Jarvis v. Webber

236 P. 138, 196 Cal. 86, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 295
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1925
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3504.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 236 P. 138 (Jarvis v. Webber) 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
Jarvis v. Webber, 236 P. 138, 196 Cal. 86, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 295 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

WASTE, J.

The appellant brought an action against the respondent, as sheriff of Butte County, for the recovery of personal property ‘seized under attachment and sold on execution. Judgment was entered for the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The action in which the attachment was issued was brought by the Commercial Bank of Durham against W. A. D ’Egilbert and the Western Rice Growers, Inc. It appears that D’Egilbert, the Western Rice Growers, Inc., and Western Warehouses, Inc., were associated in rice culture in Northern California in the year 1920, D ’Egilbert owning a controlling interest in both corporations. On account of continuous rains, starting early in the fall of that year, they were unable to harvest their crops, and were in such financial difficulties that they were unable to pay their employees and their other creditors. D’Egilbert, his wife, and his associate corporations executed a document, purporting to be a bill of sale and a deed absolute, whereby a number of tracts of land and a large amount of personal property, including the property subsequently attached by the sheriff, were transferred to O. W. Jarvis, the appellant herein. This document, hereafter referred to as the deed, was dated January 24, 1921, and was acknowledged by the several grantors, their officers, and agents on February 5th following. It was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Butte County, at the request of D’Egilbert, on February 19. At the same time there was executed another instrument, purporting to be a trust agreement, which was also dated January 24, 1921. It was never acknowledged, but bears the notation that on the eleventh day of March it was ‘‘subscribed and sworn to” by D’Egilbert and the officers of the two corporations. In this instrument, hereafter referred to as the trust agreement, the parties named as grantors in the deed, D’Egilbert, the Western Rice Growers, Inc., and the Western Warehouses, Inc., are designated parties of the first part. Appellant, O. W. Jarvis, party of the second part, is designated and referred to as “the trustee.” The “ Sacramento-San Joaquin Bank and all other creditors of the parties of the first part, or either of them, who shall consent to the agreement” are the parties of the third part; *89 but the instrument did not contain, nor was there at anytime attached thereto, a list of the names of the creditors of the parties of the first part, their places of residence, the amounts of their demands, or the amount or nature of any security therefor. By this instrument the parties of the first part “grant, bargain, sell, convey, assign, transfer, deliver and set over unto said O. W. Jarvis, the second party, . . . designated as said trustee, all the real property owned by them, or either of them, or in which they or either of them, has any interest, and situated ... in the state of California, and also all the personal property of every kind, nature and description owned by them, or either of them, . . . wheresoever situated, except the household goods and furniture of said D’Egilbert.” The holders of more than two-thirds of the issued capital stock of both corporations, parties of the first part, in writing attached to the instrument, approved and consented to the transfer. The evidence indicates that this instrument was delivered to Jarvis on the seventh or eighth day of February, 1921, but it was never recorded.

At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed and trust agreement D’Egilbert and the Western Bice Growers, Inc., were indebted to the Commercial Bank of Durham in the sum of $2,500 and interest. The bank at no time assented to the trust agreement or to any assignment or transfer of the property. It brought the action heretofore referred to, and on the sixteenth day of February, three days before the deed to appellant was recorded, Webber, as sheriff, acting under a writ of attachment issued in the cause, attached personal property of the defendant which is the subject of the present controversy. Judgment in the action was entered in favor of the Commercial Bank of Durham against D’Egilbert and the Western Bice Growers, Inc., for the sum of $3,068.13. A writ of execution was thereupon issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff with instructions to sell all of the personal property held by him under the attachment, or a sufficient amount thereof to satisfy the execution and judgment. Three days before the sale, appellant Jarvis demanded of the sheriff possession of the property about to be sold, asserting a right to the possession thereof under the provisions of section 689 of the Civil Code, 'which provides that a present interest entitles the owner to the immediate possession of property. In the claim he alleged *90 himself to be the owner of the attached personal property, and that he had deraigned title thereto through “an assignment and transfer of title to said personal property” on or subsequent to the twenty-fourth day of January, the date of the deed and trust agreement hereinbefore referred to, “accompanied by an immediate and continuous change of possession.” Disregarding the claim of appellant, the sheriff sold the property at public auction for the sum of $2,824.90. After paying costs of sale, and a preferred laborer’s claim amounting to $100; he paid the remainder of the amount received at the sale to the bank in partial satisfaction of its judgment. Thereafter Jarvis brought this action against the sheriff for the recovery of possession of the property sold, or the value thereof in case delivery could not be had.

The trial court found the facts we have heretofore set out, and, in addition thereto, that at the time of the execution of the so-called trust agreement D’Egilbert and the two corporations were insolvent, which fact was known to all of the parties to the transaction. It also found that at the time of the execution and delivery of the instrument D’Egilbert and the Western Rice Growers, Inc., were in the actual possession and control of the property, and the purported transfer was not accompanied by immediate or any delivery to Jarvis, and was not followed by an actual, or continued, or any change of possession. On these facts the court concluded that the purported transfer to Jarvis was an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and that, as to the Commercial Bank of Durham and the attaching sheriff, it was void and of no effect. It therefore held that the sheriff had not unlawfully converted the goods and chattels and rendered judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff has appealed, presenting for our determination two main questions: (1) Whether or not the deed and the trust agreement, upon which appellant relies as vesting title in him, constitute an assignment for the benefit of creditors within the meaning of sections 3449-3473 of the Civil Code; (2) if the instruments did amount to an assignment, whether or not they were sufficient to vest title in appellant as against the attaching bank, notwithstanding the fact that they were not intended to, and did not, conform to the code sections. There is also presented the question whether or not immediate and continued change of possession was essential to the *91 validity of appellant’s claim of title as against the attaching creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 138, 196 Cal. 86, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvis-v-webber-cal-1925.