Thompson v. Superior Court of San Francisco

51 P. 863, 119 Cal. 538, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 667
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1898
DocketS. F. No. 749
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 P. 863 (Thompson v. Superior Court of San Francisco) 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
Thompson v. Superior Court of San Francisco, 51 P. 863, 119 Cal. 538, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 667 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This is a hearing upon an original application for a writ of certiorari. The uncontradicted facts disclosed by the record are the following: The assignee of the estate of Alfred Clarke, an insolvent debtor, applied to the superior court sitting in the insolvency proceeding for permission to sell certain personal property of the estate of the insolvent. The property was second-hand waterpipe laid in the ground. An order of the court was obtained permitting the assignee to sell the pipe at private sale. He made two sales, and reported them to the court, stating that “he had sold six hundred feet of said pipe to William Long for the sum of sixty-four dollars, or at the rate of four cents per foot, and on the tenth, day of June, 1896, had sold the remainder of said pipe to William F. Thompson for the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars.” The sale was confirmed upon June 18, 1896. Thereafter the assignee resigned, and George P. Thurston was appointed in his stead. Thurston ever since has been and now Is the duly qualified and acting assignee. Upon September 25, [540]*5401896, affidavits were presented to the court in insolvency in support of the assignee’s application to have the sale of the water-pipe made to William F. Thompson vacated and set aside. One of these affidavits was that of Shepard, the former assignee. The basis of the application for the order, as appeared by the affidavits, was that the sale was made by the assignee and confirmed by the court under a mistake in fact as to the quantity and character of the pipe sold to Thompson, which mistake was induced by the fraudulent representations of Thompson to Shepard. It was shown that the assignee experienced great difficulty in ascertaining the kind and character and amount of the pipe: 1. By reason of the fact that it was covered over in the ground; and 3. Because the insolvent refused to answer any questions, or to give any information relative thereto; that the assignee under the fraudulent misrepresentations of Thompson was induced to believe and did believe that the quantity of p'ipe did not at the most exceed three thousand or four thousand feet, and that it was four-inch pipe of the value of four cents a foot, when in truth there were from ten thousand to fifteen thousand feet of the pipe, and some of it was six-inch pipe of greater value than» four cents a foot. By reason of the fraudulent representations so made to him he made the sale of the pipe to Thompson, and reported it to the court, and the court in turn, being deceived by the representations of the assignee, became the victim of a mistake and deception thus intentionally put upon it by the purchaser, Thompson, and unintentionally by the assignee.

An order to show cause why the sale should not be vacated and set aside was served upon Thompson, and evidence taken upon the hearing. From this it appeared that the purchaser, Thompson, had been at some expense in removing portions of the pipe from the earth. The court, after hearing, made its order, finding that the sale was consummated by the then acting assignee of the estate and confirmed by the court, under a mistake of fact as to the amount of pipe included in the sale, which mistake was induced by the fraudulent misrepresentations of the purchaser, Thompson: that the sum of five hundred and twenty-five dollars was sufficient to recompense Thompson for his expenditures incurred in and about the sale, and to place him in the same position as he was in before the sale was made. [541]*541It therefore ordered that the assignee pay to Thompson the sum of jive hundred and twenty-five dollars within ten days from the date of the order, and that upon the payment the sale he vacated and set aside, and that, if the sum of five hundred and twenty-five dollars was not within said period of ten days paid to said Thompson, then the order of sale and confirmation should stand as the order of court. This order was made upon November 6, 1896; thereafter, and on the sixteenth day of November. 1896, other affidavits were presented to the court as the basis for an order directed to said Thompson to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt in refusing to deliver the pipe to the assignee. Herein it was shown that Thompson and his attorney were present in court at the hearing of the application to vacate the sale, and were present at the time of the making of the order last set forth. Thereafter, and within the ten days contemplated by that order, the assignee tendered to the attorney of Thompson the sum of five hundred and twenty-five dollars in gold coin. No objection by the attorney was made to the form or sufficiency of the tender; but the attorney refused to accept the money, stating that his client, Thompson, would not take it. After this tender to the attorney, numerous efforts were made to tender the money to Thompson personally, but the assignee was not able so to do, owing to the fact, as he alleges,that Thompson willfully and intentionally concealed himself in order to avoid a personal tender to him. Upon this showing the court, upon November 16, 1896, made the following order;

"It is hereby ordered that on the eighteenth day of November, 1896, at the hour of 10 A. M., William F. Thompson appear before this court in Department Ten, to show cause, if any he have, why he should not be punished for contempt of this court in refusing to deliver to George P. Thurston, the assignee of the estate of Alfred Clarke, an insolvent debtor, the waterpipe, fittings, pumps, and other ironwork now held and claimed by said William F. Thompson by virtue of a sale made by said estate to said William F. Thompson on or about the eighteenth day of June, 1896, and set aside and vacated by this court the sixth day of November, 1896.”

This matter coming on for hearing, it was urged in behalf of Thompson that he could not be adjudged guilty of a contempt, for that the order of November Cth did not direct him [542]*542to restore the personal property to the possession of the assignee. This view was accepted by the judge as correct, and the order to show cause was dismissed.

Thereafter, upon November 19, 1896, the assignee presented and tiled his affidavit stating that he was entitled to the possession of the waterpipe; that William F. Thompson claimed it under a sale hy the assignee of the insolvent’s estate made on or about the eighteenth day of June, 1896, which said sale was vacated and set aside by the order above mentioned of November 6, 1896; that Thompson still has possession of the pipe, to the possession of which affiant is entitled. Upon the filing of this affidavit, without notice to Thompson, the court upon the same day made its order, absolute in form, requiring Thompson to deliver up to the assignee all property of the estate which he claimed under the sale made by the former assignee.

Following the issuance of this order a writ of review was sued for in this court and obtained.

The first attack is directed to the order of November 6th, by which the sale to Thompson is vacated conditionally upon the payment to him hy the assignee of the sum of five hundred and twenty-five dollars. It is contended that this order is void for want of jurisdiction; that the title to the property having vested in the petitioner by the sale, he could not be divested of that title in such a proceeding. The rule, however, is quite otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 863, 119 Cal. 538, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-superior-court-of-san-francisco-cal-1898.