Lehnhardt v. Jennings

51 P. 195, 119 Cal. 192, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 878
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 170
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 51 P. 195 (Lehnhardt v. Jennings) 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
Lehnhardt v. Jennings, 51 P. 195, 119 Cal. 192, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 878 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

BRITT, C.

A decision was rendered in Department directing the reversal of the judgment obtained by plaintiff in this cause, on the ground that the case was not cognizable in the superior court, the amount in controversy appearing on the record as presented to be less than three hundred dollars. Subsequently, on the petition of respondent, accompanied by a suggestion of diminution of the record and a certified copy of matter said to have been omitted therefrom, a hearing in Bank was ordered by the court; not, as we understand, because the conclusion of the Department was considered to be erroneous on the record as filed, but because this, when supplemented by said omitted matter, was deemed to show a ease of which the court below had jurisdiction.

The more material facts are stated in the former opinion; it may be added that some part of the lands levied upon stood on the records of the county in the names of persons not parties to the execution. The county was joined as a defendant for the reason, apparently, that its treasury, and not the sheriff personally, is the ultimate beneficiary of the fees collected by him. We are to inquire what things were necessary to be done by the sheriff in order to make a proper levy of an execution, on lands already subject to the lien of the judgment on which the writ was issued; not merely the procedure which would make a subsequent v sale of the land good in favor of a purchaser and against the defendant in the execution (which was the question decided in Blood v. Light, 38 Cal. 649, 99 Am. Dec. 441), but what acts were necessary to a full performance of the officer’s duty so as to protect him against any charge of dereliction; for such acts he might claim legal fees, but for none others. The substance of those provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure which most nearly touch the subject is as follows: Section 542 relates to the method of exe[194]*194cuting a writ of attachment; real property standing upon the records of the county in the name of the defendant must be attached by filing with the recorder of the county a copy of the writ, a description of the property attached, and a notice that it is attached, and by leaving like papers with an occupant, if any; and if no occupant, then by posting the same on the property. If real property of the defendant is held in the name of some other person, the mode of attachment prescribed is varied to meet the exigency of such a case, notice to such other person being provided for. Section 671 makes a docketed judgment a lien upon all unexempt real property of the defendant in the county. Section 68/3 relates to the form of the writ of execution; when the judgment is a lien on real property, and sufficient personalty is not found, the sheriff is required to satisfy the judgment out of the real property belonging to defendant on the day when the judgment was docketed, etc. Section 688 provides that all property (not exempt by law) seized and held under attachment in, the action is liable to execution. “And all other property, both real and personal, or any interest in either real or personal property .... may be attached on execution in like manner as upon writs of attachment.....Until a levy, property is not affected by the execution.” Section 691: “The sheriff must execute the writ against the property of the judgment debtor by levying on a sufficient amount of property, if there be sufficient; collecting or selling the things in action, and selling the other property,” etc. Section 693 provides that before the sale of real property on execution notice thereof must be given for twenty days by posting notices in the township or city where the property is situated and by publication in a newspaper of the county.

It is seen that section 693 makes the levying of the writ a part of the process of executing it. The term “levy,” when employed, to connote the acts by which an officer manifests the intent to appropriate land to the satisfaction of an execution, and when not defined by statute, has considerable elasticity of meaning; so probably for the reason that as the common law permitted no levy of the writ on lands, it devised no procedure for that purpose. In one state, a statute provided that a “levy” should be understood to be the actual seizure of property by the officer [195]*195executing the writ; it was held that this applied only to property capable of being seized; that it was not necessary to enter on land to make a levy; and that the law was silent as to what should be the evidence of a levy on this species of property. (Duncan v. Matney, 29 Mo. 368; 77 Am. Dec. 575.) In Louisiana only, it appears, is the levy on land assimilated to that of goods, and the officer is required to take and hold actual possession (Pipkin v. Sheriff, 36 La. Ann. 781); quite in contrast with which practice is the doctrine in North Carolina that the levy “may be made in the office, although it [the land] may be ten miles distant and the officer has never seen it.” (Bland v. Whitfield, 1 Jones, 125. See, also, 3 Freeman on Executions, sec. 280 a; 8 Ency. of Pl. & Pr., 511, et seq.)

In Wood v. Colvin, 5 Hill, 228, it was held that when the judgment on which execution has issued is a lien upon land it is unnecessary to make a formal levy of the writ before proceeding to sell; and this has been said here to be the correct rule. (Bagley v. Ward, 37 Cal. 132; 99 Am. Dec. 256.) But the statute (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 691) evidently contemplates that levying is something different from selling, and it is urged in support of the appeal that the levy thus required must be made in the manner described in section 688, viz., “in like manner as upon writs of attachment,” by filing a copy of the writ in the office of the recorder, etc. Upon careful consideration, our conclusion is different; the purpose of the provisional remedy of attachment is to obtain security for the satisfaction of any judgment that may be recovered in the action (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 537); so the purpose of attaching under the writ of execution, as permitted by section 688, is to obtain security for the satisfaction of a judgment previously recovered; but, when such judgment is already a lien, the main object of an attachment has been accomplished. Again, if to levy an execution on lands in obedience to said section 691 necessarily means attaching them in like manner as upon writs of attachment, then although there may have been first a regular statutory levy of a writ of attachment in the action, the lien of which was preserved by the judgment (Porter v. Pico, 55 Cal. 174), it would still be indispensable, when the execution issues, to repeat with the latter writ the proceedings taken under [196]*196the former, which would seem to he mere futility. (Beaton v. Reid, 111 Cal. 484.)

In Bagley v. Ward, supra, the court seems to have been disposed to concede that by the provision that “property may he attached on execution in like manner as upon writs of attachment,” then contained in section 21? of the practice act, the legislature intended to require, in all cases, for the levy of ah execution, the filing in the recorder’s office of a copy of the writ with a description of the property levied upon, as in the case of an attachment; “hut,” said the court, “however this may have been, it is now too late to insist on that construction. The practice has been almost uniform since the adoption of that provision in 1851, to omit the filing of a copy of the execution in the recorder’s office.” Bagley v. Ward

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 195, 119 Cal. 192, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehnhardt-v-jennings-cal-1897.