Kimball v. Richardson Kimball Co.

43 P. 1111, 111 Cal. 386, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 594
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1896
DocketNo. 19568
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 43 P. 1111 (Kimball v. Richardson Kimball Co.) 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
Kimball v. Richardson Kimball Co., 43 P. 1111, 111 Cal. 386, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 594 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Searls, C.

The action was brought by the plaintiff upon a promissory note to recover from defendant $1,500 and interest.

Plaintiff issued an attachment which was levied upon certain property and moneys of defendant in the hands of the Los Angeles National Bank. Defendant made default, and no question was made as to plaintiff’s right to a judgment against defendant.

William Deering & Co. (a corporation) also brought an action against the same defendant (a corporation) to recover money due it from said defendant; issued a writ of attachment, which was subsequently levied upon the same property and money previously levied upon by plaintiff.

William Deering & Co. took judgment against defendant for $1,372.69. After levying its attachment William Deering & Co. intervened in this action, and set up facts claiming to show the lien of plaintiff’s attachment should be postponed and held subordinate to the lien of its subsequent attachment. The cause was tried by the court, written findings filed, and judgment rendered, adjudging the lien of intervenor’s attachment superior to that of the attachment lien of plaintiff, and adjudging the former to be first paid out of the attached property.

Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and the cause comes up without a bill of exceptions or statement, [390]*390upon so much of the judgment-roll as by the stipulation of the parties is deemed sufficient to illustrate the questions in dispute.

The points made by appellant in favor of reversal are: 1. That the findings do not support the decree; 2. That finding XI is not supported by the pleadings.

It would be more satisfactory to set out the’ findings in full, but their great length precludes our doing so. The following is believed to be a fair synopsis of them, and to lead to an understanding of the questions involved :

1. That “William Deering & Co.” is, and for more than five years past has been, a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois.
2. The “ Richardson-Kimball Company” is, and since 1887 has been, a corporation under the laws of California.
3. The plaintiff, George H. Kimball, is and has been secretary, treasurer, and a stockholder of said Richardson-Kimball Company since 1887.
4. Intervenor William Deering & Co. has been since 1888 a creditor of the Richardson-Kimball Company (hereinafter called defendant), and on the sixth day of September, 1888, defendant had certain moneys of William Deering Company (hereinafter called intervenor) which it held for intervenor’s use, viz., $2,507.43, which it acknowledged in writing, but which it failed to turn over to intervenor, and there is due intervenor on account thereof $1,416.74.
5. That since 1889 defendant has been and still is insolvent, which was well known to plaintiff and defendant.
6. The attached property, money, etc., was on the 9th of May, 1891, in the hands of the Los Angeles National Bank, subject to its certain liens thereon, which was known to plaintiff and defendant.
7. On said May 9th defendant made the note in suit to plaintiff, which was not made to defraud intervenor or other creditors, but was for a consideration of $1,500j> and was made without fraud or collusion.
[391]*3918. On the 18th of August, 1891, plaintiff brought this action, and attached all the property and money of de= fendant in the hands of said bank.
9. On the fifth day of September, 1891, intervenor brought suit against the defendant, and attached the same property.
10. The property so attached by plaintiff and intervenor was; and now is, the only property and assets of the defendant.
11. Upon the incorporation of defendant in 1887, plaintiff subscribed $22,400 to its capital stock, upon which he has not paid more than $2,400, and he still owes on account thereof $20,000. No calls or assessments have ever been made by defendant on account of the sum due and owing by plaintiff on account of his subscription to the capital stock; since May 1, 1891, plaintiff has been at all times insolvent.
12. After intervenor filed its complaint of intervention herein, viz., on the third day of November, 1891, the attachment in its suit against defendant was discharged by order of the court, and thereafter, and on the seventh day of November, 1891, intervenor sued out a second writ of attachment in the same cause, which on the ninth and eleventh days of November, 1891, was served upon the said Los Angeles National Bank, in the usual form, with notice, etc., attaching all the property, money, etc., of defendant in its hands.

This attachment was also served in like manner upon T. H. Ward, as bailee of said bank, and the sheriff has since that time held the money and property so by him attached.

Intervenor obtained judgment in its action against defendant on the sixteenth day of January, 1892, for $1,372.69, and the property and money is held by the sheriff for the satisfaction thereof.

On the twenty-first day of September, 1891, the Los Angeles National Bank commenced an action against F. A. Carter and others, including all the parties to this action, in a complaint of interpleader, requiring them [392]*392to litigate their claims, etc., and at the same time deposited with T. H. Ward, the clerk of the superior court, all the property and money of defendant in its hands, subject to the determination of the action of inter-pleader.

Such deposit was made without order of the court and without the knowledge or consent of defendant or intervenor herein, and such action of interpleader is still pending and undetermined.

On the 16th of January, 1892, intervenor filed a supplemental complaint in intervention, setting out the order dissolving its attachment and the issuing and service of the writ of attachment of November 7, 1891, etc. This last fact is admitted in the record.

It also appears that plaintiff interposed a general demurrer to intervenor’s complaint in intervention, which was overruled by the court.

The theory of appellant is that the findings do not support the decree for the reasons:

(a) That intervenor, as an attachment creditor in another suit against defendant, has no such “ interest in the matter in litigation ” as entitles him, under section 387 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to intervene.

In support of this first contention he cites Horn v. Volcano Water Co., 13 Cal. 62. The intervenors in that case were general creditors of the defendant, without any lien, either general or specific, on the property involved in the action. In speaking to this point the court said: “ To authorize an intervention, therefore, the interest must be that created by a claim to the demand, or some part thereof, in suit, or a claim to or lien upon the property, or some part thereof, which is the subject of litigation. No such claim or lien is asserted in the petition of Eawle, and his right to intervene must in consequence fail.”

The court further held that certain other parties who were judgment creditors were proper parties.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P. 1111, 111 Cal. 386, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-richardson-kimball-co-cal-1896.