Quist v. Sandman

99 P. 204, 154 Cal. 748, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 392
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4821.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 99 P. 204 (Quist v. Sandman) 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
Quist v. Sandman, 99 P. 204, 154 Cal. 748, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 392 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

LORI GAN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff against A. W. Sandman, and the Hills, and others, to obtain a personal judgment against Sandman and to enforce a lien upon some 235 cords of tan bark, the property of the Hills. All the other defendants except Sandman and the Hills filed cross-complaints asking a personal judgment against Sandman and also asserting liens against the tan bark similar to those asserted by the plaintiff. The claims asserted by the plaintiff and cross-complainants were for labor in cutting and drawing' the tan bark from the trees on the premises of the Hills, under their employment for that purpose by Sandman, who had entered into a contract with the Hills to do the peeling and delivery of the barb. Sandman made default. The Wins, appeared and resisted the assertion of a lien on their property. The cause was submitted on an agreed statement of facts, and the court gave the plaintiff and the cross-complainants personal judgment against the defendant Sandman, and a further judgment establishing their asserted liens against the bark, and directing its sale by the sheriff to satisfy their lien claims.

The defendants Hill appeal from the judgment and- from an order denying their motion for a new trial. Sandman was not served with notice of this appeal.

It is insisted by the respondents that both these appeals should be dismissed, and they have moved to that effect.

They insist that the appeal from the judgment should be dismissed because the defendant Sandman, who had the contract with the Hills to cut and deliver the bark and who employed the respondents to do the work thereof, and against whom they obtained a personal judgment, should have been served -with the notice of appeal from the judgment.

Their claim is that he was an adverse party whose interest would be injuriously affected by a reversal of the judgment establishing and enforcing the lien, and, hence, under section 940 of the Code of Civil Procedure, should have been served with the notice of appeal.

*751 We do not think this point has any force. Though the judgment against Sandman was a personal judgment for the full amount of the several claims of respondents, he has not appealed from it. That judgment fixed a primary liability on his part to respondents. It is true, that by another part of the judgment liens are established against the property of the appellants ITill in favor of respondents, but the judgment establishing them is separate and distinct from the personal judgment against Sandman, and a matter in which the latter has no interest and which does not affect him, unless it can be said that that portion of the judgment providing that the proceeds of the sale of appellants’ property, on which the lien is fixed, shall be paid on the personal judgment obtained against him, is a legal advantage of which he will be deprived if the judgment establishing the lien is reversed. It is the claim of respondent that Sandman has this legal advantage and benefit. It is insisted by them that as Sandman is interested in having the judgment sustained, so as to have the proceeds of the sale of the property of the appellants Hill, upon which the lien of respondents was fixed, applied towards the satisfaction of the personal judgment against himself, he is therefore a party who would be injured by a reversal of the judgment, and, hence, should have been served with notice of appeal.

We do not, however, think that Sandman comes within the class of aggrieved parties upon whom it is necessary to serve such notice. While it would appear on the face of the judgment, superficially considered, that he would be injuriously affected by a reversal of it, yet when his legal rights under the judgment as an entirety are considered, it is obvious that it can have no such effect.

As we have seen, Sandman was personally responsible to the respondents for whatever claims they had for their services in cutting the bark. ' Any right which they could assert against the property of the appellants Hill, if such right existed at all, was conferred by law and consisted of a right to subject the property of the Hills to a lien for their services. The primary obligation to respondents, however, was upon Sandman, and respondents obtained a personal judgment against him for the full amount of their claim. Any lien which the law gave to respondents upon the property of appel *752 lants Hill was for the benefit of respondents and not for the advantage of Sandman. In legal effect this judgment, in as far as it enforced the lien against the property of the Hills and directed a sale and the application of the proceeds toward the satisfaction of the judgment obtained against Sandman was of no benefit -to the latter so as to make the reversal of the judgment injurious to him. Sandman had no legal right to have the property of the appellants Hill subjected to the payment of his indebtedness to the respondents. The primary personal obligation was on him to pay the respondents for their labor. The law, if it gave them a lien at all, created it for the benefit of the respondents because he had failed to perform his obligation to them. If the judgment here involved were reversed, it could only be reversed so far as it established a lien on the property of the appellants. The personal judgment against Sandman not being appealed from would remain after reversal as it had stood before, subject to enforcement at any time on execution at the instance of respondents. Reversing that judgment in so far as it established a lien, which is the only question involved on this appeal, could not affect the personal judgment against Sandman. Nor could such reversal injuriously affect Sandman because thereby Sandman would be deprived of a lien against appellants’ property. It would in law be no injury to him, because, had the judgment as far as it established the lien been affirmed, and the property to which the lien attached been sold under the judgment, the Hills would have their action over against Sandman to recover from him the amount which their property had had to contribute to the payment of his personal judgment and primary liability to the respondents. All that the reversal would amount to as far as Sandman is concerned would be that the Hills, as against him, would not be forced to take such action, nor Sandman be subjected to it. Under such circumstances, and where it is apparent that no legal benefit could accrue to Sandman under the judgment establishing the lien, it cannot be said that the reversal of the judgment as a lien would injuriously affect him, and, hence, he was not a party upon whom notice of appeal should be served. (See on this proposition generally Mannix v. Tryon, 152 Cal. 38, [91 Pac. 983].)

The notice to dismiss the appeal from the judgment is denied.

*753 Bespondents likewise move to dismiss the appeal from the order denying the motion of appellants for a new trial. Their point is that as the ease was submitted to the trial court for disposition on an agreed statement of facts, which facts it was also stipulated by the parties were to be considered as the findings of the court in the case, a motion for a new trial would not lie.

We are satisfied that the point that under such circumstances a party cannot demand a new trial is correct.

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Bluebook (online)
99 P. 204, 154 Cal. 748, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quist-v-sandman-cal-1908.