Granger v. Sheriff

73 P. 816, 140 Cal. 190, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 574
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1903
DocketL.A. No. 1281.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 73 P. 816 (Granger v. Sheriff) 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
Granger v. Sheriff, 73 P. 816, 140 Cal. 190, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 574 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Appeal by defendants from an order of the superior court of San Diego County denying their motion to vacate and set aside a sale of real estate under a decree of foreclosure. There is no brief on file for respondent. The judgment directed that the mortgaged premises “be sold at public auction in the manner provided by law by'the sheriff *191 of the said county of San Diego,” and was embodied in the writ or order for its enforcement. Without notice to defendant, plaintiff’s attorney obtained an ex parte order of the court, which was entered in the minutes by the clerk as follows: “On motion of counsel for plaintiff, it was ordered that the findings of fact and the conclusions of law and judgment and decree herein be amended so as to order the sale herein ordered to be made by the sheriff of the county of San Diego or by a commissioner to be appointed by the court, and that all acts ordered to be done by said sheriff may be done by such commissioner.” No amendment of the decree was made, except by entry upon the minutes of the clerk. Thereafter the court made an order appointing George H. P. Shaw to make the sale of the premises, and pending proceedings to sell an appeal was taken to the supreme court, and a stay of execution was had, and said commissioner made return of the writ of execution without sale. Thereafter, on July 24, 1901, the judgment of the superior court was affirmed by the supreme court, and its judgment certified to the clerk of the said superior court and filed herein on August 27, 1901, but said certificate was at no time attached to the judgment-roll in said action, and no minute entry of the judgment of the supreme court was at any time made on the docket against the original entry, prior to the foreclosure sale herein. On August 29, 1901, the court made an order reappointing the said Shaw as commissioner to make the said foreclosure sale, under said decree, without notice to defendants or either of them, and without further record than as herein set forth. In its order the court recited the making of the judgment by the supreme court, and that remittitur "has been duly received and filed in the office of the clerk of said superior court, ’ ’ and that it appeared by return of the commissioner that by reason of said appeal to the supreme court no sale had been made, “and that a commissioner should be appointed to make said sale at this time, and an alias writ addressed to said commissioner be issued to enforce the said judgment. It is therefore, upon motion of Frederic W. Stearns, attorney for said above-named plaintiff, ordered that George H. P. Shaw be and he is hereby appointed the commissioner to make the sale of the premises ordered to be sold in and by said judgment,” etc. *192 Thereafter, on September 5, 1901, a writ or order of sale was issued by said court, reciting therein the judgment of foreclosure, also reciting the appointment of said Shaw as commissioner and the filing of his bond, and directing him to sell the property and “to perform all things according to the terms and requirements of said judgment and decree and the provisions of the statute in such cases made and provided.” The commissioner proceeded under the said writ and made the sale and issued to the purchaser a certificate of sale, and on the same day made full return of his proceedings to the court. In his return the commissioner states that before any bids were offered or made on the day of sale, he was served with written notice by the attorneys of defendant, protesting against and objecting to any sale by him under the decree of foreclosure, or at all, on the ground that the writ of execution under which the commissioner was proceeding was without authority of law, and is void, and on the further ground that the order appointing said commissioner is void and without authority. Some time thereafter defendant’s attorneys served notice of the motion to set aside and vacate the sale. It is contended: 1. That where one person is constituted an officer of the court to make a judicial sale no other person is authorized to make it, and the sale by another is void; 2. That when the court by the decree appointed the sheriff to make the sale its power was exhausted, and no other appointment could be made, except upon a vacancy happening by revocation of the order or incapacity of the sheriff to act; 3. That the judgment appointing the sheriff could not after-wards be vacated by amendment, ex parte, and that the decree was not, as a matter of fact or of law, amended, and the sale was made by the commissioner directly under authority of the decree as originally entered directing the sheriff to sell; and 4. That no jurisdiction existed to issue the writ of execution or order of sale, because the certificate of the -supreme court on appeal had not been attached to the judgment-roll, nor had a minute of the judgment of the supreme court been entered on the docket, as required by law. It is not claimed or shown that defendants were in any way prejudiced or injured by the sale, or that it was irregularly conducted otherwise than as above shown. McDermot v. Barton, 106 Cal. *193 194, was a ease where the complaint prayed for the appointment of the sheriff to sell the property, and the decree ordered a sale of the mortgaged property by the sheriff. On the day the decree was signed, and without amending it in this particular, the court made an order appointing a commissioner to make the sale. Defendants appealed from the order. The court said: "The essence of such a prayer is an invocation of a judicial sale. The method of its consummation, so long as pursued within the power conferred upon the court, is of no moment; and had the prayer of the complaint been silent as to the officer by whom the sale asked for was to be made, it would have been equally efficacious. So, too, the fact that the decree as entered by the court ordered the encumbered property to be sold by the sheriff, while the order made and entered the same day appointed a commissioner to discharge the same duty, was but an oversight of the court below not calling for an appeal, but which might have been remedied, and, as the record furnishes all the information required, may be at any time remedied by a simple motion to amend and correct the decree by striking out the word ■‘sheriff’ and inserting ‘commissioner’ wherever they occur in such decree.” The order was affirmed.' Precisely this course was taken in the present case, only the decree was not amended by vacating the decree and its re-engrossment with the amendments as directed by the first order. But the amendments and the order were part of the minutes in the case, and we think in effect superseded the appointment of the sheriff. No one could be misled by the proceedings,, for the order under which the commissioner proceeded gave notice of his authority, and it is not claimed or shown that the property brought less than its value or that appellants were prejudiced by the sale. If the order in McDermot v. Barton was authorized, where no amendment of the decree was in fact made or attempted to be made, the order in the present case was authorized, and, if so, the subsequent proceedings under the order must likewise be held to have been authorized. McDermot v. Barton is in point from another view.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P. 816, 140 Cal. 190, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granger-v-sheriff-cal-1903.