Bank of Woodland v. Stephens

This is an appeal by J.J. Stephens, as administrator of the estate of M.R. York, deceased, from a judgment foreclosing a mortgage executed by M.R. York and Susan F. York in their lifetime. The case is presented upon the judgment-roll alone.

1. The mortgage contains a covenant that upon the filing of a complaint to foreclose the same the plaintiff would be entitled to have a receiver appointed to take possession of and lease the premises, collect the rents, and hold the same as security for the debt secured. The complaint in the action avers this covenant, but contains no showing that the property is insufficient to pay the debt. Upon this complaint an application was made to the court for a receiver, which was granted, and a receiver appointed, who took charge of the property accordingly. The decree appealed from provides that the receiver theretofore appointed should continue to act as receiver and receive from the tenant in possession the rents and profits until a sale and redemption, and hold the same as *Page 662 security for the debt. The appellant objects to this portion of the decree upon the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction under the facts of the complaint to appoint a receiver, and, therefore, that it had no power to continue him in office after the making of the final decree. This contention must be sustained. In the cases of Scott v. Hotchkiss, 115 Cal. 94, and Baker v. Varney, 129 Cal. 565,1 it was decided by this court that jurisdiction to appoint a receiver could not be conferred by a stipulation of the character here in issue, and that, notwithstanding the stipulation, the party who desired a receiver must state facts sufficient to show that the premises mortgaged are probably insufficient to pay the mortgage debt, with interest and costs, as provided in section 564 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Upon the authority of those cases, which we fully approve, we hold that the part of the decree referred to is erroneous.

2. The mortgagors were husband and wife, and the property described in the mortgage was community property. Prior to the execution of the mortgage, the property was duly selected as a homestead by the mortgagors. Upon the death of M.R. York, the husband, an administrator was duly appointed, and thereafter an inventory was returned in the estate, showing that the homestead property was of the value of fifteen thousand dollars. Upon the return of the inventory, proceedings were taken under sections 1476 to 1486, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure, whereby the said homestead premises were admeasured, and a portion thereof, consisting of one hundred acres, was set apart to Susan F. York, as the widow of said M.R. York, as a homestead, leaving the remaining two hundred and twenty acres of the mortgaged premises from that time forward free from the homestead character. The mortgagee did not at any time present his mortgage debt as a claim to the administrator of the estate of M.R. York for allowance. The court found these facts, and gave a decree refusing a foreclosure as to the one hundred acres set off as a homestead, but decreeing foreclosure upon the remaining part of the premises.

Upon these facts the appellant contends that the decree is erroneous upon the ground that the entire property at the death of the deceased was a homestead, and that the mortgage *Page 663 cannot be enforced unless a claim therefor had been duly presented to the administrator for allowance. The general proposition that a mortgage upon the homestead cannot be enforced unless a claim therefor had been duly presented to the administrator has been settled ever since the case of Camp v.Grider, 62 Cal. 20. (See, also, Wise v. Williams, 72 Cal. 547;Bollinger v. Manning, 79 Cal. 11; Building Assn. v. King, 83 Cal. 442; Hearn v. Kennedy, 85 Cal. 57; Rosenberg v. Ford, 85 Cal. 612; Perkins v. Onyett, 86 Cal. 350.) But we are of the opinion that this rule applies exclusively to the property described in the mortgage, which is impressed with the character of homestead. At an early date in this state it was held that the homestead character applied only to so much of the property as did not exceed five thousand dollars in value. In Gregg v. Bostwick,33 Cal. 228,1 the court say: "If what is actually used as a homestead is of greater value than five thousand dollars the excess is not homestead under the statute, though so in fact." InEstate of Delaney, 37 Cal. 180, the court says: "At its inception it is limited to five thousand dollars in value, and when the property is enhanced in value, so that it exceeds the statutory limit, the excess does not constitute a part of the statutory homestead. After the premises are worth five thousand dollars, every increase in value works a reduction in the area of the homestead." In the latter case, the court held that, under section 121 of the Probate Act, as amended in 1868, which required the court to set off to the survivor the homestead selected under the General Homestead Law, but did not contain any provision for determining the area of the homestead, where the selected premises exceeded five thousand dollars in value, it was the duty of the court nevertheless to ascertain the amount of land necessary to make up the value of the exemption, and set off that amount alone as the homestead. It is the homestead only which is exempt from execution and forced sale. With regard to sales on execution during the lifetime of the homestead claimants, the process by which the excess can be reached by the creditor is prescribed by the Civil Code (secs. 1245 to 1259, inclusive). Where, upon the death of the homestead claimant, the inventory shows that the premises claimed exceeded five thousand dollars in value, *Page 664 the method of determining what part is homestead and what part is subject to the debts of the deceased is prescribed by sections 1476 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure, which sections were followed in this case. The effect of this procedure was, that the portion not set off to the widow was then ascertained to be no part of the homestead, and it thereupon became subject to all debts of the deceased, including the mortgage in question. The rule which requires a mortgage upon the homestead to be presented to the administrator as a claim is based upon the provisions of section 1475 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and is limited to cases in which the homestead does not exceed five thousand dollars in value, or in which the mortgagee seeks to proceed in foreclosure of his mortgage against the property which is eventually set off as a homestead, where the premises described in the homestead declaration exceed five thousand dollars. It does not apply at all to a probate homestead. (McGahey v. Forest,109 Cal. 68.) The purpose of the provision, as stated in the leading case on the subject, Camp v. Grider, 62 Cal. 20, is to preserve the homestead to the parties entitled thereto, if possible. It was not intended to have any application whatever to lands which, by the proceedings prescribed in that chapter of the code, were eventually determined not to be a homestead, and there is no reason why it should be construed to apply to such land. We are of the opinion that it was not necessary for the mortgagee in this case to present his claim to the administrator as a condition precedent to his right to foreclose the mortgage on the excess.

For the reasons herein stated it is ordered that the decree be modified by striking therefrom the provisions relating to the continuance of the receiver in his office subsequent to the final decree, and that, as so modified, the judgment be affirmed.

Angellotti, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.

1 79 Am. St. Rep. 140.

1 91 Am. Dec. 637. *Page 665