Western Board of Adjusters, Inc. v. Covina Publishing, Inc.

9 Cal. App. 3d 659, 88 Cal. Rptr. 293, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1984
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 1970
DocketCiv. 34020
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 9 Cal. App. 3d 659 (Western Board of Adjusters, Inc. v. Covina Publishing, Inc.) 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
Western Board of Adjusters, Inc. v. Covina Publishing, Inc., 9 Cal. App. 3d 659, 88 Cal. Rptr. 293, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1984 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

*662 Opinion

REPPY, J.

This is an appeal from an order (minute order) made June 10, 1968, denying the motion of defendants Covina Publishing, Inc., a corporation, (hereinafter, Covina), and R.G.S. Corporation, a corporation (hereinafter, R.G.S.) to discharge a writ of attachment for $150,000, secured by plaintiff, Western Board of Adjusters, Inc., a corporation (hereinafter, plaintiff) on May 17, 1968, and levied thereafter.

. The Circumstances

On April 26, 1968, plaintiff filed a complaint against Marvin Miller as an individual (hereinafter, Miller), Marvin Miller Enterprises, Inc., (hereinafter, Miller Enterprises), Collectors Publications, Inc., (hereinafter, Collectors), Associated Professional Services, Inc., (hereinafter, Associated), Covina, and R.G.S., with appropriate allegations supportive of the contention that each defendant was the alter ego of the other. Although at one point, the Miller interests asserted that the corporations were independent of one another, the trial assumed the alter ego statuses for the purpose of considering the motions, and no appellate attack is made against this position.

In the first cause of action plaintiff alleged that Miller Enterprises was in default on a promissory note drawn August 12, 1965, in favor of plaintiff’s assignor for collection, Danner Press of Canton, Inc., (hereinafter, Danner), in the sum of $605,438.26 (hereinafter, the $605,438.26 note).

In the second, third and fourth causes of action, plaintiff alleged, on common counts, that each of the defendants was on or about January 17, 1967, indebted to Danner in the sum of $28,804.13, which debt became due and was unpaid. (Hereinafter, the $28,804.13 claim.)

In the fifth cause of action plaintiff alleged that Associated was in default on a promissory note drawn January 24, 1965, in favor of plaintiff’s assignor for collection 1 Tyler Printing Company, a corporation, (hereinafter, Tyler) in the sum of $31,289.44 (hereinafter, the $31,289.44 note).

Also, on April 26, 1968, plaintiff filed the declaration for attachment of its president, seeking a writ in the sum of $75,000, in which it was declared that defendants were indebted to plaintiff upon “Common Counts and Promissory Notes” (plural). Originally the form language that the payment of the obligations had not been secured was not altered, but before the hearing plaintiff filed an amended declaration saying that the $605,- *663 438.26 note was secured but the security had become valueless. Writs were issued to service officers of various counties.

A levy of attachment was made on 4.24-acre residence on Holt Avenue in the City of Covina standing in the name of R.G.S. and on personal property contained in the business facility of Covina on Proctor Avenue, City of Industry, consisting chiefly of an inventory of books (ultimately agreed to be 2,600,000), processing equipment and office furnishings by placing a keeper on the premises. 2 Garnishments were made on certain parties assertedly obligors of one or more of the defendants. 3

On May 10, 1968, Miller, Covina, and R.G.S. (at times, collectively, defendants) noticed a motion for an order that would discharge the writs or, alternatively, quash the levies and garnishments on property having a value in excess of the amount of the writ, $75,000. The grounds were that the indebtedness represented by the $28,804.13 claim (as well as the $605,438.26 note) was secured and that the security had not become valueless (Code Civ. Proc., § 537, subd. 1), and that property having a worth much in excess of the amount of the writ had been attached.

A hearing was conducted on May 16, 1968. A copy of one of the security agreements was admitted in evidence. It contained a clause that the security was given for the purpose of securing payment of the $605,-438.26 note “and all advances for indebtedness hereafter arising whether evidenced by promissory notes or not. . . .’’It was on this that defendants based their contention that the subsequent Danner claim of $28,804.13 was secured, making the remedy of attachment unavailable.

The $605,438.26 note contained a clause saying that right was granted to Danner to assign it “and any security pledged for the payment thereof,” (indicating that the giving of security was contemplated) and another clause reading that Miller Enterprises “agrees that an attachment may be issued in any action brought for collection of this Note . . . .” despite the fact that, according to expectations, the note was going to be secured. The contemporaneously executed security agreement contained a clause providing that it (the security arrangement) should “in no way diminish . . . any rights [perhaps including attachment] which . . . [might] exist *664 on the part of Danner to recover said . . . [$605,438.26] from . . . [Miller Enterprises].” On the basis of these features in combination it was argued by plaintiff that there had been a waiver of the rule disallowing attachment on secured claims and that it had the right to attach for the $605,438.26 note, whether its security had become valueless or not.

Declarations bearing on the issue of the worth of the property attached were submitted and argued. The court was informed that some of the books were involved in obscenity charges in criminal court.

The court denied the motion to discharge the writ in toto. It determined that an excessive worth of property had been attached and ordered 2,200,000 books released from the attachment. It sustained the attachments on the Holt Avenue real property and on 400,000 books and the processing equipment and office furnishings in the Proctor Avenue business facility. It determined that the worth of the properties which it allowed to remain under attachment for the two lesser obligations was not excessive for the $75,000 writ. 4

An overall analysis of the trial court’s holding satisfies us that it took the position (for what reason being unclear) that it would consider that the $75,000 writ would apply only to those obligations wherein the problem of security and its original and later value were not concerned. Therefore, it must have given attention to the security for future advances and decided that the clause paraphrased above would not be applied to Danner’s subsequently arising claim against Miller Enterprises of $28,-804.13, probably on the basis that such a provision was intended to benefit the creditor and could be rejected by it, or could not be foisted upon it in the circumstance wherein the prior debt had not been substantially liquidated or the value of the security substantially increased, or both (none of which factors evolved in the instant case); and it must have given attention to the problem of waiver of the rule precluding attachment in suits on secured obligations and decided that the indicated language did not amount to such or that it would not sanction a waiver on grounds of public policy, and, therefore, determined that the $75,000 writ would not be taken as applicable to the $605,438.26 note.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Cal. App. 3d 659, 88 Cal. Rptr. 293, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-board-of-adjusters-inc-v-covina-publishing-inc-calctapp-1970.