Burton v. Lies
Burton v. Lies
Opinion of the Court
Cope, J. and Norton, J. concurring.
The plaintiff sold to the defendant Lies certain real estate, and took from him a mortgage to secure the payment of $4,000 of the purchase money. Lies sold the property to one Lefevre, subject to the mortgage, and subsequently received back a conveyance of a portion of the premises. Lefevre died soon afterwards, and the defendant De la G-uerra is the executor of his estate. The plaintiff brought his action for the foreclosure of the mortgage, making Lies and the executor parties defendant, obtained the usual decree for the sale of the premises, became the purchaser at the sale, and, no redemption having been made within six months after-wards, received the Sheriff’s deed. With this deed he demanded possession of a part of the property sold from the widow of Lefevre, who was at the time in its occupation, and the possession having been refused by her, he applied to the Court for a writ •of assistance. The application was resisted by the widow, who .alleged that she occupied the premises by virtue of a lease from one Thompson, and that he owned an undivided half of the same, by purchase from certain parties made in 1837. The Court denied the writ; and hence the present appeal.
It would seem that the premises in the possession of the widow
Executors and administrators, it is true, under our system take possession of all property, real and personal, of the deceased whose estates they represent, and have the right to the possession of the same until the estates are settled or distribution is directed by the Probate Court; and, in consequence, have until then the sole right to maintain actions of ejectment for real property of the decedents withheld from them. (Meeks v. Hahn, 20 Cal. 620.) But the action for the foreclosure of a mortgage is not brought for the possession merely of the property, except as such possession may follow the Sheriff’s or Master’s deed, but is brought to subject to sale the title of the mortgagor—that is, such title as he had at the date of his mortgage—and to cut off all the rights of parties subsequently becoming interested therein. Executors and administrators do not possess the title, but only a temporary right to the possession of the property.
The decree did not, therefore, bind or in any respect affect the rights of the widow Lefevre to her undivided half of the mortgaged premises. Her estate in that half remains, as it existed previous to the institution of the foreclosure suit. (Goodenow v. Ewer, 16
We have considered the widow of Lefevre as succeeding to one undivided half of the property, and in doing so we have not overlooked the fact that she resisted the application for the writ as tenant under Thompson—a party holding adversely to the mortgagor by title existing previous to the execution of the mortgage. If Thompson did hold an adverse title as represented, the fact was of itself a sufficient justification for the Court to refuse the writ, and to leave the purchaser to his action of ejectment. We have, however, treated the widow as having, in her own right, one undivided half of the property, upon facts admitted by the appellant in his brief.
The decree is valid as to the premises owned exclusively by the defendant Lies, and by the sale the purchaser acquired his title. If the purchaser desires to apply for relief from the sale, and to take further proceedings by a supplemental bill, bringing in the widow and other parties, for a resale of the premises, he must pursue the course pointed out in Boggs v. Hargrave (16 Cal. 566).
Order affirmed.
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- The presumption attending the acquisition of property, during marriage, by either husband or wife is that the property belongs to the community. In an action to foreclose a mortgage all persons beneficially interested in the mortgaged property at the time of the commencement of the action must be made parties. Where the mortgagor of real property sells and conveys his estate to a married man, and after the death of the grantee (his wife surviving) the mortgagee seeks to foreclose, the widow is a necessary party to the action. The action for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon real property is not brought for the possession merely of the property, except as such possession may follow the Sheriff’s or master’s deed, but to subject to sale the title which the mortgagor had at the time of executing the mortgage, and to cut off the rights of parties subsequently becoming interested in the premises; and executors and administrators do not possess the title, but only a temporary right to the possession. A writ of assistance can only issue against the defendants in the suit, and parties holding under them who are bound by the decree. L., a married man, purchased certain real estate, subject to a mortgage thereon, which had been previously executed by his grantor, and soon afterwards ,died. The mortgagee commenced an action to foreclose the mortgage, making the executors of L., but not the widow, a party, and after a decree of foreclosure and sale and expiration of the time of redemption, received the Sheriff's deed, (himself being the purchaser) and thereupon applied to the Court for a writ of assistance against the widow, who retained possession of a portion of the premises, which on demand she refused to surrender: Held, on appeal from an order denying the writ, that the denial was proper; that the estate conveyed to L. became thereby the common property of himself and wife; that upon his death the title to one-half of this property vested in her, subject only to the mortgage and the lien for the payment of debts; that this title was not affected by the proceedings in the foreclosure suit to which she was not a party; and that not being bound by the decree, a writ of assistance could not be issued against her. When the title of a purchaser at a sale in a foreclosure suit fails on account of a defect of parties in such suit, he must seek relief by pursuing the course pointed out in Boggs v. Eargrave (16 Cal. 566).