265 P. 389 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
Judgment was awarded plaintiff against defendants on June 24, 1915. On January 30, 1924, upon ex parte application and upon presentation of affidavit that no part of the judgment had been paid and that deponent was informed and believed that defendants had property not exempt from execution which should be applied upon the judgment, the trial court ordered that execution issue. Pursuant to this order execution issued and a motion to recall the same was made upon notice on the 11th of February, 1924. This motion was made upon affidavit and was based upon the ground of inadvertence. Thereafter the court made an order vacating the order of January 30th and the execution was recalled. Notice of motion was subsequently served upon defendants that plaintiff would on February 15, 1924, move the court to reconsider its order of February 11th and to deny the motion to vacate the order of January 30th. A hearing was had on February 15th, whereupon plaintiff moved in open court for a rehearing or a reconsideration of the order of February 11th upon two different grounds — upon errors of law as to laches and upon the point that no summons and complaint had been served. Nothing relative to the latter was done at the hearing. On March 4, 1924, the court caused the following minute order to be entered: "The ruling on the motion to set aside the order of the court to recall execution having been heretofore submitted on February 15, 1924, it is now ordered that said motion to set aside the order made herein under date of February 11, 1924, be denied and that such order recalling execution herein shall stand as entered." On the same date a formal order was made and entered recalling and vacating the order authorizing the issuance of execution.
[1] Plaintiff appeals "from the judgment made and entered in the said superior court in the above entitled action on the fourth day of March, 1924, in favor of the defendants and against said plaintiff, and from the whole thereof." Defendants argue that the appeal should be dismissed upon the ground that it is taken from the order signed March *750 4th, while appellant claims in his briefs that the appeal is from the minute order of February 11th. It is apparent from the record that the hearing of February 15th was as to whether or not the court should reconsider its order of February 11th, which order had never been suspended. When this question was submitted for decision counsel for plaintiff handed the court a form of order to be signed, which covered the exact ground of the minute order of February 11th. After consideration of the submitted question the court on March 4th caused a minute order to be entered to the effect that the original order of February 11th should not be disturbed. That this form of order was intended only as a more formal record of the order of February 11th is apparent from the fact that it was handed to the court at the conclusion of the hearing of February 15th. It was dated "February," but was changed by the judge to the date of signing. The court, coincident with the last referred to minute order, caused the formal order to be filed, and it was signed by him as of March 4th. This order further decrees that the sale of the executed property set for February 14th should be postponed. Had it been intended as the evidence of a new order made March 4th, it would not have contained an order of postponement of an act that was to have been performed about three weeks prior to the making of such order.
The act of the court is the real order, and the recording in the minutes and the signing of the order were but evidences of the order made. As was said in Von Schmidt v. Widber,
It is apparent that the appeal is taken from the decision of the court which is identified in this instance by the signed memorandum thereof. In the case of Foss v. Johnstone,
In Estate of Stone,
The case of Meley v. Boulon,
[2] Respondent claims that the appeal is not based upon an appealable order, but there is nothing in the point. It seems to be now the settled rule in this state that any special *752
order made after final judgment affecting such judgment, although not dependent upon it, is an appealable order. . . . If such an order is not one made after final judgment from which an appeal will lie, then it is not difficult to conceive how a trial court could, in cases of which this court has appellate jurisdiction, make many different kinds of erroneous orders of the most oppressive and ruinous character, from which the law would afford absolutely no relief." (Magee v. Superior Court,
There appears in the transcript a so-called statement of facts, which, omitting the title, reads:
"This cause came on regularly for hearing in Dept. 26 before Honorable Paul Burks presiding on the 11th day of February, 1924.
"Upon hearing arguments by counsel for plaintiff and defendant and upon reading the affidavits submitted, this court found that the plaintiff was guilty of laches in not enforcing the judgment within the five year period prescribed by law, and ordered the execution recalled.
"The court did not consider the question of service of summons at the time of the hearing nor subsequently at the hearing on the 15th day of February, 1924, of plaintiff's motion to set aside said order of February 11, 1924, recalling said execution.
"The court in making its order to recall the execution in the above action did so solely upon the ground of laches by the plaintiff and upon no other ground."
[3] The sole remaining question is as to whether or not the lower court abused its discretion when it ordered the vacation of the order authorizing the issuance of the execution, and this question must be determined from the law and the affidavits filed on the motion by both parties. The affidavit of the defendant Clara A. Huene states that she and her husband, judgment debtors, were engaged in conducting rooming-houses for many years, and that up until November, 1919, she owned and possessed ample personal property consisting of furniture and leases in and of several *753
apartment houses for varying periods in Los Angeles to have satisfied the judgment through execution, but that no effort was made to levy execution and no demand for payment was made; that up to such date plaintiff knew the above facts and knew or had means of knowing affiant's whereabouts. The affidavit of the defendant E.A. Huene states that he lived in Los Angeles June 24, 1915, and continually thereafter until June, 1918, during which time he possessed an automobile, well worth the amount of the judgment, which he used openly on the streets of Los Angeles, and that plaintiff knew or had means of knowing it; that no attempt to levy was made prior to January 30, 1924. Counter-affidavits were filed by plaintiff, but for the purpose of determining whether or not there has been an abuse of discretion it will be taken that these are the true facts. "It is true as claimed by the learned counsel for the respondents, that orders like the present, in legal parlance, rest very much in the discretion of the court below, and will not be disturbed by this court unless we are satisfied that the order is so plainly erroneous as to amount to an abuse of discretion. (Citing authorities.) The discretion intended, however, is not a capricious or arbitrary discretion, but an impartial discretion, guided and controlled in its exercise by fixed legal principles. It is not a mental discretion, to be exercised ex gratia, but a legal discretion, to be exercised in conformity with the spirit of the law and in a manner to subserve and not to impede or defeat the ends of substantial justice. In a plain case this discretion has no office to perform, and its exercise is limited to doubtful cases, where an impartial mind hesitates. If it be doubted whether the excuse offered is sufficient or not, or whether the defense set up is with or without merit in foro legis, when examined under those rules of law by which judges are guided to a conclusion, the judgment of the court below will not be disturbed. If, on the contrary, we are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the court below has come to an erroneous conclusion, the party complaining of the error is as much entitled to a reversal in a case like the present as in any other." (Bailey v. Taaffe,
It is the intent of the law, and it would seem the intent, as well, of good morals, that everyone being able should *754
pay his debts. Here we find the debt ripened into a judgment. Several years go by and it is not paid. The law does not contemplate that, the time of the statute of limitations having run, the liability to pay has completely passed. The motion made in this case is provided for by law. There must, then, be something added to the mere fact of the expiration of the time and that the judgment debtors were possessed of personal property, which would move the court to deny the right given by the statute, section
And in Carr v. Sacramento C.P. Co.,
What are the circumstances, then, which could justly move the lower court to deny the benefit of this statute to the plaintiff? We are at a loss to find any. While we are aware that the mere citation of cases where execution has issued after a long lapse of time has occurred is not decisive of any question here, still it is well to observe whether or not the court in this case was in step with the best minds in the judiciary.
In Weldon v. Rogers,
In Doehla v. Phillips,
The case of Brown v. Pacific Coast Agency,
In the instant case the statement of facts upon which the court vacated the order authorizing the issuance of execution and recalled the execution certainly did not constitute "legal grounds" — that is, afford doubts upon which the *756 court's discretion as herein defined could act to deny the application of the benefits of the statute to the plaintiff.
The judgment vacating the order authorizing the issuance of execution and recalling such execution is reversed.
Craig, Acting P.J., and Thompson, J., concurred.