Godchaux v. Mulford

26 Cal. 316
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 26 Cal. 316 (Godchaux v. Mulford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Godchaux v. Mulford, 26 Cal. 316 (Cal. 1864).

Opinions

By the Court, Sanderson, C. J.

Previous to the submission of this case upon its merits, counsel for respondents moved the Court to strike out the statement on motion for a new trial, upon the following grounds: First—Because no notice of plaintiffs’ intention to move for a new trial was given. Second—Because the statement does not specifically set forth the grounds of the motion. Third—Because the statement is not such a statement as the Practice Act contemplates, either on appeal or on motion for new trial.

Whether any notice of motion for mmjrial was given does not appear, and the statement ffj^j^wuwl^f^intradictory and inartificial, but there is appdfded^tp it'-^fSmulation made between the attorneys who teiel^hei^se inTfhl Court below which we think is a compleS aflfewerilip allpt% substantial objections made to the record* Tm sti]Ailatmijfe signed by the attorneys of both parties, ®bi foljjwing words : “ It is hereby stipulated by and K^weenJpj^attorneys for the plaintiffs and defendants, in the abov^mititled action that the foregoing statement hereto annexed is a true and correct statement on motion for a new trial. That upon said statement the said Court did, on the first day of September, 1863, overrule the plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial and refuse to grant the said plaintiffs a new trial in said action, to which ruling the said plaintiffs then and there excepted. And it is hereby further stipulated, that the judgment roll, orders and instructions, given and refused by the Court, the aforesaid statement on motion for a new trial, and this stipulation, is a true and correct statement on appeal to the Supreme Court, and may be used as such without further certificate or identification.”

[320]*320In the presence of the foregoing stipulation we will presume that notice of motion for a new trial was regularly given, and will further hold that all technical objections to the transcript are waived and the case submitted to us upon its merits. (Weil v. Paul, 22 Cal. 492.)

The plaintiffs sue the defendant, Mulford, late Sheriff of Calaveras County, and his sureties, for the alleged wrongful seizure and sale of certain goods belónging to them, under certain executions against one Kraft. The answer alleges that the goods so seized were the property of Kraft, and as such legally subject to the seizure and sale.

It appears from the evidence set forth in the statement that for some time anterior to the 16th of December, 1857, Kraft had been engaged in selling goods and merchandise at Mokelumne Hill, in Calaveras County, where he also resided with his family, his dwelling house being in the fear of the storeroom, toward the centre of the lot. On that day he made a sale of his goods and merchandise to plaintiffs, and a lease of the storeroom. A bill of sale of the goods and a lease of the tenement were executed in writing by Kraft and wife and delivered to plaintiffs at the same time. The validity of that sale seems to have been impeached on three different grounds:

First—That it was made with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, and therefore void under the provisions of section twenty of- the statute concerning fraudulent conveyances.

Second—That it was not accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual and continued change of possession, as required by section fifteen of the statute.

Third—That it was made in trust, for the use of the vendor, Kraft, contrary to the provisions of section eleven.

Upon the close of the testimony both parties presented certain instructions, which they respectively requested the Court to give to the jury, some of which were given and others refused, the parties respectively duly excepting.

It appears, from the evidence set forth in the statement, that the negotiations for the sale of the goods were closed on [321]*321the 16th of December, 1857, by the execution of a bill of sale and a lease of the storeroom. The door in the back end of the room, leading to the dwelling house of Kraft, was immediately closed up by nailing planks across it. Kraft’s sign was removed, and that of Godchaux & Brother put over the front door of the storeroom. A person by the name of Blum, who seems to have had no connection with Kraft in any way, was employed by plaintiffs to take immediate possession for them. He did so take possession, and retain it until one Block was sent up by them from San Francisco, who remained there until the goods were seized by the Sheriff, in February, 1858. After the sale Kraft was absent some three weeks in San Francisco, but at the time of the levy by the Sheriff he, together with one of the plaintiffs and Block, was in the store and was engaged arranging goods in a show-case.

It also appears from the testimony of Kraft, who was examined as a witness by the defendants, that there were certain conditions in the sale from him to plaintiffs not expressed in the bill of sale, to the effect that after twenty-four hours he was to go back to the store and sell the goods in the plaintiffs’ firm name, and the plaintiffs were to keep the stock up by furnishing fresh goods; that he was to draw seventy dollars per month for family expenses, and eight dollars per month to pay interest on money owed by him, and that the remainder was to be sent to the plaintiffs at San Francisco ; that the business was to be carried on for his benefit, and in the meantime the plaintiffs were to buy up all his debts at as low a figure as possible, and that after all the debts had been bought up, and the plaintiffs had received their advances, the stock was to be restored to him.

It is conceded by counsel for the plaintiffs that the question as to a fraudulent intent between vendor and vendee, as matter of fact, under the provisions of section twenty of the Statute of Frauds, was fairly submitted to the jury by the instructions of the Court upon that point; but it is insisted that the jury was not correctly instructed touching the law as found in the eleventh and fifteenth sections of the statute.

[322]*322The instructions which counsel claims are erroneous are as follows :

“ If the jury believe from the evidence that Kraft was hired by the plaintiffs—Grodchaux—and remained in possession of the goods he (Kraft) had sold to them as such hired man, the sale was void by the Statute of Frauds, aud the jury will find a verdict for the defendants.”
“ If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs agreed with Kraft to return the balance of the goods, or the money which they brought, after paying themselves for the money due them, it raises a secret trust in favor of Kraft and the contract was void, and they will find a verdict for the defendants.”
“ Though the sale be absolute in terms, yet, if the jury believe from the evidence that it was made with the understanding between Kraft and plaintiffs that it was only to operate as a mortgage, then it is a secret trust as to the surplus and is void as to the defendants, and the jury will find a verdict for the defendants.”"

The first of the foregoing instructions was designed to apply to the facts in evidence, and the law as found in the fifteenth section of the Statute of Frauds. (Wood’s Digest, 107.) That section reads as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
26 Cal. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godchaux-v-mulford-cal-1864.