198 P. 19 | Cal. | 1921
The parties herein had exchanged two pieces of real estate, each subject to mortgage. The mortgage upon the property of the plaintiff was afterward foreclosed by the mortgagee and sold in satisfaction thereof, leaving a deficiency of $2,264.90. The mortgagee thereupon brought suit against the plaintiff for the amount of the deficiency and the plaintiff in turn brought suit against the defendants, alleging that the defendants in the transaction for the exchange of properties had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage and were therefore liable to him for such deficiency. Subsequent to the beginning of the suit the plaintiff paid the amount of the deficiency and by way of supplemental complaint set up the fact of such payment. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and defendants appeal. Defendants' main contention on the appeal is that the written agreement for the exchange of the real properties of plaintiff and defendants and the deeds which were exchanged in pursuance thereof provided that each party should take the property transferred to it subject to the mortgage thereon. That as there was no agreement either in the deeds or in the written contract for exchange by which the defendants agreed to assume the mortgage upon the property transferred to them, oral evidence that such an agreement was entered into is inadmissible, for the reason that the writing between the parties must be considered conclusive as to the agreement between them.
[1] It is well settled by the authorities that an agreement to assume and pay a mortgage is not inconsistent with a deed reciting that the property is granted subject to a mortgage. Consequently such an agreement may be shown by parol evidence. (Hopkins v. Warner,
It is clear from the foregoing authorities that if the rights of the parties are determined with relation to the deed and the oral testimony concerning the assumption of the mortgage, that the parol evidence with reference to the assumption of the mortgage was admissible and that the judgment of the trial court must be sustained.
The foregoing, however, is not entirely decisive of the case, for the reason that the deed in question was based upon a previous written agreement of exchange, which agreement was subsequently enforced by a decree of specific performance wherein the parties hereto litigated their respective rights under said agreement. In determining the rights of the parties in this action we have to take into consideration the effect of such contract and such decree. It is, therefore, necessary to state additional facts in order to arrive at a conclusion upon that subject. The parties entered into an agreement for exchange of real estate on the 23d of November, 1911. Under the terms of this agreement the Schaders agreed to deliver to White a grant deed, on or before the 23d of December, to three lots in Santa Monica with a certificate of title "showing the title of said property to be free and clear of all encumbrances in Nellie M. Schader, except a mortgage for seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500.00) payable to Mrs. Mary B. Hook, due approximately two years from date, and also subject to the restrictions of said Carl F. Schader 'Seaside Terrace' Tract above referred to, as follows: . . ." They also agreed to deliver to White a bill of sale of all the furniture contained in the residence erected thereon and to deliver possession December 22, 1911, on payment of four thousand dollars. White agreed to deliver to the Schaders on or before December 23, 1911, a warranty deed to certain real property in the city of Seattle, Washington, and to deliver a certificate of title showing the title to the premises to be in White, "free and clear of all encumbrances, except a certain mortgage for seven thousand dollars ($7,000.00) dated April *610 20th, 1910, running for five years at seven per cent interest per annum, in favor of Margaret A. Campbell" and excepting also certain assessments, etc. It was further agreed that the Schaders should pay the interest on the note and mortgage of seven thousand five hundred dollars in favor of said. Mary B. Hook to date (November 23, 1911), and that White should pay the interest on the seven thousand five hundred dollar mortgage in favor of Margaret A. Campbell to date. It was further agreed that White should pay the Schaders four thousand five hundred dollars. It should be observed that this contract calls for a grant deed from the Schaders and a warranty deed from White, the effect of which deeds would be that each grantor should discharge the encumbrances upon his own property. It is to be further observed, however, that each grantor was to furnish evidence of title showing the property subject to the particular encumbrances referred to in the agreement.
Subsequent to the delivery of possession of Schaders' property to White they brought a suit to recover possession and for rescission of the contract of exchange. White by cross-complaint sought to specifically enforce the contract, and the Schaders in their answer to the cross-complaint sought to reform the agreement of exchange. In the complaint for a specific performance it was necessary that the cross-complainant allege as he did that the consideration was adequate. This allegation was denied and formed one of the issues in the case. The findings of the court upon that subject is as follows: "That said agreement hereinbefore referred to was and is a just and reasonable agreement as between the plaintiff and the defendant, and at the time said agreement was made the said property of the defendant in the city of Seattle and the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars paid by the defendant to the plaintiff, together with the difference in plaintiff's favor in the mortgages assumed by the plaintiff andthe defendant respectively, constituted and were a fair, just, and adequate consideration for the said property of the plaintiff in said city of Santa Monica." (Italics ours.) It was in pursuance of this finding as to the entire transaction between the parties and the effect of the deed tendered by White to Campbell that the decree was rendered requiring the Schaders to *611 specifically perform the agreement by the delivery to White of their deed to the property in Santa Monica.
This action between the parties was pending at the time of the bringing of the action at bar, the former action having been tried and judgment rendered and the case was on appeal. In defendants' answer they stood upon the pendency of that case as a ground of abatement, but previous to the trial the former action had been terminated by an affirmance of the judgment (Schader v. White,
In considering the question as to whether the findings and judgment in the prior action between the parties are conclusive upon the question of the assumption of the mortgage in question, it should be stated that, the appellants rely upon the statement contained in the findings that ". . . said contract contains the whole agreement of the *612 parties thereto. . . ." This clause is a part of the sentence in the findings disposing of Schader's contention in that case that there could have been a mutual mistake in the drafting of the contract in omitting the following words: "that said A. Stanley White is to pay the taxes on the premises in the City of Seattle for the years 1911-12," and it was in that connection that the court found that these words were not omitted by mistake and incidentally that the contract contained the whole agreement of the parties. This general statement, of course, is modified in so far as the assumption of the mortgage in question is concerned by the express finding that the parties agreed to assume the mortgages upon the properties deeded to them respectively.
In view of the fact that the question of the assumption of the mortgage is res adjudicata under the circumstances of this case, it is unnecessary to consider whether the parol evidence introduced with reference to the assumption of the mortgage was properly receivable or sufficient in legal effect to establish such assumption.
[3] Defendants claim that the action was prematurely filed for the reason that the plaintiff had not at that time paid the deficiency; that, therefore, the order permitting the filing of the supplemental complaint was erroneous and that proof thereunder should not have been received. There is no merit in the contention, for the reason that the right of the plaintiff to reimbursement had accrued when suit was brought. At that time the mortgaged property had been applied to the debts by the mortgage foreclosure sale and there was an unpaid balance (Stichter v. Cox,
[4] Appellants contend that the mortgagee waived her rights against the mortgagor, the plaintiff herein, by failing to secure a deficiency judgment in the mortgage foreclosure case. In that case service was obtained by publication. Jurisdiction was not acquired over the person of the plaintiff, and the effect of the decree was to apply the property to satisfaction of the mortgage. It was in no sense a waiver of the rights of the mortgagee against the mortgagor. The payment by the plaintiff to the mortgagee was, therefore, not voluntary.
[5] Appellants claim that the judgment is excessive, at least to the extent of the attorney's fees which were included in the mortgage foreclosure. The agreement to pay these attorney's fees was included in the agreement to assume and to pay the mortgage debt. (Williams v. Moody,
Judgment affirmed.
Sloane, J., Olney, J., Shaw, J., Lennon, J., Angellotti, C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
*614All the Justices concurred.