101 Cal. 438 | Cal. | 1894
This is an action on a negotiable promissory note secured by a mortgage given by the defendant McAdam to Shoobert, Beale Co., and by the latter assigned to this plaintiff. The court below granted a decree of foreclosure as prayed for, and from such decree the defendant Jackson, who is a grantee for value by deed from McAdam given subsequent to the mortgage, has appealed.
The point made is that the mortgagee is a fictitious person — that the mortgage having been made to a partnership doing business under a fictitious name, creates at most only an equity, and as against a subsequent grantee for value of the mortgagor establishes no lien.
There is no doubt that a partnership is not a person, either natural or artificial, and it cannot at law be the grantee in a deed or hold real estate. Legal title must vest in some person, but if the title be made to all the partners by name they hold the legal title as tenants in *440 common. In equity, however, a different rule prevails. There the real purpose for which the property was acquired is considered, and under the principles of trusts the court will regard real estate held for partnership purposes as personal property, so far as such holding may be necessary to settle the equities between a firm and its creditors, or between the partners themselves. None of the latter principles is involved in this action, however.
If the name of the grantee were purely fictitious, that is, if no person were named, it may be that the mortgage would be void, although there is respectable authority for holding that a mortgage may be enforced in the firm name. (Foster v. Johnson,
In all these cases a resort to extraneous facts and circumstances may become necessary, in order to ascertain the individual to whom the description was intended to apply; but it is not perceived that the greater or less probability of this should, in either case, affect the validity of the deed." (Morse v. Carbenter,
In Moreau v. Saffarans, 3 Sneed, 599, 67 Am. Dec. 582, it was held that real estate purchased by partners is to be regarded in respect to the legal title as an estate held by them as tenants in common, but subject to a trust for the benefit of the partnership until the partnership accounts are settled, and that a conveyance to "J. L. Saffarans Co.," would operate to invest John L. Saffarans, individually, with the entire legal title, but that in equity he would be treated as holding the legal title in trust for the benefit of the partnership. In Menage v. Burke,
The judgment is affirmed.
*500GAROUTTE, J., and HARRISON, J., concurred.