Opinion
IKOLA, J.
Defendant Arnold A. McMahon (McMahon) appeals from a postjudgment order directing him to turn over a domain name to plaintiff Palacio Del Mar Homeowners Association, Inc. (Palacio), to aid the execution of its judgment against McMahon. But Palacio cannot obtain an order directing the turnover of intangible property directly to it. And Palacio failed to show McMahon is in possession of the domain name. We reverse.
FACTS
As protracted litigation
snowballed, Palacio obtained a $40,000 judgment against McMahon for attorney fees incurred defending against McMahon’s frivolous anti-SLAPP motion.
(Palacio IV, supra,
G038622 [affirming attorney fee award].) Palacio obtained a writ of execution.
(Palacio V, supra,
G039245 [dismissing appeal from order granting writ]; see Code Civ. Proc., § 699.510.)
The levying officer received two employer returns, but ultimately returned the writ unsatisfied to the court on the date it expired: February 27, 2008.
(Palacio V, supra,
G039245; see §§ 699.530, subd. (b), 699.560, subd. (a)(4).)
In the meantime, Palacio conducted a judgment debtor examination of McMahon on February 2, 2008. (§ 708.110, subd. (a).) McMahon conceded he had represented to the California Supreme Court that he “ ‘has been a provider of interactive computer service, www[.]ahrc.com, for approximately ten years ....’” He testified the statement was true, though he thought the domain name was registered in his wife’s name.
Palacio moved for an order directing McMahon to turn over possession and control of the ahrc.com domain name. It supported its motion with the transcript pages from the judgment debtor examination, a printout from the Orange County Clerk-Recorder’s Web site showing McMahon’s wife had registered the fictitious business name “AHRC NEWS SERVICES” in 2001, and a printout from the Network Solutions’ Web site showing AHRC News had registered the domain name in 1997.
The court granted the motion in April 2008. Its order provided, “It appears [McMahon] has an interest in the property in possession or under the custody and control of his wife.” It directed McMahon and his wife (doing business as AHRC News or AHRC News Services) to “transfer [within 30 days] any and all rights of ownership, access, administration, and control over the domain name known as ‘ahrc.com,’ but not the speech content of the host computer to which the ‘ahrc.com’ domain name currently connects, to [Palacio].” It provided the “domain name shall be offered for sale by public auction [upon transfer], and the proceeds from said sale shall be applied towards the satisfaction of the money judgment dated April 18, 2007. . . .”
McMahon appealed and petitioned for a writ of supersedeas to stay the turnover order. We granted the petition, issued the writ of supersedeas, and consolidated the two matters.
DISCUSSION
The parties devoted much of their briefing to discussing the nature of a domain name. We asked for additional briefing on more basic issues concerning the turnover order.
We conclude the order must be reversed.
The turnover order was sought and issued pursuant to section 708.205. That statute is part of an article governing judgment debtor examinations. (§ 708.110 et seq.) It authorizes the court to order “the judgment debtor’s interest in the property in the possession or under the control of the judgment debtor ... to be applied toward the satisfaction of the money judgment. . . .” (§ 708.205, subd. (a).)
Section 708.205 does not allow the turnover of the domain name directly to Palacio. It authorizes the judgment debtor’s interest in property “to be applied toward the satisfaction of the money judgment.” (§ 708.205, subd. (a).) Cash is easily applied toward satisfying the judgment. Nonmonetary property is not so easily applied. It must be valued and sold. And section 708.205 does not authorize the judgment debtor to value property unilaterally or put it up for public sale.
Palacio unpersuasively contends otherwise. Its primary case holds the judgment debtor’s interest in tumed-over property is applied to the judgment by “ordering] the person examined ... to deliver property or funds to a levying officer or directly to the judgment creditor.”
(Imperial Bank
v.
Pim Electric, Inc.
(1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 540, 547 [39 Cal.Rptr.2d 432]
(Imperial).)
We parse the disjunctive clauses thusly: A turnover order may direct the examinee to deliver (1) property to a levying officer, and (2) funds directly to the judgment creditor—but not property directly to the judgment creditor. This limitation follows from the authorities upon which
Imperial
relies. In
Lewis v. Neblett
(1961) 188 Cal.App.2d 290 [10 Cal.Rptr. 441]
(Lewis),
the court affirmed a turnover order directing the judgment debtor to deliver cash to the sheriff as levying officer.
(Id.
at pp. 295, 298.) The Law Revision Commission comment to section 708.205 states the property may be ordered turned over to the levying officer or a receiver. (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 17 West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1987 ed.) foll. § 708.205, p. 455.) It further asserts “[t]he person examined may also be ordered to pay the judgment creditor directly”
(ibid.),
but it relies upon a case in which the court
reversed
(on other grounds) an order directing the judgment debtor’s sublessee to pay rent directly to the judgment creditor.
(Hustead v. Superior Court
(1969) 2 Cal.App.3d 780, 783, 793 [83 Cal.Rptr. 26]
(Hustead).)
If
Hustead
authorizes any turnover order, at most it supports the turnover of cash to the judgment debtor. At one point,
Imperial
cites a commentator for the proposition that “ ‘a turnover order issued in connection with an examination proceeding . . . may require delivery of property directly to the judgment creditor ....’”
(Imperial, supra,
33 Cal.App.4th at p. 550.) But the cited commentator misreads
Hustead
and the comment to section 708.205 as supporting the turnover of nonmonetary property directly to the judgment creditor. (Ahart, Cal. Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments and Debts (The
Rutter Group 2009) ¶ 6:1341.)
Jogani
v.
Jogani
(2006) 141 Cal.App.4th 158, 173 [45 Cal.Rptr.3d 792], and
In re Burns
(Bankr. 9th Cir. 2003) 291 B.R. 846, 855, uncritically repeat
Imperial’s
reference to the commentator’s unsupported conclusion. In sum, no persuasive authority directs the examinee to turn over nonmonetary property directly to the judgment creditor.
Palacio did not invoke and cannot rely upon the general turnover statute, section 699.040. The statute allows a judgment creditor to seek an order “directing the judgment debtor to transfer
to the levying officer
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Opinion
IKOLA, J.
Defendant Arnold A. McMahon (McMahon) appeals from a postjudgment order directing him to turn over a domain name to plaintiff Palacio Del Mar Homeowners Association, Inc. (Palacio), to aid the execution of its judgment against McMahon. But Palacio cannot obtain an order directing the turnover of intangible property directly to it. And Palacio failed to show McMahon is in possession of the domain name. We reverse.
FACTS
As protracted litigation
snowballed, Palacio obtained a $40,000 judgment against McMahon for attorney fees incurred defending against McMahon’s frivolous anti-SLAPP motion.
(Palacio IV, supra,
G038622 [affirming attorney fee award].) Palacio obtained a writ of execution.
(Palacio V, supra,
G039245 [dismissing appeal from order granting writ]; see Code Civ. Proc., § 699.510.)
The levying officer received two employer returns, but ultimately returned the writ unsatisfied to the court on the date it expired: February 27, 2008.
(Palacio V, supra,
G039245; see §§ 699.530, subd. (b), 699.560, subd. (a)(4).)
In the meantime, Palacio conducted a judgment debtor examination of McMahon on February 2, 2008. (§ 708.110, subd. (a).) McMahon conceded he had represented to the California Supreme Court that he “ ‘has been a provider of interactive computer service, www[.]ahrc.com, for approximately ten years ....’” He testified the statement was true, though he thought the domain name was registered in his wife’s name.
Palacio moved for an order directing McMahon to turn over possession and control of the ahrc.com domain name. It supported its motion with the transcript pages from the judgment debtor examination, a printout from the Orange County Clerk-Recorder’s Web site showing McMahon’s wife had registered the fictitious business name “AHRC NEWS SERVICES” in 2001, and a printout from the Network Solutions’ Web site showing AHRC News had registered the domain name in 1997.
The court granted the motion in April 2008. Its order provided, “It appears [McMahon] has an interest in the property in possession or under the custody and control of his wife.” It directed McMahon and his wife (doing business as AHRC News or AHRC News Services) to “transfer [within 30 days] any and all rights of ownership, access, administration, and control over the domain name known as ‘ahrc.com,’ but not the speech content of the host computer to which the ‘ahrc.com’ domain name currently connects, to [Palacio].” It provided the “domain name shall be offered for sale by public auction [upon transfer], and the proceeds from said sale shall be applied towards the satisfaction of the money judgment dated April 18, 2007. . . .”
McMahon appealed and petitioned for a writ of supersedeas to stay the turnover order. We granted the petition, issued the writ of supersedeas, and consolidated the two matters.
DISCUSSION
The parties devoted much of their briefing to discussing the nature of a domain name. We asked for additional briefing on more basic issues concerning the turnover order.
We conclude the order must be reversed.
The turnover order was sought and issued pursuant to section 708.205. That statute is part of an article governing judgment debtor examinations. (§ 708.110 et seq.) It authorizes the court to order “the judgment debtor’s interest in the property in the possession or under the control of the judgment debtor ... to be applied toward the satisfaction of the money judgment. . . .” (§ 708.205, subd. (a).)
Section 708.205 does not allow the turnover of the domain name directly to Palacio. It authorizes the judgment debtor’s interest in property “to be applied toward the satisfaction of the money judgment.” (§ 708.205, subd. (a).) Cash is easily applied toward satisfying the judgment. Nonmonetary property is not so easily applied. It must be valued and sold. And section 708.205 does not authorize the judgment debtor to value property unilaterally or put it up for public sale.
Palacio unpersuasively contends otherwise. Its primary case holds the judgment debtor’s interest in tumed-over property is applied to the judgment by “ordering] the person examined ... to deliver property or funds to a levying officer or directly to the judgment creditor.”
(Imperial Bank
v.
Pim Electric, Inc.
(1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 540, 547 [39 Cal.Rptr.2d 432]
(Imperial).)
We parse the disjunctive clauses thusly: A turnover order may direct the examinee to deliver (1) property to a levying officer, and (2) funds directly to the judgment creditor—but not property directly to the judgment creditor. This limitation follows from the authorities upon which
Imperial
relies. In
Lewis v. Neblett
(1961) 188 Cal.App.2d 290 [10 Cal.Rptr. 441]
(Lewis),
the court affirmed a turnover order directing the judgment debtor to deliver cash to the sheriff as levying officer.
(Id.
at pp. 295, 298.) The Law Revision Commission comment to section 708.205 states the property may be ordered turned over to the levying officer or a receiver. (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 17 West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1987 ed.) foll. § 708.205, p. 455.) It further asserts “[t]he person examined may also be ordered to pay the judgment creditor directly”
(ibid.),
but it relies upon a case in which the court
reversed
(on other grounds) an order directing the judgment debtor’s sublessee to pay rent directly to the judgment creditor.
(Hustead v. Superior Court
(1969) 2 Cal.App.3d 780, 783, 793 [83 Cal.Rptr. 26]
(Hustead).)
If
Hustead
authorizes any turnover order, at most it supports the turnover of cash to the judgment debtor. At one point,
Imperial
cites a commentator for the proposition that “ ‘a turnover order issued in connection with an examination proceeding . . . may require delivery of property directly to the judgment creditor ....’”
(Imperial, supra,
33 Cal.App.4th at p. 550.) But the cited commentator misreads
Hustead
and the comment to section 708.205 as supporting the turnover of nonmonetary property directly to the judgment creditor. (Ahart, Cal. Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments and Debts (The
Rutter Group 2009) ¶ 6:1341.)
Jogani
v.
Jogani
(2006) 141 Cal.App.4th 158, 173 [45 Cal.Rptr.3d 792], and
In re Burns
(Bankr. 9th Cir. 2003) 291 B.R. 846, 855, uncritically repeat
Imperial’s
reference to the commentator’s unsupported conclusion. In sum, no persuasive authority directs the examinee to turn over nonmonetary property directly to the judgment creditor.
Palacio did not invoke and cannot rely upon the general turnover statute, section 699.040. The statute allows a judgment creditor to seek an order “directing the judgment debtor to transfer
to the levying officer
either or both of the following: [f] (1) Possession of the property sought to be levied upon if the property is sought to be levied upon by taking it into custody. [][] (2) Possession of documentary evidence of title to property of or a debt owed to the judgment debtor that is sought to be levied upon.” (§ 699.040, subd. (a), italics added.) It does not allow a turnover to the judgment creditor.
And section 699.040 limits itself to tangible property that can be “levied upon by taking it into custody” (or tangible, “documentary evidence of title” to property or a debt).
(Ibid.)
Domain name registration supplies the intangible “contractual right to use a unique domain name for a specified period of time.”
(Network Solutions, Inc. v. Umbro International, Inc.
(2000) 259 Va. 759 [529 S.E.2d 80, 86].)
Even if this right constitutes property, it cannot be taken “into custody.” (§ 699.040, subd. (a); accord,
Pacific Decision Sciences Corp. v. Superior Court
(2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 1100, 1109 [18 Cal.Rptr.3d 104] [no turnover order in aid of writ of attachment for “intangible assets incapable of being taken into physical custody”].)
Finally, the turnover order is wrongly directed at McMahon because Palacio has not shown the domain name is in his possession. (§§ 699.040, subd. (a) [authorizing turnover by “the judgment debtor”], 708.205 [authorizing turnover by third party only when it is examined].) Palacio’s evidence showed the domain name is registered to McMahon’s wife and serviced by Network Solutions. (See
Office Depot, Inc. v. Zuccarini
(N.D.Cal. 2007) 488 F.Supp.2d 920, 921 [§ 699.040 does not authorize turnover order directed at third party “domain name ‘registrars’ ”].) McMahon’s testimony he “operates” the associated Web site does not show he is in possession of the underlying domain name.
DISPOSITION
The order is reversed. The matter is remanded to the trial court with directions to vacate the order. McMahon shall recover his costs on appeal.
Bedsworth, Acting P. J., and O’Leary, 1, concurred.