Murphy v. Kendall

142 P.2d 59, 61 Cal. App. 2d 46, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 605
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 12404
StatusPublished

This text of 142 P.2d 59 (Murphy v. Kendall) 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
Murphy v. Kendall, 142 P.2d 59, 61 Cal. App. 2d 46, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 605 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

WARD, J.

Petitioner and appellant is the daughter of S. S. Murphy, against whom it may be assumed she obtained a judgment about thirty years ago. The judgment has not been made part of the record herein. Respondent, executor of the estate of the widow of S. S. Murphy, has failed to file a brief.

Appellant was permitted to file a transcript on appeal without payment of the established fee, and to file a “typed and hand printed opening brief.” Subsequently she filed a document entitled “Motion for Entry of Reversal upon Default of Respondent.” This was followed by a “Petition for Ruling upon Default of Executor, and deny Respondent Brief.” About one month later there was filed a “Petition to Submit upon Records with Directions to the Clerk of Court to forward to Appellant such Questions as the Court Desires to have a3iswered.”

With reference to the last motion, it is not good practice to propound questions to the litigants after an appeal has been submitted for decision unless it appears that the answers will be of assistance in determining the issues. Unfortunately for appellant, the record indicates that further answers would result in complicating the questions already before the court. The other two motions may be determined in accordance with the present ‘ ‘ Rules on Appeal ’ ’ (rule 17b), which provide merely that if respondent’s brief is not filed, the case may be submitted for decision on the record.

The present appeal is presented by way of a bill of exceptions. However, the record is in such a state of confusion in many essential respects that this court is unable to follow the attempt of appellant as “protestant,” “claimant,” “petitioner,” or “litigant,” represented sometimes by counsel and [48]*48at other times appearing “in propria persona” and “in forma pauperis,” to present her grounds of appeal.

The first document forming part of the record on appeal, entitled “Appellant’s Bill of Exceptions,” contains certifications by three judges who took part in the proceedings, Judge M. G. Woodward stating in his certificate: “I am signing the foregoing merely in order that appellant may get her appeal. I cannot certify that it is a ‘fair summary’ or that it is a bill of exceptions.” The next document, the “Clerk’s Transcript on Appeal,” filed six months after the bill of exceptions, has been certified by the clerk of the court. Instead of the usual certification by the court the following, signed by the trial judge, appears: “The foregoing is apparently offered as a judgment roll. It is merely a copy of certain files, involving matters from which no appeal can be taken. Much of the material had no bearing on an appeal from the decree of distribution.” There is also a “Clerk’s Transcript on Appeal” “stricken out by Judge M. G. Woodward.” Most of the papers stricken from the files are documents offered to the court but not signed. Some of the record is typed; some hand lettered in pen or pencil. Some of the motions herein are accompanied by citations. One motion supported by affidavit is followed by a “Plea for Equity” containing prose and poetry. Its purpose, as stated, is to enable appellant not only to “secure her own,” but so that she may blaze “a more rightful way for those who follow.”

Appellant’s opening brief contains an appendix claimed to include all matter from the clerk’s transcript which is referred to in the brief and not set forth in the bill of exceptions.

The appeal in its disordered form might be dismissed for. nonconformance with statutory provisions, rules, etc., but it is our conclusion that the ends of justice will be best served if it be considered upon its merits.

Appellant’s claim in its origin is apparently based upon a judgment against her father for support. Several proceedings to enforce the judgment were instituted. In Murphy v. Reicks, 40 Cal.App. 1 [180 P. 15], wherein petitioner and appellant herein appeared as defendant and appellant, in an action to restrain the sale of certain real property, the court, referring to the present petitioner, said (p. 8): “She has filed herein a voluminous brief, prepared, as we are informed,

[49]*49by herself, unaided by a lawyer, and while therein, for one who has not been an habitual student of the law, she has presented her side of this ease with singular clearness and force, it is plainly manifest that (as above declared), so far as this particular case is concerned, the law is against her, and, therefore, her appeal cannot be sustained.” The decision denied that appellant herein had a lien against the property. Later she filed another action against her father and stepmother in an attempt to enforce the original judgment. The facts of that case—Murphy v. Murphy, 57 Cal.App. 182 [207 P. 43]—are stated on pages 182-183 as follows: “Prom the complaint it appears that plaintiff is the daughter of S. S. Murphy by a former marriage; that on April 26, 1911, she obtained a judgment against him for her maintenance and support in the sum of $15 per month and that the amount due under said judgment is $930, as principal, and $179.91 interest. The complaint then proceeds.” Thereafter appear references to the transfer to and acquiring of properties by Alice K. Murphy, the wife of S. S. Murphy, as shown by oficial records, including the family home particularly involved in the present controversy. The court, commenting in that regard, said (p. 185) : “Nor is any fact alleged from which it can be inferred that any transfer to said Alice K. Murphy was fraudulent.” In a later decision, Murphy v. Murphy, 71 CaLApp. 389 [235 P. 653], an action to renew a judgment for the maintenance of an alleged dependent daughter to be a lien upon property standing in the name of the wife of the judgment debtor, it was expressly declared that there was no lien against property of the stepmother. This appears to be a final adjudication that the property in dispute is free from any judgment lien on the part of this appellant.

The father, S. S. Murphy, died in 1936. Prom the various records on this appeal it may be gleaned that appellant appeared in some capacity as contestant to the granting of letters of administration or otherwise, and that her claims were denied. On the present appeal, despite the confused condition of the record, it may be said that appellant is attempting to enforce her judgment against property, by whomsoever held, which she claims belonged to her father.

Alice Murphy, the wife of S. S. Murphy, died testate in May 1939. The executor of her estate was empowered to [50]*50sell certain property. Prom the entire record it appears that appellant herein, as an heir at law of S. S, Murphy, filed a claim in the matter of the estate of Alice Murphy. Subsequently a protest against the sale of the property was filed. However, at the sale appellant herein entered a bid, evidently upon the theory of setting off her alleged claim against the purchase price. Subsequently she protested the confirmation of the sale and also renewed her bid and her creditor’s demand as an heir at law of the estate of S. S. Murphy, in the matter of the estate of Alice Murphy, upon the theory that the estate of the former was still pending. Subsequently an amendment to the protest of sale of the real property was filed, in which it appears that an action had been commenced “against W. S. Kendall, Administrator of above Estate [Alice Murphy]; said action being founded upon his rejection of petitioner’s demand as creditor set forth in said protest and his rejection of her claim as heir to the Estate of S. S.

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Related

Murphy v. Riecks
180 P. 15 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Murphy v. Murphy
207 P. 43 (California Court of Appeal, 1922)
Murphy v. Murphy
235 P. 653 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
142 P.2d 59, 61 Cal. App. 2d 46, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-kendall-calctapp-1943.