Fay Securities Co. v. Bowering

288 P. 41, 106 Cal. App. 771, 1 Cal. Sup. 6, 106 Cal. App. Supp. 771, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1929
DocketDocket No. 50.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 288 P. 41 (Fay Securities Co. v. Bowering) 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
Fay Securities Co. v. Bowering, 288 P. 41, 106 Cal. App. 771, 1 Cal. Sup. 6, 106 Cal. App. Supp. 771, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

A writ of attachment against the defendant was levied upon certain money due to him. He claimed that this money was exempt from execution and attachment under subdivision 10 of section 690 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Thereupon, the plaintiff moved the trial court *773 for an order declaring these funds subject to attachment and execution. After the hearing of this motion the court made an order denying it and directing the release of the money, from which order the plaintiff appeals. No question has been made as to the right of appeal from this order and it seems to be in effect an order discharging an attachment and, therefore, appealable under section 983 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Risdon Iron Works v. Citizens etc. Co., 122 Cal. 94 [68 Am. St. Rep. 25, 54 Pac. 529].)

At the hearing of the motion the defendant testified that he was in the trucking business, owning and operating four trucks and employing three men as drivers, besides himself, and that the money attached was due him as the result of the operation of his four trucks and was income from his trucking business.

The provision of the code under which the exemption is claimed is that “the earnings of the judgment debtor for his personal services” shall be exempt from execution under certain conditions not here involved. The question before us is whether the money above mentioned is within this exemption. As far as we are advised, this question has not been decided by any of the appellate courts of this state, but there are numerous decisions on similar questions in other states. On account of the varying language of the exemption statutes, many of these decisions are not in point here. In some of the states, the exemption is of “earnings” without qualifying words. Some decisions, based on such a statute, hold that income arising from a business in which capital or assets are employed may be exempt. There are also a few decisions extending this rule to statutes exempting “earnings from personal services,” but only in cases where the services of the debtor are the chief factor in the business. The weight of authority in other states appears to be that the terms “personal earnings” and “earnings for personal services,” which are treated in many authorities as synonymous, do not include a debtor’s income arising from a business involving other elements of gain than his personal services, such as the employment of capital or assets. (25 Cor. Jur. 68.)

In New York, where the statute exempts “personal earnings,” it has been held that the exemption does not include *774 moneys due from customers to one who retails ice and employs two carts and several men (Mulford v. Gibbs, 9 App. Div. 490 [41 N. Y. Supp. 273]), or the income of a saloon-keeper from his business (Prince v. Brett, 21 App. Div. 190 [47 N. Y. Supp. 402]), or money due the judgment debtor for milk produced by him on a rented farm, although he appears to have worked the farm in person (The Matter of Wyman, 76 App. Div. 292 [78 N. Y. Supp. 546]), or income of the judgment debtor from an iron working shop in which he hires three men and uses a truck and various machinery (Schafer v. Tyroler, 94 Misc. Rep. 127 [158 N. Y. Supp. 1090]), on the ground that all these items are the proceeds of a business rather than personal earnings.

In Shelly v. Smith, 59 Iowa, 455 [13 N. W. 419], it was held that money due from boarders to the keeper of a boarding-house who has several boarders and four employees, besides herself and her daughter, is not exempt, and in Youst v. Willis, 5 Okl. 170 [49 Pac. 56], the same ruling was made as to money due a hotel-keeper from his guests. The statute in each case was the same as ours, and in the Iowa case the court pointed out that many elements of profit are involved in the keeping of a boarding-house besides the mere personal earnings of the proprietor and his family.

In Clapp v. Smith, 91 Okl. 84 [216 Pac. 120], it was held that the proceeds of crops grown by a farmer are not exempt as “current wages or earnings from profession or personal services.”

In Wineblood v. Payne, 129 Okl. 103 [263 Pac. 669], it was held that one who was driving a truck and hauling gravel at three dollars per load might claim as exempt the reasonable wages of a truck driver, although it was conceded that the earnings of the truck were not exempt and there was nothing in the terms of his employment on which such a segregation could be based. The court cited in support of its decision 25 Corpus Juris, 69, and the rule there stated is:

“Where a debtor’s income is derived from a business involving other elements of gain than his personal services, he is entitled to an exemption in as much thereof as is necessary to compensate him for his own personal labor, provided it can be ascertained. But if the amount due the *775 debtor on account of personal labor cannot be distinguished from the rest, no part of such income will be exempt as ‘personal earnings’ under the statute.”

Manifestly this decision is not supported by the authority cited and it does not seem to us well grounded in reason. How can it be said with truth that one who hauls goods in a truck by contract for a lump sum per load is receiving any particular portion of the freight charge for his personal services and the remainder for the use of his truck? If this can be done, it would be equally proper to find the rental value of the truck, subtract . that from the gross receipts and call the balance the earnings of the driver. Neither process takes account of the expenses of operating the truck, nor does the Oklahoma court point out how those expenses are to be paid, though perhaps it assumes that they will be met out of the balance remaining after taking out the wages of the driver. But suppose a truck operator, in order to meet competition, or by reason of bad judgment, or bad luck, fixes a price for hauling that does not cover the three items of operating expenses, driver’s wages, and rental value of the truck. Which is then to be eliminated in apportioning the returns? The mere fact that one of these items is exempt from execution, if ascertained, hardly affords a reason for holding that it must, or can he, segregated from the others for that purpose where no means of segregation appear. It might easily happen that the hauling price would be no more than sufficient to cover the operating expenses. Since a truck could not be operated at all without some provision for the expenses of doing so, it would be more reasonable in such a case to apply the whole returns for that purpose and hold that no earnings for the driver were included therein—which would manifestly be the fact if the operator were solvent and no question of exemption were involved; but the Oklahoma decision would lead to the absurdity of applying the returns in such a case to the earnings of the driver although, in fact, there were no earnings. We think the true rule in this matter is that stated in the passage already quoted from Corpus Juris. That rule purports to be based on the case of Brainard v. Shannon,

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288 P. 41, 106 Cal. App. 771, 1 Cal. Sup. 6, 106 Cal. App. Supp. 771, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fay-securities-co-v-bowering-calctapp-1929.