Sewell v. Johnson

134 P. 704, 165 Cal. 762, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 481
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 2996.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 134 P. 704 (Sewell v. Johnson) 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
Sewell v. Johnson, 134 P. 704, 165 Cal. 762, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 481 (Cal. 1913).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought to set aside the transfer of one thousand four hundred shares of the capital stock of the “Building Association of the New or Practical Psychology” claimed to have been made by one W. R. Price to the defendant.

The complaint alleged that on November 4, 1909, plaintiff obtained a judgment against said Price for $7,728.18 which was then in full force and effect; that “after the said W. R. Price perpetrated the fraud upon the plaintiff herein which was the basis of the action upon which said plaintiff recovered judgment against the said W. R. Price aforesaid,” the said Price for the purpose of defeating such judgment and defrauding his creditors, particularly the plaintiff, had without any consideration therefor transferred all of said one thousand four hundred shares of stock to the defendant; that *765 execution was issued on said judgment against the property of said Price and returned unsatisfied and the said Price has not sufficient property other than the said stock out of which said execution may be satisfied.

The only issue made by the answer in said action was as to the transfer of said stock; defendant denied that it had been transferred to him by said W. E. Price and averred that he had purchased one thousand shares from Mary L. Price, the then owner thereof, and that four hundred shares of said stock were issued and delivered to him directly by the corporation itself to secure a loan made by defendant to it.

The court found the facts as alleged in the complaint except as to the four hundred shares of said stock and gave judgment for plaintiff, decreeing that the transfer of one thousand shares was made by said W. E. Price in fraud of his creditors, particularly plaintiff; that said Price was sole owner of said one thousand shares, and enjoined defendant from transferring, selling or encumbering any of those shares.

Defendant appeals from the judgment on the judgment-roll alone.

On the oral argument in this case and in a “supplemental memoranda” filed thereafter, appellant called the attention of this court to the fact that on June 12,1912, on an appeal taken by W. E. Price from the judgment of the superior court in the case of Sewell v. Christie, W. R. Price, and H. C. March (Sewell v. Christie et al., 163 Cal. 76, [124 Pac. 713]), this court reversed said judgment. Under such suggestion and the presentation of the record on appeal in that ease on the oral argument, appellant insists that we must take judicial notice of the reversal of such judgment, and as it appears by doing so, that the integrity of that judgment, which was the sole foundation of plaintiff’s action against this appellant, has by such reversal been destroyed, the judgment on the present appeal based upon it should also be reversed.

No question was made by respondent on the oral argument, or in his briefs subsequently filed, but that the judgment reversed in Sewell v. Christie, Price et al., is the same judgment pleaded in the complaint in this action, nor that if the court can take into consideration the fact of such reversal that there is not a sufficient showing made to warrant it. No contention is made as to the fact but against the legal right of *766 appellant to have this court take judicial notice of the fact of such reversal which it is claimed by respondent, appellant is asking us to do. The position of respondent is that in disposing of the present appeal this court must coniine itself exclusively to an examination and consideration of the record therein, and that, as it is nowhere set up in the answer of the defendant in this action that the judgment alleged in the complaint had not become final, nor any plea in abatement set up therein, on that ground, we are precluded from taking judicial notice of our action on the other appeal.

But it was not alleged in the complaint nor did the court find that the judgment had become final, but only that it was in full force and effect, which would be true though the time for appeal from it had not expired, or it had actually been appealed from. Though not a final judgment it was a subsisting one, upon which, unless a stay-bond were given execution might issue, and as such in aid of satisfying any execution issued under it plaintiff had a right to rely on it in this action against the defendant, and neither the mere fact that the time for appeal by Price had not expired, or that an appeal had actually been taken by him, could have precluded plaintiff from doing so, nor have been available as a plea in abatement in this action on the part of defendant. Such a plea could only have been available if, pending his right to appeal, or on an appeal, Price had given an undertaking to stay execution on the judgment which, it is apparent from the allegations in the complaint he did not do, because this action is brought in aid of the enforcement of an unsatisfied execution issued on the judgment, and is inconsistent with any idea that a stay-bond was given.

As said in the opinion in another branch of the litigation arising out of this judgment in Sewell v. Christie et al.— namely, Sewell v. Mary L. Price et al., 164 Cal. 270, [128 Pac. 409].

11 The general rule undoubtedly is that until a judgment becomes final by affirmance on appeal or by the lapse of the time within which an appeal might be taken, such judgment is not admissible in evidence and cannot be relied upon as the foundation of rights declared in it. (Feeney v. Hinckley, 134 Cal. 467, [86 Am. St. Rep. 290, 66 Pac. 580], and cases cited.) But the rule has no application to the case at bar. The pres *767 ent action is of the kind commonly known as a creditor’s bill. Its purpose is to apply to the satisfaction of the creditor’s demand property of the debtor which was transferred by such debtor with intent ‘to delay or defraud any creditor or other person of his demands.’ (Civ. Code, sec. 3439.) Section 3441 of the Civil Code provides that ‘a creditor can avoid the act or obligation of his debtor for fraud only where the fraud obstructs the enforcement, by legal process, of his right to take the property affected by the transfer or obligation.’ Consequently it is universally held that a creditor is not in a position to attack a transfer for fraud unless he has a specific lien upon the property transferred or has reduced his claim against the debtor to judgment. . . . The bill maintained by a judgment creditor to subject to the payment of his demand property fraudulently transferred by the debtor is not, strictly speaking, an action upon his judgment. ' It is really an action for equitable relief against the obstruction caused by a transfer which hinders him in satisfying his claim by the ordinary process of law, that is to say, by an execution. If, then, he has put himself in a position to levy execution, he has done everything necessary to enable him to attack the transfer which hinders his enjoyment of his right. The fact that the time for appeal has not expired does not prevent the issuance or the levy of execution under a money judgment, nor is the right to have execution affected by the fact that an appeal is actually taken, unless an undertaking to stay execution has been given.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 704, 165 Cal. 762, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sewell-v-johnson-cal-1913.