120 Cal. 680 | Cal. | 1898
Plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a lien upon the real property of defendant C. Bunnell. The Ger-mania Building and Loan Association was made a defendant. It answered, setting up a mortgage upon the property executed to it by Bunnell, and asked that this mortgage be declared a lien prior and superior to that of plaintiff.
The court found defendant Bunnell to be indebted to plaintiff in the sum of seven hundred and fifty-seven' dollars and fifty cents, gave plaintiff judgment for that amount, together with attorney’s fees and costs, decreed to him a lien upon the property superior to that of the loan association, and ordered a sale and a distribution of the proceeds accordingly. From this judgment, and from the order denying it a new trial, defendant, the Ger-mania Building and Loan Association, alone appeals.
By a deed executed on December 5, 1891, plaintiff, the then owner, conveyed to defendant Bunnell the land which is subjected to foreclosure in this suit. The land was overflowed land within the boundaries of a reclamation district. The deed was formally executed and acknowledged by both parties to it, and contained the following clauses, covenants, and conditions:
“In consideration of the premises and of the sum of one hundred dollars to him in hand paid by the party of the second part, and of the conditions, covenants, and stipulations by and on behalf of the party of the second part hereinafter expressed and contained, the party'of the first part has granted and conveyed,” etc. “To have and to hold the same unto the said party of the second part, his heirs and assigns, but upon and subject to the conditions, covenants, and stipulations by and on behalf of the party of the second part hereinafter expressed and contained. And in consideration of the premises the party of the second part hereby covenants, stipulates, and agrees to' and with the party of the first part, his heirs and assigns, that so long as
“That all payments herein agreed to be made by party of the second part to the party, of the first part shall be, and are hereby, made a lien on the land hereby conveyed, and, in case of nonpayment, may be recovered in any action brought by party of the first part to recover the same and foreclose such lien; and in case any such suit be brought, reasonable counsel fees, to be fixed by the court, shall be allowed the plaintiff.”
“That each and all of the covenants, stipulations, and agreements herein contained shall run with and bind the land herein conveyed, and each several acre and fraction of an acre thereof.”
■ The propositions advanced by appellant are three: First, that the agreement is a mere nudum pactum upon which no recovery may be had. Herein it is argued that the plaintiff binds himself to nothing, and that there is no consideration whatever for the defendant Bunnell’s promise to pay. The instrument being in writing not only imports a consideration for its covenants (Civ. Code, sec. 1614), but Bunnell’s agreement to pay under the terms and conditions set forth is expressly declared to be a part of the consideration moving the grantor to the execution of the deed. The burden was upon appellant to show want of consideration (Civ. Code, sec. 1615), and this he has failed to do. It is not of importance, therefore, even if it be true, that there was no obliga
Second, it is contended that appellant’s mortgage was a purchase money mortgage, and as such had priority over plaintiff’s hen. This proposition is untenable for the following reasons: A mortgage, given for the purchase of real property at the time it is conveyed has priority over all other liens created against the purchaser, subject to the operation of the recording laws. Such is the declaration of section 2898 of the Civil Code. This is but the recognition of an equitable principle which was early declared. It came into existence at a time when title, and not a mere hen, passed to the mortgagee by virtue of the mortgage. It was recognized that the vendor who had parted with his land, and had taken to secure part payment of the purchase money a mortgage upon that same land, should not suffer an impairment of his security, and perhaps an absolute loss of a large part of the purchase price, by other rights such as dower, or the right of a judgment creditor attaching to the property in .the brief time during which title was held by the vendee. To save this result equity formulated the fiction that when the deed and mortgage were part of the same transaction, and well-nigh simultaneous in time, the seisin of the vendee was too short to allow the attachment to the property of any such lien or claim. It is said in somewhat technical justification of the fiction that the execution of the deed and the mortgage, being simultaneous acts, the title to the land does not for a single moment rest in the purchaser, but merely passes through him and vests in the mortgagee without stopping at all, and that during such instantaneous passagei liens cannot attach to the title. (Curtis v. Root, 20 Ill. 53; 4 Kent’s Commentaries, 39; Mayburry v. Brien, 15 Pet. 21.)
This equitable principle, where recognized, was frequently extended beyond the vendor in whose interest it was originally formulated, and made applicable to a third person who had furnished the whole or part of the money used in the purchase of the land. In illustration of this may be cited from this state: Dillon v. Byrne, 5 Cal. 455; Lassen v. Vance, 8 Cal. 271; 68 Am. Dec. 322;
But the claims of third persons to have their mortgages upheld as purchase money mortgages have been recognized only when it has been made to appear that the money was loaned to the purchaser for the express purpose, and was used for the express purpose, of paying for the property. Here it is not pleaded nor found that appellant’s mortgage was a purchase money mortgage, nor did appellant offer any evidence that it had advanced the money secured by the mortgage for the sole and express purpose of paying for the property. The only evidence in the case is a declaration by Bunnell that he so used the money, but this is not sufficient. It is not made to appear that he was not at liberty to have used it for any other purpose. Therefore, so far as the record discloses, the loan was, like any other advancement of money to the general use of the borrower, secured by a mortgage upon his realty.
Again, the deed and agreement between the vendor and the vendee was itself of record before the execution of appellant’s mortgage. If it were to be conceded that appellant’s mortgage was a purchase money mortgage, it could take priority only “subject to the operation of the recording laws.” By the operation of those laws there was a subsisting, prior, and valid lien upon the property, with notice of which the appellant was charged at the time he accepted the mortgage.
The third proposition of appellant'is that, notwithstanding the terms of the agreement, the covenant sued upon does not run with the land. ' A determination of this question can be of no consequence to this appellant. Its decision might well be of importance to Bunnell’s grantee or assign, but, so far as concerns the loan association, under the case presented an adjudication in its favor’ upon the proposition would not advantage it. If the contract amounts to no more than a personal promise of Bunnell, still it is his promise to do a certain thing, and as security for his performance he has given to plaintiff a lien upon his land which is here foreclosed.