Daily v. Superior Court

40 P.2d 936, 4 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 378
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1935
DocketCiv. 9699
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 936 (Daily v. Superior Court) 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
Daily v. Superior Court, 40 P.2d 936, 4 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 378 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

This is an application for a writ of review brought for the purpose of having annulled an order in a contempt proceeding. The alleged contempt occurred in the immediate presence of the trial court while calling the calendar. Judge Jorgensen, the trial judge, being absent on his vacation, Judge Atteridge of Santa Cruz County was presiding. At the time of the alleged contempt no action was taken. After Judge Jorgensen returned from his vacation John M. Thompson, Esq., the attorney for one of the aggrieved parties, presented to the respondent court his affidavit setting forth the facts and applied for a citation. The citation was issued and served. Later each of the petitioners appeared and filed verified answers. A hearing was had, on issue joined, and thereafter an extended order was prepared and signed. Among other things that order contains the following: ,

“FINDINGS OF FACT
“The court finds that the statements, allegations and averments contained in the affidavit of John Thompson above referred to are true, except that the court finds that Roy Daily did not appear as an attorney for Bayside Fish Flour Co. in the Irwin suit hereinafter referred to.
“That at all of the times herein mentioned said John Thompson was and now is the attorney for Del Mar Canning Corporation, a corporation, plaintiff in the above entitled action; that in the above entitled action a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant on the 10th day of December, 1932, for a sum of money in excess of $5,000.00; that on the 6th day of April, 1934, there was filed in the above-entitled court an action entitled O. W. Irwin, plaintiff v. Bayside Fish Flour Co., a corporation, defendant; that in the action of Irwin v. Bayside Fish Flour Co., a judgment was entered on the 14th day of May, 1934, against Bayside Fish Flour Co., for the sum of $561.03, together with interest and costs, and a writ of execution was issued upon such judgment, and by virtue *129 of such writ of execution the Sheriff of Monterey County on the 7th day of June, 1934, sold certain personal property of the defendant to satisfy said execution; that upon the sale said property was purchased for the sum of $4,300.00, leaving a balance over and above the amount necessary to satisfy the execution under which the property was sold, in a sum of approximately $3,800.00; that thereafter a writ of execution was issued in the above entitled action upon the judgment obtained therein on the 10th day of December, 1932, directed to the Sheriff of Monterey County, and said writ of execution was delivered to said Sheriff while the amount realized from said execution sale in the Irwin case was still in the hands of said Sheriff; that the said Sheriff thereafter delivered the amount received by him on said execution sale, towit: $4,300.00, less his costs, to the above entitled court to be applied as this court should direct upon the writ of execution in the O. W. Irwin case and upon the writ of execution in the above entitled case.” It is then recited that on the tenth day of July, 1934, the Del Mar Canning Corporation served upon petitioners and filed a notice of motion that it would apply for an order directing the clerk to turn over said moneys to it. It is further alleged that on the twenty-fourth day of July, 1934, the defendant Bayside Fish Flour Company, through petitioners as its attorneys, served and filed a notice of motion to recall the execution issued to the Del Mar Canning Corporation. Continuing the order recites: “that on July 30th, 1934, Judge H. G. Jorgensen, the judge of the above entitled court was on his summer vacation, and said Judge James L. Atteridge, the judge of Santa Cruz county, California, was acting in his place in the hearing only of uncontested matters; that Judge Atteridge was not familiar with the calendar and the various motions and counter motions above referred to; that said Judge Atteridge had no knowledge of any of the judgments or executions above referred to, or any facts in reference thereto; that on the said 30th day of July, 1934, both the said motion of plaintiff and the said motion of defendant in the above entitled action, being on the calendar of the above entitled court, together with various other matters, said James L. Atteridge, acting as judge of said court, being present and presiding, and both said attorneys, Roy Daily and Theodore *130 M. Monell being present in the court- room, at about the hour of ten o’clock a. m. of said day, said Judge Atteridge prior to calling said calendar asked if there were any ex parte motions, whereupon said Theodore M. Monell purporting to appear in said action of Irwin v. Bayside Fish Flour Co. presented an ex parte motion to have all .the said excess moneys realized on the writ of execution, in the said Irwin case, and then in the hands of the court as aforesaid, and amounting to approximately $3,800.00 delivered to defendant, BAYSIDE FISH FLOUR COMPANY; that said Roy Daily was present at all times during the presentation of said ex parte motion and on one occasion during the argument thereof between said Judge Atteridge and said Theodore M. Monell said Daily engaged said Monell in a whispered conversation; that at said time said attorneys Roy Daily and Theodore M. Monell fraudulently misled and deceived the court in that they, and each of them, failed to inform the court that the plaintiff, Del Mar Canning Corporation, through its attorney, John Thompson, was claiming this fund and had made a motion to deliver this same money over to the plaintiff, Del Mar Canning Corporation. That said attorneys, Daily and Monell, and each of them fraudulently misled and deceived the court by failing to inform the court that the motion of the Del Mar Canning Corporation was on the calendar and involved the right of said Del Mar Canning Corporation to the same moneys, and by failing to inform the court that the defendant had a motion upon the calendar to recall the execution of the Del Mar Canning Corporation, and that there was a conflicting claim of the Del Mar Canning Corporation against those same moneys; that the attorneys Roy Daily and Theodore M. Monell took advantage of the court’s ignorance concerning the state of the calendar, the record in the above entitled action, the judgment of the plaintiff therein, the writ of execution issued in the above entitled action and the motion pending on behalf of the plaintiff to deliver the moneys over to it; that Judge Atteridge not being advised as to these matters, and relying upon the deceit and misrepresentation of said attorneys, ordered the moneys above referred to delivered to the defendant. That had Judge Atteridge known of the judgment in the above entitled action, or of the writ of execution issued herein, or of the motion of the plaintiff to have the *131 moneys delivered to it herein, or of the notice of said motion on file herein, or of the motion of the defendant to recall the execution herein, or any of said matters, he would not have made the ex parte

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Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 936, 4 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daily-v-superior-court-calctapp-1935.