121 Cal. 199 | Cal. | 1898
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage alleged to have been made on the sixteenth day of November, 1891, by the defendants, Thomas J. Daley and his wife, Sarah M. Daley, to secure a promissory note of that date for twenty-nine thousand three hundred and ninety-five dollars and seventy-three cents, alleged to have been made by the said Daley and his wife. The court rendered judgment foreclosing the mortgage fo-r the amount of the note and interest (with the exception of the amount of three hundred dollars for a certain overdraft, which need not be further considered). Defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new , trial.
The note and mortgage were made and executed by the appel'lant Thomas J. Daley in his own right, and by the appellant Sarah M. Daley by the said Thomas J. Daley, her attorney in fact; and the main contention of appellants is, that the said Thomas had no authority to execute the mortgage as attorney for Sarah. The court below did not render any personal judgment against Sarah on the note, but held that Thomas had authority to execute for her the mortgage, and decreed a foreclosure against her.
On the thirtieth day of September, 1889, the defendant, Sarah M. Daley, duly executed a power of attorney to the defendant, Thomas J. Daley, which upon its face, beyond doubt, authorized him to execute the mortgage in question; but the contention of appellants is, that the mortgage was given to secure a personal indebtedness of Thomas, that the plaintiff was aware of that fact at the time the mortgage was executed, and that, therefore, under certain authorities cited, the mortgage as to Sarah was void. Admitting the principle contended for to be correct, still it is not applicable to this case. The facts are these: On October 10, 1890, the appellant, Thomas J. Daley, was indebted to a corporation, called “The Consolidated Bank,” on five several promissory notes, in the sum of about twenty-five thousand dollars; and on that day he executed to one John Ginty a trust deed of the lands here involved, to secure such indebtedness. Afterward, on December 18, 1890, he made a deed of gift to his wife of all “his right, title, and interest” in said lands. Afterward, the present plaintiff and respondent paid the full amount
To the foregoing facts the principle that an attorney with power to mortgage cannot make a valid mortgage for his own personal debt, and for his own personal advantage alone, does not apply. The deed of trust was a subsisting lien against and a burden upon the lands to which Sarah held the legal title, to the same extent as the lien created by the mortgage; and the mere change in the form of the lien did not change her position. It cannot be said, therefore, that within the authorities cited by appellant the mortgage was made for the sole advantage of the ■attorney in fact. The lien for the personal indebtedness of the .attorney in fact had been created before the deed, the consideration of which was merely love and affection, had been made to Sarah, and before she had any interest in the lands. The facts, therefore, do not show any legal limitation of the express power given in the power of attorney to execute the mortgage. It is ■true that there had been a former deed made by Thomas to his wife in 1888; but as that deed had not been recorded, and as the respondent had no notice of it, it is not to be considered as affecting this ease.
The other point made by appellants is that the mortgage does not contain a sufficient description of the lands sought to be mortgaged. The premises were within a Mexican grant, and the main description is by subdivisions, as though they had been upon public lands and surveyed by the United States government; and the contention is that as government surveys are not made upon the Mexican grants, therefore the description is mean
There are no other points in the case calling for discussion. ■'
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.