Court Opinion

ID: 5449698
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:17:13.636568+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:20.310012
License: Public Domain

THE COURT.
Foreclosure of a mortgage on real estate. The complaint is verified. Plaintiff had judgment, from which defendant, Catharine S. Escailler,appeals on the judgment-roll alone. Appellant objects to the judgment upon two grounds: 1. That it was error to allow attorney’s fees; and 2. That the count erred in failing to find upon the issues raised hy her answer.
1. The mortgage was given to secure the payment of a promissory note. Upon the subject of attorney’s fees it contained the following provision: Upon default ‘The mortgagee may foreclose this mortgage, and may include in said' foreclosure a reasonable counsel fee, to be fixed hy the court, together with *298all payme'nts made by the mortgagee for insurance upon the buildings on said premises, and for any adverse claims to the mortgaged property, for searching title to the mortgaged premises, to the execution hereof, and for taxes on said premises, other than the taxes on this mortgage, or the money hereby secured, all of which payments the mortgagee is hereby authorized to make, and the same, with interest thereon at the same rate as provided in said promissory note, shall be deemed to be secured by this mortgage and payable to the mortgagee or assigns in and out of -the proceeds of the sale under said foreclosure.” Unless the mortgage be given to secure the payment of attorney’s fees, such fees may not be included as a part of the mortgage lien upon foreclosure. If the mortgagor contracts for the allowance of such attorney’s fees, but does not secure the payment of them in the mortgage, these fees are in the nature of a special damage, which may be pleaded and recovered against the mortgagor, but for them the mortgagee may have only a personal judgment. (Prescott v. Grady, 91 Cal. 518.) The mortgage here under consideration declares that in the foreclosure may be included a reasonable counsel fee, together with all payments made by the mortgagee for specified purposes, all of which payments shall be deemed to be secured by the mortgage. A mortgage security is given, therefor, for the payment of the promissory note and for the repayment of such designated sums as may have been expended by the- mortgagee; but, while much care is shown to bring these expenditures strictly within the mortgage, it is nowhere declared that the mortgage lien shall extend to and protect the attorney’s fees. In this respect the case is identical in principle with that of Irvine v. Perry, 119 Cal. 352, and with the cases there cited. It follows, therefore, that while plaintiff is entitled upon proper showing to recover attorney’s fees in his action, tie is not entitled to have those fees included in the amount of the mortgage lien. He must rely alone upon a personal judgment. -The averment in the complaint “that the sum of two hundred dollars is a reasonable sum to he allowed plaintiff as his attorney and counsel fees for the foreclosure of this mortgage” is a sufficient averment upon this point.
2. The only answer to the complaint made by defendant, the *299mortgagor and appellant, related to an agreement alleged as •follows: “That since the commencement of said action the said plaintiff and the said defendant agreed one with the other "that the said defendant should pay the total' amount of interest claimed by the said plaintiff to be due upon the notes and mortgages, .... all costs and expenses incurred "by said plaintiff in bringing said action, "and the sum of one hundred dollars for plaintiff’s attorney in compensation for his services in said action, as a full and complete satisfaction of the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s complaint”; payment of one hundred dollars on account of said settlement is averred; and that “by reason of said agreement the said plaintiff has waived his cause of action alleged in plaintiff’s complaint. The answer is duly verified. It appears from the complaint that the promissory note secured hy the mortgage was dated June 1, 3896, and was for the sum of two thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, payable two years after date, with twelve per cent interest payable quarterly. The complaint was filed June 25, 1897, to which time but fifty dollars interest had been -paid. The mortgage gave the mortgagee the option of declaring the principal" of the note to be due upon any default in payment of interest, and it is alleged that he gave defendant notice of having elected to regard the note as due. There is a finding that since the commencement of the action defendant, appellant, has paid plaintiff one hundred dollars, of which twenty-two dollars and thirty cents were on account of costs of this suit, and sevent}'seven dollars and seventy cents were on account of attorney’s fees “on behalf of plaintiff in this suit.”
It is also found that the. principal sum of the note, together " with interest (except fifty dollars interest paid 'before suit was brought), is unpaid. The finding as to payments made after suit was commenced shows that the amount corresponds with the amount alleged to have been paid under the agreement pleaded, but there is nothing in the findings to show that this was the identical money so paid.
Appellant makes the point that the court erred in not finding upon the issues presented by the answer, to which the respondent replies, that the answer presented no-issues, calling for findings. It is not necessary to pass upon the sufficiency of the answer to raise an issue of fact.
*300In Wise v. Burton, 73 Cal. 175, it was said: “This court will not reverse for want of a finding on an issue with respect to which there is no evidence.” Commenting upon this rule in Himmelman v. Henry, 84 Cal. 104, it was said: “In the case at bar—which is brought here upon the judgment-roll alone—wé will not presume that there was evidence upon a point in respect to which there is no finding. This view of the case makes it unnecessary to consider the question whether or not the alleged special issues were material.” (See Giletti v. Saracco, 110 Cal. 438.) Appellant, to present his point, should have shown by bill of exceptions, or otherwise, that evidence was submitted upon the issues made by his answer. The case now before us, we think, plainly falls within the rule above stated. The findings support -the judgment.
The judgment is therefore ordered modified in the respect above indicated—that is to say, a personal judgment shall be given to plaintiff for the amount found due to him for counsel and attorn ejr’s fees in this foreclosure suit, but such amount shall not be included in the amount of the mortgage lien for the payment of which the property was ordered sold. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.