Court Opinion

ID: 4719923
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:35:37.768764+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:36.162457
License: Public Domain

Mitchell, J.
Frances M. Robinson executed and delivered her several promissory notes, aggregating *78the sum of $21,500, payable to Edward Gr. Widmann. At the same time, and to secure the payment of the notes, she executed and delivered a mortgage in the sum of $21,500, on real property owned by her in the state of California; and in addition at the same time, as a part of the same transaction and to secure the payment in part of the same promissory notes, she executed and delivered a mortgage in the sum of $3,000 on land owned by her in King county, Washington. The transactions occurred in California, where the parties then lived. Subsequently she conveyed the mortgaged land in King county to the defendants in this action. Thereafter, upon maturity and nonpayment of the notes, 'suit was brought in California upon the notes and for a foreclosure of the mortgage on the property in that state. In that suit there was judgment as prayed for, and a foreclosure sale of all the California property, resulting in a deficiency judgment for $3,488.85. Thereupon this action was brought in the superior court of King’ county, Washington, upon the deficiency judgment of the California court, not for any personal judgment here, but only to foreclose the mortgage on the King county land in an amount. authorized by the terms of the mortgage on the King county land, not in excess of the deficiency judgment of the California court, and foreclosing all rights of the defendants as subsequent purchasers of the King county land. There was a judgment of foreclosure, as prayed for, in the- sum of $3,112.05, and costs amounting to $28. Defendants have appealed.
There is no dispute as to the facts. Appellants, noticing a provision of the present mortgage, namely, “that when $3,000 has been paid on the $21,500 debt, then the mortgagee herein will release this mortgage,” contend that, because $1,000 was paid" on the debt be*79fore suit, and because tbe sale of tbe property in California was for an amount in excess of the remainder due on tbis mortgage, therefore tbe mortgage bere bas been satisfied. To tbe extent of tbe $1,000 payment, tbe contention is right, and in fact it was taken care of in tbe present judgment. Otherwise tbe contention is without merit; for evidently tbe payment to effect a release of tbe mortgage means voluntary payment, and not an enforced collection, of less than tbe whole debt, by foreclosure suit and sale in California. The mortgage bere was given to secure a note of $3,000, which, with other notes, made up tbe $21,500 mentioned in tbe California mortgage; and tbe record shows tbe sale in California was for an amount not sufficient to satisfy that portion of tbe total debt, together with interest and costs of suit in California- remaining after deducting tbe amount still due of tbe $3,000, to secure tbe payment of which tbe present mortgage was given.
Further, appellants, citing Mascarel v. Raff our, 51 Cal. 242, and Dooly v. Eastman, 28 Wash. 564, 68 Pac. 1039, rely on tbe rule:
“If a mortgage is given on two pieces of land, and tbe mortgagee enforces it against and sells only one piece, be thereby waives tbe lien of tbe mortgage on the other piece; . . .” Mascarel v. Raff our, supra [syllabus].
The theory or reason upon which the rule rests is expressed by this court in the Dooly case, wherein, quoting from the Mascarel case, it was said:
“ ‘By the foreclosure the mortgage is merged in the judgment, and a new action could not be maintained to foreclose the mortgage as to the omitted lot.’ ”
But in each of those cases—indeed, in all such cases where the rule has been enforced—the situation was as stated in the Dooly case, to the effect that the mort*80gagee had the right to include in the first foreclosure suit the land involved in the second action, and to have the same sold in payment of the judgment, but failed and neglected to do so. Clearly, however, the rule was impossible here. There could have been no merger of the mortgage on land in this state in a judgment obtained in the state of California; nor did the mortgagee have the right to include in the foreclosure suit in California the land here in controversy, or have it sold in payment of a judgment obtained there, for the very plain reason the court in California had no jurisdiction to foreclose a Hen upon real property in this state.
The properties are situated in different states, and the merger of the note or notes in a judgment does not extinguish the debt, but simply the form of the evidence of it, and the mortgage here continues to be an enforcible lien until that portion of the debt it was given to secure payment of is satisfied. Jones, Mortgages (7th ed.), § 936; 27 Cyc., pages 1409, 1410; 19 R. C. L., page 436, § 219, “Mortgages.”
Finding- no error in the case, the judgment is affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Parker, Main, and Mackintosh, JJ., concur.