Yuen v. McMann

34 P. 80, 99 Cal. 497, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 700
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1893
DocketNo. 14480
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 34 P. 80 (Yuen v. McMann) 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
Yuen v. McMann, 34 P. 80, 99 Cal. 497, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 700 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

De Haven, J.

This is an action against McMann, as sheriff, and his co-defendants as sureties, upon his official bond, to recover possession of certain personal property taken by him as such sheriff under a writ of possession issued upon a judgment obtained by one Lee Chuck v. Quan Wo Chong Co., in an action of unlawful detainer, and by which writ the said defendant was commanded to place the plaintiff in that action in possession of the premises described therein, and to make out of the personal property of plaintiff’s assignors the amount of damages recovered by the judgment upon which the writ was issued. The plaintiff brought this action as the assignee of Q,uan Wo Chong Company, and recovered judgment for the return of the property, or its value, five thousand dollars, and for the further sum of one thousand dollars damages for its detention, and for interest and costs of suit. The defendants appeal.

1. The motion to dismiss the action, as to the sureties, was properly denied. They were not improperly joined with their [499]*499co-defendant, McMann, as defendants in the action as claimed by them, and, if they were, the objection was waived by the failure to demur to the complaint upon this ground. The complaint was also sufficient in its statement of facts to show a cause of action against the said defendants as sureties upon the official bond of their co-defendant McMann, The complaint alleges that defendant McMann as principal and the other defendants as sureties made and delivered the official bond of the defendant McMann, as sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco, by which the defendants became jointly and severally-bound for the faithful performance by the said McMann of his official duties as such sheriff, and then proceeds to state the alleged wrongful act of McMann in his official capacity for which damages are sought in this action. This is sufficient to show a liability upon the part of the defendants as sureties upon such official bond, for, by the terms of such bond, they became liable to respond in damages in a sum not exceeding the amount specified therein for any wrongful act or default of their principal in his official capacity. (Pol. Code, secs. 960, 961; Van Pelt v. Littler, 14 Cal. 194.) The case of Ghiradelli v. Bourland, 32 Cal. 585, cited by defendants, is not opposed to our conclusion upon this point. The complaint in that case did not directly aver that the defendants sued therein as sureties signed or joined in the execution of any official bond, nor did it show the terms of such bond, and it was not distinctly alleged that the defendant, sued therein as sheriff, ever executed any official bond as sheriff. The distinction between that case and the present is, we think, quite obvious.

2. The letter of defendant McMann, dated December 31, 1888, was properly excluded, as it did not contain an offer to restore to plaintiffs all the personal property sued for in the action, and the same may be said of the subsequent letter of January 4, 1889, also excluded. In addition to this, it seems that the plaintiff did, upon January 5, 1889, accept from defendant McMann the property offered to be returned in this last letter and at the time named therein, so that, in any view, its exclusion could not possibly have injured the defendants. ;

3. The evidence on the part of plaintiff tended to show, among other matters, that on December 22, 1888, his assignors [500]*500appealed from the judgment against them in the action for unlawful detainer before referred to, and in addition to the usual bond on appeal filed an undertaking in an amount fixed by the court in which the judgment was rendered, sufficient to stay the execution thereof in all its parts, and the defendant McMann was on that day served with notice of such appeal, and of the filing of the undertaking to stay the execution of the judgment. The defendant McMann had already made a levy upon certain personal property of the defendants in that action, and was engaged in placing the plaintiff therein in possession of the premises recovered at the time he received this notice. The evidence further tended to show that at the time of giving to defendant McMann notice of the filing of the bond on appeal, and of the undertaking to stay the execution of the judgment appealed from, the assignors of plaintiff demanded that he should release from levy the personal property taken upon the execution, and he refused to do so, giving as a reason that they were not entitled to such release until the sureties upon the undertaking staying execution of the judgment had justified. At this time, however, no exception had been taken to such sureties by the plaintiff in that action. In this state of the evidence the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury as follows:—

1 “It was not the duty of the defendant McMann to deliver the personal property so levied upon, even in the event that his fees had been paid him, upon the mere filing of the stay bond on appeal to the supreme court. It was his duty to hold the property until the sufficiency of the sureties on that appeal bond had been approved by the court, or all questions as to their sufficiency had been waived by stipulation, or in some other proper manner, between the parties to the suit.” The court refused to give this instruction, but, on the contrary, instructed the jury as follows: “I instruct you that the sufficiency or insufficiency of the sureties on the bond on appeal from the judgment rendered .... in no way affected the question of the perfection the appeal so far as these defendants are concerned, and that upon the filing and service of the notice of appeal from said judgment, and the filing of the bond on appeal and stay bond appeal from said judgment, the appeal thereupon became [501]*501perfected, notwithstanding any question as to the sufficiency or insufficiency of the sureties, and it was the duty of the defendant, William McMann, to release all property from levy under the writ of possession issued upon said judgment, immediately upon notice to him of the perfection of said appeal.” ,

The defendants now claim that the court erred in refusing to give the instruction requested by them, and in giving the foregoing instruction, and it is argued in support of this proposition that when a levy has been made under an execution, the only effect of filing an undertaking to stay the execution of the judgment is to stay the sale of the property, but that the officer executing the writ may retain possession of such property until the sureties on the undertaking have justified, or their justification has been waived, or the time within which to except to their sufficiency has expired. The language of section 946 of the Code of Civil Procedure cannot be construed so as to sustain this position of defendants. By that section the declared effect of perfecting an appeal and giving an undertaking to stay the execution of the judgment appealed from, is not only “to stay all further proceedings in the court below upon the judgment or order appealed from,” but to also “release from levy property levied upon under execution issued upon such judgment.” In view of this explicit language of the statute, it must be held that the court below correctly instructed the jury upon this point. It was no concern of the defendant whether or not the sureties upon such undertaking, or others in their place, would be able to justify if exception should be taken to their sufficiency, and we understand that this was so substantially held by this court in the case of Lee Chuck v. Quan Wo Chong Co., 81 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 P. 80, 99 Cal. 497, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuen-v-mcmann-cal-1893.