Van Bogaert v. Avery

271 Cal. App. 2d 492, 76 Cal. Rptr. 608, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2403
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1969
DocketCiv. 32519
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 271 Cal. App. 2d 492 (Van Bogaert v. Avery) 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
Van Bogaert v. Avery, 271 Cal. App. 2d 492, 76 Cal. Rptr. 608, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2403 (Cal. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

FLEMING, J.

In the continuing warfare between creditor and debtor this latest battle might be entitled the Case of the Botched-Up Execution Sale.

In 1959 the creditors, the Averys, obtained judgment against the debtors, Everett and Lucille Van Bogaert, for $7,800. Unable to collect their judgment, the Averys sought to reach the excess value of the Van Bogaerts’ homestead on Mary Ellen Avenue by levy of execution on the homestead and petition for court order of sale. (Civ. Code. §§ 1245-1256.) After appraisers had fixed the value of the homestead at $25,000, the superior court in July 1960 ordered the property sold under the execution at a minimum bid of $15,000. But because of an absence of qualified bidders the sheriff could not sell the property, and in October 1960 the execution sale went off calendar.

In December 1963 the Averys assigned their judgment to Robert Cardella, a collection agent who did business under the military nomenclature of Mark IV Agency. In a blitzkrieg of activity Mark IV Agency obtained a writ of execution in its own name, levied on the Mary Ellen Avenue homestead, and brought about an execution sale of the property in March 1964 to one William Lawson for $25. The property was not redeemed within one year, and in March 1965 the marshal deeded the property to Lawson. Six months later Lawson, through an intermediary, deeded the property to plaintiff Jeffrey Van Bogaert, son of Everett and Lucille Van Bogaert, the judgment debtors. In December 1965 Jeffrey recorded a grant deed to the property from Ms parents, and in the following month he filed the present suit against the Averys and others to quiet title to the property, basing Ms claim to title on the marshal’s deed.

Meanwhile the Averys had retrieved their judgment, still undiminished by collection, from Mark IV Agency. During *494 the entire period Lucille Van Bogaert, mother of Jeffrey, continued to reside at'the homestead on Mary Ellen Avenue. In 1961 Everett Van Bogaert departed California and the produce business and when last heard from was enjoying Ms leisure in Agua Purita, Mexico. Jeffrey entered the armed forces, but he has promised to pay his mother $12,500 for the Mary Ellen property at the rate of $25 a month, starting in 1976.

In January 1967 the trial court quieted title to the property in plaintiff Jeffrey, and all parties appear content with the decree except the Averys, the still unpaid judgment creditors, who have appealed.

The source of the Averys’ predicament lies in the fact that the collection performance of Mark IV Agency in no way lived up to the military precision implicitly promised in its name. The original blunder of Mark IV Agency appears to have been its failure to instruct the marshal to accept no bid for the property under $15,000, a blunder compounded by ■inactivity in response to a sale for $25, and further compounded by continuing inactivity during the year following the sale. The Van Bogaerts, or perhaps their new lawyer, John Guerin (whose alter ego corporation, after unsuccessfully trying to buy the Avery judgment for $500, acquired the property from Lawson for $1,000 and later conveyed to Jeffrey for a $6,000 trust deed), observing the creditor forces operating with inadequate communications and exposed flanks, quietly infiltrated the rear, and, after allowing suffi- • cient time to build up their strength, launched a counterattack in force against the creditor battalions. The Averys, having been caught in ambush, now ask the court to extricate them from their plight and rule that the battle did not rise to the dignity of real warfare but merely amounted to a tactical exercise in the course of military maneuvers. They argue that .the marshal’s sale was void and in contemplation of law never took place; that, consequently, their lien on the homestead resulting from the original levy of execution and court order of sale remains a valid lien on the property above the amount of the homestead exemption.

In quieting title in favor of Jeffrey the trial court relied on three propositions. First, the execution lien of the Averys under the homestead sections of the Civil Code expired in one year. Second, the execution sale was merely voidable and not void, or, if void, not void on its face. Third, the Averys were estopped from attacking the validity of an execution sale *495 brought about by their agent and predecessor in interest, Mark IV Agency, since an execution creditor who brings about an execution sale is estopped from using defects in the sale to challenge its validity. (2 ALR 2d 55-58; 33 C.J.S. 485.)

The Averys’ claim is founded on the continuing validity of their execution lien, and for purposes of this case we will assume that their execution lien remained in effect to the time of the execution sale. (Lean v. Givens, 146 Cal. 739 [81 P. 128, 106 Am.St.Rep. 79].) Necessarily, the court order authorizing a sale under the execution likewise remained in .effect. Under this assumption the real questions become whether the execution sale extinguished the Averys’ lien, and, if it did, whether the sale can be vacated in a collateral proceeding in order to reinstate the lien.

If the execution sale were wholly void, as the Averys claim, then Lawson acquired no title to the property, and the entry of a decree quieting title in Jeffrey was erroneous. But the cases which state that execution sales of homestead property are wholly void and convey no title to the purchaser involve execution sales conducted under general law and not sales ordered by the court under the homestead law. (Kendall v. Clark, 10 Cal. 17 [70 Am.Dec. 691]; Ackley v. Chamberlain 16 Cal. 181 [76 Am.Dec. 516]; Deffeliz v. Pico, 46 Cal. 289.) The fact that a court will declare void an execution sale of ,a homestead conducted under general law does not require the court to make the same declaration about án execution sale of a homestead conducted under the homestead law, even one which has been conducted irregularly.

To evaluate the effect of noncompliance with the minimum bid provision of a homestead execution we first consider the extent in other respects to which the homestead execution procedure was followed. In the case at bench each of the required procedural steps in the statutory procedure for execution against a homestead had been taken. The judgment, the writ of execution, the levy of execution, the petition, for appointment of appraisers, and for execution against the homestead, the appointment of appraisers, the service of notice on the homestead claimant, the report of appraisers, and the court order directing sale under the execution, had all been accomplished. The irregularity occurred at the sale itself and consisted of the failure of the marshal to secure the minimum bid ordered by the court. Did the failure to obtain the proper bid in an otherwise fully authorized execution sale amount to *496 such a defect as to render the proceeding wholly void for all purposes? We think not. At that point the status of the homestead had changed from property exempted from execution by Civil Code section 1240 and Code of Civil Procedure section 674, to property subjected by court order to execution sale under Civil Code section 1254, albeit at a specified minimum bid.

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Bluebook (online)
271 Cal. App. 2d 492, 76 Cal. Rptr. 608, 1969 Cal. App. LEXIS 2403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-bogaert-v-avery-calctapp-1969.