McCutcheon v. Superior Court

24 P.2d 911, 134 Cal. App. 5, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 117
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 22, 1933
DocketDocket No. 9094.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 24 P.2d 911 (McCutcheon 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
McCutcheon v. Superior Court, 24 P.2d 911, 134 Cal. App. 5, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 117 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

It appears that in a certain action pending in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff therein and against the corporation defendant therein for the principal sum of $3,463, and that thereafter a writ of execution which was issued on said judgment was duly returned “wholly unsatisfied”. Thereupon the plaintiff in that action instituted another and separate suit, termed a “creditor’s bill”, against the said corporation for the sole asserted purpose of having a receiver appointed to administer the assets mentioned and described in the complaint in said suit, together with the business of the corporation, to the end that the proper and legal claims of all creditors of said corporation, including that of the plaintiff, be satisfied and paid. The answer of the defendant corporation in said suit “admits all and singular the allegations of the complaint, and hereby consents to the appointment of a receiver”. In due course the petitioner herein was appointed such receiver, who thereupon, and for a period of more than one year thereafter, proceeded to and did administer the affairs of said corporation and conduct its business. After the expiration of more than one year’s service by petitioner as such receiver as aforesaid, a judge of the superior court, in whose department thereof the said suit was pending, “did summarily, upon his own motion as judge of the superior court, vacate *7 the order theretofore made appointing said receiver and discharged said receiver on the ground that said court in said action had no jurisdiction to appoint a receiver”; and thereafter, on the presentation by said receiver to said court of his report, account and petition for discharge as such receiver, the said judge sitting as said court “declined to hear such report and account, or to discharge said receiver and exonerate his bond on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction in said action to appoint said receiver ’ ’. In such circumstances, on an application by petitioner, this court issued its alternative writ of mandate by which the said judge and the said court, as respondents herein, were required either to proceed with the hearing of the said report, account and petition for the discharge of said receiver, or, on a specified date, to show cause why compliance had not been made with said order.

The effect of the answer and the argument presented by the respondents herein is that in the face of the' facts and the pleading, as shown by the complaint in the suit called a “creditor’s- bill”, the superior court was without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver; that any acts performed by the receiver in the performance by him of his assumed official duty as such were in law unauthorized and void; and consequently that neither the respondent court nor the judge thereof now may be required to proceed further either in the hearing, the settlement, or the approval of the report, account and discharge of said receiver, or otherwise, or at all.

In effect, by the terms of subdivision 4 of section 564 of the Code of Civil Procedure, a receiver may be appointed by the court in which an action is pending “after judgment ... in aid of execution, when an execution has been returned unsatisfied, ...”

As hereinbefore indicated, in the action which gave rise to the instant application, the procedure suggested for the purpose of inducing appropriate action for the appointment of a receiver was by means of a “creditor’s bill”. In section 106, volume 1, Pomeroy’s Equitable Remedies, it is stated that “it has been held, in many cases, that in a judgment creditor’s suit, on the return of the execution unsatisfied, it is almost a matter of course to appoint a receiver to collect and preserve the judgment debtor’s property pending the litigation”. (Citing authorities.) And, as is said *8 in 11 California Jurisprudence, page 146: “Under the old system of practice when a judgment creditor had exhausted the remedy by writ of execution, he had a right to invoke the jurisdiction of a court of equity by a proceeding known as a creditor’s suit for the purpose of compelling a discovery of assets, tangible or intangible, and applying them to the satisfaction of his execution. And formerly this was the only method of reaching assets which could not be seized on execution. Supplementary proceedings were created to provide an easier and less expensive method of reaching the same result, and are intended as a substitute for creditors’ suits. This being so, resort must be had to supplementary proceedings, unless in exceptional cases in which the legal remedies are unavailing.” (Citing authorities.)

By the terms of sections 714 to 723, inclusive, of the Code of Civil Procedure, commonly known as proceedings supplemental to execution, a complete procedure at law is provided by which may be obtained results similar in purpose and effect to those intended by the more cumbersome method authorized by the provisions of section -564 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which, as just stated, contemplate the filing of a creditor’s suit and the consequent appointment of a receiver. In each of a number of cases decided by the Supreme Court of this state it has been declared that the statutory proceeding supplemental to execution was intended as a substitute for a creditor’s bill. (Adams v. Hackett, 7 Cal. 187, 201; McCullough v. Clark, 41 Cal. 298, 302; Pacific Bank v. Robinson, 57 Cal. 520, 522 [40 Am. Rep. 120] ; Habenicht v. Lissak, 78 Cal. 351 [20 Pac. 874, 12 Am. St. Rep. 63, 5 L. R. A. 713]; Herrlich v. Kaufmann, 99 Cal. 271, 275 [33 Pac. 857, 37 Am. St. Rep. 50] ; Matteson etc. Co. v. Conley, 144 Cal. 483, 485 [77 Pac. 1042] ; Nordstrom v. Corona City W. Co., 155 Cal. 206, 211 [100 Pac. 242, 132 Am. St. Rep. 81]; Travis Glass Co. v. Ibbetson, 186 Cal. 724, 727 [200 Pac. 595] ; Bonner v. Lehfeldt, 39 Cal. App. 649, 653 [179 Pac. 722] ; McKenzie v. Hill, 9 Cal. App. 78, 80 [98 Pac. 55].)

And although the statutory provisions may contain no express authorization for the appointment of a receiver in aid of the purpose to be effected, as early as 1864, in the ease of Hathaway v. Brady, 26 Cal. 581, 593, it was ruled by the Supreme Court of this state (syllabus) that “in pro *9 ceedings supplementary to execution, the court has power, when it has all the parties before it, to appoint a receiver”. That that principle has been recognized and established is attested by Professor Pomeroy in volume 1 of Pomeroy’s Equitable Remedies, section 110, where it is said: “Proceedings supplementary to execution being designed to be a substitute for the equity procedure by creditors’ bill, receivers are appointed in such proceedings very much as a matter of course, ' where it appears that the judgment creditor (debtor) has, or probably has, property that ought to be subjected to the satisfaction of the judgment, after the return of the execution unsatisfied.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 P.2d 911, 134 Cal. App. 5, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccutcheon-v-superior-court-calctapp-1933.