Williams v. Riehl

59 P. 762, 127 Cal. 365, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 655
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1899
DocketSac. No. 711.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 59 P. 762 (Williams v. Riehl) 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
Williams v. Riehl, 59 P. 762, 127 Cal. 365, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 655 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

The defendant Riehl was the guardian of the estate of one Carver, a minor, and as such guardian executed a bond, as required by the order of the court in which the proceedings were pending, in the penal sum of $25,000, with the following named sureties for amounts named, respectively, to wit: F. S. Smith, for $25,000; George Peters, $5,000; William Johnston, $5,000; Stanton Myers, $5,000; Jacob Gehert, $5,000; D. T. Lufkin, $5,000, and Patrick Kelly, $5,000. Carver died, and plaintiff was appointed and qualified as administrator of his estate. The final account of defendant Riehl as such guardian was regularly settled, and it was ascertained by the court that he had in his hands belonging to his ward the sum of $10,000, with interest, which amount he wras directed to pay. The amount not having been paid, the plaintiff brought this action against the defendant Riehl and the other defendants who are sureties on his bond, and on the eleventh day of March, 1898, the plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant Riehl, the guardian, in the sum of $10,267, and against defendant Smith in the same amount, and against the other defendants in the sum of $5,000 each. The plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of said Carver, and by permission of the court in which the estate was pending, agreed to accept $9,500 in full payment of his judgment, and the amount was paid to plaintiff on the twenty-seventh day of April, 1898, by defendants Johnston, Smith, and Lufkin, and at their request the plaintiff executed and delivered to them a written assignment of the judgment authorizing them to enforce the same in the name of the plaintiff as such administrator. This assignment was filed with the clerk of the court and with the papers in this action. After the said assignment was filed the defendants, who paid the judgment and to whom the said assignment was made, applied to the clerk and the clerk issued a writ of execution directed to the sheriff of Sacramento county commanding him to levy upon! *368 the property of the defendant Kelly and cause to be made out of the same the sum of $5,000, besides, interest and costs. The sheriff to whom the writ was directed proceeded to levy upon the property of defendant Kelly and noticed the same for sale. Kelly, after giving notice, moved the court below to recall and quash the writ of execution, and for an order directing satisfaction of the judgment to be entered. The court denied the motion and refused to make the order. The court further ordered that the writ of execution be amended so as to run against Kelly for $1,875 only. The defendant Kelly has appealed from the order so made and from the order refusing to recall the execution.

3. It is claimed by appellant that the defendants Smith, Johnston, and Lufkin, who will hereafter be called the respondents, having failed to comply with the provisions of section 709 of the Code of Civil Procedure, cannot proceed under the judgment by obtaining an execution thereon to enforce contribution from him. The section is as follows: “When property, liable to an execution against several persons, is sold thereon, and more than a due proportion of the judgment is satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale of the property of one of them, or one of them pays, without a sale, more than his proportion, he may compel contribution from the others; and when a judgment is against several, and is upon an obligation of one of them, as security for another, and the surety pays the amount, or any part thereof, either by sale of his property or before sale, he may compel repayment from the principal; in such case, the person so paying or contributing is entitled to the benefit of the judgment, to enforce contribution or repayment, if, within ten days after his payment, he file with the clerk of the court where the judgment was rendered notice of his payment and claim to contribution or repayment. Upon a filing of such notice the clerk must make an entry thereof in the margin of the docket.”

Respondents do not claim to have complied with said section as tó filing with the clerk of the court the notice as therein provided, or as to having an entry made in the margin of the docket, but they claim that, independent of said section, by virtue of the written assignment to them of the judgment, they have the right to an execution to enforce contribution from the *369 appellant. We think the contention of respondents as to this point correct. The section is somewhat obscure, and the first part of it, down to the word “principal,” only lays down fundamental rules as to the rights of sureties and joint judgment debtors to compel contribution. The latter part of the section, “in such case the person so paying or contributing is entitled to the benefit of the judgment to enforce contribution or repayment, if within ten days,” etc., is the portion that contemplates giving to sureties or joint judgment debtors the right to an execution in the original proceedings. The section was, no doubt, enacted for the benefit of sureties and joint judgment debtors in order to enable them, without bringing an action, to use the judgment and the writs of the court for the purpose of compelling, in the case of sureties, the repayment from their principal, or contribution from cosureties, and, in case of joint judgment debtors, contribution from their codebtors.

The legislature evidently did not have in mind a case where the parties paying the judgment procured a written assignment of it. The plaintilf, being the owner of the judgment, had the right to assign it to anyone upon payment of the amount authorized by the order of the court in which the estate was pending. The fact that the parties paying it were some of the judgment debtors would not prevent them from taking an assignment of it. The section is substantially the same and in almost the exact words of section 480 of the Civil Code of Kansas. The supreme court of that state, in Harris v. Frank, 29 Kan. 203, has placed a similar construction upon section 480 of its code. In the opinion it is said: “Besides, said section 480 of the Civil Code whs not enacted for the purpose of giving assignees of judgments a remedy as assignees. They have a remedy independent of such section, and could enforce their judgment if such section had never been enacted. Said section was really enacted for the benefit of sureties, and for the benefit of joint judgment debtors, without reference to whether any assignment had been made or not.”

The cases of Davis v. Heimbach, 75 Cal. 261, and Clark v. Austin, 96 Cal. 283, are not in conflict with what has here been said. In neither case was there any assignment of the judgment to the parties seeking to enforce contribution.

*370 2. The payment of the judgment hy respondents to plaintiff ■did not amount to a satisfaction of the same as against their cosureties or the principal. The rule is, that the mere payment of a judgment by one joint debtor does not operate as an accord and satisfaction of the judgment as to other joint judgment debtors, unless it plainly appears that the payment was intended to have such effect. (Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, sec. 275; Brown v. White, 29 N. J. L. 514; 80 Am. Dec. 226; Coffee v. Tevis, 17 Cal. 239; Freeman on Executions, sec. 444.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 762, 127 Cal. 365, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-riehl-cal-1899.