Sunset Farms, Inc. v. Superior Court

50 P.2d 106, 9 Cal. App. 2d 389, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1935
DocketCiv. 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 50 P.2d 106 (Sunset Farms, Inc. v. Superior Court) 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
Sunset Farms, Inc. v. Superior Court, 50 P.2d 106, 9 Cal. App. 2d 389, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1332 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

The petitioner has applied for the issuance of a writ of prohibition to prohibit the taking of any further proceedings under an order appointing a receiver on the ground that the order of appointment is void for lack of jurisdiction. The action in which the receiver was appointed was

in the Superior Court of Imperial County by H. W. Everts on June 3,1935. Petitioner was named as a defendant therein. The complaint in said action, in addition to other relief, sought the appointment of a receiver for the property of petitioner pending the trial of the action. On the same date on which the action was commenced the plaintiff therein, without notice to petitioner, applied to the respondent court for the appointment of a receiver and an ex parte order a receiver was thereupon made. The receiver named in the order qualified immediately following the entry of the order and on the aforementioned date ousted petitioner’s officers and directors and seized and took possession of all property and assets of petitioner located in Imperial Count;' and its corporate records and books and assumed control and management of the entire business and affairs of petitioner. Thereafter, petitioner moved the respondent court to vacate the order appointing the receiver. This motion was presented on June 10, 1935, and was denied on said date. The application for a writ of prohibition was filed in the Supreme Court on June 28, 1935. On July 1, 1935, the Supreme Court made an order commanding respondent to show cause on July 15, 1935, why the writ of prohibition should not issue as prayed and at the same time transferred the matter to this court for determination.

The respondent has demurred to the petition and has also filed its answer thereto.

The principal contention advanced by respondent in support of the demurrer is thát the petition is fatally defective in that it fails to disclose the absence of a plain, speedy and adequate remedy available to petitioner in the ordinary course of law. The statute which authorizes the issuance of the writ *393 provides that it may issup “in all cases whore there is not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law” (sec. 1103, Code Civ. Proc.). Respondent urges that petitioner possessed the right of immediate appeal from the order which it now seeks to prohibit and that this remedy was plain, speedy and adequate. The advancement of this contention necessitates a consideration of those allegations of the petition whereby petitioner seeks to deny that there is available to it any plain, speedy or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.

These allegations are lengthy and are set forth with very considerable detail. The reasons why an appeal from the order or from any judgment that may be rendered after trial of the action would be inadequate are seven in number and comprise approximately ten pages of the printed petition. An examination of them discloses that they are predicated on the hypothesis that the receivership must necessarily be continued in effect pending an appeal from the order. This basic assumption is incorrect. Section 943 of the Code of Civil Procedure expressly authorizes a stay of the execution of an order appointing a receiver on an appeal therefrom through the medium of an undertaking executed for the purpose by the party perfecting the appeal. It was declared in Jacobs v. Superior Court, 133 Cal. 364, 365 [65 Pac. 826, 85 Am. St. Rep. 204] : “Formerly—and when Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327 [24 Pac. 121, 18 Am. St. Rep. 192, 10 L. R. A. 627], was decided—there was no appeal from an order appointing a receiver, but in 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 55) section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended so as to allow such appeal, and at the same time section 943 was amended so as to provide for the staying of an order a receiver by an undertaking on appeal. These amendments were apparently intended to afford a remedy for prodigal, unwise, and unwarranted appointments of receivers, which seems to be a growing evil; and we think that they do afford an adequate remedy, as contemplated by section 1103, and the decisions of this court on the subject. The fact that a question of jurisdiction arises does not change the rule as to the adequacy of the remedy by appeal. (See Agassiz v. Superior Court, 90 Cal. 101 [27 Pac. 49].)

“The filing of the undertaking operates as a supersedeas, suspends all authority of the receiver under the order, with *394 draws from him the right to the control and possession of the property involved, and restores the same to the appealing party, from whom it has been taken. ’ ’

The decision in Jacobs v. Superior Court, supra, is peculiarly in point because, like the present, it was an original application addressed to the Supreme Court for a writ of prohibition to arrest all further proceedings upon an order of the respondent superior court appointing a receiver. There is a further similarity in that the order sought to be annulled authorized the receiver to take possession of farming land with the crops growing thereon in an action to foreclose a mortgage on said land. The petitioners for the writ there maintained that they were the owners of the growing crops and that the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit being merely a mortgagee of the naked land had no legal right to interfere, by receivership or otherwise, with their possession and control of the crops. The respondents contended that the lease under which petitioners set up their claim was without consideration and was executed merely to delay creditors. The Court declined to examine the conflicting claims of the parties in the action in which the receiver was appointed or to determine whether or not the appointment was proper on the ground that an appeal from the order of appointment afforded a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law within the meaning of section 1103 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That an appeal from an order appointing a affords a remedy in the ordinary course of law adequate to estop invocation of the extraordinary remedy of prohibition is upheld in the following decisions: Johnston v. Superior Court, 4 Cal. App. 90 [87 Pac. 211] ; Hubbard v. Justice’s Court, 5 Cal. App. 90 [89 Pac. 865]; California etc. Assn. v. Superior Court, 8 Cal. App. 711 [97 Pac. 769]; Lightner Min. Co. v. Superior Court, 14 Cal. App. 642 [112 Pac. 909]; Campbell v. Superior Court, 67 Cal. App. 728 [228 Pac. 354] ; Greenburg v. Superior Court, 71 Cal. App. 332 [235 Pac. 92] ; Pacific Broadcasting Co. v. Superior Court, 100 Cal. App. 649 [280 Pac. 991]; Highland Securities Co. v. Superior Court, 119 Cal. App. 107 [6 Pac. (2d) 116].

The petition here alleges that the remedy of appeal from the order will be inadequate because a period of two years would be required for the determina *395 tion of such an appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.2d 106, 9 Cal. App. 2d 389, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunset-farms-inc-v-superior-court-calctapp-1935.