Frazier v. Wasserman

263 Cal. App. 2d 120, 69 Cal. Rptr. 510, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1968
DocketCiv. 932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 263 Cal. App. 2d 120 (Frazier v. Wasserman) 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
Frazier v. Wasserman, 263 Cal. App. 2d 120, 69 Cal. Rptr. 510, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

GARGANO, J.

This is a judgment roll appeal. Appellants are former creditors of Leland F. Dempsey who was adjudicated a bankrupt under the federal Bankruptcy Act. Respondent is Dempsey’s trustee in bankruptcy. The undisputed facts as stated in the respective briefs and as gathered from the court’s finding of fact are substantially as follows. 1

Leland F. Dempsey was an income beneficiary of a testamentary spendthrift trust known as the Jennie L. Mayer Trust. The trust terminated January 1, 1961; upon termination Dempsey was entitled to receive one-half of the corpus free and clear of all trust restrictions. However, Dempsey did not receive possession of his share of the trust proceeds amounting to $28,671 until February 10, 1961, when the Probate Court of Orange County, the court in which the Jennie L. Mayer estate was probated, distributed the trust estate.

Meanwhile (during the period between the termination of the trust and the distribution of the trust estate by the probate court) some of Dempsey’s creditors filed claims in the probate proceeding against Dempsey’s trust interest. And on the day before the trust estate was distributed (on February 9, 1961), two of Dempsey’s creditors, Charles Cooper and Bernice Cooper, filed an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against Dempsey in the United States District Court. 2 But *123 the probate court, after reciting in its decree of distribution that the Mayer Trust was a spendthrift trust, nevertheless directed the trustee (the Bank of America) to distribute Dempsey’s one-half share of the trust proceeds directly to Dempsey.

Subsequently (on April 26, 1961), Dempsey was adjudicated a bankrupt by the bankruptcy court. By that time Dempsey had delivered the proceeds of the trust to his attorney, appellant Thomas Wahl. Wahl in turn paid the money to himself and to the other appellants to discharge the antecedent debts which Dempsey had incurred under certain promissory notes that he had executed during the term of the trust. At the time of the payment all appellants (with the exception of appellant Wasserman) knew the source of payment and that bankruptcy proceedings were pending against Dempsey. Almost two years later (on February 8, 1963), respondent, the bankruptcy trustee, brought this action to recover the money which each appellant received from Dempsey’s share of the Mayer Trust proceeds. The lower court granted judgment in favor of respondent, and this appeal followed.

Appellants first attack the judgment of the bankruptcy court. Succinctly, they contend that the judgment of the superior court must be reversed because there was ‘1 a fatal lack of jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court over any assets of Leland F. Dempsey.” And, significantly, appellants make this contention without having raised this defense in their pleadings and apparently without having offered any evidence on the issue in the superior court.

It is of course true, as appellants maintain, that the jurisdiction of a lower court of this state to act may be challenged by direct attack for the first time on appeal (King v. Kutner-Goldstein Co., 135 Cal. 65 [67 P. 10]). However, appellants do not challenge the jurisdiction of the Superior Court of Sacramento County in this appeal; they collaterally attack the judgment of the bankruptcy court, a court of the United States. It is the rule that if a prior judgment is the basis of relief in a lower court, that judgment must be challenged in the lower court before it may be collaterally attacked on appeal unless it is void on its face. And the challenge in the lower court is even more essential when the invalidity of the judgment is dependent upon extrinsic facts which the lower court did not have the opportunity to consider (Dryer v. Dryer, 231 Cal.App.2d 441, 445 [41 Cal.Rptr. 839]).

*124 Appellants do not assert that the judgment of the bankruptcy court is void on its face. They merely assert that respondent’s complaint in the superior court discloses that only two persons filed the petition in bankruptcy against Dempsey on February 9, 1961, and hence “the bankruptcy could not have been effective that day” under section 59 of the Bankruptcy Act. This section provides:

“Three or more creditors who have provable claims not contingent as to liability against a person, amounting in the aggregate to $500 in excess of the value of any securities held by them, or, if all of the creditors of the person are less than twelve in number, then one or more of the creditors whose claim or claims equal that amount, may file a petition to have him adjudged a bankrupt; ...” (11 U.S.C.A. § 95.)

Appellants’ contention is devoid of merit. Section 59 of the Bankruptcy Act also allows one creditor, whose claim amounts to at least $500, to file an involuntary petition against the debtor if all of the debtor’s creditors are less than 12 in number. Thus, appellants ask this court to assume, as a matter of law, that Dempsey had at least 12 creditors when the petition was filed against him, contrary to the rule articulated in Dryer v. Dryer, supra. And, significantly, they ask this court to make this assumption despite the presumption of Evidence Code section 666 in favor of the validity of the bankruptcy court’s judgment. Under this section, when any act of a court of the United States is under collateral attack it is presumed that the court acted in lawful exercise of its jurisdiction.

In any event, there is no contention that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction in the fundamental sense, e.g., over the person of the bankrupt and the subject matter of the action. And lack of jurisdiction in the fundamental sense is essential to a collateral attack on a judgment (Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. McConnell, 44 Cal.2d 715, 725 [285 P.2d 636]). Consequently, when the bankruptcy court adjudicated Dempsey a bankrupt it also determined its own jurisdiction, and this determination is res judicata in subsequent collateral proceedings (Stoll v. Gottlieb, 305 U.S. 165 [83 L.Ed. 104, 59 S.Ct. 134] ; Chicot County Drainage Dist. v. Baxter State Bank, 308 U.S. 371 [84 L.Ed. 329, 60 S.Ct. 317] ; Houston v. Pomeroy, 227 Ore. 499 [362 P.2d 708, 710], 1 Collier, Bankruptcy (14th ed. 1956) § 2.05, p. 486).

In Stoll the United States Supreme Court held that when jurisdiction over the subject matter was raised and decided in *125 the bankruptcy court it could not be collaterally attacked in the state court.

In Chicot

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 Cal. App. 2d 120, 69 Cal. Rptr. 510, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-wasserman-calctapp-1968.