Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Duarte

201 P. 790, 54 Cal. App. 260, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 570
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2288.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 201 P. 790 (Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Duarte) 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
Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Duarte, 201 P. 790, 54 Cal. App. 260, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 570 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action against the defendants Vincent, as principal, and Joe Rose Duarte and Gonzales, as sureties, on a bond executed and given by said defendants as indemnity to the sheriff of Merced County on a sale of certain personal property seized by said officer under a writ of attachment.

The plaintiff, a corporation, is and was, at all the times mentioned in the complaint, engaged in a general guaranty and surety business, and at all said times one S. C. Cornell was sheriff of said county of Merced; that the plaintiff was at all said times and down to the date of the death of said Cornell, on the twenty-seventh day of May, 1914, the surety on the official bond of said Cornell as sheriff of said county.

It appears that the writ of attachment referred to was issued out of a justice’s court in said county, in an action *261 wherein the defendant Vincent was plaintiff and one Frank Duarte defendant, and that, on the twenty-sixth day of February, 1912, at Atwater, in said county, said Cornell, acting in his official capacity of sheriff, levied upon and attached a certain carload of sweet potatoes as the property of said Frank Duarte, and noticed the sale thereof for the twenty-eighth day of February, 1912, at 2 o’clock P. M. It further appears that, prior to the sale, the ownership of the carload of potatoes so levied upon was claimed by a third party, and that, to protect himself as said sheriff, from any claim or claims of. damages made by any third person claiming that said potatoes were not the property of said Frank Duarte at the time of the seizure thereof under said writ of attachment or thereafter, said Cornell, as sheriff, demanded of and received from said Fred Vincent, the attaching creditor, an indemnity bond whereby he (said sheriff) would be held free or immune from any liability for damages resulting to him in the event said potatoes at the time of said attachment and sale were not the property of said Frank Duarte, defendant in said justice’s court action. The condition of said bond which, as stated, was executed by the defendants Vincent, Joe Rose Duarte, and Gonzales was in the sum of $500, “to be paid to the said Sam Cornell, against .any loss arising from the attachment of one carload of sweet potatoes,, now supposed to be the property of Frank Duarte.” It appears that the ownership of the potatoes in question at the .time of their seizure and sale under the writ of attachment was claimed by a corporation designated and known as Brinkley-Douglas Fruit Company; that said corporation, after the sale of said potatoes by the sheriff, brought an action in the superior court of the county of Merced against the sheriff and the plaintiff in this action, the latter as surety on the official bond of said sheriff, claiming damages for the conversion and sale of said potatoes; that said S; C. Cornell died on the twenty-seventh day of May, 1914, and that on the fifteenth day of June, 1914, and in the superior court of Merced County, A. L. Silman was duly appointed administrator of the estate of said Cornell, deceased, and on the seventeenth day of June, 1914, duly qualified as such administrator and continuously after said last-named date until the twenty-ninth day of October, 1917, was the duly *262 qualified and acting administrator of said estate; that on the fifteenth day of May, 1915, said Silman, as such administrator, was duly substituted as a party defendant in said action instituted by said Brinkley-Douglas Fruit Company, as plaintiff, in the place and stead of S. C. Cornell, as sheriff of Merced County, and that on the first day of August, 1916, a joint and several judgment in the sum of $472, with costs taxed in the sum of $34.20, was duly rendered and entered against said A. L. Silman, as administrator, etc., and said Title Guaranty & Surety Co., as said surety on the official bond of said sheriff; that a motion for a new trial in said action was denied and thereafter said defendants appealed from said judgment and said order denying said motion for a new trial to the district court of appeal for the third district and that said court of appeal affirmed the judgment and the order in said action; that the amount of said judgment with all costs of suit incurred during the trial of said action and the appeal thereafter and the interest thereon amounted to the total sum of $625.30, and that the same was paid by the plaintiff in this action. The complaint alleges “that at all times after the execution of said instrument of indemnity, hereinbefore set forth, and up to the said death of said S. C. Cornell, he was the owner and holder of the same, and that at all times after said death, until the execution of the assignment of said instrument of indemnity hereinafter alleged and set forth, the said estate of said S. C. Cornell, and the heirs of the same, each represented by said A. L. Silman, as administrator of said estate, were the owners and holders of said instrument of indemnity and all rights secured thereunder; that on or about the twenty-seventh day of August, 1917, said A. L. Silman, acting as the administrator of said estate, ánd in consideration that the said plaintiff herein would duly pay and discharge said judgment so rendered against said plaintiff and said A. L. Silman, as administrator of said estate, did sell, assign, and set over unto the said plaintiff herein, all the right, title, and interest of the said estate of said S. C. Cornell, deceased, in and to said instrument of indemnity hereinbefore set forth; and said plaintiff herein did so pay and discharge said judgment and that said assignment to plaintiff was duly confirmed by this court in *263 the matter of said estate of S. C. Cornell, deceased, on the twenty-ninth day of October, 1917, and that plaintiff, at all times since said assignment and confirmation has been, and now. is, the legal owner and holder of said instrument of indemnity and all the right, title and interest of said estate, and said heirs in and to said instrument of indemnity, and any and all rights accruing thereunder and any and all right of recovery thereon.”

Upon findings substantially in accord with the averments of the second amended complaint, of which the above statement represents an epitomized resumí, the plaintiff was awarded judgment, from which the defendants Joe Rose Duarte and J. J. Gonzales appeal, under the alternative method.

There was no oral evidence received at the trial, the evidential features of the record consisting wholly of certain facts stipulated by the parties and certain documents. The fact of the execution of the indemnity bond, the fact of the bringing of the action by the Brinkley-Douglas Fruit Company against plaintiff here and said Cornell, the fact of a judgment having been given in favor of said fruit company in said action against the plaintiff here and Silman, as administrator and substituted defendant, and the satisfaction of said judgment by the plaintiff here, were admitted at the trial. The documentary evidence, which was admitted over objection by appellants, consisted of the petition in the estate of said Cornell, deceased, for an order confirming the sale and transfer of said indemnity bond to plaintiff and the order confirming said sale and transfer.

The discussion in the briefs revolves around attacks upon the findings, upon the ground that there is no evidence in the record which supports them and the rulings allowing in evidence the documents above mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
201 P. 790, 54 Cal. App. 260, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-guaranty-surety-co-v-duarte-calctapp-1921.