Mundell v. Wells

184 P. 666, 181 Cal. 398, 7 A.L.R. 383, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 365
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1919
DocketS. F. No. 8390.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 184 P. 666 (Mundell v. Wells) 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
Mundell v. Wells, 184 P. 666, 181 Cal. 398, 7 A.L.R. 383, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 365 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Plaintiff sued as assignee of W. A. Mundell for two thousand dollars deposited with defendant Wells, who is ex-officio clerk of the superior court of Contra Costa County, as bail in the case of the People, etc., v. R. B. Cradlebaugh. The corporation defendant is the surety on the official bond of Mr. Wells, and the intervener, Taylor, asserts an interest in the money by reason of an attachment and judgment against Cradlebaugh. The plaintiff and the intervener Taylor are the appellants.

Cradlebaugh was charged with a misdemeanor triable in the superior court. After his arrest he was released on cash bail of two thousand dollars, deposited in that behalf by W. A. Mundell, who had borrowed the money for that purpose. He was preliminarily examined, was held to answer, and his bail was fixed at two thousand dollars. At his request, the fund deposited at the time of his arrest was transmitted to the county clerk. Cradlebaugh was tried and convicted; was readmitted to bail pending sentence, and the money in the hands of Mr. Wells, as clerk of the court, was by order of court accented as security for his due appearance for sentence. -

Cradlebaugh appeared for sentence,' as ordered, and his counsel in open court, not in his behalf but for those who had advanced the money in lieu of bail, sought to surrender him into custody, and asked for an order remitting the bail money “to the parties who put it up, and for the purpose of filing new bonds later on. ’ ’ The court did not act upon the suggestion of surrender, nor was there any ruling upon the motion to return the money. Cradlebaugh was arraigned and sen- *400 fenced to imprisonment for one year in the county jail and to pay a fine of one thousand dollars.

After notice of appeal, the court, on request, fixed bail on appeal, the amount being two thousand dollars. Counsel for the prisoner then asked that the bail theretofore deposited be exonerated. The court instructed him to draw the order and present it to the district attorney. Later in the day the district attorney asked for an order directing the clerk to apply one thousand dollars of the fund in his hands to the satisfaction of the fine imposed upon Cradlebaugh. After argument upon this matter, the court directed the clerk to satisfy that part of the judgment imposing a fine out of the money in his custody. He obeyed this order and offered the one thousand dollars remaining, after satisfaction of the fine, to Cradlebaugh. This sum, however, was sought to be attached in the hands of the clerk by Mr. Taylor, in an action brought by him against Cradlebaugh to recover five hundred dollars as a fee for his services as counsel in the criminal action. Mr. Taylor recovered a judgment against Cradlebaugh,' which was in force at the time of the trial of the ease at bar.

Upon these facts the superior court gave judgment for plaintiff against Mr. Wells, as clerk, for the sum of one thousand dollars remaining in his hands after satisfying the fine imposed upon Cradlebaugh. The court dismissed the action against the sureties on the clerk’s bond and adjudged that the intervener take nothing.

Appellants, Miss Mundell and Mr. Taylor, contend that the offer to surrender Cradlebaugh into custody was sufficient to exonerate the bail; that the fund on deposit was not the property of the defendant in the criminal action out of which a fine might be satisfied, and that such payment of the fine deprived the real owner of that amount without due process of law.

[1] Even if appellants could uphold their declaration that the money deposited as bail was not in the contemplation of law the property of Cradlebaugh, but of the person who furnished it for that use, they could not prevail in this action against Wells, who, as county clerk and ex-officio clerk of the superior court, only performed his duty as a ministerial officer of the court, acting under the order of the judge of said court, when he applied half of the fund to the satisfaction of the fine. Regarding that portion of the fund, they can have *401 no possible recourse against defendant Wells. The court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and could order the disposition of the money in custodia legis. If the clerk had disobeyed the order of the court in this case he would have been guilty of contempt of court. A ministerial officer is protected and justified when acting under a process or order of a court possessing general jurisdiction over the subject matter, in spite of any errors committed by the court issuing the process or giving the order. (22 R. C. L. 481.)

But the court acted correctly and fully within its powers in making the order of which appellants complain. Section 1295 of the Penal Code provides for the deposit of money for the release from custody of a person held to answer. Section 1297 is as follows: “When money has been deposited, if it remains on deposit at the time of a judgment for the payment of a fine, the county clerk must, under the direction of the court, apply the money in satisfaction thereof, and after satisfying the fine and costs, must refund the surplus, if any, to the defendant.” [2] It will thus be seen that in contemplation of law, so far as the criminal action is concerned, the money deposited for the purpose of insuring a defendant’s appearance, is his money, and the court is not required to protect the supposed rights of anyone who may have advanced it for him. There is no pretense that Cradlebaugh in the criminal action Surrendered himself into custody. His counsel, in making the motion, was seeking to protect the rights of the person or persons who had advanced the money as if bondsmen had appeared upon a written obligation. But persons who advance money in lieu of bail are not in the same position as sureties on a bond and have no such rights.

When the defendant in the criminal action appeared for sentence, the counsel for Cradlebaugh, addressing the court, said: “Now, if the court please, at this time at the request of the bondsmen I will ask for an order of Court surrendering the defendant into custody and for an order of the clerk remitting the bail money back to the parties who put it up, and for the purpose of filing new bonds later on.” The court then proceeded to pronounce judgment. [3] From the foregoing it will be seen that there was no offer of the defendant in the criminal action to surrender himself “to the officer to whom the commitment was directed”—a prerequisite to the *402 return of the bail money. (Pen. Code, sec. 1302.) ' .Therefore, the court was not called upon to rule upon the motion to order Cradlebaugh into custody. Consequently, the money in the hands of the clerk was a fund remaining on deposit “at the time of a judgment for the payment of a fine.” Under the statute (section 1297 of the Penal Code), there was but one correct method of disposing of half of it. The court adopted that method.

[4]

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Bluebook (online)
184 P. 666, 181 Cal. 398, 7 A.L.R. 383, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mundell-v-wells-cal-1919.