Swinnerton v. Oregon Pacific Railroad

56 P. 40, 123 Cal. 417, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1088
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1899
DocketS. F. No. 794
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 P. 40 (Swinnerton v. Oregon Pacific Railroad) 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
Swinnerton v. Oregon Pacific Railroad, 56 P. 40, 123 Cal. 417, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1088 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

TEMPLE, J.

On the fourth day of June, 1894, the appellant recovered a judgment in the superior court of San Francisco against the respondent, the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, for $15,363.78 and costs.

Execution was issued thereon, proceedings supplementary to the execution instituted, and Southard Hoffman, who had been previously garnisheed under the execution, was cited to appear and be examined before Judge Seawell concerning any property, moneys, or credits in his hands, due, owing, or belonging to the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company.

Upon his examination, it appeared that the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company had been the owner of a steamship known as the “Willamette Valley”; that in the business of the railroad company this steamship plied between the port of Yaquina, Oregon, and the port of San Francisco; that upon one of her voyages to the port of San Francisco, and while in that port, she was seized by the United States marshal under admiralty process issued out of the district court of the United States for the northern district of California, upon a libel in admiralty filed therein against the steamship by E. D. Chandler. Such proceedings were had in this libel suit that the steamship was; by order of the court, duly and regularly sold, and the proceeds paid into the registry of the United States district court where the libel was filed. At the times of the libel proceedings, the sale of the steamship, and the further proceedings hereinafter mentioned, Southard Hoffman, the garnishee, was clerk of the United States district court, and he deposited the proceeds of that sale in the subtreasury at San Francisco. The ultimate issue of the Chandler libel suit was a decree in favor of Chandler and other libelants and intervenors- against the steamship “Willamette Valley” for her condemnation, and payment to the libelants and intervenors of certain amounts found by the court to be due to each of them.

After all the moneys so found due to the libelants for whom the ship and her proceeds were held in custody by the United States district court were paid under its decree, there remained in the registry of the court, undisposed of, $23,950.85. Prior to the seizure of the steamship “Willamette Valley” in the libel suit, a receiver over the property of the Oregon Pacific Railroad [420]*420Company was appointed by the circuit court of Benton county, in the state of Oregon, and such receiver took possession of all the property of the corporation found in Oregon, including the steamship “Willamette Valley.” In the latter part of the year 1895 a number of persons, among them the receiver appointed by the circuit court of Benton county, in the state of Oregon, claiming an interest in the remnants of the proceeds.of the sale of the steamship, then still lying in the registry of the court, filed petitions in the United States district court, as provided by the rules and practice of the federal courts, praying for a distribution to them of this surplus or remnant. After hearing had upon these petitions the judge of the court made and gave a decree in the matter on the ninth day of June, 1896, dismissing all of the petitions except that of the Oregon receiver, and directed the clerk of his court to pay the moneys then in the registry of the court to that receiver, or to his proctor. In compliance with this decree, Southard Hoffman, as clerk of the United States district court, on the twenty-eighth day of September, 1896, prepared two checks, one for $19,918.29 in favor of Charles Clark, receiver of the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, and one for $3,606.16 in favor of Charles Page, who was the proctor of the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company and of Charles Clark,the receiver.

These two checks Mr. Hoffman took to Judge Morrow, judge of the said United States district court, for his signature. The judge signed them and returned them to Mr. Hoffman for delivery and his signature, and Hoffman then signed them. Both of these checks were drawn on the United States subtreasury at San Francisco.

On or about the eighteenth day of June, 1896, Charles Page, as proctor for the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company and the Oregon receiver, instructed and requested Mr. Hoffman that when the decree became final he should prepare two checks, one for $19,918.29 in favor of the Oregon receiver, and one for $3,606.16 in Charles Page’s favor, and that Mr. Hoffman should mail the larger check of the two to Charles Clark, the receiver, at Corvallis, Oregon, and inclose it in a letter previously written by Mr. Page to Mr. Clark, and which was left by Mr. Page with Mr. Hoffman for transmission through the mails.

[421]*421The decree did not become final until September 28, 1896. Mr Hoffman, in pursuance of the instructions received from Mr. Page, did on the twenty-eighth day of September, 1896, after the same was signed, place the larger check inside of Mr. Page’s letter, and put these in an envelope, which he sealed and addressed to Charles Clark, Corvallis, Oregon; but, before he could deposit the letter in the United States postoffice or a mailbox for delivery, and while the check so signed and countersigned and letter were in his possession, the sheriff levied a garnishment on Mr. Hoffman, under and by virtue of a writ of execution issued out of the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, under the judgment recovered in this action. At the same time Hoffman was served with an order in supplementary proceedings to appear before Hon. J. M. Seawell and be examined, also an injunction and a subpoena duces tecum to bring into court the check drawn in favor of the foreign receiver.

Upon the hearing, Mr. Hoffman declined to produce the check, claiming to hold it in his possession in his official capacity as clerk of the district court of the United States, and that all his acts in relation to the placing of the check inside of Mr. Page’s letter addressed to Clark, receiver, sealing the letter, addressing it, and the intended deposit thereof in the United States mail for transmission to Oregon, were official acts as such clerk. The superior court then made an order appointing one Forsyth receiver of the defendant’s property, in which order it was recited that this check was in the possession and under the control of Southard Hoffman (apparently as an individual, and not as clerk), and that the check represented property of the Oregon Pacific Eailroad Company. The order further authorized the receiver to collect all moneys, by suit or otherwise, and to demand and receive checks to which the defendant was entitled. Thereupon the plaintiff moved for an order upon Southard Hoffman directing him to deliver the check in his possession to Forsyth, the receiver appointed by that order. The court denied the motion.

Immediately upon obtaining this order, Forsyth, as receiver, brought an action in the superior court against Hoffman to compel him to surrender the check, and enjoining him from sending [422]*422it away. This fact having been brought to the attention of Judge Seawell, he, on the 23d of October, modified his previous order by setting aside all its provisions and recitals, except the order appointing Forsyth as receiver, and by limiting his powers to the taking of snch proceedings as he might be advised, before the district court, and not elsewhere.

On the 30th of October, the court made still a new order slightly changing the modification heretofore set forth, and finally instructing the receiver to dismiss the suit which he had brought in the superior court, and to confine his proceedings to the court of which Hoffman was clerk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 P. 40, 123 Cal. 417, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swinnerton-v-oregon-pacific-railroad-cal-1899.