Merced Bank v. Rosenthal

33 P. 732, 99 Cal. 39, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 613
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1893
DocketNo. 14874
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 33 P. 732 (Merced Bank v. Rosenthal) 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
Merced Bank v. Rosenthal, 33 P. 732, 99 Cal. 39, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 613 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

The Court.

Upon due consideration of this cause, after hearing in Bank, we are satisfied with the conclusion reached and the opinion rendered in Department; and for the reasons therein given, the judgment and order appealed from are reversed and the court below is directed to enter judgment for the defendants on the findings.

The following is the decision above referred to, which was rendered in Department Two on the 28th of December, 1892: —

Temple, C.—

This action is brought to have a deed, absolute on its face, declared a mortgage,-and to obtain a foreclosure of the same. It is brought against A. Rosenthal and S. Peckerman, as copartners, doing business under the style of Rosenthal and Peckerman, and against A. Rosenthal and S. Peckerman and Betsy Rosenthal, wife of A. Rosenthal.

It is averred that on and prior to July 20, 1883, the copartnership and A. Rosenthal and S. Peckerman were indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,000, and “being desirous of establishing a further credit with plaintiff, and of securing the payment of said moneys then due plaintiff, and of securing the payment to plaintiff of any and all other sums of money and advances that might thereafter become due to plaintiff from said defendants or any of them, and also of securing any and all balances that might thereafter be found due from said defend[41]*41ants or any of them to plaintiff in the course of their dealings, whether such indebtedness should be evidenced by promissory notes then or subsequently given or otherwise.

“The defendants, A. Rosenthal and Betsy Rosenthal, on the twentieth day of July, 1883, to secure the plaintiff of the principal sum then due, and thereafter to become due to plaintiff for moneys thereafter to be advanced to said defendants, and the interest thereon as hereinabove stated according to the tenor of any promissory notes or other instruments, then or thereafter to be given ” .... on said twentieth day of July, 1883, executed to plaintiff a deed for the mortgaged premises, absolute ou its face, but intended to be and in fact a mortgage, “ to secure the payment to plaintiff of all money then due at the day of its date aud all moneys to become thereafter due from said defendants Rosenthal and Peckerman, and A. Rosenthal and S. Peckerman.”

It is also alleged that Rosenthal and Peckerman were partners and that certain indebtedness accrued from them to plaintiff subsequent to July 20,1883, part of which was evidenced by promissory notes which are set out at length in the complaint.

Judgment is asked against defendants Rosenthal and Pecker-man for $1,412, with interest at one and one-half per cent per month from June, 1884, for costs and for an attorney’s fee, a decree of foreclosure and sale of the premises, and for a judgment for the deficiency, if any, against defendants Rosenthal aud Peckerman.

The defendants, A. Rosenthal and Betsy Rosenthal, appeared and answered at length, and as between them and plaintiff a trial was had. It does not appear that Peckerman was served with summons, and he did not appear in the case, ifo default or judgment is entered against him.

A decree was entered iu favor of plaintiff against A. Rosenthal aud Betsy Rosenthal, declaring the deed to be a mortgage^ and for a sale of the premises, for the payment out of the proceeds of the sale of the sum of $2,306.95 found due, with direction to the sheriff to report the deficiency, if any, to the court.

This appeal is taken by A. Rosenthal and Betsy Rosenthal from the judgment and from an order refusing them a new trial. The notice of appeal was served upon the plaintiff, but [42]*42not upon S. Peokerman, aud an objection is now made to the jurisdiction of this court to hear the appeal, because the notice was not served-on Peokerman. It is contended that the judgment discharges Peokerman from the debts so far as plaintiff is concerned, that upon a reversal he may be brought in and made responsible. He, therefore, it is argued, has an interest in maintaining the judgment, and is an adverse party, within the meaning of section 940 of the Codé of Civil Procedure. But was Peokerman a party to the judgment? It does not appear that he was served with summons or that he appeared in the case. The issues were made up between the plaintiff and appellants, who went to trial without objection on the ground that Peokerman was not served. The judgment then is neither for nor against him. If he had not been named as a party at all the judgment would have had the same effect upon his interest as now, and upon the reversal of such a judgment he might be brought in aud made responsible as now. But though his interests might be effected by the appeal, he would not, in such case, be an adverse party, nor is he now, as the case stands.

The first point made by appellants is that the judgment is void, because not rendered by a superior judge, but by one Charles H. Marks, who at the time had no official character whatever. It appears that J. K. Law, one of the attorneys for plaintiff, had been elected superior judge of Merced County, at the election in 1890, to succeed Judge Marks, whose term would expire in January following. Judge Law had duly qualified as such judge. This case had been tried some months before, but no findings or judgment had been entered. On Monday, January 5, 1891, that being the first Monday of January following the election of Judge Law, findings were signed by Judge Marks, and an order for judgment made. On the same day judgment was entered “on motion of J. K. Law, Esq., counsel for plaintiff,” upon the findings attested as follows :■— .

“Hone in open court the fifth day .of January, 1891.
“O. H. Marks,
“Judge of the Superior Court.”

Appellants claim that Judge Marks’ term of office expired-[43]*43with the fourth day of January, 1891, and Judge Law’s term began with the first instant of January 5, 1891. Therefore Marks was not judge when the findings and judgment were made, and the judgment is void.

Respondent in reply to this point contends: 1. The question is not properly presented, and cannot be raised on this appeal. 2. Judge Marks’ term did not expire until twelve o’clock Monday night; and 3. Marks was at least judge de facto.

1. Respondent concedes that an appeal may be taken from a void judgment, that is, from an apparent judgment which is no judgment, and that on such appeal the court may determine that the lower court committed such error as will render its proceeding void. This is to review the action of a court, and is in line with its usual functions. The appellant in such a case by appealing does not concede that there is a proper judgment, but only that there is a judgment in form, which he claims is erroneous, even to the extent of rendering it void." But an appeal is necessarily, he contends, from a court to a court, and therefore the appeal concedes -that the act which appellant asks to have reversed is the act of a court known to the law, and whose judgments may be reversed here on appeal. One cannot assume the fact of the existence of a court simply to appeal in order to have it declared that such fact does not exist.

An objection might be urged to the proposed act of a court that it would be without jurisdiction, but how could one raise the objection that the tribunal was no tribunal? To raise the question would be to ask that the point be sustained, that is to recognize the tribunal as such.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P. 732, 99 Cal. 39, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merced-bank-v-rosenthal-cal-1893.