Robinson v. Tevis

38 Cal. 611
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 38 Cal. 611 (Robinson v. Tevis) 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
Robinson v. Tevis, 38 Cal. 611 (Cal. 1869).

Opinions

Sanderson, J., delivered the opinion of the Court :

This is an action by an attaching creditor against a garnishee founded upon the one hundred and twenty-seventh section of the Practice Act.

From the facts, as agreed upon by counsel, it appears that the plaintiff, on the 31st of December, 1866, commenced an attachment suit against one J. R. Hardenbergh, and garnisheed the defendant by serving upon him a copy of the attachment, and notifying him in writing that any debts due from him to Hardenbergh, and any credits or other personal property in his hands belonging to Hardenbergh, were attached at the suit of plaintiff. That at the time the attachment was served upon the defendant, he was the creditor of a copartnership concern, composed of said Hardenbergh and one Dyer, to a large amount, and held, as collateral security, notes to a much larger amount due to the firm from Pearson & Getchell. That after the garnishment, the defendant accepted an assignment, by Hardenbergh & Dyer, of the notes held by him as security, in trust for himself and certain other creditors of the firm of Hardenbergh & Dyer, [613]*613with the knowledge and consent of said creditors. That said other creditors were creditors of the firm prior to the service of the attachment upon the defendant. That by the terms of the trust, the defendant was to collect the notes at maturity, and, after paying himself, apply the remainder of the funds in payment of the other creditors of the firm, for whose benefit the trust was declared. That the defendant performed the trust, notwithstanding the garnishment, and in doing so, exhausted all the funds which he had collected upon the notes. That the funds received by the defendant from the notes were more than sufficient to pay him his claim against Hardenbergh & Dyer and the claim of the plaintiff against Hardenbergh. That in due time the plaintiff obtained a judgment in his attachment suit against Hardenbergh.

The statute under which this action has been brought provides that, upon service of the attachment, a garnishee shall be liable to the plaintiff in the attachment for such debts as may be due from him to the defendant in the attachment, and for the amount of any credits or other personal property that may be in his hands or under his control, belonging to the defendant in the attachment, until the attachment is discharged, or the judgment of the plaintiff in the attachment is satisfied, unless he pays such debts and transfers such credits and other personal property to the Sheriff. If the garnishee does not do this he may be required to attend before the Court from which the attachment has been issued, or the Judge thereof, or a referee appointed by the Court or Judge, and answer upon oath concerning debts due from him to the defendant in the attachment, and credits or other personal properly in his possession or under his control which belong to the defendant in the attachment. The defendant may, also, be required to attend at the same time and place, and answer upon oath in relation to moneys due him from the garnishee, and to credits and other personal property in the possession or under the control of the garnishee which belong to him. If, upon such examination, it appear that the garnishee has credits or other personal property in his possession or control which belong to the defendant in the [614]*614attachment, and are capable of manual delivery, the Court or Judge may cause them to be delivered to the Sheriff, upon such terms as may be just, having due regard to liens and claims against the property; and if it appear that the garnishee has property of the defendant not capable of manual delivery, the Court or Judge may cause a memorandum containing the amount and description thereof to be delivered to the Sheriff. This course, however, is not compulsory upon the plaintiff in the attachment. If the garnishee has not voluntarily paid or delivered to the Sheriff, the plaintiff, after obtaining judgment, may sue him, as in the present case, and recover the property or its value, to the extent of his judgment, if the garnishee has converted it in the meantime. (Roberts v. Landecker, 9 Cal. 262.)

The notes of Pearson & Getchell were credits of the firm of Hardenbérgh & Dyer, in the control of the defendant, and, as such, were subject to seizure and sale upon, execution, the same as any other partnership property would have been at the time the plaintiff’s attachment was served. (Davis v. Mitchell, 34 Cal. 81.) Had the plaintiff been a creditor of the firm, he would have had no difficulty in reaching those notes by attachment, and subjecting them to the satisfaction of his claim against the firm. Under the provisions of the statute, to which we have referred, he would have been entitled to summon the defendant before the Court, or Judge, or referee, and, upon its appearing that he held these notes as collateral, the Court or Judge could have caused him to surrender them to the plaintiff, upon being paid the amount of his own note against the firm, and, thereupon, to transfer the latter also; or, after obtaining his judgment against the firm, he could have brought an action against the defendant and accomplished the same result.

(Roberts v. Landerker, supra.) The lien of the plaintiff obtained by his attachment would have not only fastened itself upon the notes, but would have transferred itself to the money due upon them, when collected by the defendant. Having collected the notes, the defendant could have applied the money, so far as necessary, to the payment of his own note against the firm, but he would have been bound to pay [615]*615the remainder to the Sheriff, or hold it subject to the plaintiff’s lien; and if, under such circumstances, he had paid it out to other creditors of the firm, he would have been guilty of a conversion as against the plaintiff, and would have become liable to him for the amount so converted to the extent of his judgment against the firm. How, then, is this result affected by the circumstance that the plaintiff is not a creditor of the firm, but of Harbenbergh only, in his individual or separate capacity?

It is settled in this State that joint or partnership property can be seized under an execution against one of the joint owners or partners, for his individual or separate debt, and sold; and that the purchaser will acquire by his purchase the interest of the debtor partner; but that the rights of the several partners and the creditors of the firm are paramount to the claims of the creditors of the members of the firm, in their individual or separate capacity; and hence, that the interest which passes by the sale is the interest of the debtor partner in the residuum of the partnership property after the settlement of the partnership debts; that the interest may be ascertained by suit before the sale, in the name of the plaintiff in the execution, or, with his consent, in the name of the Sheriff, who, by his seizure, acquires a special property in. the goods, or, after the sale, in a suit by the purchaser against the other partners, or by the latter against him. (Jones v. Thompson, 12 Cal. 198.)

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Bluebook (online)
38 Cal. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-tevis-cal-1869.