Credit Bureau of San Diego, Inc. v. Getty

142 P.2d 105, 61 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 823, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 725
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 1943
DocketCiv. A. 115559
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 P.2d 105 (Credit Bureau of San Diego, Inc. v. Getty) 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
Credit Bureau of San Diego, Inc. v. Getty, 142 P.2d 105, 61 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 823, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 725 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

HAINES, P. J.

The record discloses the following state of facts:

On April 9, 1941, plaintiff and respondent, Credit Bureau of San Diego, a California corporation, recovered against *Supp. 825 one Theodore T. Osborne a judgment in the Municipal Court of the City of San Diego in the amount of $513.03, which is still in force and wholly unsatisfied, and the judgment debtor appears to be insolvent. On April 29, 1943, however, in a criminal action then pending against him, Osborne deposited with the Clerk of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of San Diego, cash bail amounting to $500. The criminal action was, on May 13, 1943, dismissed and a written order made on May 14, 1943, by the superior court, exonerating said bond. Meantime, the money had been deposited by the clerk with the county treasurer in pursuance of the provisions of section 4292a of the Political Code. There was presented to the superior court an affidavit made on May 13, 1943, by Osborne’s attorney, reciting that the money was due to Osborne, pursuant to which that court, on May 17, 1943, by order directed the appellant Getty, the county auditor, to draw a warrant in Osborne’s favor on the county treasurer for the said $500, and directed the treasurer to pay the same. The warrant was pursuant to said order, and on a requisition from the clerk dated May 18, 1943, accordingly so drawn and the money paid to Osborne on May 19, 1943.

On May 14, 1943, however, the respondent Credit Bureau of San Diego had tendered to one Graves, a supervising account clerk and deputy county auditor, an abstract of said municipal court judgment, issued by the clerk of the municipal court on May 7, 1943, with the affidavit of respondent’s president, dated on that day and captioned in said municipal court case, to the effect that there was then due on the judgment $590.60 and “That there is now due on this judgment (including interest to date, accrued costs and costs of this abstract and the filing thereof and deducting all payments and credits) the total sum of $590.60; That there is money, wages or salary owing and unpaid to Theo T. Osborne a judgment debtor; from the County Clerk (for bail deposited) department of the County Treasurer and the judgment creditor desires to avail himself of the provisions of section 710 C.C.P. and have said money, or enough thereof to satisfy this judgment, paid into the above Court.”

On the advice of a deputy district attorney, the deputy auditor, Graves, refused to accept said abstract of judgment and affidavit. Thereafter and on May 28, 1943, respon *Supp. 826 dent corporation, Credit Bureau of San Diego, instituted in the municipal court the present action against Getty, both personally and in his capacity as county auditor, and subsequently recovered judgment against him in said action in his personal capacity only, for the said sum of $500, and it is from this judgment that the present appeal is taken.

The first proposition relied on by appellant is: “That money deposited in an official trust fund pursuant to the provisions of Political Code Section 4292a is not money owing and unpaid from the County and therefore Section 710 of the Code of Civil Procedure can have no application.”

It is trué that the procedure authorized by section 710 is applicable, by the terms of that section, only when the judgment sought to be enforced is rendered “against a defendant to whom money is owing and unpaid by this State or by any county, city and county, city or municipality, quasi municipality or public corporation.” The test, then, of its applicability, in any particular case, is whether the state, or the political subdivision of the state involved, owes the judgment debtor money, that is, at the time involved, unpaid. It is, on appellant’s behalf, urged that in contemplation of law if anybody “owed” the $500 to Osborne when the plaintiff presented its abstract of judgment at the auditor’s office, it was the clerk of the superior court, or at all events, not the county, and that there never was money “owing and unpaid” to Osborne by the county, and that, therefore, whatever other procedure may have been open to the plaintiff for reaching the $500, the procedure contemplated by section 710 was not available to accomplish that purpose. It must, we think, be conceded that Osborne was not a creditor of the county in the sense of having any claim upon any of its public funds. As noted in the opening brief for appellant, the Supreme Court, in Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. County of San Diego, 112 Cal. 314 [41 P. 423, 44 P. 571], in dealing with an action purporting to be brought under section 3819 of the Political Code, as then existing, to recover from a county taxes paid under protest in pursuance of what was claimed to be an illegal assessment for the benefit of a school district, held that the demurrer to the complaint ought to have been sustained, since, though the county treasury was the depositary for the school district’s funds, yet:

*Supp. 827 “The funds of the school district are not subject to the control of the county, so as to allow a reimbursement of the county for the amount of the judgment if it should be paid.”

So, also, in Elberg v. County of San Luis Obispo, 112 Cal. 316 [41 P. 475, 44 P. 572], involving an action to recover taxes paid for the benefit of a high school district, under protest, where the action was brought against the county, it was said (p. 318) :

“The county, as such, has no interest in the funds of the high school district, nor any control over the same in the county treasury (Stats. 1893, p. 272); and we do not think it was the legislative intent, by the enactment of section 3819 of the Political Code, to permit an action against a county to recover taxes paid to and held by its officials, not for the benefit of the county nor subject to its disposition, but for the use of, and to be disbursed by, a distinct organization— a local district within the county. If judgment is obtained in such an action against the county, then it must be paid by the county; and no provision is made by which it may have recourse upon the district for the amount thus paid, as it has against the state in the ease of enforced repayment of taxes which have already reached the state treasury (Pol. Code, see. 3819); manifestly this would be unjust to those parts of the county not within the district, and we should not attribute to the legislature a design to allow such a result unless that construction is required by the terms of the statute—as it is not in this instance.”

It will be noted that in each of these cases, although the taxes were actually paid into the county treasury, the law provided that, while there, they should be part of a specific fund belonging to the school district, not the county, and subject to disbursement, not upon the order of the board of supervisors, but only upon warrants drawn under order of the board of trustees of the school district and by its officers.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P.2d 105, 61 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 823, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/credit-bureau-of-san-diego-inc-v-getty-calctapp-1943.