3 P.2d 48 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
This action was instituted by the plaintiff to foreclose a vendor's lien upon lot 7, block 1 of tract No. 5647 in the city of Beverly Hills, county of Los Angeles.
The record shows that the defendants Martin H. Mead, Theresa Mead and B.D. O'Niel defaulted, and that a separate judgment was entered against them. Execution thereafter issued and the interest of said defendants in the *608 property above mentioned was sold by the sheriff of Los Angeles County, and a deed thereto executed by the sheriff and delivered to the plaintiff. The judgment upon which execution was issued appears upon its face to have been entered only against the defaulting defendants above named, and contained among other provisions the following limitations as to its effect, to wit: "And it is further adjudged and decreed that this judgment does not affect the rights of any of the defendants not herein specially mentioned, if any such rights any of them have, and as to all defendants other than Martin H. Mead, Theresa Mead and B.D. O'Neil it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that this action may proceed."
Upon the trial of this action the only evidence in support of the plaintiff's title was the sheriff's deed based upon sale, pursuant to a judgment entered only against the defaulting defendants. The complaint in the action was amended so as to transform the same into the nature of an action to quiet title. The California Mortgage Company, corporation, one of the defendants and appellants, claims to be the owner of the premises involved, pursuant to sale made by the trustee of a trust deed executed by Martin H. Mead and Theresa Mead, his wife, to secure the repayment of $10,000, and that the interest of the appellant in and to the property has never been foreclosed; that the court never established the existence of a vendor's lien in the plaintiff as against the Mortgage Company; that plaintiff waived her vendor's lien as against the Mortgage Company, and that if plaintiff has any interest in the property, it is simply to the extent of enforcing a vendor's lien as superior to the rights of the appellant holding under the deed of trust, and that the deed made pursuant to the judgment to which we have referred established plaintiff's rights only as against the defaulting defendants.
The record shows the following facts: That the plaintiff was, on the twenty-fifth day of January, 1926, the owner of the property hereinbefore mentioned; that on said date an escrow agreement was entered into by virtue of which the plaintiff agreed to sell the described premises to the defendant Mead, for the sum of $3,600. This agreement was delivered to and held by the Beverly National Bank. The escrow agreement provided for the delivery of a deed by *609 the plaintiff to the defendants upon certain payments being made. On January 26, 1926, the defendant Martin H. Mead and his wife entered into a contract with the Security Finance Company for a building loan in the sum of $10,000, for the construction of a building upon the lot described, and executed a deed of trust conveying the property to the California Title Insurance Company, one of the defendants and an appellant herein. The agreement provided for the recording of the deed of trust after certain facts had been ascertained not material to be mentioned herein. The deed of trust contained the usual covenants providing for the sale by the trustee in the event that repayment of the loan was not made according to the provisions of the deed. On February 19, 1926, following the escrow agreement to which we have referred, a deed was recorded by the terms of which the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant Martin H. Mead, the premises involved in this action. On February 15, 1926, the appellant Security Finance Corporation sold and indorsed the note, secured by the trust deed to which we have made reference, to the appellant California Mortgage Company. The trust deed appears to have been recorded on the first day of February, 1926. The assignment of the note of the Security Company and of its interest in the trust deed to the California Mortgage Company did not appear of record at the time of the beginning of this action. Thereafter the Mortgage Company advanced to the Meads the sum of $9,300. Some time after the beginning of this action, the amount due under the trust deed not having been repaid, the property was sold by the trustee named in the trust deed, at which sale the California Mortgage Company became the purchaser.
On December 1, 1926, the plaintiff began this action to foreclose a vendor's lien, as hereinbefore stated, the record showing that only $2,500 had been paid on account of the purchase price of the lot involved, and that there remained due the sum of $1,000. At the time of the beginning of the action the record shows that the lot had been conveyed to B.D. O'Niel, who held the title subject to the deed of trust mentioned herein. On January 14, 1927, the default of the defendants Martin H. Mead, Theresa Mead and B.D. O'Niel was entered. On January 27, 1927, judgment was entered against the defaulting defendants, as herein stated. On *610 February 1, 1927, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint herein. On February 19, 1927, answers were filed to said amended complaint by the California Title Insurance Company and Security Finance Company. On March 7, 1927, sale of the premises was had under the separate default judgment entered against the defendants Meads and O'Niel. On June 3, 1927, the California Mortgage Company, appellant herein, served under the fictitious name of John Doe Company, filed its answer; on March 8, 1928, the case came on for trial; on March 8, 1928, the sheriff executed and delivered a deed purporting to convey the premises to the plaintiff, based upon the default judgment to which we have heretofore referred; on the same date this cause came on for trial the plaintiff filed a supplemental complaint which was deemed denied; on March 26, 1928, the appellant California Title Insurance Company, issued its trustee's deed to the California Mortgage Company, purporting to convey the premises according to a sale made pursuant to the trust deed to which we have heretofore referred; on June 22, 1928, the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law; this was followed by motions on the part of the appellants to vacate the judgment to amend the conclusions of law, and also motions for new trial.
We do not need to follow the respective assignments of the appellant as to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings, or as to the insufficiency of the findings to support the judgment, as the whole case rests upon one question, to wit: Under the admitted facts which we have set forth, was the effect of the sale made by the sheriff, based upon a default judgment entered against the defendants Mead and O'Niel, expressly limited as to them, such as to bar and exclude the interests of any of the appellants in and to the premises involved? The respondents, in support of the judgment, call our attention to the provisions of section
The case of Anderson v. Alexander,
[1] As we read the record in this case we do not think the action, either as set forth in the original complaint or in the supplemental pleadings, seeking to change the form of the action to one quieting title, is governed by the provisions of section
In 17 California Jurisprudence, page 718, section 23, the law is thus stated: "A vendor's implied lien after conveyance is created by law and not by contract of the parties, as are mortgages. It is not a specific and absolute charge on the land, but a mere equitable right to resort to it upon failure of payment by the vendee, that is, it is, in its nature, a personal privilege, unassignable, which the vendor can assert only in a suit brought for the purpose of having it decreed and enforced." It is further held in the same section that where the title is retained, the relationship of mortgagor and mortgagee does not exist, as the section reads: "Such contract does not establish the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee; the vendor's security is something stronger than a mortgage, because the legal title is retained as security, — something that a mortgagee never has. . . . The lien of a purchase-money mortgage and a vendor's lien have some features in common, but are not identical." And as further said in 25 Cal. Jur. 740: "The lien is a creature of equity established solely for the security of the vendor after he has executed a conveyance to the purchaser. It does not depend upon an agreement of the parties or any intention on the part of the vendor to create or retain it, but is presumed to exist unless a contrary intention of the vendor is clearly manifested. The lien arises at the time of the sale and transfer of the legal title, without payment of the consideration, and though not evidenced by any writing or public record, it continues to exist after an absolute conveyance of the property, unless the vendor has taken security." And further: "The lien is not a specific absolute charge upon the property, giving no right of entry or title, but is simply a right to resort to the property upon a failure of payment by the purchaser. In other words, it, strictly speaking, is not a lien but is a mere equity, capable of acquiring the force and effect of a lien under certain circumstances." *614
That the provisions of section
[2] The contention is made that the Mortgage Company acquired no interest under and by virtue of the trustee's sale and conveyance of the premises. We do not need to determine the merits of this contention, as it in nowise affects the judgment that should be entered herein, for the simple reason that if the Mortgage Company has not succeeded to the title held by the California Title Insurance Company, then the Title Insurance Company is still interested as the holder of the title to the premises, and unless judgment of foreclosure of the vendor's lien claimed by the plaintiff was entered as against the Title Company, its interest still exists. But there is a provision of the code covering this question. Section
In the case at bar the record shows that the Mortgage Company did come into the action, and it came into the action as successor to the interest of the Title Insurance Company. That a purchaser pendente lite need not be substituted appears from the section to which we have referred, and also is supported by the following cases: Sears v. Ackerman,
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to permit the parties to amend their pleadings so as to fully tender for determination all the equities involved in this action.
Thompson (R.L.), J., and Preston, P.J., concurred. *616