200 P. 752 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1921
Plaintiff commenced an action against the defendants to quiet its title to a tract of land in San Francisco. The trial court gave judgment, among other things, in favor of the defendants Henry S. and Carrie E. Bridge, and from that portion of the judgment the plaintiff has appealed, bringing up the judgment-roll without any bill of exceptions.
The facts material to a consideration of the case are as follows: On April 1, 1910, the American Steel Casting Company, a corporation, and Boaz D. Pike and Georgie S. Pike, executed to plaintiff a one-day note; on April 11, 1911, the plaintiff commenced an action on the note against the makers; each and all of the defendants in that action defaulted and judgment was entered on the twenty-third day of May, 1912. On the same date that the action was commenced on the promissory note an attachment was taken out, served, recorded, and returned, under and by virtue of which plaintiff attached the real estate in San Francisco standing of record in the name of Boaz D. Pike, Georgie S. Pike, or Edna Laura Pike. On the twenty-second day of April, 1914, execution issued on said judgment and such proceedings were had that thereafter the sheriff duly and regularly delivered to the plaintiff on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1915, a sheriff's deed to the property in dispute. On the seventh day of June, 1910, Boaz D. Pike and Georgie S. Pike executed to Edna Laura Pike, their daughter, a deed of gift purporting to transfer said property. On February 10, 1913, Edna Laura Pike executed to the defendant Carrie E. Bridge her promissory note in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, and to secure the same she executed to Henry S. Bridge and Fred W. Bridge a trust deed covering the property in dispute. Besides the foregoing facts the trial court found that Boaz D. and Georgie S. Pike executed the deed to their daughter, Edna Laura Pike, voluntarily, without any valuable consideration, at a time when they were insolvent, and that they did so with the intent to hinder and delay and to defraud their existing creditors and this plaintiff of its judgment against them. The trial court also found that Fred W. Bridge died after the execution of the deed of trust and that Henry S. Bridge and Carrie E. Bridge had no notice prior to the commencement *526 of this suit of any claim by plaintiff of the invalidity of the title of the said defendant Edna Laura Pike to the said real estate.
The plaintiff claims that the deed from Boaz D. and Georgie S. Pike to their daughter, Edna Laura Pike, was void, and that it was void as to the defendants Henry S. and Carrie E. Bridge because they had notice of plaintiff's claim. The defendants Henry S. and Carrie E. Bridge reply that they had no notice. The trial court found (Tr., fols. 94-114) that at the time plaintiff commenced its action on the promissory note, April 11, 1911, it regularly levied an attachment on the interest of Edna Laura Pike. It also found (Tr., fols. 216-218) that Henry S. and Carrie E. Bridge had no notice of the plaintiff's claim. If it be said that these two findings are conflicting the case should be reversed (McElligott v. Krogh,
[1] The claim of the defendants is that they had no notice of the attachment and, as the title to the property stood of record in the name of Edna Laura Pike, that the defendants were entitled to deal with her as the owner. They also claim that as the plaintiff had not filed an action in the nature of a creditor's bill against Edna Laura Pike on February 10, 1913, the defendants were not in any way bound by any contention of this plaintiff regarding the frailty of the title of Edna Laura Pike. In both of these contentions of the defendants we think that they are in error. In section 136 of Freeman on Executions it is said: "As against the fraudulent transferee, the creditor may seize the property, whether real or personal, as that of the fraudulent vendor, and may proceed to sell it under execution. The title transferred by such sale is not a mere equity — not the right to control the legal title, and to have the fraudulent transfer vacated by some appropriate proceeding; it is the legal title itself, against which the fraudulent *527
transfer is no transfer at all. The creditor having a judgment may, if he thinks it advisable, ask the aid of equity, but he cannot be compelled to do so." In those words the author has digested a long line of cases in California, including, among others, First Nat. Bank of L. A. v. Maxwell,
The respondent cites Morrow v. Graves,
The briefs devoted some space to the issue as to whether the respondents had notice, actual or constructive. The respondents cite some language contained in Casey v. Leggett, supra, andMorrow v. Graves, supra, and in reply the appellant cites some language contained in Ritter v. Scannell,
It follows that the appellant should have been given a judgment on the findings as made; that this judgment should be reversed, and the trial court should be directed to enter judgment for the appellant on the findings, in accordance with what has been said above, and it is so ordered.
Langdon, P. J., and Nourse, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 12, 1921.
All the Justices concurred. *530