Cordes v. Harding

150 P. 650, 27 Cal. App. 474, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 46
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1493.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 150 P. 650 (Cordes v. Harding) 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
Cordes v. Harding, 150 P. 650, 27 Cal. App. 474, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 46 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit in an action instituted for the recovery of the sum of $1,720.20, alleged to be due to the plaintiff under the terms and conditions of a contract entered into by him with the defendants.

The sufficiency as a matter of law of the pleaded and proven facts to constitute a cause of action was challenged by the motion for nonsuit, and these facts, as admitted by the pleadings or established in evidence, are conceded to he substantially as summarized in the plaintiff’s statement of the ease, which, with some slight modifications, will be adopted as a general statement of the facts involved in and essential to a determination of the points presented in support of the appeal.

In the early part of the year 1910 and for some time prior thereto the defendants, Hardin and Monroe, were attorneys *476 for the Consolidated Mines Company, a corporation, which owned certain mining property in the county of Amador. At this time they, the defendants, asserted a claim aganst the Mines Company for $10,193.25 for legal services, and through their assignee, I. Linderman, brought suit, and on May 9,1910, procured an attachment',upon the company’s property. At that time the company wS&,indebted to certain persons for merchandise sold in various anhsqmts, aggregating $2,283.65. These creditors threatened to commence proceedings against the Mines Company to have it declarecE^ bankrupt. However, they did not pursue this plan, but assigned their claim to W. F. Cordes, the plaintiff here, who brought an action against the Mines Company, and caused an attachment to be levied on June 17, 1910, on the same property of the company which had been previously attached in the suitXbrought by Linderman. A stipulation was thereupon made, entitled in the court and causes of Linderman and Cordes againsi<the Mines Company, signed by the attorneys for the respective plaintiffs, providing as follows: )

“It is stipulated by and between the plaintiffs in thje above entitled actions and their' attorneys that all recoveries or avails effected in either of said suits under or by virtu'e of the attachments which have been issued therein and levied upon the property of the California Mines Company, a corporation, in the county of Amador, state of California, shall be ratably apportioned between said plaintiffs according to the respective amounts of their claims, or according to the respective amounts of the judgments rendered and entered in said suits should judgments be recovered and entered. x
“The following are the claims assigned to the plaintiff Cordes and which are to share with the demand of the plaintiff Linderman: E. I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Co., $373.75; John A. Roebling Sons, $1,554.69; H. S. Crocker Co., $44.40; Pacific Coast Rubber Co., $310.81.
“It is further stipulated that in case of sale upon execution under either of the attachments in said actions Nos. 29,474 or 30,195, a copy of this stipulation shall be delivered to the officer making such sale, and that such officer shall distribute the proceeds in accordance with this stipulation.
“This stipulation shall be deemed a part of another stipulation this,day entered into between the attorney for Cordes and the attorney for plaintiff in a certain action pending *477 in the county of Alameda, state of California, entitled ‘The Amador Keystone Mining Co., plaintiff, vs. California Consolidated Mines Co., a corporation, defendant, and numbered 32,244 therein, dated June 23, 1910.”

The stipulation referred to in the paragraph last quoted was one entered into between the attorney for Cordes and the attorney for the Amador Keystone Mining Co., whereby it was agreed that Cordes’s attachment should have precedence over that of the Amador Company in so far as the property of the company defendant known as Weidman-Mahoney mines was concerned. Neither of these stipulations was filed among the records of the action of Linderman vs. the Mines Company. Linderman subsequently obtained a judgment for $8,883.10, but no execution was issued thereon. Prior to December 1, 1911, a transcript of the judgment was filed in the office of the recorder of Alameda County.- On November 23, 1910, Cordes obtained judgment against the Mines Company for $2,301.90. The property of the company was subject to sale under another lien prior in time, which had attached by virtue of the entry of a judgment against the Mines Company in favor of a corporation known as the Chichizola Estate Co. Execution was issued on this judgment and levied on the property, and after proper proceedings the property was sold by the sheriff on December 16, 1910, to the Chichizola Estate Co., and a certificate of sale delivered to it and a duplicate recorded. Thereafter the Chichizola Estate Co. paid taxes in the sum of ten thousand dollars which were a lien on the property, and later assigned its certificate of sale to one William J. McGee. Before the period of redemption expired the defendants Hardin and Monroe, who were the actual owners of the Linderman judgment, obtained an extension of that period by demanding a statement of the rents and profits under section 707 of the Code of Civil Procedure. On December 22, 1911, within the extension the defendant Monroe appeared in Jackson, the county seat of Amador, with the money to redeem the certificate which McGee held by assignment from the Chichizola Estate Company. It is an admitted fact in the case that Harding and Monroe had on deposit the sum of twenty-three thousand dollars, and were ready to exercise their rights as subsequent judgment lien-holders to redeem the property of the Mines Company from McGee. The property was worth about thirty thousand *478 dollars and on that day McGee purchased the cause of action, attachment, and judgment of the defendants Hardin and Monroe without any limitation or restriction for the sum of seven thousand dollars. Since that time McGee has claimed to be the sole owner of the Linderman cause of action and the judgment obtained therein. Four days later the sheriff of Amador County executed and delivered to McGee his deed to the property in question. Neither plaintiff Cordes nor his assignors have received anything whatever from the suit, attachment, or judgment against the Mines Company. A demand was made upon the defendants for the payment of a share of the money received by them from McGee, but the defendants ignored the demand.

The plaintiff’s cause of action, which was pleaded in two counts, proceeded upon the theory: 1. That the money received by the defendants from McGee upon the sale to him by the defendants of the Linderman cause of action and judgment constituted either “an avail or recovery” effected in the Linderman action within the meaning of those' words as they were employed in the contract, and that therefore the defendants were obligated, in keeping with the terms of the contract, to share ratably with the plaintiff the sum received from McGee; 2. That if such sum was not an avail or a recovery, then when the defendants sold their judgment to McGee they put it out of their power to effect any avails or recoveries, and thereby breached their contract with the plaintiff, and consequently must respond to the plaintiff in damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 P. 650, 27 Cal. App. 474, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordes-v-harding-calctapp-1915.