Judges: Field
Filed Date: 7/1/1860
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, J. concurring.
This is an action to recover the possession of certain premises, situated within the city and county of San Francisco, and arises upon the following facts: In 1853, the plaintiff conveyed the premises to Baker, for the consideration of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, and received from him, at the time, a mortgage as security for the purchase money. The conveyance and mortgage were executed simultaneously. Both were of the premises in fee, but without covenants of warranty. Upon the foreclosure of the mortgage, the plaintiff became the purchaser, and received the Sheriff’s deed.
To resist a recovery, the defendants offered to prove an older and better title by grant from the government of Mexico, before the cession of the country to the United States, and to follow such proof by deraignment of title from the grantees to Boyreau, passing through Baker, after the execution of the mortgage under which the plaintiff claims. The Court excluded the evidence as immaterial, and the defendants excepted.
It was admitted that Clark was in the occupation of the premises at the time he executed the conveyance to Baker, and that the latter entered under the conveyance, and was in the possession when he acquired the older title. The plaintiff had judgment, and the defendants appeal.
The Respondent relies for the affirmance of the judgment upon several grounds, but it is unnecessary to refer to only one of them—that which relates to the operation of the deed of mortgage upon the older and outstanding title, subsequently acquired by the mortgagor. In the case of Clark v. Baker et al. decided at the present term, we had occasion to consider the effect of this mortgage upon the after-acquired interest. We there held that it was immaterial whether the mortgage was regarded as a conveyance of a conditional estate, as at common law, or as creating a mere lien or incumbrance, as by the law of this State, that though by our law the title does not pass, yet the lien created operates upon the property in a way precisely
Judgment affirmed.