Toole-Tietzen & Co. v. Colorado River Development Co.
Toole-Tietzen & Co. v. Colorado River Development Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff is the holder, by assignment, of a mortgage given by defendant Colorado River Development Company to secure payment of two promissory notes, each in the sum of $37,500, dated December 30, 1927, payable three years after date, with interest at six per cent, per annum, payable semiannually. There was also a chattel mortgage covering personal property situated on the land mortgaged, given as additional security for the same debt. The property involved is ranch land, consisting of approximately 22,-000 acres, located in the county of Riverside, Cal. The mortgage first referred to contained the provision that upon default in the payment of any interest due, the total debt should, at the option of the holder» of the mortgage, become immediately due and payable. In December, 1929, default was made in the payment of interest amounting to $2,-250. Plaintiff seasonably gave notice of its election to declare the whole debt due and payable, and thereafter, on February 1,1930, filed this action to secure foreclosure of its mortgages, and at the same time prayed for the appointment of a receiver.
It was made to appear at the time plaintiff presented its application in the latter behalf, that the mortgagor had ceased to operate the property and had practically abandoned it. That condition has continued and at the time of the hearing of the special matter which this order particularly concerns, there had been no change in that regard. The character of the property, it being ranch land and being equipped with tools, ranch houses, and some live stock, made it plainly necessary that some one should be placed in charge of
Defendant White, who holds a lien against the land second to that of plaintiff’s mortgage, to-secure payment of a debt of $30,000, his security being evidenced in the form of a trust deed, objects- to the creation by the receiver of a further debt against the property, setting forth, among other things, that it is not essential to farm the land or to preserve its rights with the irrigation district. He questions the receiver’s claim that there are taxes due, and generally expresses his view that, in the presence of this foreclosure suit, the property should be allowed to remain uncultivated and uncared for, and suffer whatever damage it might by reason of the failure to assure the land of water supply. These objections on the part of the second lienholder are pertinent, of course, if he stands in a position to be damaged in the event the receiver’s application to issue certificates is allowed. Plainly, he could be damaged only in the event the sale price obtained for the property equaled less than the sum secured by plaintiff’s mortgage, plus the amount of the debt created by the receiver, plus an amount sufficient to satisfy the White claim. However, it is found by examining the verified answer made to the receiver’s petition by defendant White, that defendant White fairly declares that the property is of a value greatly in excess of the sum of the mortgage indebtedness together with any probable amount that the receiver may require to use in prosecuting farming operations. On page 5 of Mr. White’s verified answer, he asserts that in March, of 1929, an appraisal was made by a firm of engineers and appraisers, and that the value of the land was by those appraisers fixed at the sum of $1,577,198.38, and he alleges further as follows : “That the said land is now in the same condition, if not better than at the time of said appraisal, by reason of the recent clearing by the said Colorado River Development Company of 250 acres of heretofore Uncleared land in the area known as Settling Basin *. * * and denies that said real property will * * * be damaged or reduced in value to such an extent, or any extent, that the real property will probably, or at all, be insufficient to secure the various obligations, or any obligations, for which defendant Colorado River Development Company has hypothecated said real property. é * *• v
If the market value of the land is one-half of the sum that defendant White assigns to it, by no possibility will he suffer loss. He does not contend that the use and cultivation of the land will be a detriment to it, and such cannot be the case. I have before adverted to the fact that under the condition of practical abandonment in which the land stood at the time this suit was brought, sufficient ground existed to warrant the appointment of a receiver.
The mortgage contract made by the Colorado River Development Company with plaintiff’s assignor contained a term giving to the mortgagor the privilege of making partial payments in discharge of the mortgage debt, and of having portions of the acreage released when such payments were made. The defendant White, since the commencement of this suit, made a selection of a certain 1,318.61 acres, tendering the sum of $3 per acre, or a total of $3,955.83. The sum tendered was correct as to the amount required under the release clause of the mortgage. The question of the right to have such a release made is, more probably, one to be settled by the decree in the foreclosure suit, where the various interests will be adjudicated. However, if it is to be now assumed that defendant White intends to have presented for the court’s consideration an application for an order directing the receiver to release to him the ground claimed, an opinion may well be indicated. I note first that it is conceded by the plaintiff and the receiver that the holder of the second lien is clothed with all of the right of the mortgagor in asking for a partial release to be made; this is upon the assumption, as it is held in Sacramento S. F. L. Co. v. Whaley, 50 Cal. App. 125,194 P. 1054, that the release clause expressed a covenant which runs with the land. If the decision mentioned rests upon an interpretation of the statute law of California, and the interpretation be deemed correct, then the concession made is a necessary one. There are eases to the contrary, decided upon principle, but in view of the stipulation offered, the opinions of the courts are of no moment.
It is ordered that the petition of the receiver to be allowed to issue receiver’s certificates in the amount and for the purposes set forth in his petition, be granted. The conditions are made, however, that no greater acreage than that worked or farmed during the preceding year be farmed, worked, or cultivated during the year 1930; that the purchase of materials and supplies, and the employment of labor be only in such an amount as strict business judgment requires, using great economy; that the operations of the receiver, in the behalf considered, shall contemplate only the carrying through of the agricultural operations for the present year, and not include any preparation for the working of the ranch for succeeding years. Said receiver shall, at least once every sixty days, file a full report of his expenditures, and a statement of’ the work being done by him or under his direction, and a copy thereof at the same time shall be furnished to the defendant White.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TOOLE-TIETZEN & CO. v. COLORADO RIVER DEVELOPMENT CO.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published