Snidow v. Hill

191 P.2d 513, 84 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1259
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1948
DocketCiv. 16137
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 P.2d 513 (Snidow v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snidow v. Hill, 191 P.2d 513, 84 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1259 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

BARTLETT, J. pro tem.

The defendants have appealed from an order made ex parte May 7, 1947 appointing R. E. Allen, Receiver, and an order made after a hearing on May 9, 1947 continuing the receivership. The complaint is one to *703 quiet title to 17 acres in Glendora, California on which is located a citrus grove and a private residence. Attached to the defendants’ answer is a contract between Houston A. Snidow and the appellants which provides for a sale of the property to the appellants for $55,000 in installments, $3,000 to be paid on January 1 and on June 1 of each year with interest of 6 per cent per annum on the unpaid bálance. The title is to remain in the seller until paid in full. The contract also provides that the seller have the right to all the proceeds received from the sale of fruit and that if the seller advances money in connection with the care, operation or maintenance of the property, the seller is to be reimbursed out of the first money received in connection with the transaction. There is a provision recognizing the fact that there is a trust deed on the property in favor of one Anson Lisk.

At the time the contract was entered into, Snidow and the appellant Hill were in a partnership known as the L. A. Trailer Service.

The contract also provides that money withdrawn from that partnership by either party may be credited against the amount due as their interest may appear.

The affidavit of Houston A. Snidow, upon which the motion for a receiver was based, recites that the defendants are in default in their payments provided for in the contract; that a sum in excess of $30,000 is still due; that the value of the property has so depreciated since the contract was entered into that it is insufficient to discharge the balance due and that the property is in danger of being materially injured by failure to properly care for the grove, failure to irrigate at proper times, failure to disc the same, and failure to fertilize, although accepted agricultural practice requires these matters to be done.

It is further deposed that unless these matters are immediately attended to at the period then existing when the trees are blooming and setting fruit, irreparable damage would be caused to the soil, trees and crop.

The testimony taken at the hearing was sharply conflicting but the facts set forth in his affidavit were again testified to by Snidow and he was corroborated as to the lack of care of the grove and the depreciation in its value by another witness. Testimony was also given indicating a lack of financial ability on the part of appellants to properly care for the grove. The Lisk trust deed referred to in the contract required the property to be correctly cared for and protected.

*704 The order of May 7, 1947, which was continued in effect on May 9,1947, reads as follows:

“It is hereby ordered that B. B. Allen, 220 N. Broadway, Los Angeles, California, be and he is hereby appointed receiver herein for the purpose of irrigating, fertilizing, spraying, fumigating, smudging, cultivating, controlling pest, harvesting fruit, delivering fruit to the packing house, and otherwise culturing and caring for the citrus property situated on the following described real property: . . .

The appellants claim that the order appointing a receiver should be reversed upon three grounds. We quote from their brief:

“1. The court has no power to appoint a Beceiver pendente lite unless the evidence shows that the property is in danger of being materially injured.
“2. The court has no jurisdiction to appoint a Beceiver in this case.
“3. The pleading and proof is insufficient to support the order appointing a Beceiver. ’ ’

The court had jurisdiction to make the orders attacked. So fa:g as applicable here, section 564 of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes the appointment of a receiver on the application of the plaintiff or of any party whose right or interest in the property or funds is probable and where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured, and also in all cases where receivers have heretofore been appointed by courts of equity.

It makes no difference that the complaint is in the form of an action to quiet title. If we scan the provisions of the contract between the parties and examine the averments in the affidavit upon which the motion was based, we find a situation in which the plaintiffs’ interest in the fund is probable and the property or fund is in danger of being lost or materially injured. There is no doubt as to its being the type of action in which courts of equity have exercised their inherent power in aid of their jurisdiction to appoint receivers. The order in the instant case in its enumeration of the duties of the receiver is notable not for the powers it grants but for the extreme limitation based upon those powers. It does not confer the use and possession of the residence, that is left with the appellants. It does not grant the receiver either possession or control of the proceeds of the crop. Indeed, all it does is make a necessary order authorizing the receiver, for the protection of the grove, to properly culture and care *705 for it. In Davies v. Ramsdell, 40 Cal.App. 432 [183 P. 702], the court says:

“This is an appeal from an order appointing a receiver pendente lite, in a suit in equity, more resembling the old suit to remove a cloud on title than the code suit merely to quiet title. The appellant contends the order should not have been made, as such appointments are not usually made in suits to quiet title. In this case there were equitable considerations before the court in addition to those of the ordinary suit to quiet title. Equity has inherent power in aid of its jurisdiction to grant injunctions and to appoint receivers, and the exercise of the power rests very largely in the discretion of the chancellor. ...”

We also quote the following from Takeba v. Superior Court, 43 Cal.App. 469,474,475,476 [185 P. 406] :

“The sole and only question to be determined in this proceeding is, manifestly, whether the respondent court stepped beyond its jurisdiction in appointing a receiver in the case of Mier v. Mizushima, mentioned above, and in taking, through the receiver so appointed, possession of the fruit referred to in the petition for this writ.

“Numerous affidavits have been filed herein touching the merits of the controversy—that is, affidavits addressed to the question as to the ownership of the fruit. But we cannot decide that controversy in this proceeding. If it appears that the court was within its jurisdiction under the law in appointing the receiver, then the inquiry, so far as this proceeding is concerned, is at an end.

“But we think the respondent court was authorized to act in this case, upon a proper showing, of course, upon the provisions of what was formerly subdivision 6 of the code section, above named, but which is now, and has been since the above considered amendment of 1919, subdivision 7.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P.2d 513, 84 Cal. App. 2d 702, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snidow-v-hill-calctapp-1948.