contended by respondent, the acknowledgment to the county assessor for the purpose of relieving the defendant of a portion of his taxes, "is sufficiently connected with the mortgagee to allow him to rely upon it as a waiver of the statute." We do not agree with appellant in this contention. We incline to appellant's view that the statement made to the assessor was voluntary, for, as we read the statute pleaded (Pol. Code, sec. 3629), it would seem to be the duty of the mortgagee to return the mortgage indebtedness as part of his property, and that it cannot be regarded as the property of the mortgagor or that there is any duty put upon him to return it. His object in doing so is to secure a reduction pro tanto of his taxable property and to avoid the possibility of its being overlooked by the assessor and the burden cast upon the land instead of the mortgagee. The mortgage is the property of the mortgagee, whose duty it is to return it *530 for taxation. But however this may be, the return made by the mortgagor was to the assessor for his information alone, and had no necessary connection with the mortgagee, and there is no presumption that the mortgagee knew of it or acted upon it, and there is no allegation that it had any knowledge of it until the complaint was prepared, which was three years after this statement was made, or that it was with intention that it be communicated to the mortgagee. It seems to us that the assesssor stood in no different relation to the mortgagee in the matter than any stranger to whom such a statement or acknowledgment has been made.
The judgment is affirmed.
Burnett, J., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 16, 1909.