Spellacy v. Young

186 P. 368, 44 Cal. App. 174, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 464
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3033.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 P. 368 (Spellacy v. Young) 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
Spellacy v. Young, 186 P. 368, 44 Cal. App. 174, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 464 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

This is an appeal in an action in inter-pleader instituted by the plaintiffs Spellacy and Mascot Oil Company, a corporation, against various defendants to determine the title to certain shares of stock of said corporation. The defendant C. S. Young answered and cross-complained against S. Wright Jewett, R. W. Kemp, and E. L. Foster, attacking their title to nineteen thousand four hundred shares of said stock upon the ground that the sheriff’s sale through which they obtained title was illegal and void. The defendant W. R. Williams, superintendent of banks of the state of California, answered and cross-complained against the said 0. S. Young, attacking his title to two thousand five hundred shares of the stock of said corporation as having been deposited with the Kern Valley Bank, a defunct banking corporation, by E. L. Foster, as security for the note of said Foster to the bank. An assignment, absolute in form, from Young to Foster was turned over to the bank when the note was made. Separate judgments supported by separate findings were entered in favor of the defendants Jewett, Kemp, and Foster against C. S. Young, and in favor of the defendant W. R. Williams, as successor in interest to the Kern Valley Bank, against the same party. The case is before this court upon appeals taken from both of said judgments and presented on the same record.

*176 The material facts out of which the interpleader suit originated are these:

In an action between Young and Spellacy, judgment was given in favor of Young to the effect that Spellacy held certain shares of stock in the Mascot Oil Company in trust for Young. In that proceeding Young was represented by E. L. Foster, an attorney at law, and upon the termination of the proceeding suit was instituted by said Foster against Young to recover the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars for professional services in connection with the litigation. At the time of the institution of the latter suit an attachment was attempted to be levied upon the interest of Young in the stock which in the previous litigation had been held to be his. Thereafter, judgment was rendered in favor of Foster and against Young for something less than eight thousand dollars, execution was immediately issued, and nineteen thousand four hundred shares of the stock of the corporation were sold to Kemp, one of the attorneys for Foster in that proceeding, for $1,940. Immediately thereafter a stay of execution was procured and an appeal filed, judgment being affirmed by the supreme court on March 14, 1916. (Foster v. Young, 172 Cal. 317, [156 Pac. 476].) About the time the notice of appeal was filed, Young, through his attorney, made a motion in the superior court to set aside the execution and sale upon the ground that neither the defendant nor his attorney had been given notice of the presentation of the findings or of the entry of the judgment. This motion being denied, an appeal was taken from the order upon a bill of exceptions and heard with the appeal from the judgment. Upon this phase of that •case the supreme court said (172 Cal. 322, [156 Pac. 478]) : “The motion as made to vacate and set aside this sale was not based upon any claim of invalidity as to the acts of the sheriff in selling the stock, but upon the sole ground that notice of the making of said findings of fact, and the rendition and entry of the judgment upon which said execution issued, was never at any time served upon defendant, and that he had no notice thereof.” Upon the grounds then urged the supreme court affirmed the order denying the motion to set aside the sale. This interpleader suit was instituted in August, 1912, the sale complained of was made in April of that year, and the motion above referred to was *177 made immediately thereafter. In September, 1912, the appellant herein filed an answer setting up the alleged irregularities in the attachment and execution proceedings. However, after the opinion in Foster v. Young, was rendered, Young filed an amended and supplemental cross-complaint in the pending action, wherein the sale was attacked upon the grounds that neither Young nor his attorney had any notice that any execution had issued, and that the cross-defendants Poster and Kemp had so arranged said sale that neither Young nor his attorney should know of the same until it had been completed. This amended and supplemental cross-complaint was filed May 23, 1916, more than four years after the sale was conducted. In the amended and supplemental cross-complaint it is alleged that the cross-complainant Young and his attorney learned of this sale upon April 3, 1912, two days after the sale had taken place. No reasons were given for the long delay in seeking relief. On the trial of the pending action the court refused to admit any testimony in support of this amended and supplemental cross-complaint upon the grounds that it did not state facts- sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that the relief was barred by the statute of limitations. If the court was correct upon these rulings, other points raised by appellant upon this appeal do not require consideration.

[1] The amended cross-complaint sets forth the institution of the action in which the attachment was issued, service of the attachment, the entry of judgment, the sale by the sheriff, the offer to redeem the stock surreptitiously bid in by Kemp, and the offer to pay the entire judgment after it became final following the opinion of the supreme court. The only facts alleged upon which might be predicated any claim for equitable relief are those relating to want of notice of the execution and sale on the part of Young and his attorney. It is not alleged that the notice required by the statute was not in fact given, but merely that Young and his attorney, being far removed from the city of Los Angeles at the time, did not actually know that said judgment had been entered or that the execution had issued or the sale noticed. It is too clear for argument that these allegations, standing alone, do not support a claim" for equitable relief, if, as was to be implied from the *178 want of attack, the execution was properly issued and the sale legally and fairly conducted.

[2] The amended cross-complaint attempts to- set up a plea for relief from fraud. Such relief is barred within three years from the discovery of the fraud under the provisions of subdivision 4, section 338, of the Code of Civil Procedure. The amended cross-complaint was not filed until after the expiration of four years from the date of the discovery of the fraud. The original cross-complaint filed by Young against the same parties set up facts relating to this sale in support of a claim that the action taken by the sheriff did not comply with the requirements of the statute relating to attachments and executions. This claim, however, was abandoned upon the filing of the amended and supplemental cross-complaint and an entirely new cause of action was therein attempted to be stated, to wit, one based upon fraud. This cause of action being barred by the statute, the trial court properly refused to admit evidence in support of it.

The judgment in favor of Jewett, Kemp, and Foster, therefore, must be affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 368, 44 Cal. App. 174, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spellacy-v-young-calctapp-1919.