19 Cal. 330 | Cal. | 1861
Field, C. J. concurring.
This was a bill filed by plaintiff in February, 1856, against one Wm. A. Richardson and others for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage, made by Richardson in his lifetime, of a rancho in Marin county, called the Saucelito Rancho, containing three square leagues, more or less, claimed under a Mexican grant. The mortgage, as alleged, was given to secure three promissory notes, dated
Afterwards, and after certain proceedings—among them a judgment of this Court on appeal—an amended complaint was filed, which set up, among other things, that Richardson requested Ellis to obtain an indorsement of the notes, and an assignment of the mortgage, and to extend the time of payment and reduce the interest ; that the rate of interest due on the notes and mortgage was •actually known to the defendants, apart from the face of the mortgage ; that Richardson owed plaintiff a certain other note of $5,000, dated on the eleventh of June, 1853, with interest at the rate of five per cent, per month; that Throckmorton only held the premises in trust for Richardson, and as agent, subject to the incumibrances, under a deed of August 7th, 1855, which is exhibited; and that other deeds (in the record) of February 9th, 1856, to Throckmorton, were executed to him as agent and for like purposes, and that Throckmorton paid no consideration to Richardson on these : accounts, and that he never paid off these incumbrances.
Throckmorton filed several answers, in which he admits the making of the notes and mortgages, but avers there is no mention of the rate of interest in the mortgages of record, and knows only the rate from the record; claims that on the seventh of August, 1855, he became the purchaser, by good and sufficient deed of conveyance, of all the right, title and interest of Richardson and wife, and his son Stephen, and his daughter Mariana Torres, and her husband Manuel, to the premises ; that by the grant, the land was vested in Richardson and family, and afterwards the land was partitioned—giving the mode, etc.—of which partitioned parcels the different members took possession ; sets up the same facts in regard to the Albion Rancho as in Torres’ answer, and that the land was worth three dollars an acre; sets up that the transfer of the notes and mortgages to Ellis amounted to payment; sets up that the bond of plaintiff was a covenant running with the land, and was transferred to him by deed of February 9th, 1856, under a provision of that deed (in the record) conveying all Richardson’s interest in expectancy ; that plaintiff is insolvent, etc.; that the $5,000 note in the bill was made without authority, etc.
The mortgage from Richardson to plaintiff contains this provision : “ This conveyance is intended as a mortgage to secure the payment of three promissory notes, given by the party of the first part, bearing even date herewith, one of which notes is for the sum of two thousand three hundred and sixty dollars, ($2,360) and is payable to the order of L. Etoubleau, six months after the date thereof, at the banking house of Messrs. Tallant & Wilde, at San Francisco. Another of which notes is for the sum of three thousand five hundred and forty dollars, ($3,540) and is payable to the order of Charles Meyers, six months after the date thereof, at the banking house of Messrs. Tallant & Wilde, at San Francisco. And the other of which notes is for the sum of three thousand three hundred and twenty dollars, ($3,320) and is payable to the order of Jeremiah Clarke, six months after the date thereof, at the banking house of Messrs. Tallant & Wilde, at San Francisco. And if the payment of the amount of the said notes shall be made at maturity, then these presents shall become void, and the estate hereby granted shall cease and utterly determine; but if default shall be made in the payment of the said sum of money, or the interest, or any part thereof, at the times hereinbefore specified for the payment thereof, the said party of the first part in such case does hereby authorize and fully empower the said Jeremiah Clarke, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, to sell the said hereby granted premises at public auction, and convey the same to the purchasers in fee simple, and out of the money arising from such sale to retain the principal and interest which shall then be due on the said note, together with all costs and charges, and pay the overplus, if any, to the said party of the first part, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns.”
The bond executed by plaintiff to Avis is as follows:
“ Know all men by these presents, that I, Barton Ricketson, of the city of San Francisco and county of San Francisco, State of California, am firmly bound and held to Wm. Parsons Avis, of the city and county aforesaid, in the sum of $32,000, money of the United States, to be paid to the said Wm. Parsons Avis, his*349 administrators or assigns, which payment, well and truly to be paid, I bind myself, my heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, firmly by these presents, sealed with my seal, this second day of June, A. D. 1853.
“ The consideration of this obligation is such, that if the above bound Barton Ricketson, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, do well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto the above named Wm. Parsons Avis, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, the full sum of $16,168, like money aforesaid, together with one-half of the profits that may arise from a sale of 16,168 acres of land, situate and being a part or parcel of land on the Albion Rancho, as described in a deed this day made to the said Ricketson by Wm. A. Richardson, for the purpose of effecting sales, if possible—otherwise, said land to be reconveyed to the said Wm. Parsons Avis within one year from date—then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full virtue.
“ Barton Ricketson. [l. s.]
“ Signed and sealed in the presence of B. H. Allen.”
The bond was executed in consideration of a deed for 16,180 acres of the Albion Rancho, by Richardson, the object of the conveyance, as plaintiff contends, being to enable the plaintiff' to sell the land, and to appropriate the proceeds, or so much as necessary, to the payment of the note of $5,000 mentioned in the pleadings. On the nineteenth of April, 1854, Avis made an indorsement upon this bond as follows: “ It is agreed that Barton Ricketson may convey the land within described to Messrs. Compton & Davidson of San Francisco, or to whomsoever Wm. A. Richardson may appoint, after giving full satisfaction for a certain bond of which the within is a copy, and of all my claims in the premises.
“ William Parsons Avis.
“ Witness: Chas. B. A. Adams.”
It seems that, on the twenty-ninth of September, 1853, Avis, the attorney in fact for Richardson, addressed to the plaintiff a letter as follows:
“ San Francisco, September 29th, 1853.
“ Barton Ricketson, Esq., New Bedford : Dear Sir : The*350 affairs of Capt. Win. A. Richardson are in process of liquidation by his friends, Messrs. Compton & Davidson, residents of this city, who request an immediate reconveyance of the 16,168 acres of the Albion Rancho, which I deeded to you in June last. Please deed the same to me in accordance with the express understanding, as per bond, and inclose the same with the note for $5,000 to your agent, Mr. Wood, with whom a settlement will be made on its receipt.
“ Very respectfully and truly yours, etc.,
“ William Parsons Avis.”
And it seems from the proof that the plaintiff did, on the nineteenth of April, 1854, execute a deed of this Albion Rancho property to Compton & Davidson.
The main points made upon this state of facts are these:
1. That the mortgage of the plaintiff was good only, at most, for the sums expressly mentioned in the mortgage and legal interest on those sums, from the maturity of the notes, and not good, as against the vendees of Richardson, for the conventional interest mentioned in the notes.
2. That the facts in regard to the bond and the plaintiff’s connection with the land, part of the Albion Rancho, and his failure to convey the same within the year, constitute a liability on his part to Richardson, or those representing him, or his privies in estate, for the amount of $16,180, which sum is to be set off against the mortgage as of the date when due.
Both of these propositions are plainly indefensible.
It is true the mortgage does not describe, or profess to describe with exactness, the debts secured by it. It describes the notes, except as to the rate of interest, and provides that on default of payment of the sums mentioned, with interest at their maturity, then the mortgagee may sell the mortgaged premises. It is not necessary that literal exactness should be used in describing the indebtedness in a mortgage security, if the description be correct as far as it goes, and if enough be said to direct the attention of parties dealing with the property to sources of correct and full information, provided that these persons be not deceived, or subject to be misled
2. The other point is equally misconceived. It has been seen that Avis, although acting as agent for Richardson, took the bond in question from Rieketson in his own name, and that it imported a direct obligation of conditional reconveyance of the land to him, Avis, within the year. If Avis had a right to make this contract, it would seem he had the same right to discharge, modify or control its obligation. He might, from anything that we can perceive, have entirely released Rieketson from compliance. He directed him, as it seems by the letter which has been noticed, to reconvey to him ; and though this was not done in form, the reason appears from the record, by very fair inference from established facts. It seems that Compton and Davidson were the agents as well as the mortgagees of Richardson, and had control of his affairs and property ; and not only permission, but express authority were given to Rieketson to convey the property to them. Richardson, after this, holding, as he claimed, the equitable title to this land, or the right to call for a conveyance of it—the land not having been sold within the year—treated the land afterwards as his, as appears from his disposition of it in his subsequent deeds, and in his will. But there is another answer: It has been seen that by the agreement indorsed on the bond, Rieketson was empowered to convey the land to “ Messrs. Compton and Davidson, of San Francisco, or to whomsoever Wm. A. Richardson may appoint.” It is plausibly argued that this changed the terms of the bond, or dispensed so far with its obligations as to place the reconveyance in the hands or power of Richardson himself; and it seems that he exercised the privilege of directing the course of the title. But it is not neces
3. There is nothing in the other points deserving of serious consideration. The record does not show that the notes and mortgage were not presented to the executor, and the mere omission to show that they were, in the face of the express admission in the first-answer of Torres and the stipulation of the counsel, is not enough to induce us to affirm a judgment which evidently was rendered on different principles and without any reference to this circumstance. The statute does not require a presentation of the notes, etc., to be postponed until after the publication of notice by the executor, but the holder may anticipate such publication.
Decree reversed and cause remanded for a decree in pursuance of the principles of this opinion.