Municipal Bond Co. v. City of Riverside

41 P.2d 215, 4 Cal. App. 2d 442
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 1935
DocketCiv. 1427
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 215 (Municipal Bond Co. v. City of Riverside) 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
Municipal Bond Co. v. City of Riverside, 41 P.2d 215, 4 Cal. App. 2d 442 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

This is an appeal by the City of Riverside from that portion of the judgment which denied recovery to the municipality on its cross-complaint filed in the action. The action was instituted by the plaintiff corporation, an owner and holder of bonds issued by the city treasurer under the 1911 Street Improvement Act. Thereby the plaintiff sought to recover from the city, the city treasurer, and the surety on the treasurer’s official bond the sum of $2,758.93, which was alleged to have been paid to the said treasurer by the owners of property upon which assessments had been levied to pay the cost of street improvements and for which assessments bonds had been issued. It was further alleged that the city treasurer had misappropriated the aforesaid sum to his own use. The City of Riverside filed an answer whereby it denied liability to the plaintiff and a cross-complaint against its codefendants, the city treasurer and the surety on his official bond, wherein it sought, on behalf of the owners of bonds issued under the above-mentioned Street Improvement Act, to recover from these cross-defendants the sum of $5,607.08, which was alleged to have been paid to the city treasurer by property owners in payment of coupons upon said bonds issued .as aforesaid and in partial redemption of said bonds and appropriated by said cross-defendant to his own use. The trial court denied recovery to plaintiff from the city and firom tile surety on the city treasurer’s official bond. It' also denied recovery to the City of Riverside on its cross-complaint. From the judgment thus rendered separate appeals were prosecuted by the plaintiff and by the City of Riverside. *445 That portion of the judgment which denied recovery to plaintiff from the city and from the surety on the treasurer’s bond was affirmed (Municipal Bond Co. v. City of Riverside, 138 Cal. App. 267 [32 Pac. (2d) 661]). At the time plaintiff’s appeal was presented there was also submitted a motion by the plaintiff to vacate an order of this court dismissing the city’s appeal, which order had been entered pursuant to a written stipulation entered into between the city attorney of the City of Riverside and the attorney representing the surety on the city treasurer’s official bond providing that the city’s appeal should be dismissed. Plaintiff’s motion to set aside the order of dismissal was granted, the order was vacated, and the remittitur which had issued upon the dismissal of the city’s appeal was recalled (Municipal Bond Co. v. City of Riverside, supra).

The single question which is presented on this appeal is whether or not the trial court correctly concluded that the City of Riverside was not entitled to recover from the city treasurer and his surety as trustee for the owners and holders of bonds issued by said city treasurer under the provisions of the 1911 Street Improvement Act as aforesaid. This appeal is on the judgment roll alone and. this court is therefore bound by the findings of fact which the trial court made. There is here no dispute that the sum mentioned in the city’s cross-complaint was paid to the city treasurer for the use and benefit of the bondholders and that the city treasurer did not account to the 1911 bond redemption fund or to the bondholders or to the city therefor. The City of Riverside, however, contends that the trial court’s legal conclusion that the city was not entitled, as a matter of law, to recover from the city treasurer and his surety, as trustee for the owners of bonds, is incorrect and that therefore the portion of the judgment which denied recovery to the city on its cross-complaint must be reversed.

We entertain the opinion that, in the solution of this problem, we are bound by our former decision vacating the order of this court dismissing the city’s appeal. This action was taken on the motion of the plaintiff corporation. It was plaintiff’s contention in support of the motion that as a bond owner it was vitally interested in the city’s appeal and that it was not notified that the city proposed to dismiss the appeal *446 under its stipulation with the city treasurer’s surety. This contention prevailed. It is apparent that it must have been decided that the plaintiff was interested in the city’s appeal, otherwise the court would not have been impelled, to grant the motion. It is also apparent that the interest which the plaintiff had in the city’s appeal was that it is one of the bondholders for whom the city sought to recover from the city treasurer and his surety on its cross-complaint. Examination of the opinion heretofore rendered by this court leaves no doubt that plaintiff’s motion was granted and the order dismissing the city’s appeal was vacated on the theory that the plaintiff, as one of the beneficiaries of the trust set up in the city’s cross-complaint, was entitled to notice that the city proposed to abandon its appeal and that having received no notice, it was entitled to have the order of dismissal set aside as an order improvidently made.

Irrespective of our opinion that we are here bound to adhere to our former decision and assuming that the familiar doctrine of the law of the case is not applicable to the present appeal, we are nevertheless convinced that the trial court erroneously concluded that the City of Riverside was not a trustee for the bondholders of funds which the court had found were paid to the city treasurer upon bonds issued by said treasurer under the provisions of the 1911 Street Improvement Act “for the use and benefit of the various holders and owners thereof” and that the city is not therefore entitled to recover against the city treasurer and his surety on its cross-complaint.

The chief contentions of the respondent surety company on this appeal are that the city is exempted from liability to the bondholders by the provisions of the 1911 Street Improvement Act and that, as the trial court specifically found that the money paid to the.city treasurer by the property owners never found its way into the general fund of the city, the city never had possession of the money which the city treasurer misappropriated and it may not therefore be declared to be a trustee of something which it never had.

With respect to the contention that the city is not liable to the bondholders, it may be observed that this question was directly decided on the former appeal taken by the plaintiff from that portion of the judgment which denied recovery to plaintiff from the City of Riverside. It does *447 not, however, follow therefrom that the city could not maintain an action against the treasurer and his surety as a trustee for the persons rightfully entitled to the money which was collected by the city treasurer and misappropriated by him.

As to the contention that the city never received the money and therefore may not successfully urge its trusteeship of that which never came into its possession, it may be observed that the fact that the money never was paid into the general fund of the city is not conclusive of the question which is here presented. It is not disputed that the money was paid to an officer of the city in exact conformity with the provisions of the 1911 Street Improvement Act and that it was not contemplated by this statute that this particular money should be paid into the city’s general fund.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 215, 4 Cal. App. 2d 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipal-bond-co-v-city-of-riverside-calctapp-1935.