MacMillan Petroleum Corp. v. Griffin

222 P.2d 69, 99 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1740
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1950
DocketCiv. 14300
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 69 (MacMillan Petroleum Corp. v. Griffin) 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
MacMillan Petroleum Corp. v. Griffin, 222 P.2d 69, 99 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1740 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

The basic questions are whether a certain order granting enforcement of a judgment is void because the then plaintiff was a dissolved Nevada corporation, and whether it could be set aside when the true status of the plaintiff was discovered. There is also involved the question of the validity of an ex parte order substituting party plaintiff. There are a number of orders made culminating in the order appealed from.

Summary

On May 17, 1934, Mileage Gasoline Company (hereafter called Mileage) recovered a judgment against defendants Griffin and Jovick. Approximately 13 years later, in 1947, an application by Mileage’s attorney was made to the superior *525 court on notice to grant enforcement of this judgment and to order execution to issue. Apparently, Griffin was not served, and so far as this appeal is concerned will not be considered further. December 19,1947, the court made an 1 ‘ Order Granting Leave to Enforce Judgment” against Joviek. Thereafter the following orders were made and proceedings had:

April 20, 1948—a minute order denying respondent’s motion to vacate the order of enforcement.
May 3—an ex parte order vacating the April 20 order, endorsed on a notice of motion by respondent to be heard May 7 to vacate that very order.
June 14—an order (1) vacating the order of April 20; (2) permitting respondent to renew his motion to vacate the December 19 order (3) granting his motion to vacate that order; and (4) denying Mileage the right to enforce the judgment.
(June 15—respondent appealed from the April 20 order. This appeal apparently has not been perfected.)
August 10—by stipulation the order of June 14 was vacated and the matters which were before the court on June 14 were to be again presented. At this moment, the order of April 20 refusing to vacate the order of enforcement was in effect, unless the order of May 3 vacating it was valid.
August 21—an ex parte order substituting Macmillan Petroleum Corporation (hereafter called Macmillan) for Mileage as party plaintiff.
September 4—respondent filed notice of motion to set aside this order of substitution.
October 25—Mileage and Macmillan filed notice of motion to vacate the May 3 order which purported to vacate the April 20 order.
December 3—the order appealed from. The order (1) denied plaintiff’s motion to set aside the order of May 3; (2) granted respondent’s motion to vacate the order of April 20; (3) granted respondent’s motion to vacate the August 21 order of substitution; (4) granted respondent’s motion to set aside the December 19 order of enforcement and denied plaintiff the right to enforce the judgment.

Obdeb of Substitution

Respondent contends that neither Mileage nor Macmillan have any standing on this appeal—Mileage, because it is a dissolved Nevada corporation with no capacity to appear in this case; and Macmillan, because the order of substitution *526 is void. For the reasons hereafter set forth in the discussion concerning the validity of the December 19 order, Mileage has no capacity to carry on this litigation, and hence its appeal must be dismissed. Moreover, if the order substituting Macmillan is valid, Mileage is completely out of the case, and hence could not appeal if it had capacity. Macmillan claims to hold an assignment of the judgment made by Mileage prior to its dissolution. An assignee is entitled to be substituted as party plaintiff in the place of the assignor. (Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, vol. 1, p. 651.) That portion of the order of December 3 setting aside the order of substitution was made upon the claim by respondent that the order was invalid because made ex parte. While it is better practice that a notice be given, there is no requirement that notice of application for substitution of a party plaintiff be given to the defendant. (Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, vol. 1, p. 654.) Respondent also contended that it was invalid because made by the presiding judge of the superior court rather than by the judge in whose department the matter was pending. It is not clear from respondent’s brief whether he still makes the same contention. The point is unfounded. There is but one superior court in a county, and the action of any judge of that court is the action of the court, and not merely of the particular judge. (Brown v. Campbell, 110 Cal. 644 [43 P. 12].) As the order of substitution was valid, that portion of the order of December 3 vacating it must be reversed.

Was the Order of Enforcement Void?

The application for order enforcing the judgment was based, as it had to be, on the claim that the then plaintiff had exercised due diligence in not collecting the judgment theretofore. It was accompanied by the affidavit of Attorney Hatch in which he stated that continuously from a time prior to the date of the judgment he had been one of the attorneys for plaintiff. He then set forth efforts to collect the judgment, and that under examination, defendants had stated that they had no assets, but agreed to notify affiant whenever they were ■ able to make any payments. Affiant had never been so notified, but recently had learned that they, or at least respondent, did have assets. There was no mention of Macmillan in the proceedings. On the motion heard April 20 to vacate the December 19 order of enforcement, respondent filed an affidavit claiming that the December 19 order of enforcement *527 had been taken against him by surprise and excusable neglect in that at that time he did not know that Mileage was a dissolved Nevada corporation. He then set forth that Mileage had been a Nevada corporation which had surrendered its license and authority to conduct business in California, and had voluntarily dissolved on December 24, 1937. A certificate of its withdrawal from business in California and of its dissolution in Nevada accompanied the affidavit. This fact of dissolution has never been denied, and could not be, in view of the certificate of dissolution. On August 21, on the ex parte application for substitution, Macmillan filed an affidavit of Morris P. Macmillan, former president of Mileage and now vice-president of Macmillan, stating that prior to the dissolution of Mileage it had assigned its assets to Macmillan and that as president of Mileage and vice-president of Macmillan he had authorized Attorney Hatch to proceed with the enforcement and collection of all-judgments.

It appears from the affidavit later filed by respondent on the proceedings to set aside the order of April 20, which order refused to vacate the order of enforcement, that court and counsel on the April 20 hearing assumed that the effect of the dissolution of Mileage was to be determined by California rather than Nevada law. When respondent’s counsel returned to his office he discovered authorities which convinced him that the Nevada law should govern.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 69, 99 Cal. App. 2d 523, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macmillan-petroleum-corp-v-griffin-calctapp-1950.