77 P. 828 | Cal. | 1904
December 30, 1890, the defendants, Frank Stevenson and Charles B. Stevenson, his brother, executed to the plaintiff their promissory note, together with a mortgage to secure its payment upon certain lands in the county of Los Angeles. The note and mortgage were given for the purpose of taking up a previous note and mortgage given by them to Josefa A. de Miller, which had been assigned to the plaintiff, and were executed by Frank individually and as the attorney for Charles under a special power of attorney, by which Charles had authorized Frank to make in his name and execute to the plaintiff "a note for the amount due him on a certain note made by myself and Frank Stevenson to Josefa A. de Miller and by her assigned to" the plaintiff; and also to execute a mortgage to secure the same upon the same property as that which was given to secure the note to Miller. No payment was made upon this note, and on December 27, 1895, Frank, acting for himself, and purporting to act as attorney in fact for his brother Charles, executed to the plaintiff another note for the amount due upon the former one, together with a mortgage to secure its payment, upon the same property, in consideration of which the plaintiff surrendered to him the former note, and caused the mortgage to be canceled of record. No payments having been made upon the latter note, the plaintiff brought the present action for its recovery, and to foreclose the mortgage given to secure its payment. After the original complaint had been filed, he filed an amendment thereto in the nature of an additional count, in which he alleged the execution of the note and mortgage of 1890; that nothing had been paid thereon; that on December 27, 1895, the defendants executed to him the note and mortgage of that date; that said note and mortgage were intended to be and were in fact a renewal of those of 1890; and prayed that in case the note set forth in the original complaint should be declared invalid, he might have judgment against the defendants upon the note and mortgage of 1890. The defendant Charles in his answer admitted the execution of the note and mortgage of 1890, and alleged that the same *107 had been paid, satisfied in full and extinguished; denied that he had executed or authorized the execution of the note and mortgage of 1895, and denied that said note and mortgage were intended to be or were in fact a renewal of those of 1890; and alleged that the latter note and mortgage were barred by the statute of limitations. He also set forth the power of attorney given by him to his brother Frank in 1890, and alleged that he had not given him any other authority to execute a note or mortgage in his name; that at the time of the execution of the note and mortgage of 1890 this power of attorney was delivered to the plaintiff, who had caused it to be recorded; that with knowledge of these facts the plaintiff had agreed with Frank that the latter should execute to him the note and mortgage of 1895 in payment and extinguishment of the note and mortgage of 1890, and that, in pursuance of such agreement, Frank had executed and delivered to the plaintiff the note and mortgage of 1895, and the plaintiff had accepted the same and surrendered the former note and acknowledged of record full satisfaction of the mortgage. The defendant Frank made no answer to the complaint as originally filed or as amended. Upon the trial of the cause the court found the facts substantially in accordance with the allegations in the answer of Charles, and found that the plaintiff agreed with Frank to accept the note and mortgage of 1895 in satisfaction of the note and mortgage of 1890, and that, in pursuance of this agreement, he surrendered the note and entered satisfaction of the mortgage. Upon these facts the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendant Frank upon the note and mortgage of 1895, but was not entitled to judgment against the defendant Charles upon either of the notes or mortgages, and entered judgment in accordance therewith. From the judgment entered in favor of Charles and from an order denying a new trial against him the plaintiff has appealed.
For the purpose of determining the plaintiff's right of action, the complaint as amended is to receive the same consideration as if the matters alleged in the amendment had been included in the complaint when originally filed. This additional count sets forth a cause of action against the defendant Charles, and, as the court found that this cause of action is not barred by the statute of limitations, the plaintiff *108 was entitled to judgment thereon against him, unless the other matters alleged in his answer constitute a defense thereto and were established at the trial.
The court finds that the only consideration for the note and mortgage of 1895 was, that they were delivered by Frank and accepted by the plaintiff "instead of and to take the place of" the note and mortgage of 1890; that at the time of their execution the plaintiff surrendered the former note to Frank and afterwards caused the mortgage to be satisfied of record. It also finds that the acceptance of the last note and mortgage, the surrendering of the note, and satisfying of record the mortgage of 1890 "amount to" a satisfaction thereof.
The acceptance by the plaintiff of the note and mortgage of 1895 as a renewal of the note and mortgage of 1890, or in substitution therefor, did not of itself operate as an extinguishment or discharge of the latter. One executory agreement is not extinguished by the execution of another between the same parties; nor is a security for an obligation merged in another security of the same degree which is accepted for the same obligation. It is a well-settled rule that, in the absence of an agreement to that effect, a promissory note is not paid by the execution of another note, but that the time for its payment is thereby merely suspended until the maturity of the new note.(Tolman v. Smith,
As a defense to the plaintiff's right of foreclosure, the respondent relies upon the satisfaction of the mortgage, which the plaintiff entered of record in December, 1895. But, while the discharge of a mortgage is presumptive evidence that it has been satisfied, it is not conclusive thereof. If it be shown that the discharge or acknowledgment of satisfaction was obtained through fraud, or was made by reason of some mistake of fact, it will be inoperative, and the mortgage may still be foreclosed. (Jones on Mortgages, sec. 966; Freeholders of Middlesex v. Thomas,
Mistake is the foundation of one of the chief branches of equity jurisprudence, and the exercise of equity jurisdiction is frequently had where a contract as written does not express the terms of the actual agreement between the parties. This jurisdiction is often invoked to set aside or cancel the release of a mortgage that has been given under a mistake of fact, or contrary to the evident intention of the parties; notably when, upon the execution of a new mortgage, in renewal or as a substitute for a prior one, the former mortgage is released in ignorance of the existence of an intervening lien. Equity looks at the intention of the parties, and will control the effect of a release executed under a mistake of fact, or cause it to be canceled, when no intervening rights have accrued by reason of the mistake. (Jones on Mortgages, sec. 971; Story's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 167; Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, *110
sec. 871; Swift v. Kraemer,
It is very evident that the surrender of the note by the plaintiff, and his discharge of the mortgage of 1890, were made by reason of a mistake as to the character of the power of attorney under which Frank purported to act in behalf of his brother in giving the note and mortgage of 1895. The instrument was not before them during this transaction and they each testified that they supposed that it authorized Frank to execute that note and mortgage. "Mistake of fact" for which a contract may be avoided is defined in the Civil Code (sec. 1577) to be "An unconscious ignorance or forgetfulness of a fact, past or present, material to the contract." The forgetfulness or ignorance on the part of both the plaintiff and Frank of the terms of the power of attorney given by Charles is as fully within the scope of this definition as is the forgetfulness or ignorance of an intervening lien on the part of a mortgagee when, upon the renewal of an existing mortgage, he releases the old mortgage without intending to surrender his security against such intervening lien. It is not to be assumed that the plaintiff knowingly intended to accept an unauthorized note and mortgage of the respondent in satisfaction of a valid one, or to surrender and cancel an existing obligation and security without receiving any consideration therefor; or that if he had known that the power of attorney under which Frank acted did not give him authority to bind his brother by a new note and mortgage, he would have satisfied the old mortgage of record or surrendered the old note. (See Bruse v. Nelson,
There is no substantial difference between the facts in this case and those presented in Swift v. Kraemer,
The respondent has not shown any equitable consideration which requires the release to be sustained against the claim of the plaintiff. He was not a party to the agreement under which the release was given, and does not appear to have known of it until several years thereafter. No consideration was given by him for it, and no change has since taken place in his relation to the property by reason of the transaction. His denial of any authority in Frank to execute the note and mortgage of 1895 was a repudiation of Frank's acts, and precludes him from availing himself of the agreement then *112
made between Frank and the plaintiff. Equity will not permit him to claim the benefit of the release which was given in consideration of the execution of the mortgage of 1895, and at the same time repudiate the act of his brother in giving that mortgage. He cannot accept the benefit of the transaction without assuming the obligation for which that benefit was given (Civ. Code, sec.
Upon the facts before the court it should have rendered a decree for the foreclosure of the mortgage of 1890, as prayed by the plaintiff. It was not necessary for him to obtain a decree directing a cancellation of the discharge which he had entered of record in 1895 before commencing an action for its foreclosure(Chester v. Hill,
The judgment and order denying a new trial should be reversed.
Chipman, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.
For the reasons above given the judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Van Dyke, J., Shaw, J., Angellotti, J.