Jenner v. Murphy

92 P. 405, 6 Cal. App. 434, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 122
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 18, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 379.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 92 P. 405 (Jenner v. Murphy) 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
Jenner v. Murphy, 92 P. 405, 6 Cal. App. 434, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 122 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

COOPER, P. J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment. Defendant Daniel T. Murphy made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and this appeal is by him from a part of the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial. The action was brought by plaintiff, the divorced wife of Bertram Samuel J. F. Murphy, hereinafter designated as Samuel J. Murphy, to obtain a decree that two certain deeds, dated respectively May 27, 1886, and May 26, 1897, made by defendant Samuel J. Murphy to defendant Daniel T. Murphy, are fraudulent and void as to plaintiff, and that a certain judgment for the sum of $8,284.13, with interest, rendered in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Samuel J. Murphy, in a suit upon a prior judgment for permanent alimony, recovered by plaintiff against the said defendant Samuel J. Murphy in England, be declared a lien upon the property so transferred by said deeds to defendant Daniel T. Murphy, until he shall pay and satisfy said judgment. The court found in favor of defendant Daniel T. Murphy as to the first deed, and hence it will not be necessary to state any facts as to that. The defendant Samuel J. Murphy made default, and hence it will only be necessary to state the facts as to the second deed, and its effect as between the plaintiff and the appellant.

In 1891 the plaintiff and defendant Samuel J. Murphy intermarried. In February, 1895, a decree of divorce was rendered in Great Britain, dissolving the said bonds of matrimony, and awarding to plaintiff $50 per month alimony. Appellant had heard of this divorce prior to the conveyance made to him by his brother Samuel J. Murphy in 1897. A portion of the money due plaintiff as alimony was thereafter, on November 11, 1898, included in a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Samuel J. Murphy for the sum of £1,450. Upon this last-named judgment the plaintiff brought an action in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco against defendant Samuel J.'Mur *436 phy, and upon the sixth day of May, 1901, judgment was duly entered in favor of plaintiff in said' action for the sum of $8,284.13. From this judgment an appeal was taken and the judgment affirmed. (Murphy v. Murphy, 145 Cal. 482, [78 Pac. 1053].)

The action at bar was commenced August 5, 1901, after the entry of the last-mentioned judgment in the superior court, and pending its appeal to the supreme court. No stay bond was executed pending the said appeal. The court below found that the said deed of May, 1897, was executed for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the plaintiff in collecting any sums that might be due or become due to her from defendant Samuel J. Murphy, and ordered that appellant pay to plaintiff out of the property so held by him for defendant Samuel J. Murphy the sum of $9,944.31, being the amount, with interest and costs, of the said judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against said Samuel J. Murphy in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, and that until the same be paid it remain a lien upon the undivided interest in two certain pieces of real estate held by appellant for defendant Samuel J. Murphy under the said deed of May, 1897.

The first point urged by the appellant is that plaintiff has not the status of a' creditor so as to entitle her to assail the transfer, for the reason that an appeal had been taken from her judgment rendered in the superior court against Samuel J. Murphy. It is true that a fraudulent conveyance, as against a resident of the state, can only be attacked by a creditor who has reduced his claim to a judgment and who is entitled to an execution, which could be levied and satisfied only for such fraudulent conveyance. Plaintiff alleged, proved, and the court found, that she had a judgment, and one upon which she was entitled to an execution. The appellant claims that, because an appeal had been taken, the judgment was not a final judgment; or, in other words, his contention is—and he asks us to hold—that a creditor, who has reduced his claim to a judgment in a court having jurisdiction cannot be allowed to bring an action to set aside a fraudulent conveyance pending an appeal from such judgment, although no undertaking has been given to stay execution. He asks us to hold that a judgment creditor entitled to an execution may be deprived of the right to maintain *437 an action like this pending an appeal which may be delayed for years, and with no security for the final payment of the judgment. We would be loath to follow any case which would sustain such a doctrine, but to the credit of the law no case has been cited which even lends countenance to such contention. The language of the law boobs is that a creditor, who has reduced his demand to a judgment at law, may maintain his action to set aside a conveyance which hinders and obstructs the right of the creditor to reach the debtor’s property by execution. The law presumes that a judgment, until reversed, is a correct judicial determination of the rights of the parties. It presumed so in this case, and, as has been stated, the court on appeal so held. If the appellant’s contention be correct, the law, while giving the plaintiff the right to an execution, would be so impotent that it could not in' any way assist her by removing the obstruction which prevents the enforcement of the execution. It is true, that pending an appeal, the judgment was not final, but it was nevertheless a judgment. It was entered as the code provides it should be. It entitled the plaintiff to a writ of execution. It was admissible in evidence for the purposes of this case. In California etc. Bank v. Graves, 129 Cal. 649, [62 Pac. 259], it was held that the judgment-roll was admissible upon an application for a writ of assistance pending an appeal from a judgment of foreclosure, where no undertaking had been given to stay the execution. The same was held in Montgomery v. Tutt, 11 Cal. 190, in which case Judge Field said: “When the court possesses jurisdiction to make a decree it possesses the power to enforce its execution.”

In Cook v. Rice, 91 Cal. 664, [27 Pac. 1081], the plaintiff asked for an injunction and for damages for certain trespasses upon certain lands. Defendant pleaded as an estoppel a former judgment, in which it was held that the plaintiff was not entitled to any part of the land except ten acres specifically described. When the judgment-roll in the former suit was offered in evidence, it was objected to because the time for appealing had not expired, and the judgment was not final. The court said, speaking through Mr. Justice Temple: “It was not necessary that it should be final in the sense that it was not liable to be reversed on appeal. It was enough that the judgment was in force, not suspended by an *438 appeal or otherwise, and that while in force it finally disposed of the controversy. ’ ’

In the case at bar the judgment was in force, not suspended by the appeal, and while so in force it finally disposed of the controversy. Plaintiff having a judgment, the judgment-roll was admissible to show it. It may further be said that defendant Samuel J. Murphy was a nonresident of the state at the time this action was commenced, and it has been held that in such case the plaintiff is not required to be a judgment creditor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P. 405, 6 Cal. App. 434, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenner-v-murphy-calctapp-1907.