77 P. 1109 | Cal. | 1904
The petitioners herein seek a review upon certiorari of certain orders of the superior court of San Diego County made after final judgment, in a cause entitled Free Gold Mining Company (a corporation), Plaintiff, v. Spiers et al., Defendants.
Upon the filing of the petition, an order was made requiring the respondent to show cause why a writ of certiorari should not issue as prayed. At the appointed time the judge of the superior court and the parties at whose instance and for whose benefit the orders in question were made appeared and severally demurred to the petition upon the ground that the facts alleged were insufficient to justify the issuance of the writ. One of the parties also assigned as additional ground of demurrer that the petitioners were without legal capacity to maintain the proceeding.
The petition, with its annexed exhibits, is voluminous, and the transactions which it details are intricate and confusing, but the essence of the matter may be sufficiently stated in comparatively brief space. The Golden Cross Mining and Milling Company (a corporation) was the owner of a number of mining claims in San Diego County, together with a quantity of mining machinery, lands, reduction-works, etc. Being largely indebted to James Spiers and others, the corporation, on the 4th of January, 1896, conveyed the whole of said property to Spiers and certain co-trustees for the purpose of securing its creditors. Spiers and his co-trustees, claiming the right so to do according to the terms of the trust, took possession of the property and undertook to operate it for the benefit of the creditors, but finding, as they alleged, that its operation resulted in a loss, they advertised it for sale. To save the property from being sold at a sacrifice by its trustees, the Golden Cross Company sold and conveyed it to another corporation — the Free Gold Mining and Milling Company — which, in consideration of the conveyance, agreed to pay all the debts of the Golden Cross Company, to Spiers and others, and to pay to that corporation one million dollars in addition, which payment was secured by a lien expressly reserved in the deed of conveyance. As a part of the same transaction the Golden Cross Company also assigned and transferred to the Free Gold Company all its claims, demands, and causes of action against Spiers and his co-trustees for damages resulting *503 from their alleged wrongful acts in taking the property into their possession, and injuring and impairing its value by wasteful, unskillful, and negligent methods of operation. Upon receiving this conveyance and assignment the Free Gold Company commenced the action against Spiers and the other trustees in the course of which the orders in question here purport to have been made.
The complaint in said action contained a number of counts setting forth different causes of action, and prayed judgment for the recovery of possession of the property, quieting the title thereto, and damages. It prayed also for an injunction pendentelite and for the appointment of a receiver. Upon the filing of the complaint a receiver was appointed, with authority to operate the mines and works. Before any trial of the cause the parties to the action settled all the matters in controversy between them by a compromise agreement dated the twenty-sixth day of November, 1897. By this agreement the plaintiff released the defendants from all claims for damages, and undertook to pay the reasonable fees of their attorneys in the action. The several amounts due to the creditors represented by Spiers and his co-trustees were ascertained and scheduled, and a list was made of certain other creditors whose claims were to be paid by the Golden Cross and Free Gold companies directly and without the intervention of the trustees or receiver. Finally it was agreed that the receivership should be continued until all the creditors represented by Spiers and his co-trustees were paid in full, after which the property remaining in the hands of the receiver should be restored to the possession of the plaintiff the Free Gold Company. By a supplemental agreement the claims of certain other creditors were adjusted and put upon the same footing as those previously represented by the trustees, and the order of payment as between these creditors and those to be paid directly by the Free Gold and Golden Cross companies was settled. Preference was given to the former to the extent of five per cent of their respective claims on each monthly dividend, and if any surplus remained to be divided the latter were to share pro rata in the surplus. To these agreements the Golden Cross Company and the deferred creditors (T.S. Fuller, Mrs. E.C. Fuller, and Mary E. Hedges, — petitioners herein) assented, and they were embodied *504 in and became orders of court in the said action of Free Gold Company v. Spiers et al. In pursuance of these orders the successive receivers in the cause have operated the properties, and out of the net proceeds have paid in full the claims of the creditors represented by the defendants Spiers and his co-trustees. It is not directly alleged that the claims of the Fullers and Mary E. Hedges have not been paid, but it appears inferentially that a portion at least of their respective claims is still unsatisfied. No part of the million dollars purchase money payable to the Golden Cross Company has been paid, and that claim, together with the lien reserved for its security, is held by the petitioner J.M. Elliott under an assignment in trust for certain creditors of the Golden Cross Company and its stockholders.
On May 21, 1903, all the creditors represented by Spiers and his co-trustees having been fully paid, and they having executed a reconveyance of the property held by them in trust, a final judgment was entered in the action of Free Gold Company v. Spiers et al., in accordance with the agreement of November, 1897, and the supplemental agreement of April, 1898, and the orders of court based thereon.
By this judgment Spiers and his co-defendants were exonerated from all claims for damages, etc., and the title of the Free Gold Company to all the property mentioned and described in the several deeds of trust was quieted. Though expressly made final as between the parties, the judgment contained the following reservation: "But as to the pending receivership, the creditors of Isaac Trumbo's late receivership, all matters of administration, accounting, dealing and transactions of the present receiver, Pauly, this cause and jurisdiction thereof is hereby expressly retained, reserved, and continued for such further action, orders, and proceedings by and before this court as shall be meet and proper."
On March 18, 1904, an order was entered settling the final account of Charles W. Pauly as receiver. By this order he was directed to pay certain expenses of the receivership incurred by him, including his own compensation, to continue the operation of the mines and works until the thirtieth day of April, to make a clean-up on that date, and on the following day deliver possession of the mines and works to the Free Gold Company, and thereupon to make a further supplemental *505 and final report, upon approval of which he would be discharged.
On March 23, 1904, Samuel M. Shortridge filed a petition asking the court to make an order ascertaining and allowing to him a reasonable compensation for his services as attorney for Trumbo, who had acted as receiver from September, 1889, to April, 1901, and directing payment of the same by receiver Pauly out of the funds in his hands.
April 4, 1904, Jefferson Chandler filed a petition setting out the nature and value of his services as attorney for the plaintiff in the action, the Free Gold Company, and asking the court to determine the amount justly due to him as compensation for said services, and to make an order requiring payment of the same by the receiver, and continuing the receivership until the sum so fixed should be paid.
On the ninth day of April, 1904, these applications came on to be heard without notice to any of these petitioners. At the time of said hearing, without filing any petitions, and likewise without notice to any of these petitioners, Samuel M. Shortridge and J. Wade McDonald appeared and moved the court to ascertain, allow, and order paid to them, the value of their services as attorneys for the plaintiff in the action.
The court thereupon made and entered an order allowing Shortridge $4,500 for his services as attorney for Trumbo, and ordered the same paid forthwith out of the funds then in the hands of the receiver.
By a separate order it was found that the reasonable value of the services of Chandler, as attorney for plaintiff, was $15,000, of Shortridge $10,000, of McDonald $2,500, and the receiver was ordered to pay these sums, aggregating $27,500, out of the proceeds of the property in his hands, and the receivership was continued in force until such payment should be made, the former order terminating the receivership on the 30th of April being modified accordingly.
These two orders of April 9th allowing Shortridge $4,500 as attorney for receiver Trumbo, and Chandler, Shortridge, and McDonald $27,500, as attorneys for the plaintiff, and prolonging the receivership to enable the receiver to realize from the working of the mines funds sufficient to pay the same, are the orders which the petitioners herein seek to have *506 reviewed upon the ground that the superior court, in making them, exceeded its jurisdiction.
In support of their demurrers the respondents urge various objections to the proceedings by certiorari. In the first place they say the petitioners either are parties to the action of the Free Gold Company v. Spiers et al., or they are not; that if they are parties to that action within the meaning of section 938 of the Code of Civil Procedure, they have an undoubted right to appeal from these orders made after final judgment, and even if they are not parties to the action, if they are parties to the special proceedings to obtain the allowance of attorneys' fees, they have an equally unquestionable right of appeal from the orders requiring the receiver to pay the allowances out of the funds in his hands, because such orders are in effect judgments against them in a collateral proceeding growing out of the action, as was held in Grant v. Superior Court,
There is no doubt that a right of appeal excludes the right to proceed by certiorari, and it is equally clear that if the petitioners are parties to the action or the proceeding they have the right of appeal. But there is nothing in the petition which lends any support to the claim that the petitioners are parties within the meaning of section 938 of the Code of Civil Procedure as it has been construed in a series of decisions of this court, commencing with the dictum in Senter v. De Bernal,
It is clear, we think, that the petitioners are not parties to the record, and that they have no right to prosecute a direct appeal from these orders.
This brings us to the alternative proposition of the respondents, that if only parties to the record are allowed to appeal under section 938 of the Code of Civil Procedure, then none but parties to the record can invoke the remedy bycertiorari under section 1069; for they contend the word "party" must be construed in the same way in both connections. By section 938 a "party aggrieved" may appeal, and by section 1069 the "party beneficially interested" may sue out a writ of review. The contention is, that if "party" in one section means party to the record of the proceeding to be reviewed, it can mean nothing less in the other. The conclusiveness of this argument, however, depends upon the assumption that the legislature in the various sections of the code regulating the practice in special proceedings has chosen its language with critical discrimination. But a comparison of different portions of the statute shows that it has not done so.
By section 1086 it is provided that the writ of mandate must issue "upon application of the party beneficially interested." The provision indeed is substantially identical with that relating to the writ of review; yet no one would claim that in this connection "party" means a party on the record of an action or proceeding to which the writ of mandate is auxiliary or corrective, for ordinarily there is no such action or proceeding. To determine the true meaning of the word "party," therefore, as used in section 1069, it is necessary to look to the decisions in this and other jurisdictions defining the class of persons entitled to the remedy by certiorari. Upon this precise point we have not been greatly aided by the briefs of counsel, but we find by reference to the cases cited in the Encyclopædia, and by the text-writers, that the great preponderance of authority sustains the proposition that the writ will not be granted to a stranger to the record, when the *509 matter to be reviewed is the judgment or order of a court made or entered in a cause litigated inter partes.
There is a class of cases, like Maxwell v. Supervisors,
These grounds of exception, however, have no application here, and we cannot find in the decisions of this court a single case in which certiorari to review a judgment or order of a court has been issued at the suit of a stranger to the record. There is in fact another plain, speedy, and adequate remedy allowed by our practice to one whose rights or interests are injuriously affected by the judgment or by any appealable order of a court given or made in an action or proceeding to which he is not a party. He may make himself a party by moving to set aside such judgment or order, and if his motion is denied may, on appeal from that order, have the proceeding of which he complains reviewed not only for excess of jurisdiction but for error.(People v. Grant,
Our conclusion on this point renders it unnecessary to consider other objections to the proceeding, and precludes a decision upon the merits of the controversy.
The demurrers to the petition are sustained and the proceeding dismissed without prejudice to the right to proceed by motion and appeal.
Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J., McFarland, J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.