In Re Clarke

140 P.2d 92, 60 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 481
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 1943
DocketCrim. 3697
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 140 P.2d 92 (In Re Clarke) 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
In Re Clarke, 140 P.2d 92, 60 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 481 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

*22 YORK, P. J.

Petitioner applied for a writ of habeas corpus and was granted a hearing upon his averment that he was “imprisoned, detained, confined and restrained of his liberty by the Sheriff of Los Angeles County, State of California, in the County Jail . . . that said imprisonment, detention, confinement and restraint are illegal. ...”

The commitment of petitioner to a jail sentence of ninety-five days and the infliction of fines in the sum of $9,500 for contempt of court arose out of the civil action of Taylor v. Clarke which was initiated March 6, 1940, seeking declaratory relief and an accounting, the complaint therein alleging a partnership between the parties to the action in the Boncquet Laboratories. The answer of defendant Clarke (petitioner here) denied the partnership and alleged the existence of a lease by Taylor to Clarke whereby the latter had leased for a term of three years certain assets which had theretofore been purchased by Taylor from the trustee in bankruptcy of Boncquet Laboratories. Further, that from April 1, 1937, with full knowledge of Taylor, said defendant Clarke had carried on the business individually under the fictitious name of Boncquet Laboratories for his own individual benefit and profit and as sole owner thereof.

On April 24, 1940, upon hearing on an order to show cause and for appointment of a receiver and for a restraining order in said civil action, at which hearing Clarke and his attorneys were present, an injunction pendente lite issued enjoining and restraining the said Clarke “from withdrawing any funds of the business of the Boncquet Laboratories on deposit in any bank or banks, except such as are reasonably necessary in the ordinary and usual course of business, and from disposing of any of the assets of the business of the Boncquet Laboratories, either directly or indirectly, except such as is reasonably necessary in the ordinary and usual course of business, until the further order of this court.” (Emphasis added.)

Thereafter, from May 1, 1940, to and including August 6, 1941, petitioner Clarke from time to time withdrew sums of money, aggregating the sum of $35,761.39, from the bank or banks where accounts were maintained by Boncquet Laboratories. Under date of June 11, 1941, L. N. Dechene subscribed to an affidavit setting forth facts constituting the alleged contempt, which facts he averred were ascertained by him wholly from certain books of account of the Boncquet *23 Laboratories; and an order to show cause was issued thereon on June 11, 1941, against petitioner and his attorneys. On June 17, 1941, said L. N. Dechene filed an amended affidavit reciting more specifically the matters covered by the first affidavit and alleging additional facts (also gleaned by him from certain books of account) charging petitioner with violating the injunction order of April 25, 1940, i.e., the withdrawal of various sums of money from the bank, whereupon a second order to show cause based upon the amended affidavit was duly issued directed to petitioner. Thereafter, on July 23 and 24, 1941, the matter came on for hearing before the Honorable Ruben S. Schmidt, as Judge of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, who found petitioner and his attorneys “not guilty” of contempt and ordered them discharged and the proceeding dismissed. This order was later annulled by the Supreme Court (Taylor v. Superior Court, 20 Cal.2d 244 [125 P.2d 1]), and said, orders to show cause in re contempt were then set for hearing before the Honorable Charles S. Burnell, as judge of the superior court, who, on January 18, 1943, made his findings of fact and issued an order and decree adjudging petitioner guilty of nineteen separate contempts of court and committed petitioner to the custody of the Sheriff of Los Angeles County. Having served over fifty days of the sentence imposed upon him, petitioner seeks to procure his release from custody through the instant proceeding in habeas corpus.

The injunction pendente lite was directed against petitioner “his agents and attorneys, and counsellors” and the amended affidavit of L. N. Dechene specifically averred that certain sums of money withdrawn from the bank by petitioner were paid to and accepted by his attorneys. Both orders to show cause in re contempt issued June 11 and June 17, 1941, respectively, were directed to petitioner and his attorneys therein named. However, at the hearing on said orders to show caxise before Judge Burnell, the matter was dismissed as to said attorneys, leaving petitioner “as the sole person against whom this proceeding is prosecuted.”

The court found, as to each of the nineteen violations of the injunction pendente lite, that the amount specified therein as having been withdrawn from the bank “was for the personal use and benefit of the defendant, F. A. Clarke; that the withdrawal and use of said sum by said F. A. Clarke, from said account was a deliberate, intentional, and willful *24 violation of the terms of the Restraining Order and Judgment made by the Hon. Emmet H. Wilson, on the 25th day of April, 1940 . . . ; that the withdrawal and use of said sum by said F. A. Clarke, was not reasonably necessary in the ordinary and usual course of business of Boncquet Laboratories.”

Further, that petitioner “withdrew the total sum of $35,761.39, from time to time, subsequent to the 25th day of April, 1940, as specifically set forth hereinabove in Findings No. V, to No. XXIII, inclusive. That all of the withdrawals made by said defendant, F. A. Clarke, totalling the sum of $35,761.39, were for the personal use and benefit of said defendant, F. A. Clarke, and which sums of money were used by said F. A. Clarke, and were not reasonably necessary in the ordinary and usual course of business of Boncquet Laboratories. . . . that . . . the withdrawals . . . constitute nineteen separate and distinct, deliberate, intentional, and willful violations of the terms and provisions of the Restraining Order and Judgment. ...”

The judgment in re contempt ordered that as punishment for each of the nineteen counts, petitioner be imprisoned in the county jail for a period of five days and pay a fine of $500, and in the event of nonpayment of such fines, that he be imprisoned one day for each $2 in default, the sentences on the nineteen counts to run consecutively. It was also provided that in lieu of serving the said terms of imprisonment and paying the fines imposed, petitioner might purge himself of said contempts by returning the sum of $35,761.39 withdrawn by him and. by depositing the same in a named bank to the credit of Boncquet Laboratories.

In his petition for writ of habeas corpus, petitioner avers that the total sentences imposed upon him by said judgment amount to an imprisonment of 95 days in the county jail and the payment of $9,500 in fines; and “in the event of his failure to pay said fines . . . (he) is to be imprisoned an additional day for each two dollars of said fines, being in all 4,750 days in addition to said 95 days, or a total of 4,845 days, being thirteen (13) years and one hundred (100) days.”

At the hearing in re contempt before Judge Burnell, the main witness was L. N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 P.2d 92, 60 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clarke-calctapp-1943.