Finch v. Finch

107 P. 594, 12 Cal. App. 274
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 690.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 107 P. 594 (Finch v. Finch) 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
Finch v. Finch, 107 P. 594, 12 Cal. App. 274 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

BURNETT, J.

The record discloses evidence of three separate actions, all of which, respondent claims, are material to the controversy. The first, numbered 12,695, was brought October 29, 1907, by the plaintiff here against the defendant Finch and others for an accounting. A restraining order was issued and served upon this appellant, on said October 29th, enjoining it from paying out or transferring any money it had on said date to the credit of the defendant, Paul V. Finch, until the further order of the court.

On November 14, 1907, the same plaintiff filed a complaint in case No. 12,845 against the same defendant to secure a judgment for the sum of $5,500 upon a different transaction *277 and liability. On December 3, 1907, a writ of attachment was issued in this case and appellant was regularly garnished. Appellant failed to furnish the sheriff with a statement of the amount of money due defendant, or any information concerning the same, and appellant was cited on the seventeenth day of December, 1907, to appear for examination, whereupon appellant “made answer to said plaintiff that said Western National Bank had in its possession and under its control the sum of $2,000 in cash, as a commercial account, owned by or due to the defendant, Paul Y. Finch, at the time of the service upon the said bank of the said writ and order for examination as aforesaid.” Judgment in said cause No. 12,845 was awarded to plaintiff and respondent herein on April 29, 1908. A writ of execution was thereupon issued, but it was returned by the sheriff unsatisfied, appellant answering that the money had been paid to the sheriff on December 26, 1907. On June 9, 1908, respondent procured an order citing the garnishee to appear and be examined concerning the $2,000 which it had admitted, on December 17th preceding, to be due defendant or any other money in its possession belonging to defendant at the time of said garnishment, and to show cause why it should not be required to pay to respondent the said sum of money. Upon the hearing the following additional facts appeared: On the twenty-fourth day of December, 1907, one E. G. Hoyes secured judgment against the same defendant, Finch, for the sum of $2,270.98. Execution issued immediately, and on December 26th appellant was served with the writ and paid $2,000 to the sheriff, who returned that he “duly levied on the twenty-sixth day of December, 1907, upon the Western National Bank of San Francisco, all moneys, goods, credits, effects, debts due or owing, or any other personal property in possession or under control of the Western National Bank of San Francisco belonging to the judgment debtor, and on the twenty-sixth day of December, 1907, I received from said judgment debtor, through W. C. Murdoch, Jr., Asst. Cashier of said bank, the sum of $2,000,” and this was applied in part satisfaction of said judgment. The writ of attachment in the present suit and the writ of execution in the Hoyes case were served by different deputies connected with the sheriff’s office, and when the money was paid over *278 as aforesaid appellant did not inform the deputy sheriff of the prior service.

The appeal is from an order of the court directing appellant to pay to respondent the sum of $2,000 to be applied toward the satisfaction of the judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Eespondent summarizes the matter as follows: “Appellant on October 29, 1907, was served with a restraining order, whereby it was enjoined from paying the money to anyone at all, in one suit; again on December 3, 1907, appellant was served with a notice of garnishment, and ordered to hold the money in another suit, and on December 26, 1907, appellant is served with a writ of execution in a third and separate suit, and appellant, without question, pays the money to the sheriff on this writ in the third suit, though the injunction and attachment are still in full force and effect, and now appellant asks the court to sanction gross negligence or willful disregard of the law, and relieve appellant of the direct liability created by statute, in which event either the sheriff or the plaintiff, who are innocent parties, must suffer.”

Consideration of the injunction, we think, should be eliminated from this proceeding, as it was issued in an entirely different action, and it has-no relevant connection with the order in controversy here.

Appellant contends: “1. That the trial court had no jurisdiction to make the order appealed from; and 2. That conceding the' question of jurisdiction for the purpose of the argument and not otherwise, the payment to the sheriff was a complete discharge of all liability on the part of the appellant.”

The avowal of the want of jurisdiction is based upon the ground of the denial of the indebtedness at the time of the service of plaintiff’s execution, supported by the evidence that the money was paid to the sheriff on said twenty-sixth day of December, 1907. In this behalf it is contended by the learned counsel for appellant that this remedy by proceedings supplementary to execution “to disclose and subject to the satisfaction of the judgment a fund in the hands of the garnishee or any indebtedness owing by the garnishee to the judgment debtor” is limited to cases where “the garnishee in such supplementary proceedings admits the posses *279 sion of such fund or the indebtedness claimed to be due from him to such judgment debtor, and that this does not contemplate the litigation of any rights or claims of such garnishee or a personal money judgment against him.”

The provisions of the statute directly involved in the solution of the question are sections 719 and 720 of the Code ■ of Civil Procedure. In the former it is provided that “the judge or referee may order any property of the judgment debtor, not exempt from execution in the hands of such debtor, or any other person, or due to the judgment debtor, to be applied toward the satisfaction of the judgment; but no such order can be made as to money or property in the hands of any other person or claimed to be due from him to the judgment debtor if such person claims an interest in the property adverse to the judgment debtor or denies the debt. ’ ’ And section 720 provides that where such claim is made or the debt denied, an action may be maintained by the judgment creditor against said third party to recover the property in dispute.

It will not be controverted, we think, that the court below was not bound by appellant’s denial of the debt if the undisputed facts showed that the debt really existed at the time of the service of the said writ of execution. The mere denial by the garnishee of the indebtedness which the other averments and admissions of the parties show to be an erroneous conclusion from the whole transaction certainly should not be deemed sufficient to divest the court of jurisdiction to make the order provided for in said section 719.

The question then arises whether the payment of the $2,000 to the sheriff on December 26th discharged the indebtedness and relieved appellant of liability to respondent. In view ■of the facts, we think it should be held that appellant is in the same position, as far as respondent is concerned, as though it had retained in its possession the said money and had not made any payment to the sheriff.

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Bluebook (online)
107 P. 594, 12 Cal. App. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finch-v-finch-calctapp-1909.