55 Cal. 453 | Cal. | 1880
This is a proceeding under the Code of Civil Procedure, (tit. 1, chap. 1, part iii) to review the action of the late District Court of the Fifteenth Judicial District, in appointing a receiver, and the only question for our consideration relates to the power of the Court below to make such appointment.
It appears, from the return of the writ of review issued out of this Court, that on the 14th day of March, 1864, the defendant (in the original suit) executed and delivered to- Danforth N. Barney and Louis McLane a certain mortgage or deed of trust upon its property, to secure .the payment of seven hundred
We find in the mortgage,, or deed of trust, (it is immaterial whether it is a deed of trust or simply a mortgage) a power expressly conferred on the parties of the second part, in case default is made in the payment of the principal or interest of said bonds, to enter upon and take possession of the mortgaged property.
On the 26th of October, 1877, Louis McLane filed his complaint in the late District Court of the Fifteenth Judicial District, averring such default of the mortgagors, a demand and refusal to surrender to him the possession of the mortgaged property, or any part thereof, and praying the appointment of a receiver, etc. On the filing of such complaint, an order to show cause was made by the Court below, and on the 29th day of October, 1877, Louis McLane was appointed a receiver of the property embraced in the mortgage, with full power and authority to take and hold the same, and to exercise the powers over the property conferred by the mortgage or deed, until the further order of the Court, unless the defendant, within fifty days after the service on its agents or attorneys of a copy of the order, pay to the plaintiff the amount due on the unpaid bonds and coupons issued and secured by the mortgage. It is this order that the defendant complains of, and we are now called upon to review its legality on certiorari.
Had the Court below power and jurisdiction to make the order appointing Louis McLane a receiver of the property described in the mortgage ? If such power was vested in the Court, its action must be sustained, however erroneous it may have been, for the writ brings up the proceedings for review only to the extent of inquiring into and determining the question of jurisdiction.
Section 564 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that a receiver may be appointed by the Court in which the action is pending, in all cases where receivers have heretofore been appointed by the usages of Courts of Equity. This is not a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage, and to subject the mortgaged property to sale under the decree of the Court, but it is in the nature of a proceeding to enforce specific performance of the
The case of Ether Shepley et al. v. The Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad Co. et als., 55 Maine, 395, is also in point. This was the case of a mortgage executed by the railroad company to three trustees to secure the payment of certain bonds issued by it, and it was stipulated in the deed that if the company should at any time fail to pay the interest or principal of the bonds according to their tenor, the mortgagees might take the mortgaged property into their actual possession, manage and control the same, and apply the net income and proceeds thereof to the payment of such interest and principal.
It will be seen that the condition of the mortgage in the case in 55th Maine, was substantially the same as the condition in the mortgage in the case now under consideration; and it was there held that the Court had jurisdiction to decree a specific performance of the stipulation in the mortgaged property for the non-payment of the bonds.
In the case of the American Bridge Co. v. Heidelbach, 94 U. S. 798, a company, to secure the payment of its bonds, mortgaged its property and the rents, issues, and profits arising therefrom, with the provision that if there was default in paying the interest, the mortgagees might take possession of the property mortgaged, manage the same, and receive and collect all rents and claims due and to become due to the company. The Court, speaking of the power conferred upon the mortgagees by this instrument, says: “ In this case, upon the default which occurred, the mortgagees had the option to take personal possession of the mortgaged premises, or to file a bill, have a receiver appointed, and possession delivered to him. In either case the income' would thereafter have been theirs.”
To the same effect is the law as stated in the text-books. We will refer only to one—the latest of these: “ A Court of Equity has jurisdiction to order a specific performance of a stipulation in a railroad mortgage, authorizing the trustees to take possession of the mortgaged property for the non-payment of the bonds
But it is unnecessary for us to pursue this subject any further, or to cite any additional cases upon a point which seems to be perfectly well settled by authority.
Wo are of opinion that it was within the power and jurisdiction of the Court below to make the order complained of in this case, and, therefore, this writ should-be discharged.
So ordered.
Myrick, J., McKinstry, J., Ross, J., Sharpstein, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.
[Mr. Justice McKee, not having heard the argument, to ok no part in the decision of this case.]