Zappettini v. Buckles

138 P. 696, 167 Cal. 27, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 423
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6704.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 138 P. 696 (Zappettini v. Buckles) 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
Zappettini v. Buckles, 138 P. 696, 167 Cal. 27, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 423 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an application for a writ of supersedeas to stay execution pending an appeal from what is claimed to be a final judgment in am action brought by petitioner, John Zappettini, as plaintiff, against one Joseph Arata, as defendant, for a dissolution of a partnership existing between the parties, an accounting, and a distribution of the assets remaining after payment of debts between the parties as their respective interests may appear. In this action judgment was given decreeing that the partnership was dissolved, declaring what property belonged to the partnership, describing it, the same consisting of both real and personal property, adjudging that all of said property be sold “together as a whole and in one parcel at public sale for cash” by a receiver theretofore appointed by the court, and that said receiver after deducting the costs and expenses of sale, pay the remainder of the proceeds into court “to abide the further order of the court”; adjudging that the proceeds of the sale be paid and applied as follows: 1. To the payment of the fees and expenses of the receiver, “the same to be fixed and determined by this court,” 2. To the payment of the fees and expenses of a referee theretofore appointed, the same “to be fixed and determined by the court,” and 3. “To the payment of the debts of said copartnership upon the determination thereof by this court, and that the determination thereof be and is hereby reserved by this court until after the return upon the sale of said property”; adjudging that any money remaining after said payments be divided and paid over to the parties in the following proportions: viz.: to plaintiff John Zappettini, 10.3484 per cent thereof, and to defendant Joseph Arata 89.6516 per cent thereof—such payments to be made “as ordered by the court, or upon the consent of the parties to this action”; and adjudging further *29 that each party to the action shall pay his own costs. Within the time allowed by law after the giving of said judgment, the'plaintiff appealed to this court from said judgment and the whole thereof, by serving and filing his notice of appeal, and filing the three hundred dollar bond for “damages and costs” provided for by section 941 of the Code of Civil Procedure. No other bond was given. Notwithstanding such appeal, the defendant and the receiver are proceeding with the execution of such judgment in so far as it provides for the sale of such property. Hence this application.

This proceeding is improperly entitled. It is a proceeding in the original action, in aid of our appellate jurisdiction, and should be entitled “John Zappettini, Plaintiff, v. Joseph B. Arata, Defendant.” Of course this is a matter that we may correct. The clerk of this court will make the correction on the pleadings and in his register of actions.

There is no appeal allowed by law from the judgment referred to unless it can fairly be held to be a “final judgment” within the meaning of those words'in subdivision 1 of section 939 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and subdivision 1 of section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If it is only what is called an interlocutory judgment and decree it is not one of the interlocutory decrees specified in said sections as appealable. If it is such a final judgment, we are satisfied that the execution thereof is in all respects stayed by the appeal by force of certain statutory provisions.

The general rule in regard to the effect of an appeal in the matter of staying proceedings without the giving of a stay-bond is declared in section 949 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides that, except in certain specified cases, none of which need be noticed here except one to which we shall hereafter refer, in cases not provided for in sections 942, 943, 944, and 945, “the perfecting of an appeal by giving the undertaking or making the deposit mentioned in section nine hundred and forty-one, stays proceedings in the court below upon the judgment and order appealed from.” The only exception specified in the section which is claimed to be applicable is the following, viz.: “except where it directs the sale of perishable property; in which case the court below may order the .property to be sold and the proceeds thereof to be deposited, to abide the judgment of the appel *30 late court.” We deem this- provision inapplicable here for the reason that none of the property was ordered sold as or upon the ground that it is perishable property. In this case there has been no adjudication upon any such question in the superior court. The statutory provision in question has reference to the case where the order appealed from directing a sale of certain property has been made because and upon the ground that the property ordered sold is perishable, and contemplates an adjudication or a finding to that effect on the part of the court making such order.

The case before us is not within any of the rules declared in sections 942, 943, 944, and 945 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as those sections have been construed by this court. The only one of these sections that could be claimed to be applicable is section 945, which provides that if the judgment or order appealed from direct the sale or delivery of possession of real property, the execution of the same cannot be stayed, unless a written undertaking be given by appellant to secure the other party against damages by waste and for the value of the use and occupation of the property, and when the judgment is for a sale of mortgaged premises, also for the payment of any deficiency arising on .the sale. The judgment here is one for the sale of real as well as personal property. But at the time of the judgment all of the property was and ever since has been in the actual possession of the superior court, by its receiver; and appellant has not been in possession of any part thereof. It was said in Pennie v. Superior Court, 89 Cal. 33, [26 Pac. 617] that those sections (942 to 945 inclusive) “apply to cases where the appellant has money or other property in his possession which has been adjudged by the lower court to belong to the respondent, or where the appellant has been directed to do some act for the benefit of the respondent, and where it would be unjust to allow the appellant to retain- the possession of the property, and perhaps dissipate it, or put it out of his power to perform the act required, without securing respondent by a bond. (See, also, Rohrbacher v. Superior Court, 144 Cal. 633, [78 Pac. 22].) This is certainly true as to section 945 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it is settled that the provisions of this section have no application to an appeal from a judgment directing the sale of real property where the *31 appellant is not in possession or control of the property, and the judgment is not one for sale under a mortgage where a deficiency bond is required. (Owen v. Pomona Land etc. Co., 124 Cal. 331, 334, [57 Pac. 71].) The decision in Bank of Woodland v. Stephens, 137 Cal. 458, [70 Pac. 293], was expressly placed on the ground that the mortgagor and his tenant “remained in actual possession of the mortgaged premises.” In McCallion v. Hibernia Sav. & Loan Soc., 98 Cal. 442, [33 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
138 P. 696, 167 Cal. 27, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zappettini-v-buckles-cal-1914.