Consolidated National Bank of Tucson v. Reiniger Mining & Smelting Co.

295 P. 79, 111 Cal. App. 64
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1931
DocketDocket No. 5960.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 295 P. 79 (Consolidated National Bank of Tucson v. Reiniger Mining & Smelting Co.) 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
Consolidated National Bank of Tucson v. Reiniger Mining & Smelting Co., 295 P. 79, 111 Cal. App. 64 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment entered by the trial court against them in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1464.45.

Plaintiff brought its action in the court below to recover upon a judgment rendered the twenty-ninth day of March, 1920, in the Superior Court of the County of Maricopa, State of Arizona, in an action entitled George A. Kennedy, Plaintiff, v. The Reiniger Mining and Smelting Company, a Corporation, and Charles P. Reiniger, Defendants. In said action the plaintiff caused a writ of garnishment to be issued and served on the Consolidated National Bank of Tucson, Arizona, the plaintiff in the present case. The bank failed to answer said writ, and after judgment was rendered against the defendants in said action and on the same day, the plaintiff entered a judgment by default against said garnishee for the same amount as the primary judgment. The defendants in their answer to plaintiff’s complaint admit that at the time said writ of garnishment was served on said Consolidated National Bank that it was not indebted to defendants or either of them and that it had no money or other property of either of the defendants. Both judgments were rendered March 29, 1920, and were final judgments on May 16, 1921, when said Kennedy assigned said primary judgment to said bank, and satisfied the judgment against the bank upon receipt from said bank of the amount of the judgment so taken against it by default. The facts above stated clearly appear from the evidence introduced, even without the documentary evidence, objection to the introduction of which was sustained by the trial court.

*66 Appellant contends that the payment to Kennedy by the bank of the judgment against it was a satisfaction of the primary judgment as well as the one against the garnishee, and that the assignment of such primary judgment was wholly ineffective to prevent such satisfaction. •

There is no question but that if the bank had satisfied the judgment against the defendants it would have been a voluntary payment and the bank could not have compelled contribution. (Segog v. Engle, 43 Minn. 191 [45 N. W. 427].) The record is clear, however, that such was not attempted to be done by either party to the transaction. The witness Steinfield, who was the president of the bank at the time of the transaction with Kennedy, was asked regarding the payment made to Kennedy: “It was in full settlement of both transactions?” To which he answered: “No, it was settlement of the garnishment against the bank and an assignment of the claim upon which this was based.” On direct examination said witness testified relative to the settlement as follows: “Q. What did the bank pay that $1566.93 to Kennedy for? A. It paid it for the judgment that Kennedy obtained against Reiniger in an action which he brought against Reiniger and the garnishee judgment that the bank had entered against it because it inadvertently had forgotten to file an answer.” There is nothing in the record to contradict such testimony. While it is true that the judgment against the bank effectually estopped it from denying as against the plaintiff Kennedy that it had no funds or property of the defendants in the action, and was not indebted to them, it did not make the bank jointly or severally liable to Kennedy on the same obligation with the defendants, nor did it create any relation at all with the defendants. As to them the bank remained as it was before, a stranger, and as such stranger, while it did not have the right by paying the primary judgment and satisfying it, to compel contribution, as we have said, it certainly had the right to protect itself by paying the judgment so inadvertently rendered against it, and taking an assignment of the judgment against the defendants.

A garnishment proceeding is in effect a suit by the defendant against the debtor, by which plaintiff is subrogated to the rights of the original creditor. (Hunting *67 ton v. Risdon, 43 Iowa, 517.) Here the defendants had no rights to which Kennedy could become subrogated, and defendants not having been prejudiced by the assignment which Kennedy had the right to make and the bank to take, and not having paid the judgment against them, we do not see where they have any reason to complain.

Defendants offered in evidence the complaint, answer and transcript of minute orders of November 18, 1922, and December 30, 1922, in the case of Kennedy v. Charles P. Reiniger and Frank W. Leslie, in the Superior Court of the State of Arizona, in and for Pima County, and also exemplified copies of the complaint, answer, first amended answer on motion to bring in additional parties defendant of the Consolidated National Bank of Tucson, supplemental answer of the same defendant, second supplemental amended answer of said bank, verdict of the jury, and transcript of minutes entered, particularly of October 11, 1921, and October 13, 1921, and to and including the minute entry of Friday, November 18, 1921, all in that certain action in the Superior Court of the State of Arizona, in and for the County of Pima, entitled Selim M. Franklin v. Consolidated National Bank of Tucson, Arizona, to all of which plaintiff’s objections to such introduction were sustained by the court. It is appellant’s contention that the documents so offered show that the action of the Arizona court, in each case, bars plaintiff’s action in the present case, and that the court committed prejudicial error in sustaining such objections.

The complaint in the first case, i. e., that of Kennedy v. Reiniger and Leslie, alleges the making and docketing of the judgment sued on here, the issuance of a writ of execution directed to the plaintiff in Pima County, Arizona, and its return unsatisfied. That the defendant Reiniger in 1919 purchased from certain parties an undivided one-half interest in and to certain mining claims, the deed for which he caused to be made to the defendant Leslie; that the purchase price was paid by Reiniger' and title taken by said Leslie for his benefit, and for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of said Reiniger, and that Leslie had notice of such intent, and the complaint prayed that it be decreed that Reiniger was the real owner of said interest, and that the same be sold to pay plaintiff’s *68 judgment. The complaint was filed December 5, 1921, and after the assignment to the bank by Kennedy of the judgment sued on. The defendants in their answer set up a plea in bar, alleging substantially that the plaintiff had no real interest in the judgment set out in the complaint for the reason that the same had been satisfied and discharged by the plaintiff in this action, and that said bank was the real party plaintiff, “wherefore, defendants plead in bar to this action that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest and that the same should be dismissed ’ ’.

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Bluebook (online)
295 P. 79, 111 Cal. App. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-national-bank-of-tucson-v-reiniger-mining-smelting-co-calctapp-1931.