March v. Barnet

53 P. 933, 121 Cal. 419, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 924
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1898
DocketS. F. No. 704
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 P. 933 (March v. Barnet) 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
March v. Barnet, 53 P. 933, 121 Cal. 419, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 924 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

VAN FLEET, J.

When this cause was in Department an opinion was rendered affirming the judgment, but subsequently the judgment of the Department was set aside and the cause ordered to a hearing in Bank.

The action is to recover for the alleged wrongful taking of certain personal property of the plaintiff. The material fact's, ae found hy the court, were these:

[421]*421• In October, 1890, 0. M. Button brought an action against Jacob Steen and John Boss and W. F. March, the plaintiff herein, on a promissory note made by said Steen payable to John Boss, or order, and by him indorsed to plaintiff March, who in turn, before maturity, indorsed the same to Button. A writ of attachment issued in said cause, which was levied upon the property of defendant Jacob Steen.
Thereupon S. Barnet and one G-. Bowman entered into an undertaking for the release of said attached property, as prescribed by section 540 of the Code of Civil Procedure, whereby they undertook and agreed to pay any judgment plaintiff in that action might obtain against the defendant Steen, whereupon the attachment was released.
Button obtained judgment in that action against Steen as maker of said note, and March as indorser thereof, for six hundred and twenty-five dollars and ninety-seven cents and costs, the suit having been dismissed as to defendant Boss; the findings upon which the judgment was based expressly disclosing the fact that Steen was the maker and March an indorser of the note.
On April 18, 1893, Barnet paid that judgment to Button and took an assignment of it. On May 17, 1893, defendant Bar-net assigned the judgment to defendant Isaac Blum, who on May 31, 1893, assigned it to Joseph Blum, having first taken out an execution and placed it in the hands of the sheriff of San Francisco, instructing him to seize and sell the interest of March in the schooner “Ingalls,” which, under the further direction of Joseph Blum, the sheriff proceeded to do, selling said property to said Joseph Blum on May 38, 1893, for seven hundred and seventy dollars, which interest was then and there of the value of one thousand dollars. Before making the sale the sheriff demanded an indemnifying bond, which was given by defendants Isaac Blum, Joseph Blum and J. H. Jacobs. Joseph Blum transferred his purchase to J. H. Jacobs on the day of the sale, and Jacobs at once took possession of the same, and held it at the commencement of the action. At all these times, from the payment of the Button judgment by Barnet until the sale and transfer of March’s interest in the schooner, each of the defendants S. Barnet, Isaac Blum, Joseph Blum, [422]*422and J. H. Jacobs had full notice of the relation sustained by said S. Barnet to that judgment, as surety for Steen; and said transfers from Barnet to Isaac Blum, from Isaac Blum to Joseph Blum, and from Joseph Blum to Jacobs, were made with the intention on the part of each of them “to have said property of plaintiff seized under said execution and sold so as to' protect said Steen against said judgment, and to reimburse said S. Barnet for the amount paid by him to said O. M. Button when he took said assignment.”

Upon these findings the court below gave plaintiff a judgment as against defendant Steen for nine hundred and forty-three dollars and forty-one cents, and costs, but denied him any relief as against defendants S. Barnet, Isaac Blum, Joseph Blum, and J. H. Jacobs—the action having been theretofore dismissed as to defendant Laumeister.

Plaintiff appeals from so much of the judgment as is in favor of the defendants Barnet, the Blums and Jacobs, the appeal being upon the judgment-roll, without a bill of exceptions.

In the Department opinion it was assumed that by his undertaking to release the attachment in Button v. Steen et al., Barnet obligated himself on behalf of both Steen and March to-meet any liability which should be cast upon them, or either of them, by the judgment in that case; and this assumption of fact dominated the conclusion there reached. Were such the case, the reasoning of that opinion—that upon paying the judgment in that case Barnet became subrogated to the rights of Button, the judgment creditor, as against both Steen and March, and entitled to enforce it indifferently against either—would be logical and the conclusion reached obvious.

But it is quite apparent that the assumed existence of the fact upon which that theory of the case rests is based upon a misapprehension of the findings. The findings do not show that Barnet became obligated upon behalf of both Steen and March; to the contrary, they show very clearly that the undertaking given by Barnet was given solely at the request and for the benefit of Steen, and to release his property, and that the obligation Barnet assumed thereby was only that in case the plaintiff in the action, Button, “recovered judgment therein [423]*423against said Jacob Steen,” he would on demand pay, etc. There was nothing in the terms of the undertaking, or the relation of the parties, which, either as a matter of fact or matter of law, made Barnet responsible for any obligation of March, or which in any way made March a party to Barnet’s undertaking. The undertaking made Barnet the surety of Steen, but it created no obligation or privity between Barnet and March. And while in becoming Steen’s surety Barnet thereby made himself a party to the judgment and became bound to pay it upon. Steen’s default (Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, sec. 408; Freeman on Judgments, see. 180; Black on Judgments, 587; Riddle v. Baker, 13 Cal. 296, 306), as between himself and March he remained a stranger to the judgment.

When, therefore, Barnet paid the judgment he was performing solely the obligation of his principal, Steen, and his right to subrogation was confined to the rights of the judgment creditor as against Steen; and he was entitled to look for reimbursement only to the latter. In other words, as put in the books, he “stood in the shoes” of his principal, and he had precisely the same rights which the latter would have had, and none other. (Civ. Code, sec. 2847; Freeman on Judgments, secs. 470, 471; Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, secs. 242, 260, 270; Fitch v. Hammer, 17 Colo. 591.)

It is obvious that, had Steen himself paid the judgment, he could not have looked to March for reimbursement. While as to Button they were equally liable, as between themselves Steen, as maker of the note, was ultimately responsible to March. (March v. Barnet, 114 Cal. 375.) Since, therefore, Steen would have had no right to enforce the judgment against the plaintiff March, neither had Barnet such right. (Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, sec. 227, and authorities above cited.)

Consequently, when the property of plaintiff was seized and sold in pretended satisfaction of such judgment for the reimbursement of Barnet, the taking was clearly unlawful, and constituted a naked trespass in those participating therein, for which they were jointly and severally liable to plaintiff in the full value of the property taken. (Lewis v. Johns, 34 Cal. 629; Weber v. Ferris, 37 How. Pr. 102; Lovejoy v. Hurray, 3 Wall. 1; Davis v. Newkirk, 5 Denio, 92.)

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Bluebook (online)
53 P. 933, 121 Cal. 419, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/march-v-barnet-cal-1898.