Wilde v. Superior Court

127 P.2d 560, 53 Cal. App. 2d 168, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1942
DocketCiv. 2967
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 127 P.2d 560 (Wilde v. Superior Court) 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
Wilde v. Superior Court, 127 P.2d 560, 53 Cal. App. 2d 168, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 458 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is a proceeding instituted in this court to review an order holding petitioner guilty of contempt of court, and punishing him by the imposition of a fine of $300 to be collected by one day’s imprisonment for each two dollars of such fine in case it be not paid.

On January 20, 1941, petitioner, who had been an attorney at law, was permanently disbarred from practice in this state.

The material facts recited in the petition filed here should be briefly summarized. It recites that on December 2, 1936, judgment was recovered in the sum of $778.57 by plaintiffs in the Superior Court of San Diego County in an action entitled Union Trust Company of San Diego and Mortimer Rieser, as executors of the last will and testament of William B. Gross, deceased, substituted plaintiffs v. Meryl P. Bennett and Charles F. Naylor, defendants; that $313.50 was paid on the judgment on October 7, 1941; that the balance was unsatisfied; that by a writing dated March 30, 1936, and filed September 30, 1941, plaintiffs’ cause of action was assigned to Ethel Eaton who was the secretary of petitioner and who took the assignment in her name for the convenience of petitioner; that she was never the actual or beneficial owner of the cause of action and judgment; that on September 6, 1941. Ethel Reed (formerly Ethel Eaton) in writing assigned the cause of action and judgment to plaintiff ; that this assignment was filed September 30, 1941; that both assignments authorized the respective assignees to take any and all steps necessary or desirable to collect and enforce payment of the judgment in the names of the plaintiffs or otherwise; that on October 10, 1941, petitioner, in propria persona, as assignee of the judgment creditor, filed a veri *171 fied petition and application for an order charging with the lien of the judgment a partnership interest of Meryl P. Bennett in a partnership in which it was alleged he was a member; that an order to show cause was issued and came on for hearing on November 3, 1941; that petitioner, as assignee of the judgment, appearing in propria persona, presented the petition to the judge presiding who found that the “judgment was assigned (to petitioner) solely for collection” and found him guilty of contempt for violating the provisions of section 6130 and of subdivisions a and b of section 6127 of the Business and Professions Code; that during the presentation of the petition to the court, petitioner stated to the judge presiding that he was the beneficial owner of the cause of action and judgment assigned to Ethel Reed and became the absolute, sole and record owner thereof under the assignment of September 6, 1941, and was presenting the petition as petitioner in propria persona solely in his own interest as such owner for himself and not for or on behalf of anyone else; that he offered to produce Ethel Reed “as a witness who would testify that said W. C. Wilde at all times since said March 30, 1936, has been and now is the absolute, beneficial and sole owner of said cause of action and judgment and that she had never had any personal or beneficial interest therein but that she so took and held the same in her name for the use and benefit of said W. C. Wilde and as his property.”

The petition then summarized the various proceedings which resulted in the judgment in question and in the two assignments. On September 2, 1932, William B. Gross, through petitioner, as his attorney, filed an action in the Justices’ Court of San Diego Township to recover a money judgment against Bennett and Naylor; that Gross died May 25, 1933, and his executors were substituted as plaintiffs; that on March 3, 1936, judgment was rendered in the* justices ’ court in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $391,45. This is the cause of action and judgment which was assigned to Ethel Eaton.

It is also alleged that claims were presented to the executors of the Gross estate by petitioner and two others totaling $386.40; that suit was filed in the justices’ court on these claims in the name of Ethel Eaton; that the executors filed a cross-complaint in this action seeking to recover judgment against Wilde; that another action was pending against *172 Wilde on a claim in favor of Gross; that these cross demands were compromised which compromise was approved by order of the superior court in which the Gross estate was being probated which order authorized the executors to assign the claim and judgment against Bennett and Naylor; that the other actions were dismissed; that Wilde paid the other claimants the full amount of their claims against the estate of Gross; that in accordance with the order of the probate court the claim and judgment against Bennett and Naylor was assigned to Ethel Eaton “solely for the use and benefit and beneficial interest of said W. C. Wilde and as his property.”

Respondents maintain that the court cannot base its decision on any of the allegations of the petition. (Donovan v. Board of Police Commissioners, 32 Cal. App. 392 [163 Pac. 69] ; Goodrich v. Superior Court, 92 Cal. App. 695 [268 Pac. 669].) Whatever may be the correct rule in' cases of this kind we do not need to refer to the allegations of the petition again except to shorten the subsequent summary of the return filed and of testimony taken. However, it was stipulated at the hearing that the petition be considered a traverse to the return. It is unnecessary to determine the propriety of this proceeding.

The return filed by respondents consists of a clerk’s transcript of the superior court action, there having been an appeal taken from a justices’ court judgment. The documents show.the pleadings in the action of Gross v. Bennett and Naylor in the justices’ court, the substitution of the executors as plaintiffs, the judgment for plaintiffs dated March 3, 1936, and the assignment to Ethel Eaton, as set forth in the petition. This assignment recites that it was made pursuant to an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County in the Matter of the Estate of William B. Gross, deceased. A copy of this order is not in the record. The record contains a notice of appeal from the judgment of the justices’ court, an undertaking on appeal, the judgment of the superior court and other files not necessary to mention. It concludes with the order adjudging Wilde guilty of contempt. In the judgment in the superior court action against Bennett and Naylor, Wilde was allowed $100 attorney’s fees.

There is no indication in the record that any testimony was taken at the hearing which resulted in the order holding *173 Wilde in contempt so that order must be supported, if at all, by the record contained in the return.

Over the strenuous objections of respondents, Wilde was called as a witness in his own behalf and was permitted to testify at the hearing before this court. His evidence substantiated the material allegations of his petition already summarized, as well as the part of the return relating to the appeal. He also testified that after he had been held guilty of contempt the balance of the judgment against Bennett and Naylor was paid to him in full; that the money was his; that he divided it with no one and that no other person had any claim upon it or any part of it.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P.2d 560, 53 Cal. App. 2d 168, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilde-v-superior-court-calctapp-1942.