Clark v. Johnston

193 P. 864, 49 Cal. App. 315, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 285
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3211.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 P. 864 (Clark v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Johnston, 193 P. 864, 49 Cal. App. 315, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 285 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BEASLY, J., pro tem.

These are appeals by the defendants in the several cases from identical orders vacating in each case a satisfaction of judgment theretofore entered in favor of the respective plaintiffs in the actions entitled as above. The orders were made upon the motion of the respondent Rauer, a stranger to the record. There are three eases, similar in all respects, consolidated by stipulation and tried together in the superior court, and they are here upon a consolidated record under section 941a et seq. of the- Code of Civil Procedure.

Avoiding so far as possible unnecessary detail, the facts of the three cases may be stated as. follows: Clark, the plaintiff, was a bookkeeper in the office of Rauer, a collector. Rauer held three promissory notes as indorsee or assignee against Davis and his codefendants. Rauer transferred these notes to Clark by assignments absolute in form. The purpose of the assignments was solely that Clark’s name should be used as plaintiff in these actions, which were accordingly begun in his name, one against Johnston and Davis, another against Campin and Davis, and the third against Taylor and Davis. A fourth action not embodied in this record figured in the facts as they finally developed in the trial court. These cases went to judgment in favor of plaintiff, the amounts thereof and of the fourth judgment above enumerated aggregating about $3,500. In this state of the cases Clark, at the instance of Davis, satisfied the judgments by *317 directions in writing to the clerk, which the latter obeyed by entering the satisfactions of record. For these satisfactions Clark took from Davis a check for $50 and a promissory note for $1,950. Clark made no profit personally from the transaction as he turned over and delivered the check and the note to Rauer’s attorney, who was also Clark’s attorney in the case. In one of the actions a writ of attachment had been issued and levied, and to secure the release of the property taken under this writ the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland had, at the instance of Davis and his co-defendant, executed an undertaking, and the surety company, in turn, in order to secure itself had taken from the defendants in the action certain collateral. This was released upon presentation to the surety company of proof of satisfaction executed by Clark. The rights of the Fidelity & Deposit Company are not involved in this matter, as no attempt was made in the proceedings following the satisfaction to reestablish any rights of Rauer or Clark against it. Davis by securing the satisfaction of the several judgments, if it is permitted to stand, will profit to the extent of having settled judgments in about the sum of $3,500 for a promissory note of problematical value and $50 in cash, and also by having procured the release of the collateral held by the surety company as security for its undertaking given upon the release of the levy of the writ of attachment.

Following this satisfaction proceedings were instituted by Rauer upon which this appeal is predicated. Rauer in each action noticed a motion to set aside the satisfaction. This motion was based upon the ground that the satisfaction of judgment “was made and entered without right and without consideration. ’ ’ In support of his motion Rauer filed certain affidavits of himself and his attorney showing that Clark had no interest whatever in the notes or in the judgment; that the assignments to him had been made solely for purposes of collection and only with the intent upon his part and upon that of Rauer that he should nominally be plaintiff in the action; that he was not permitted to conduct or manage the litigation in any way; that he paid none of the costs, and that he was, in short,- a mere figurehead in the case, and that Clark had nothing whatever to do with the actions except that they were prosecuted in his name; that at all times Rauer was the owner of the notes and judgments, *318 and that all these facts were at all times known to Davis; that Bauer had never authorized Clark to adjust, compromise, or settle the actions or to satisfy the judgments therein, and that Clark had no authority to do any of these things. Certain counter-affidavits were filed in the matter, but the trial court found in accordance with the facts above stated—or at least it must be presumed to have so found in support of the order which it subsequently made, no formal findings upon the matter - having been filed. Certain oral testimony was presented at the hearing, and, among other things, Bauer testified that he had told Davis distinctly that Clark had no interest whatever in the judgments. Upon this state of the record the trial court vacated the satisfaction of judgment in each case.

[1] Upon this record it is contended by appellants that Bauer, being a stranger to the record, could not be heard to move to vacate the satisfaction. Of course, a party to the record may have a satisfaction, entered in fraud of his rights, set aside on motion in the immediate action in which the judgment is entered (Haggin v. Clark, 61 Cal. 1.) This case takes us so far in the controversy upon firm ground. The court of appeals of the state of New York went a step further in the case of McGregor v. Comstock, 28 N. Y. 237. The case involved facts so nearly like those of the case before us as to be indistinguishable in principle. Comstock, a tenant of Winthrop, was sued in ejectment by McGregor and others. Comstock had judgment for his costs. The plaintiffs and their attorneys knew from the beginning of the action that Comstock was not the real defendant in the case but that Winthrop was the person in whose interest the defense was being made. The judgment was satisfied by Comstock unknown to and without consultation with Winthrop after the latter had procured an execution and its levy against property of some of the defendants. The court of appeals, affirming an order vacating the satisfaction, said: “The order appealed from should be affirmed, whether the application for the order be regarded as made by defendant’s attorney on his own behalf to enforce his lien as attorney, or on behalf of his client, who was the real party in interest and defended the action in the name of the nominal defendant for his own benefit.” After a further discussion the writer of the opinion con *319 tinues: “I am also of the opinion that under the circumstances Winthrop is to be regarded as the equitable assignee of the judgment as between him and Comstock, and that the giving of the satisfaction piece by Comstock was a fraud upon the rights of Winthrop. Winthrop had assumed the whole defense of the action and incurred all the expenses of the litigation. Comstock paid nothing and was liable for nothing to the attorney employed to defend. He had no equitable or legal right to the fruits of the judgment. The payment of the judgment to Comstock with knowledge of the facts was a fraud upon Winthrop. The facts disclosed in the affidavit show conclusively that a fraud was intended to be perpetrated. It would be a reproach to the law if such purpose could not be defeated.”

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 864, 49 Cal. App. 315, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-johnston-calctapp-1920.