186 P. 178 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
The action was brought on a written contract for the sale and purchase of an automobile for the sum of $950, $150 to be paid by the defendant at the time of signing the contract, and the balance in certain definite monthly installments. Possession of the machine was delivered to the defendant, but it was provided in the contract that the title was to remain in the plaintiff until all the installments were paid. Paragraph 6 of said contract, which constitutes the basis of this action, reads as follows: "Should the buyer make default in the payment of the said purchase price, or any part thereof, or in the event of the buyer's failure to perform any of the conditions and covenants herein contained, or to pay the cost of said insurance on demand, the seller or assigns may, without notice, declare any and all payments provided for herein to be due and payable at once, and may immediately take possession of said property, whenever found, without process of law, using all necessary force to do so, and retain the same, and all payments previously made by the buyer shall be construed to be and applied as compensation for depreciation in value, and for the use of said property, and the buyer hereby waives and relinquishes all rights to the moneys so paid, and to the said property."
To the complaint, and made a part thereof, was attached said contract. It was alleged that the defendant failed to pay certain of the installments as they fell due, and that $650 of the purchase price remained due and unpaid from the defendant to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff had *765 complied with all the terms of the contract as it had agreed. The action was brought for the balance of the purchase price, and not for the return of the automobile. An attachment was issued in behalf of plaintiff and levied upon the bank account of the defendant. All the proceedings in reference to the issuance and levying of the attachment were in regular form and in accordance with the requirements of sections 537 and 538 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The defendant made a motion to dissolve the attachment upon the ground that it was shown by the complaint and contract on file in said action that the debt was secured by a mortgage or lienor pledge of personal property, and that such security had not become valueless and that no proceedings had been taken to exhaust said security. Affidavits were filed in support thereof, and thereupon the motion was granted, and from the order dissolving the attachment the plaintiff has appealed. The only question in the case is whether it falls within subdivision 1 of said section 537, providing that attachment may issue "in an action upon a contract, express or implied, for the direct payment of money, where the contract is made or is payable in this state, and is not secured by any mortgage or lien upon real or personal property, or any pledge of personal property, or, if originally so secured, such security has, without any act of the plaintiff, or the person to whom the security was given, become valueless." And the only doubt as to the application of said section is whether plaintiff's contract was secured by "any mortgage or lien upon real or personal property or any pledge of personal property." It is admitted that the action is brought upon a contract made payable in this state for the direct payment of money, but it is claimed by respondent that the plaintiff, by reason of the fact that it retained title to the property and had the right to retake it in case of default on the part of defendant in the payment of any of the installments, had security within the contemplation of said section of the code and, therefore, attachment was not a proper remedy.
In the determination of the question it is important to notice carefully the precise terms used in the statute. The law does not provide that no attachment shall issue where the plaintiff has other security for the claim, but it *766
designates the specific kinds of security that will bar the remedy, namely: A mortgage, a lien or a pledge of the property. As to the mortgage, it is quite apparent from the definition of that term in the code that plaintiff had no such security. By the terms of the contract the plaintiff remained the owner of the property, and this necessarily precludes the condition that it could be a mortgagee. [1] A party cannot hold a mortgage on and the legal title to the same property at the same time. A mortgage is defined by the Civil Code, section
[3] The question then arises whether the plaintiff, under the terms of the contract, had a lien to secure the payment of the obligation. As to this it seems to be plain under the law that a vendor's lien does not exist as to personal property, independent of possession. There is no controversy that the defendant at the time of the action had, and ever since the execution of the contract has had, possession of the machine. Therefore, since by the law a lien does not exist independent of possession it would follow, necessarily, that plaintiff did not have that kind of security. Section 3049 of the Civil Code provides as follows: "One who sells personal property has a special lien thereon, dependent on possession, for its price, if it is in his possession when the price becomes payable, and may enforce his lien in like manner as if the property was pledged to him for the price." If his lien depends upon his possession, manifestly the lien would not exist if the possession were in another. Besides, the existence of a lien and ownership as to the same property in the same party at the same time is not in accordance with the legal conception of these terms. A person cannot have a lien upon personal property of which he is the owner. A lien is a charge upon specific property which the holder thereof is entitled to enforce as a security for the performance of an obligation, which exists in his favor against the owner of the property. (Civ. *767 Code, sec. 2874.) It would seem plain, therefore, that plaintiff did not have a lien, as that term is understood in the law, upon said automobile.
[4] It seems equally plain that plaintiff was not secured by a pledge of said property. In order to have such security he must have been the pledgee and in possession of the property. Section
[5] If we are, therefore, to be guided by the plain meaning of the statute, it would follow that plaintiff was entitled to the writ of attachment. The only ground upon which this conclusion could be avoided would be that the said statute contemplates other security as well as those which are specifically mentioned. This position would, however, be in contravention of a familiar principle for the interpretation of statutes, which from the enumerated specification of certain particular ones requires the exclusion of the consideration of other classes. In other words, the statute having specified the three particular kinds of securities, to wit; mortgage, lien, and pledge, by implication there would be excluded any other species. Indeed, we think that the lower court, in holding that this was not a proper case for attachment, has gone outside the plain and simple meaning of the statute. In doing so, it had apparently the support of certain decisions of the courts to which specific reference will hereafter be made. [6] But it seems to be well settled that the statutes permitting and providing for the levying of attachments must be strictly construed and followed. (Kline v. Easton, Eldridge Co.,
As to the cases cited we think Eads v. Kessler,
The particular decision in this state upon which respondent relies is Payne v. Bensley,
We do not see how it can be held, without judicial legislation, by introducing something into the statute which is not contained therein, that the decision can be sustained.
The order is, therefore, reversed.
*772Ellison, P. J., pro tem., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 22, 1919.
All the Justices concurred, except Melvin, J., who was absent.