123 Cal. 118 | Cal. | 1898
Action to quiet title. The court gave judgment that of the property in controversy plaintiff is the owner of one thousand and twenty-seven and three-fourths sixteen hundred and nineteenths, and defendants of five hundred and ninety-one and one-fourth sixteen hundred and nineteenths, undivided. Plaintiff appeals on the judgment-roll from that part of the judgment awarding an interest to defendants and quieting defendants’ title thereto.
The findings set forth the sources of title of plaintiff and defendants as follows:
In May, 1893, one Gray and others brought an action to foreclose a vendor’s lien for $1,300 on the property in question
On March 16, 1893, plaintiff purchased from said Conly a promissory note executed by the corporation for the sum of $14,188.80, paying Conly therefor $1,000. Plaintiff was then a stockholder and director in the corporation; May 13, 1893, plaintiff brought suit on the note against the corporation and obtained judgment May 24, 1893, for $14,363.79, and on October 20, 1893, the sheriff sold all the interest of the corporation in the property, the subject of this action, as well as certain other real property, and issued his certificate of sale therefor; and on September 24, 1896, delivered to plaintiff a sheriff’s deed to all said property. This will be referred to as the Tilley-Conley judgment.
On November 24, 1893, defendant Bonney obtained a judgment against the corporation for $1,194.30, which was that day duly entered in the records of said court, and remaining wholly unpaid; on February 20, 1896, Bonney caused execution to issue thereon, and on December 18, 1895, caused all of the real property of the corporation to be sold, including that in question, and Bonney became the purchaser for the amount of his judgment, which was fully satisfied upon the records of the court. No redemption being made, a deed was issued on July 11, 1896, to Bonney, which was duly recorded. This will be referred to
On November 24, 1893, Bonney obtained another judgment against said corporation for the sum of $1,144.80, on which execution issued December 18, 1895, followed by sheriff’s sale of all the property of said corporation, including that in question, and Bonney became the purchaser and took certificate of sale. No redemption being made, the sheriff made a deed to Bonney July 11, 1896, which was duly recorded, and the execution was returned fully satisfied,as was the judgment also satisfied. This will be referred to as Bonney judgment No. 2. On September 22, 1896, Bonney conveyed an undivided half interest in said premises to defendant Cox.
On January 26, 1894, Bonney brought an action against plaintiff in this action, alleging that both of the Tilley judgments were fraudulent and praying that the Bonney judgments be declared superior to Tilley’s. At the trial Bonney had judgment April 13, 1894, adjudging that, as against the property now in question, the Tilley-Gray judgment “was only a valid lien for the sum of $775, with interest at seven per cent from September 18, 1893, and as to that amount it was a prior lien, upon the property described in the complaint herein, to the judgments of Bonney (No. 1 and No. 2) hereinbefore referred to, and that as to the remainder of said judgment over and above $775 and interest, the said judgment of April 13, 1894, was silent.” It was further decreed that “the judgment dated May 24, 1893, in the case of Tilley against said corporation (the Tilley-Conly judgment) was valid, and that Tilley was entitled to have his judgment on the Conly note enforced against the property of the corporation on an equality with said Bonney.” The findings, then, show that Bonney appealed to this court from that judgment and it was here adjudged that the Tilley-Conly judgment “could only be enforced against the property of the corporation on an equality with Bonney for the amount of $1,000, interest and costs, being the amount which Tilley paid for the note, and in other respects the said judgment of April 13, 1894, in Bonney v. Tilley, was affirmed, but it was ordered modified
Defendants in their answer allege that the sales under the Tilley-Conly judgment of May 24, 1893, and the Tilley-Gray judgment of September 18, 1893, were and are invalid, because they were subsequently modified by decree of this court on appeal, and defendants pray that these judgments be vacated and thait 'all certificates of sale and deeds executed by virtue of such judgments be canceled and declared invalid.
There were no findings or decree relative to these allegations. The conclusions of law found relate only to the proportion, as first above stated, to which each party is entitled to the property in question; and the decree merely quiets the title of each in the proportion named.
Appellant disclaims all knowledge as to how the trial judge arrived at the denominator, to wit, $1,619, or as to the source whence the two numerators were derived. Respondents do not undertake to enlighten us upon that question. The denominator corresponds in amount with the bid by plaintiff at the sale under the Tilley-Gray judgment. We are unable to discover the source of the two numerators. The denominator apparently represents the entire property in dispute, and the two numerators the respective interests of plaintiff and defendants therein, but we
¡Plaintiff, as we have seen, claims under the sale of the property upon the Tilley-Gray judgment of September 18, 1893.. This sale was made October 19, 1893, and the sheriff issued! his certificate of sale. There was no redemption, and after six. months the sheriff made his deed to Tilley. Bonney brought, his action January 26, 1894, to have this Tilley-Gray judgment, and the Tilley-Conly judgment declared void, and his, Bonney’s superior thereto. This action was brought within the six; months’ period of redemption, but without any offer to redeem,, and resulted in a judgment given April 13, 1894, that the TilleyGray judgment was a valid prior lien for the sum of $775, with interest, upon the property described, but the judgment was-silent as to the balance of the Tilley-Gray judgment. At this-time there was outstanding a certificate of sale, on which the-time for redemption had not elapsed, showing that Tilley hack purchased the property for $1,619, being the full amount of theTilley-Gray judgment, with interest and costs. Bonney appealed to this court, and on October 4, 1895, the decision of the-court was filed. (Bonney v. Tilley, 109 Cal. 346.)
The point was raised in Bonney v. Tilley, supra, at the argument here, that a vendor’s lien is not assignable, and, therefore, Tilley’s right to the vendor’s lien which was held by Gray et al. was destroyed by the assignment to Tilley. Upon the question this court did not distinctly decide that the vendor’s-lien was lost by assignment, but the court said: “If, therefore,, that part of the judgment foreclosing the vendor’s lien were eliminated, there would still be left a valid judgment which was a lien on all the real property of the corporation, and was-prior and superior to the lien of plaintiff’s judgments.” All that we can find decided by this court, as to the Tilley-Gray judgment, was that it became a prior lien for the sum of $775,. whether there was a vendor’s lien or not, and this was an affirmance of the judgment below so far as the Tilley-Gray judgment was concerned. The effect, we think, was to leave in the* hands of Tilley a certificate of sale of the premises in question which could not be avoided by statutory redemption, because-the time for redemption had expired. ¡Respondent urges that
We find nothing in Southern Cal. etc. Co. v. Ocean Beach Hotel Co., 94 Cal. 217, 28 Am. St. Rep. 115, cited by respondents, in conflict with this view of the sale. The sheriff proceeded regularly, as the findings show, under an order of sale to enforce the Tilley-Gray judgment. The purpose was to enforce a valid prior lien. The function of the order was to subject the property in question to sale to pay the judgment, and it was equally efficacious to accomplish that object whether the judgment gave a vendor’s lien or a general lien prior to Bonney’s. To hold that Tilley’s certificate of sale was vacated on the assumption that he did not have a vendor’s lien, but did have a prior judgment lien, would result in just what seems to have happened here; namely, to place all the judgments of both Tilley and Bonney on an equality, and take from Tilley his right of priority of lien on the property purchased by him, to which this court held he was entitled.
There is another feature of the case deserving attention. Besides the Tilley-Gray judgment there were three others—one, the Tilley-Conly judgment, for $1,000, in favor of Tilley; and two in favor of Bonney, one for $1,194.30, and one for $1,144.80. As to these they were held to be of equal rank between themselves upon all the assets of the corporation. Both Tilley and Bonney obtained certificates of sale under these judgments of all the property of the corporation, including the property in question. There were three separate mining claims purchased at these sales besides the premises in question. There are no findings as to the value of this outside property, or what proportion of each of the judgments was paid by it. Bonney bid the full amount of his judgments, and the executions were returned and the judgments fully satisfied. There must have been some value in the property other than the premises in question. Even if the property involved here could be sold to pay these judgments, there should have been findings as to the value of the
That part of the judgment appealed from should be reversed; and, as plaintiff from the findings appears to be entitled to the relief prayed for, the lower court should be directed to enter judgment quieting plaintiff’s title to the whole of the property involved in this action.
Haynes, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion that part of the judgment appealed from is reversed, and the trial court is directed to enter judgment quieting plaintiff’s title to the whole of the property.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J.