Kullman, Salz Co. v. Superior Court

114 P. 589, 15 Cal. App. 276, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 814.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 114 P. 589 (Kullman, Salz Co. v. Superior Court) 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
Kullman, Salz Co. v. Superior Court, 114 P. 589, 15 Cal. App. 276, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 212 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondents from causing to be executed *278 a judgment for contempt of court rendered by said respondents against the petitioner, Ansley K. Salz. The contention is, of course, that the action of the court in adjudging said petitioner guilty of contempt is in excess of the jurisdiction of respondents.

The petitioner, Kullman, Salz & Co., is a corporation, duly organized and existing under the laws of this state, and engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling leather and the products of leather, its tannery being located at Benicia, in the said county of Solano.

The petitioner, Ansley K. Salz, is the secretary of said corporation, Kullman, Salz & Co.

The petition discloses that the proceedings culminating in the order adjudging said petitioner guilty of contempt of court arose under the following circumstances: On the fifth day of October, 1910, one Jean McGregor Kullman instituted an action for divorce against her husband, Jacob Kullman, in the superior court of the county of Solano. The complaint in said action, in support of plaintiff’s claim for an allowance for her own support and maintenance and for the support, maintenance and education of their minor child, aged about seven years, the only living issue of their marriage, alleged that Jacob Kullman was a man of large and ample means; that he not only received a salary of about $300 per month as an employee of the petitioner, Kullman, Salz & Co., but that he owned stock in said corporation of the value of about $250,000; that he “is also the owner of certain real estate of large value, situated in or near the city of Benicia, county of Solano,” and, furthermore, owner of other property the character and value of which it is not necessary here to enumerate or specify. It is further alleged in said complaint that the defendants (in said action), Amalia Kullman and Herbert Kullman, mother and brother, respectively, of said Jacob Kullman, and the petitioner herein, Kullman,. Salz & Co. (also made defendants in the action for divorce), “have entered into a combination and conspiracy and have colluded and conspired together with the object and purpose of taking away from said defendant, Jacob Kullman, and of concealing and covering up all his property, so that the plaintiff will not be able to obtain for herself and her minor child substantial support and maintenance.” In furtherance of the *279 object of said conspiracy, it is alleged in said complaint, the mother of Jacob, on the sixteenth day of September, 1910, brought an action in the superior court of Solano county against said Jacob upon three promissory notes, aggregating in amount the sum of $24,000; that an attachment was issued in said action and levied on certain property of said Jacob; that said Jacob made no appearance in said action, but allowed judgment to be taken against him therein by default; that the shares of stock of said Jacob in the corporation petitioner herein were at approximately the same time transferred to some other person or persons upon a pretended sale thereof, and that all said transactions were not bona fide, but consummated only for the purpose of preventing plaintiff in said action for divorce from securing a just and suitable allowance for herself and the minor child of the parties.

Upon the filing of the complaint in said action for divorce the court made an order commanding the defendants to appear before the court on the fifteenth day of October, 1910, to show cause why an order should not be made appointing a receiver of and for all the property of the said Jacob Kullman, including the stock which it was alleged that he was still the owner of in the corporation petitioner, and restraining in the meantime any sale or disposition of any said property. An order was also made at the same time requiring the defendants to appear in court on the same day that the former order was to be heard to show cause why a temporary injunction, restraining the defendants from selling, transferring, or in any manner disposing of or dealing with the property belonging to Jacob Kullman and referred to in said complaint, should not be granted.

It is alleged in the petition herein that, on the eighteenth day of November, 1910, the petitioner, Kullman, Salz & Co., filed its amended answer to the said action of Jean McGregor Kullman for a divorce, and in said answer “alleged that it had, on the tenth day of September, 1910, and long prior to the commencement of said action, so pending in Solano county, and before the service of said or any restraining order and upon the presentation of certificates duly indorsed and showing the sale, at public auction, of all interest of said Jacob Kullman therein, canceled certificate 209 for nineteen hundred shares of the capital stock of said corporation, and had *280 issued in place thereof its certificate No. 210 to one Amalia Kullman for said 1900 shares of its capital stock,” etc. Further answering said complaint, said corporation alleged that Jacob Kullman, at the time of the commencement of the suit for divorce by his wife,- “did not own, nor has he at any time since owned any stock of this defendant corporation standing upon the books of the same in his name,” and denied the existence or prosecution of any conspiracy or collusion “with said other defendants in said action, or any of them, or with any person whomsoever,” as charged in said complaint.

An order having been made commanding the defendant, Jacob Kullman, to appear before the respondents on the nineteenth day of November, 1910, to show cause why he should not pay the plaintiff alimony pendente lite and certain moneys for costs and counsel fees in said action, a subpoena duces tecum was, on the eighteenth day of November, 1910, served on the petitioner, Ansley K. Salz, requiring him to appear before the respondents on said nineteenth day of November, and further commanding him to “bring with him all books of account of Kullman, Salz & Co., a corporation, and the Benicia Water Works, a corporation (Jacob Kullman was the secretary of the last-named corporation), including all stock-books and inventories, all cash-books, all ledgers, all journals, all trial balances during the years 1909 and 1910, all books, documents and papers, showing bills receivable and bills payable by said corporations, and the value of the shares of stock of said corporations and the value of the interest of the defendant, Jacob Kullman, in said corporations.”

On the nineteenth day of November, 1910, the hearing on the order directed to Jacob Kullman to show cause why he should not pay to the plaintiff in said action alimony pendente lite, etc., came up for hearing before the respondents, and it was in this proceeding that the petitioner, Ansley K. Salz, having been sworn as a witness and refused to produce a certain book called for by counsel for the plaintiff in the divorce suit, was, for such refusal, adjudged guilty by the respondents of contempt of court, to interdict the execution of which judgment is the purpose of the present proceeding.

All the testimony taken on that hearing is before this court, having been made a part of the petition herein.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P. 589, 15 Cal. App. 276, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kullman-salz-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1911.