Hallett v. Slaughter

140 P.2d 3, 22 Cal. 2d 552, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1943
DocketL. A. 18369
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 140 P.2d 3 (Hallett v. Slaughter) 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
Hallett v. Slaughter, 140 P.2d 3, 22 Cal. 2d 552, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 204 (Cal. 1943).

Opinions

SCHAUER, J.

Defendants appeal from a decree in equity setting aside and vacating a judgment by default secured against plaintiff in an action filed on April' 17, 1940, in the Municipal Court of Los Angeles, and based on an assigned claim for medical services allegedly furnished by Dr. Walter B. Schwuchow (since deceased) to plaintiff and her son. In that action defendants herein, Slaughter and Trigg, as operators of a collection agency named The Doctors Business Bureau, were plaintiffs and plaintiff herein was a defendant. In the instant suit plaintiff herein was also awarded a money judgment against defendants for certain sums which defen[554]*554dants had collected from her by means of levies upon her salary, under the municipal court judgment; enforcement of the municipal court judgment was enjoined; and the municipal court was ordered to permit plaintiff to file her answer in that court within ten days after judgment in the present suit becomes final. Defendant Jennie I. Schwuchow was joined as the widow of Dr. Schwuchow and executrix of his estate. We have concluded that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

It appears from the evidence and was found by the court that on May 23, 1940, plaintiff was served with a copy of the summons and complaint in the municipal court action; that she forthwith employed an attorney to represent her in such action, and her answer to the complaint therein, prepared by her attorney and verified by her, and accompanied by the requisite filing fee, was on May 24, 1940, deposited in the United States mail at Los Angeles, California, enclosed in an envelope with sufficient postage affixed, and directed to the clerk of the Municipal Court of Los Angeles; that on the same day a copy of the answer was mailed to the attorney for plaintiffs in the municipal court action (defendants herein) ; that neither the original nor .the copy of the answer was received by the respective addressees or returned to this plaintiff’s attorney, but both were lost; that plaintiff and her attorney believed the answer was on file. On June 4, 1940, the default of plaintiff herein was entered in the municipal court action, and on December 27, 1940, judgment by default was taken against her.

Early in January, 1941, execution was levied upon plaintiff’s salary. This was the first knowledge received by either plaintiff or her attorney that her answer had not reached the clerk of the court and had not been filed, that her default had been entered, and that judgment had been taken against her. Plaintiff sought release of her salary by filing a claim of exemption under the provisions of section 690.11 of the Code of Civil Procedure,- but before the claim was heard by the court plaintiff stipulated with the judgment creditors that they take half of the money under levy and that she receive the other half. Early in February, 1941, defendants levied upon plaintiff’s salary a second time, and plaintiff stipulated that they take $50 of the amount held. On February 24, 1941, plaintiff filed this suit. A third salary levy was made in March, 1941; plaintiff again filed a claim of exemption; and [555]*555after a hearing the court ordered that plaintiff was entitled to half the money and that defendants take the other half.

The trial court further found that plaintiff has a meritorious defense to the municipal court action but that, by the accidental loss of her answer and the mistaken belief on her part and on the part of her attorney that the answer was on file, she was prevented from setting up such defense; that the loss of the answer and the mistaken belief that it was on file were “not due to any fault or neglect” of plaintiff or of her attorney; that they ‘ ‘had the right to rely on the United States Post Office” to transmit the answer as directed; that plaintiff was diligent in bringing the present suit and was not guilty of laches; and that plaintiffs in the municipal court action (defendants herein) willfully and with the intent to lull this plaintiff into a false sense of security, refrained from proceeding in that action until plaintiff’s rights under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure were barred by lapse of time, although “they knew that plaintiff’s . . . salary payments were vulnerable to such proceedings.”

Defendants’ contentions are four:

1. That the evidence fails to support the finding that plaintiff’s answer and the copy thereof were mailed (as set forth above).
2. That by her stipulation made for the purpose of securing the release of her salary held under levy of execution, and by her affidavit of exemption made following the March salary levy and after the present suit was filed, plaintiff ratified and confirmed thé municipal court judgment and is now estopped to attack it.
3. That plaintiff is guilty of neglect, of laches, and of want of diligence, and therefore is not entitled to equitable relief.
4. That plaintiff failed to show that she has a meritorious defense and that a new trial would result in a judgment more favorable to her.

As to defendants’ first contention, the attorney employed by this plaintiff to defend her in the municipal court action testified that on May 24, 1940, he handed plaintiff’s answer and a copy thereof, together with the filing fee, to his secretary, and instructed her to mail the original answer and the filing fee to the clerk of the municipal court and to mail the copy to opposing counsel. The secretary testified that she did not recall the matter, but that if the papers had been [556]*556given her to mail, then she had mailed them, and that she knew “there was sufficient postage because we had a scale. I couldn’t go wrong in that.” This testimony supports the finding that the papers were mailed.

Defendants-’ second contention is answered by the rule, well settled in California, that the enforced satisfaction of a judgment does not deprive the judgment debtor of the right to appeal or to seek to have the judgment vacated or set aside. (See 14 Cal.Jur. 1018, sec. 84, and cases there cited; Engelken v. Justice Court (1920), 50 Cal.App. 157, 159 [195 P. 265]; and Hartke v. Abbott (1930), 106 Cal.App. 388, 391-393 [289 P. 206].) Plaintiff’s stipulations went no further than to specify the amount which was to be paid each of the respective parties to the judgment from the money held under levy, and contain no suggestion of a compromise agreement, of an affirmance of the judgment, or of a waiver of the right to attack it. They were made for the sole purpose of securing a prompt release to plaintiff of a portion of the money, and cannot now be held to defeat her right to maintain this suit. The same is true of plaintiff’s affidavit claiming exemption of her salary held under the levy made in March; the claim of exemption and the subsequent court hearing thereon were involuntary steps forced upon plaintiff in the same manner as were the stipulations.

Defendants’ third point—that because of neglect, laches, and want of diligence plaintiff may not seek relief from equity—is met by the findings of the trial court to the contrary on each of these issues.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P.2d 3, 22 Cal. 2d 552, 1943 Cal. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallett-v-slaughter-cal-1943.