Hibernia Savings & Loan Society v. Thornton
Before: Garoutte, Temple
Synopsis
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of S'an Francisco and from an order denying a new trial. J. C. B. Hebbard, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Opinion — Garoutte
GAROUTTE, J.
This is an action brought upon a promissory note. Plaintiff having introduced the note in evidence and rested, a motion for a nonsuit was made by defendant and • granted, whereupon plaintiff appeals.
The motion for a nonsuit was made and granted upon the ground that the promissory note upon which the action was brought was secured by a mortgage, and that no action was brought to foreclose the mortgage. It is now insisted by plaintiff that there is no evidence in the record showing the note to have been secured by a mortgage. The note was introduced in evidence, and among other matters it recited: “And if default he made in the payment of the principal sum, as above provided, it shall hear interest thereafter until paid at the rate of two per cent per month. This note secured by a mortgage of even date herewith.” Upon a previous appeal in this case
(Hibernia Sav. etc. Soc. v. Thornton,
117 Cal. 481) it was held that the complaint contained no allegation that the promissory note was secured by a mortgage. The complaint at that time was the
[576]
same as we have in this record, and contained in the body thereof a copy of the note. Upon that appeal the court said: “There is, however, no averment in the complaint that the note was secured by a mortgage, and the recital to that effect in the note cannot, as matter of pleading, he treated as the equivalent of such averment. It is only by inference or argument from this recital that it can be assumed that a mortgage was ever executed, and the rule is as much in force under the code as at common law that argumentative pleading is not permissible.”
Plaintiff now rests this appeal upon the construction of the pleading declared by the foregoing language. But a material difference at once presents itself between the case at bar and the case presented upon the previous appeal. The court, upon that appeal, was dealing with the pleading as such, while upon this appeal it is dealing with the evidence as such. While the recital, “this note secured by a mortgage of even date herewith,” may not he sufficient as a statement of fact, viewed from the standpoint of a good pleading, still that recital may be sufficient evidence
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