The defendant, Mary Torr, has appealed from a judgment of foreclosure of a mortgage which was executed by her husband alone to secure a debt of $5,000. Mrs. Torr had subsequently filed a homestead against the property.
In a previous suit to foreclose the same mortgаge, which was originally brought against both the husband and wife, the action was inadvertently dismissed as to Mrs. Torr for the reason that she was not a party to the note or mortgage,
It is contended the first decree of foreclosure is res judicata and binding on the respondent in this case; that this suit amounts to a collateral attack upon the former judgment; that the defect of parties in the original suit was due to plaintiff’s negligence in failing to search the records; that plaintiff was charged with knowledge of the recording of the homestead prior to the commencement of his action, and that equity will not relieve plaintiff from the homestead lien under such circumstances.
“Finally, it is contended that in an effort to vacate the judgment, having unsuccessfully resorted to the remedy provided by section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the appellants are now barred from applying to equity for the same relief. The remedies for relief from a judgment procured by fraud, mistake or excusable neglect, provided by sectiоn 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the ordinary suit in equity are entirely distinct and cumulative. An unsuccessful resort to the first-mentioned remedy does not bar an application to equity for relief. (15 Cal. Jur. 27, sec. 127; Estudillo v. Security L. & T. Co.,149 Cal. 556 , 561 [87 Pac. 19 ]; Bacon v. Bacon,150 Cal. 477 [89 Pac. 317 ]; Herd v. Tuohy,133 Cal. 55 , 63 [65 Pac. 139 ] ; 3 Freeman on Judgments, 5th ed., p. 2488, sec. 1198.) In Bacon v. Bacon, (150 Cal. 477 ) supra, at page 484 [89 Pac. 317 ], it is said with respect to these different remedies: ‘It (sec. 473, Code Civ. Proc.) is a cumulative remedy, and does not displace the remedy in equity. (Baker v. O’Riordan,65 Cal. 368 [4 Pac. 232 ].) We have recently held not only that it does not displace the equitable remedy, but also that an adverse decision on such a motion does not. necessarily bar a subsequent suit to vacate the judgment for the same cause.’ To the same effect the author of Freeman on Judgments, supra, says: ‘The summary disposition of a question upon motion, resulting in a denial of the relief claimed, should not ipso facto preclude the party from obtaining the aid of chancery . . . The denial of a motion to open a judgment should not of necessity preclude a courtof equity from subsequently granting relief denied at law. The decision of such motion is not such a res judicata as precludes equity from reexamining the question. The opening of a judgment in a court of law is usually e.r gratia, while restrаining the plaintiff from proceeding on the judgment is, in equity, more nearly a matter of right. The facilities for investigating the issues presented in the motion are usually much better in equity than at law, owing to the more summary character of the motion proceedings. ’
“We are of the opinion thаt the complaint in the present action alleges facts sufficient to state a cause of action against the defendants Thomas I. Young, Lillie E. Young and W. H. Lorenz justifying the aid of equity, and that the former application to vacate the judgment in the statutory proceeding does not bar the remedy here sought.”
Since the appellant’s homestead was recorded prior to the commencement of the original action to foreclose the mortgage, she was a necessary party to that suit to secure an effective foreclosure of plaintiff’s mortgage lien, notwithstanding the fact that she did not join her husband in executing the note or mortgage. Her homestead became a cloud on the title, subject to the prior lien of mortgage, which it was necessary and proper to remove so as to authorizе a valid sale of the property to satisfy the judgment for the mortgage indebtedness. Indeed, under circumstances similar to those of the present case, quoting with approval from the ease of
Brackett
v.
Banegas,
“The homestead is subject to execution or forced sale in satisfaction of judgments obtained:
“(4) On debts secured by mortgages on the premises, executed and recorded before the declaration of homestead was filed for record.”
•The рlaintiff, who was the purchaser of the property at the foreclosure sale thereof, jvas entitled to maintain this subsequent foreclosure suit which was filed long before the note and mortgage outlawed to correct the mistake of inadvertently dismissing the original action against Mrs. Torr so as to obtain a valid decree of foreclosure as against her homestead lien. The original decree was not a bar to this action.
(Ludwig
v.
Murphy, supra; Hurt
v.
Pico Inv. Co., supra; Gerig
v.
Loveland,
“For the purposes of this decision we assume that petitioners, as purchasers at the first foreclosure sale, had thе right to institute their second foreclosure action for the purpose of correcting the error into which they had fallen by omitting the name of Marjorie MeKinsey, a defendant in the first foreclosure action. The decision cited by them, Norton v. Newerf,45 Cal. App. 10 [187 Pac. 57 ], appears to suslain the right of a purсhaser at a foreclosure sale to maintain such an action to foreclose the equity of such omitted party whose ownership of the property was acquired subject to the mortgage.”
In the Hurt case, supra, it is said:
“In such a situation as herein presented the proper remedy is by a new аction in foreclosure, although the courts have allowed the original suit to be reinstated upon amended pleadings. (Norton v. Newerf,45 Cal. App. 10 , 14 [187 Pac. 57 ].) It follows that there is no merit in appellant’s contention that in this action a collateral attack is made upon the decree in action No. 194481.”
“The mortgage note here sued on became due April 25, 1899. The present action to foreclose the same was begun on September 11, 1902, which was much less than four years after the cause оf action accrued. The cause of action, considering the case as an action to foreclose the mortgage, was therefore not barred by the statute of limitations.
“This being true, ho question can arise concerning the effect of laches, or as to thе sufficiency of any excuses existing therefor. A party holding a valid mortgage lien has an absolute right to an effectual foreclosure by an action begun at any time within four years from the time his cause of action accrues, irrespective of, and in the face of, any degree of laches or delay. The previous attempt to foreclose was, so far as the security was concerned, wholly ineffectual, and in Brackett v. Banegas,116 Cal. 278 [48 Pac. 90 ,58 Am. St. Rep. 164 ], a similar judgment of foreclosure was held absolutely void as to the security. If it was void as to the security, it could not affect the mortgage nor the lien created thereby, and it could not constitute a bar, nor in any wise affect an action to foreclose the same. . . . The additional facts, included therein, disclosing the previous judgment of foreclosure and the excuses for not making the husband a party to that action, do not constitute a bar to the present action, nor any defense whatever, but, on the contrary, they show that the former judgment was void, and that therefore it could not affect the present action.
“ . . . Whatever may be the effect of the former judgment with respеct to the note, it was void as a foreclosure, and . . . it did not operate as a waiver of the mortgage lien nor of the right to foreclose the same. ’ ’
In the present case the court found that the plaintiff inadvertently dismissed the former action against this appellant without previous knowledge that her homestead had been recorded against the land prior to the commencement of the first action; that the previous suit did not foreclose the plaintiff ’s mortgage lien, and that this action is not barred thereby. Those findings are supported by the record in this case.
The judgment is affirmed.
Pullen, P. J., concurred.
