Opinion
[Syllabus Material] [Syllabus Material] [Syllabus Material] [Syllabus Material] Appeal from the District Court of the Sixth District, Sacramento County.
On the second day of March, 1868, the defendant, Julius Wetzlar, brought suit in the nature of an action of ejectment against the present plaintiff, Hannah Mack, to recover the possession of Lots 1 and 2, between L and M and Twelfth and Thirteenth streets, in Sacramento City. This case went to trial, and judgment was had for the plaintiff, Wetzlar. The defendant, Mack, moved for a new trial, and whilst that motion for new trial was still pending and undetermined, filed the bill or complaint now before this Court, for the purpose of enjoining the further prosecution of the ejectment suit of Wetzlar v. Mack. This case, now on appeal, was finally brought to hearing in the month of December, 1868, but the same was taken under advisement after the evidence was all in, and not finally decided until February 1st, 1869, on which day a judgment was rendered dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill.
The defendant in conjunction with Brannin and others, bought, on the 20th of June, 1850, the entire property of John A. Sutter, Jr., in the State of California. The language of the conveyance, after stating its condition, to wit, the payment of a certain sum of money within a given time, proceeds as follows: " Then this instrument to take effect as a full and complete conveyance in fee of all and singular the lands, tenements, hereditaments, appurtenances and real estate in the State of California, belonging to or in which the said party of the first part (Sutter, Jr.), his heirs, executors or assigns, is or are in any way entitled or interested."
At the date of this conveyance, Sutter, Jr., held a note for a sum of money, and a mortgage to secure its payment, given by Watson et al., on certain property in Sacramento City, embracing the locus, which note and mortgage constituted a part of the property purchased, and were transferred and delivered to the defendant, Brannan et al., at the same time the deed was executed and delivered. Subsequently to the date of the deed, and the delivery of the deed and the note and mortgage, Watson, one of the mortgagors, paid his part of the mortgage money, and Pearson and Baker gave their note and a new mortgage to Brannan et al. Subsequently to the date of the new mortgage of Pearson and Baker, in September, 1852, it was foreclosed, and the mortgage property, including the locus, sold, and bought in by Brannan and others, the plaintiffs in the foreclosure suit, in the name of Haggin, their attorney, on the 18th of October, 1852. On the day of the Sheriff's sale, he (the Sheriff) executed to Haggin a deed for the property bought, the locus being a part. The property was bought in in Haggin's name to make the division among the plaintiffs, Brannan and others, with greater facility. Haggin, a few months afterwards, made deeds to each of said plaintiffs in the foreclosure suit, Brannan and others, for parts of the property--the deed from Haggin to defendant, Wetzlar, being a quitclaim, dated April 22d, 1853, and embracing the locus. The premises remained in this condition until the 19th day of April, 1858, when the defendant and his wife executed to Fred. Werner a deed, " conveying his individual interest in and to all property, lots, etc., situated within the corporate limits of Sacramento City according to the official map thereof, by him, the said Wetzlar, held, or to which he is entitled in common with Samuel Brannan, Bruce et al., under their purchase from John A. Sutter, Jr., of June 20th, 1850, * * * which had not been sold prior to August 28th, 1857, by Wetzlar, Brannan, Bruce et al."
In the year 1857 (the sale to Werner being in April, 1858) Wetzlar testified, in the case of Brannan v. Mesick, that the mortgaged property (the locus being a part of it) was sold to Brannan, Wetzlar et al., by virtue of the deed of June 20th, 1850.
The plaintiff claims under Werner's deed.
On the 27th day of July, 1860, Haggin obtained from the then ex-Sheriff who made the sale in 1852, a second deed for the property then sold by him under the foreclosure sale, embracing the locus. And in January, 1868, the defendant obtained from Haggin a second voluntary quitclaim deed for the same property described in the first quitclaim deed to him from Haggin, embracing the locus .
The two last facts are averred in the complaint, which is sworn to, and are not denied in the answer.
Upon this last named deed from Haggin, the defendant bases his claim of title to the locus.
COUNSEL:
The appellant insists that the Court below erred in finding that the deed of Sutter Jr., to Brannan and others, dated June20, 1850, did not convey any interest in the premises to the grantees in that deed. Plaintiff's motion for a new trial was therefore improperly overruled, and her first error well taken.
Appellant insists that the deed from defendant and his wife to Werner, conveyed his interest in the locus to Werner, which interest, under regular mesne conveyances, she now owns. The findings of the Court are, in that particular, erroneous.
Appellant insists that respondent is estopped by his admission, under oath, from denying that Brannan and others did obtain right to the locus under and by virtue of the deed from Sutter, Jr., to them, dated June 20, 1850.
The Sheriff's sale of the mortgaged property was a sale to the plaintiffs in the foreclosure suit, the defendant and others--Haggin being their attorney, and purchasing for them.
The first Sheriff's deed to Haggin, dated October, 1852, being prematurely made, and void, did not affect the interest which the plaintiffs, Brannan and others, obtained under the sale, nor could the deed from Haggin to them, before Haggin obtained the legal estate by a valid conveyance, affect their equitable interest under the sale. Theestate owned by defendant and others, remained up to the date of the second Sheriff's deed to Haggin, in 1860, unchanged; nor did they obtain any legal title till Haggin made deeds in 1868; but each of the plaintiffs in the foreclosure suit held, till then, an equitable interest in common with the others, in all the property bought by Haggin, but no exclusive right to any.
The defendant, after his sale to Werner of April 19, 1858, was, as to the premises, a mere dry trustee, and his receiving a deed from Haggin subsequently in his own name--but, indeed, in satisfaction for his former undivided interest in the property, which, till then, was owned by them in common with Brannan et al., under the foreclosure sale--enured to the benefit of Werner and his grantees, under his deed of April 19th.
In other words, the three fourths interest which defendant obtained by the deed of Haggin, dated in 1868, being in consideration of one fourth interest in other property conveyed to Werner by the defendant, belongs in equity to Werner and to his grantees. The defendant in the said division acting as the trustee of his grantee, Werner, has no right to set up the legal interest thusfraudulently obtained against his grantee--the cestui que trust Werner, and his (Werner's) grantees. But Werner and his grantees have the right to adopt the acts of defendant in the division, and hold the entire interest in the property so set off to defendant by Haggin's deed of 1868.
The second Sheriff's deed to Haggin, and the second deed from Haggin to defendant, did not show any lawful title in the defendant to the locus as against the plaintiff, his cestui que trust, and the Court erred in not ruling the same out, on motion of the plaintiff.
Our first objection to this complaint is, that it attempts to supersede and override the motion for a new trial, which was still pending when the bill was filed. Now, if there is any principle established beyond all controversy in modern jurisprudence, it is this: that a suitor cannot, at one and the same time, pursue two distinct remedies against the same person, to attain the same object.
This bill should have been dismissed: First--Because there is an attempt to prosecute two suits; to enforce two remedies at one and the same time, against one and thesame person, to attain the same object; to unite the prosecution of the motion for a new trial and this bill for relief by injunction. Second--There is a resort to the equitable relief by injunction where the defense at law is perfect.
The deed of Wetzlar to Werner conveys certain lots by number or other specific description. It then goes on as follows: " And also his individual interest in and to all property, lots, etc., situate within the corporate limits of said City of Sacramento, according to said official map thereof, by him, the said party of the first part, held, or to which he may be entitled in common with Samuel Brannan, Bruce et al., under their purchase from John A. Sutter, Jr., as per deed of June 20, 1850 * * * * which had not been sold previous to the 28th day of August, A. D. 1857, by said Brannan, Wetzlar, Bruce et al." The italicizing in the above quotation is our own, and not in the original deed.
It will be seen, from the above quotation, that any property which passed to Werner by this general clause in Wetzlar's deed, must have possessed these qualities. First--It must be property held, or to which he was entitled, incommon with Brannan et al. It must have been purchased from John A. Sutter, Jr., as per deed of June 20, 1850. Third--It must not have been sold by Brannan, Bruce et al., prior to the 28th day of August, 1857.
First, let us see whether this property was held, or whether Wetzlar was entitled to it in common with Brannan et al.
The title to that property, at the time Sutter made his deed, was in Watson, Pearson and Baker, and Sutter merely had a mortgage lien on it to secure the purchase money. That the fee of the land remained in the mortgagors, we refer to the cases of Dutton v. Warschauer (21 Cal. 609), and Skinner v. Buck (29 Cal. 253), as also to the various authorities cited in the former case.
It has been contended that a different rule applies to mortgages executed before the passage of the Practice Act of 1851, the sixtieth section of which seems to fix the status of mortgagees and mortgagors. But the 310th Section of the Practice Act of 1850 (which was passed before the execution of the Watson, Pearson and Baker mortgage), is just as explicit as the sixtieth section of the Act of 1851. The Act of 1850 declares that the judgmentby which a mortgage is enforced shall be to the effect that the property be sold, etc. This, by implication, prohibits the action of ejectment to recover the property. The sixtieth section of the Act of 1851, by different, but not more expressive language, enacts the same thing. The two decisions, however, to which we refer, decide the question directly in reference to mortgages executed before the passage of either of those Acts.
Next--Were these two lots purchased from Sutter, as per deed of June 20, 1859? Certainly these lots are not mentioned or described specifically in that deed, nor can they be included under the general terms as to all land owned by Sutter in California. He did not own these lots at the date of that deed, because he had already sold them. He only had a lien on them to secure money, not then due. He could not sell what he did not own. Nor did he, by the terms of that deed, acquire even the debt which was secured by a mortgage on those lots.
Lastly--If Brannan et al. ever had any interest in this land, it was sold at the Sheriff's sale in 1852, and J. B. Haggin became the purchaser.
So these lots possessed neither of the three qualifications, all of which are necessary to make them pass by the general clause of the deed from Wetzlar to Werner. They were not property held in common by Brannan et al.; they were not acquired under the deed of June, 1850, and were not lots remaining unsold on the 28th day of August, 1857.
John Heard, for Appellant.
P. Dunlap and Beatty & Denson, for Respondent:
John Heard, for Appellant, in reply.
The appellant insists that the questions arising from this appeal are questions of law alone; that the judgment roll, which includes the findings, and such facts as explain them, constitute the whole case on appeal. The motion for new trial was not necessary. The appeal is from the judgment, as well as the order denying the new trial, and the whole controversy rests upon the error in law committed by the Judge in holding the deed from Sutter, Jr., to Brannan et al. insufficient to convey grantees any interest in the locus. The facts necessary to explain this question are shown by the statement, and no other errors, except those shown by the judgment roll, need be assigned. (See Treadwell v. Davis, 34 Cal. 601.)
The finding that the deed from defendant and wife to Fred. Werner did not convey the premises, is a corollary--not an independentfact. The position of the Court is, if the defendant obtained no right--that is, if his interest to the premises is not a fruit of the deed from Sutter, Jr., to Brannan et al., the deed to Werner did not convey his interest; so that finding rests upon the hypothesis that the deed from Sutter, Jr., conveyed to Brannan et al. no interest or right in the premises; in other words, that his right to the locus does not grow out of the deed from Sutter, and is not a part of that purchase. So the whole matter to be reviewed is the decision of the Court below, that the deed from Sutter to Brannan et al. did not embrace any right to the locus; or, in more accurate language, that the defendant's right to the property was not one of the fruits of that deed.
JUDGES: Temple, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. Sprague, J., expressed no opinion.
OPINION
TEMPLE, Judge
The statement on motion for a new trial contains no specification of the particulars in which the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings, nor of the errors in law, upon which plaintiff would rely for a new trial. The one hundred and ninety-fifth section of the Practice Act explicitly provides that, if these specifications are not made, the statement shall be disregarded. If, however, we could regard the specification in the notice of intention to move for a new trial as a compliance in the requirement of the statute, but one specification is made in it, and that is that the evidence shows that the locus in que was conveyed by Sutter, Jr., to Brannan, Bruce, Graham and Wetzlar, by deed dated June 20th, 1850; and the Court finds that said deed did not convey said premises to Brannan, Bruce, Graham and Wetzlar. That a mortgage does not convey the legal title for any purpose, either before or after condition broken, is well settled in this State. But it is contended that this doctrine is the result of the two hundred and sixtieth section of the Practice Act, which section became a law in 1851, and that the mortgage in question, having been executed prior to the passage of this Act, is unaffected by it. Doubtless that statute has had its influence in bringing about the adoption of that view; but a careful examination of the decisions upon that question will show, that they are not based entirely upon the statute, and, indeed, the language of the statute would, of itself, hardly warrant such a conclusion. It declares, substantially, that a mortgage shall not be considered a conveyance, whatever its terms, so as to enable the owner of the mortgage to recover possession of the land, without foreclosure and sale. This provision has reference solely to the effect of the mortgage upon the right of possession; but many other consequences were supposed to flow from the common law doctrine, that, after condition broken, the title was vested in the mortgagee, as, for instance, that the mortgage might be foreclosed, notwithstanding the fact that the Statute of Limitations has run against the debt secured by it.
In McMillan v. Richards (9 Cal. 365), Justice Field, in delivering the opinion of the Court, places this doctrine not only upon the ground of the statute, but also upon the ground that Courts of law in this country have, by gradual and insensible progress, adopted the equitable view of the subject, and uses this strong language: " In truth, the original character of mortgages has undergone a complete change. They have ceased to be conveyances except in form. They are no longer understood as contracts of purchase and sale between the parties, but as transactions by which a loan is made, on one side, and security for its repayment furnished, on the other. They pass no estate on the land, but are mere securities--and default in the payment of the money secured, does not change their character."
And in Dutton v. Warschauer (21 Cal. 609), where the precise question was discussed--though, as there was a special concurrence, the point was not decided--Judge Field says: " In McMillan v. Richards, we have occasion to consider the subject at great length, and to observe upon the diversity existing in the adjudged cases. We there asserted, what had previously been held in repeated instances, the equitable doctrine as the true doctrine respecting mortgages, and have since applied it under all circumstances. When, therefore, a mortgage is here executed, the estate remains in the mortgagor, and a mere lien or incumbrance is created."
And, again: " The counsel for the defendant does not controvert the doctrine thus stated as applicable to mortgages executed since the Statute of 1851, but appears to consider that it was not intended to embrace mortgages previously executed. In this view they are only partially correct. The doctrine was established, not merely from a consideration of the provisions of the statute, but also from a consideration of the real object and intention of the parties in executing and receiving instruments of this kind. In truth, mortgages had long before lost, for nearly all purposes, their common law character as conveyances, and been regarded as transactions by which security was furnished by a pledge of real estate for the payment of debts. Courts of equity had from an early date so regarded them, and Courts of law, by 'a gradual and almost insensible progress,' as Kent observes, had adopted the equitable view of the subject, though, we may add, not always carrying the equitable doctrine to its legitimate results."
These extracts show how the case of McMillan v. Richards was regarded by the Justice through whom the decision was pronounced, and that the decisions in this State, which adopt the equitable doctrine of mortgages, are not founded wholly upon the statute. Although the opinion of Judge Field, in Dutton v. Warschauer, was not assented to by the other Justices--and, therefore, was not, strictly speaking, authority--it has been universally accepted as law, and the subsequent decisions of this Court are all in harmony with it.
The lien which Sutter, Jr., had under this mortgage was not an estate in land. It was neither jus in re nor jus ad rem. It was a mere right to have the debt paid out of the proceeds of the property, unless it were otherwise paid. This right to hold the land as security would pass by a simple assignment of the debt, but would in no case pass by a conveyance of land alone.
Order affirmed.