Everts v. Will S. Fawcett Co.

74 P.2d 815, 24 Cal. App. 2d 213
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1937
DocketCiv. 2010; Civ. 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 815 (Everts v. Will S. Fawcett 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
Everts v. Will S. Fawcett Co., 74 P.2d 815, 24 Cal. App. 2d 213 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The appellant has appealed from two orders setting aside two execution sales and canceling the certificates of sale. The orders were made in two separate actions but the appeals have been consolidated and presented on one set of briefs, the material facts in each case being exactly similar and the questions of law being identical.

The appellant, as assignee for collection of the Bank of America N. T. & S. A., had recovered judgments against these respondents in two actions in the Superior Court of Imperial County, based upon money loaned, and both judgments had become final. Executions were issued and four claims or causes of action, then pending in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, were sold by the sheriff at execution sales and were purchased by the appellant. Two of the causes of action thus sold were brought by the respondent Fawcett Co. against the Bank of America, its associated corporations and certain corporation officials, and the other two were brought by the respondent Fawcett against the same defendants. All four of these actions were based upon unliquidated claims for damages for fraud, it being alleged in two of them that Fawcett Co. and Fawcett had been induced through fraudulent representations to purchase certain shares of stock in Transamerica Corporation, and in the other two that the same plaintiffs had been thus induced to refrain from selling certain shares in that corporation.

*215 It appears that statutory notice of these sales was given, that the respective plaintiffs in the Los Angeles County actions had actual notice of the sales well in advance of the time set, that they did not appear at the sales and that immediately after the sales they were notified that the same had taken place. More than six months later these respondents moved for an order annulling the execution sales on the grounds that a cause of action sounding in tort for unliquidated damages resulting from fraud and deceit is not subject to sale on execution, that the description in the notices of sale and at the sales of the property was insufficient and that the prices paid were grossly inadequate. These motions were granted and these appeals followed.

The main question presented is whether these causes of action pending in Los Angeles County were subject to sale on execution. Section 688 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that all goods, chattels, money and other property of the judgment debtor not exempt by law are liable to execution. A cause of action for unliquidated damages is a thing in action (Civ. Code, see. 953) and a thing in action is personal property (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 17), which is not capable of manual delivery. Under settled rules the four causes of action which were sold at execution sale were things in action and were assignable. (Civ. Code, secs. 953 and 954; Wikstrom v. Yolo Fliers’ Club, 206 Cal. 461 [274 Pac. 959]; Rued v. Cooper, 109 Cal. 682 [34 Pac. 98, 101].) In these two cases the general rule is thus quoted from a New York ease (Meech v. Stoner, 19 N. Y. 26) : “Assign-ability of things in action is now the rule; nonassignability, the exception; and this exception is confined to wrongs done to the person, the reputation, or the feelings of the injured party, and to contracts of a purely personal nature, like promises of marriage.” We think it conclusively appears that these four causes of action which were sold on execution were personal property of a kind which has not been specifically made exempt from execution and which is not capable of manual delivery. Under section 688 of the Code of Civil Procedure all “other” property which is not exempt is made liable to execution and that section further provides that property not capable of manual delivery may be levied upon in the manner in which property of that nature may be attached. Section 542 of the Code of Civil Procedure *216 provides how such property may be attached, namely, by leaving a copy of the writ and a notice with the person having such property in his possession or under his control. While the plaintiff in such an action as those with which we are here concerned cannot be said to have the property represented by the action in his possession he certainly has the same under his control. The procedure outlined by the above sections was followed in this case and copies of the writs and notices were served on the respective plaintiffs in the four actions.

In Meserve v. Superior Court, 2 Cal. App. (2d) 468 [38 Pac. (2d) 453], the court concluded that a cause of action somewhat similar to those here involved was subject to sale under execution. The respondents here contend that the portions of the opinion in that case which lead to that conclusion are mere dicta. Be that as it may, we are satisfied with the reasoning therein used which is applicable here. While that case involved a cause of action which arose from a breach of a contract we are unable to see any reason why the same rule should not apply where a cause of action was based upon a tort. The case of Wikstrom v. Yolo Fliers’ Club, supra, involved such a cause of action which was held to be a thing in action which arose out of a violation of a right of property, and which was by statute expressly made assignable and declared to survive the death of the owner. Such a cause of action is property not capable of manual delivery and the pertinent statutes make no distinction with reference to whether the cause of action which gives rise to the property right is based upon contract or upon tort.

The respondents argue that “Claims for damages in tort are not even subject to attachment (garnishment),—much the less levy and sale upon execution” and cite Arp v. Blake, 63 Cal. App. 362 [218 Pac. 773], In that case it was held that unliquidated claims for damages in tort could not be reached through the garnishment process, which involves serving notice on the person owing the debt. This is far from holding that causes of action of that nature may not be reached through other statutory provisions providing for the serving of notice on the person, to whom the debt is supposedly owed and who has the property under his control, namely the plaintiff in the action. It is further argued that “after tort claims have been liquidated,—reduced to judg *217 ment,—the judgment is not even amenable to sale upon execution”, the respondents citing McBride v. Fallon, 65 Cal. 301 [4 Pac. 17], Dore v. Dougherty, 72 Cal. 232 [13 Pac. 621, 1 Am. St. Rep. 48], Latham v. Blake, 77 Cal. 646 [18 Pac. 150, 20 Pac. 417], Hoxie v. Bryant, 131 Cal. 85 [63 Pac. 153] , and Crandall v. Blen, 13 Cal. 15. So far as material here these cases merely hold that a judgment in such an action is but the evidence of the liability and cannot be sold on execution in the particular manner in which personal property capable of manual delivery may be sold.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 815, 24 Cal. App. 2d 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everts-v-will-s-fawcett-co-calctapp-1937.