Ott Hardware Co. v. Davis

134 P. 973, 165 Cal. 795, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 485
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 3112.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 P. 973 (Ott Hardware Co. v. Davis) 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
Ott Hardware Co. v. Davis, 134 P. 973, 165 Cal. 795, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 485 (Cal. 1913).

Opinions

THE COURT.

This appeal was originally heard in the district court of appeal for the second appellate district. The justices of that court being unable to agree upon a decision, the cause was transferred to this court.

Our consideration of the record and the arguments advanced has convinced us of the soundness of the views expressed in the opinion of Shaw, J., concurred in by Allen, P. J., and we hereby adopt said opinion.

The opinion reads as follows:

“This was a proceeding the purpose of which was to obtain a writ of mandate commanding defendant, as auditor of the city of Santa Barbara, to draw a warrant upon the city treasurer in favor of plaintiff.
“The court gave judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals upon the judgment-roll.
“The action was based upon proceedings had and taken pursuant to the provisions of section 710 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for the purpose of having certain moneys alleged to be due from the city of Santa Barbara to one W. W. Clark applied in payment of a judgment obtained by plaintiff against said Clark. Section 710 of the Code of Civil Procedure, provides: ‘The duly authenticated transcript of a judgment, for money, against a defendant, rendered by any court of this state may be filed with . . . the auditor of any *797 . . . city . . . from which money is owing to the judgment debtor in such action (and in case there be no auditor then with the official whose duty corresponds to that of auditor), whereupon it shall be the duty of any such official, or of such public officer with whom such transcript shall have been filed, to draw his warrant in favor of or to pay into the court from the docket of which the transcript was taken, as much of the money, if sufficient there be, over which such . . . city . . . of which he is an official, or over which said public officer has control and custody and which belongs to or is owing to the judgment debtor in the cause designated in said transcript as will cancel said judgment.’ It appears from the findings that on May 25, 1908., plaintiff obtained a judgment against said Clark in the superior court of Santa Barbara County; that thereafter, on December 7, 1909, said superior court in an action wherein Clark and others were plaintiffs and the city of Santa Barbara, Robert Beyrle, and Title Guaranty & Surety Company were defendants, rendered a judgment in favor of Clark and against Beyrle for the sum of $705.26, which sum the defendant city of Santa Barbara was by said judgment ordered and directed to pay to Clark, or his attorneys, out of a larger amount then due from the city to Robert Beyrle, demand for which had been duly audited and allowed, as required by the charter of the city. That on the day after the rendition of said last mentioned judgment, to wit: on the eighth day of December, 1909, plaintiff served upon defendant herein and filed with him, as auditor of the- city of Santa Barbara, a transcript of the judgment so obtained by plaintiff against Clark on May 25, 1908, which transcript was in the form prescribed by section 710 of the Code of Civil Procedure, authenticated as therein required, and accompanied by the affidavit required by said section and the payment of the filing fees thereby required to be paid, and plaintiff thereupon demanded a warrant from defendant, as such city auditor, on the city treasurer of said city in the sum of $705.26, pursuant to the provisions of section 710, but defendant refused to deliver to plaintiff said warrant, or any warrant for any sum whatsoever; that at the time of the service and filing of said papers with defendant he was the auditor of said city, and as such auditor charged by the charter thereof with the duty of keeping a record of all demands against the *798 city and to draw warrants on the city treasurer therefor after such demands were allowed by the city council, and countersign the same after they.were signed by the mayor; that no transcript of the judgment was served upon or filed with the mayor of the city of.Santa Barbara; that on December 22, 1909, a copy of the judgment so obtained by Clark against said Beyrie and the city of Santa Barbara was served upon defendant and presented to the city council of the city of Santa Barbara, together with a demand in writing for the payment thereof to Clark, or to Canfield & Starbuek, his attorneys, which demand, after being approved by the city council, was presented to defendant in this proceeding, who thereupon drew a warrant therefor upon the city treasurer of said city of Santa Barbara, payable to Canfield & Starbuek, which warrant was signed by the mayor and countersigned by defendant as city clerk, delivered to said Canfield & Star-buck, and, upon presentation, duly paid by the city treasurer to said attorneys of said Clark. That prior to the institution of this proceeding the balance of the amount due from the city of Santa Barbara to said Robert Beyrie had been paid by said city, since which time there had been no money due from the city to said Beyrie or said Clark; that prior to the commencement of the action wherein Clark and others were plaintiffs and the city of Santa Barbara and Beyrie were defendants, said Clark had agreed with Canfield & Starbuek that any and all moneys recovered by him in said action should be paid to Canfield & Starbuek and by them applied ‘to the payment of the fees and disbursements of said Canfield & Starbuek accruing’ in certain specified litigation, wherein Clark was a party, and that the amount specified in the warrant so received by them had been wholly applied in the payment'of such fees and disbursements.
1 ‘ The purpose of enacting the statute was to afford a means whereby money due from a municipal corporation to the debtor of another could be reached by the creditor and subjected to the payment of his claim. .Since the section in question is to be ‘liberally construed with a view to effect its objects’ (Code Civ. Proc., see. 4), we are of the opinion that plaintiff is entitled to the issuance of the writ upon the finding as made. (Ruperich v. Baehr, 142 Cal. 190, [75 Pac. 782]; Payne v. Baehr, 153 Cal. 441, [95 Pac. 895].). *799 “Respondent insists that, inasmuch as the charter required all warrants to he signed by the mayor, and that until so signed a warrant could be of no avail, the transcript, affidavit and demand should, in order to be effective, have been served upon and filed with the mayor, instead of with the auditor. We are unable to perceive any merit in this contention. It is conceded that the city had an auditor (Stats. 1899, p. 452), whose duties were prescribed by the charter (Stats. 1899, pp. 463, 464), and that defendant was the incumbent of the office. We are clearly of the opinion that he, and not the mayor, was the official designated in the statute with whom the papers should be filed, thus giving to the city notice of plaintiff’s claim, and upon whom the demand for a delivery of the warrant should be made. The fact that the mayor was by the charter required to sign all warrants on the city treasurer did not constitute him auditor, nor, since there was an auditor, could he be an ‘official whose duty corresponds to that of auditor. ’ Indeed, none of the duties of auditor, as prescribed by the charter, were imposed upon the mayor.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 973, 165 Cal. 795, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ott-hardware-co-v-davis-cal-1913.