182 Cal. App. 2d 211 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1960
The defendant has appealed from the granting of a preliminary injunction.
The verified complaint, upon the basis of which the pre
In opposition to the application for a preliminary injunction, an affidavit of the attorney for Santa Monica Finance Company was filed. Therein he states that Neale had defaulted in the earlier action and that on December 15, 1958, his client had made a request for entry of judgment against Neale. In that action, the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, as a defendant therein, had made a motion for a continuance or to restrain the plaintiff therein from taking such a default judgment on the ground that the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland had knowledge of other claims against Neale and such order was necessary so that it would not be subjected to a multiplicity of suits. The court, in the Santa Monica Branch thereof, restrained the plaintiff in the action there pending from taking judgment against Neale and ordered the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland to file therein a cross-complaint in interpleader.
On March 9, 1959, the preliminary injunction, which forms the basis of the present appeal, was issued. Thereby Santa Monica Finance Company was enjoined, during the pendency of the present action, from further prosecuting the earlier action which was pending in the Santa Monica Branch of the court. That company was ordered to “set up and prove in this action” its claim under the bond.
The appellant asserts that none of the claims other than that of appellant “had been reduced to litigation” and that the respondent was concerned with an “unreal fear” which “is not sufficient to justify the issuance of an injunction.” There is no merit in that argument. As long as the respondent herein was faced with claims under the bond, it was warranted in having recourse to the kind of proceeding herein involved. The applicable law has thus been stated: “It is not
It has been noted that in the earlier case pending in the Santa Monica Branch of the court, the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland was ordered to file a cross-complaint in interpleader in which all known claimants under the bond would be joined as parties. This order was made on the same day as that on which the present action was filed. The cross-complaint, under the court’s order, was to be filed on or before February 19, 1959. On February 19, 1959, the parties entered into a stipulation extending such time “to and including 10 days after receipt of notice of ruling” on the application for an injunction in the present case. In that stipulation, it is stated that the present action was filed before the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland had notice of the order with respect to the filing of such cross-complaint. In accordance with the stipulation, the court in the Santa Monica Branch thereof made an order extending the time of the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland to file such cross-complaint “if it be so advised. ’ ’ This matter is mentioned because it appears that by virtue of such a cross-complaint all of the relief sought by the respondent in the present case could have been obtained. (Cf. Wiggins v. Pacific Indemnity Co., supra, 134 Cal.App. 328; see Cassidy v. Norton, 25 Cal.App. 433, 436 [143 P. 1057].) While it might have been argued that any injunction in the present case was accordingly unnecessary (see Johnson v. Sun Realty Co., 138 Cal.App. 296, 301-302 [32 P.2d 393] ; Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Egeline, 30 F.Supp. 738, 741), the appellant herein has not raised such issue on this appeal. Aside from the fact that under the circumstances of this case the appellant does not appear to have been prejudiced by the filing of a separate action in interpleader instead of a cross-complaint in interpleader in the prior action, we are not called upon in this case to determine such an issue which the appellant has not raised in his briefs on appeal. (Philbrook v. Randall, 195 Cal. 95, 104-105 [231 P. 739]; see Kurlan v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 40 Cal.2d 799, 806 [256 P.2d 962].)
We are, however, concerned, with the fact that the
“Decisions in other jurisdictions to the effect that the surety cannot be joined in an action against the principal based on a common law delictual liability, are found to rest upon a preservation in those jurisdictions of the common law rule against joinder of actions in tort and contract. In this state, an action in tort may be joined with an action on contract where both arise out of the same transaction. (§ 427, subd. 8, Code Civ. Proc.) ”
In McPhetridge v. Smith, 101 Cal.App. 122, at pages 142-143 [281 P. 419], it is said: “That the default judgment against the defendant in a case similar to this cannot be considered as proof against his bondsmen, needs but little consideration. The law appears to be well settled in this state that sureties are not bound by judgments against their principal unless the undertaking so provides, as where one under
Except for that portion of the preliminary injunction just discussed, there was no abuse of discretion on the part of the court. (See Ingrassia v. Bailey, 172 Cal.App.2d 117, 125 [341 P.2d 370].)
The paragraph of the preliminary injunction which prohibits, during the pendency of the present action, the prosecution of the earlier action pending in the Santa Monica Branch of the court is modified by adding immediately after the words “being Proceeding No. SM Civil 6700” the following “except that the said defendant Santa Monica Finance Company, a corporation, may proceed with the prosecution of its application for a default judgment in said Proceeding No. SM Civil 6700 as against Douglass V. Neale, defendant therein, only, without prejudice to the rights of Fidelity and
As so modified as set forth above, the order granting the preliminary injunction is affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
Section 204 of the Vehicle Code during the period of time involved in this case was, in part, as follows: “Before any dealer’s license shall be issued or renewed by the department to any applicant therefor, the said applicant shall procure and file with the department a good and sufficient bond in the amount of five thousand dollars ($5,000) with corporate surety thereon, . . . and conditioned that said applicant shall not practice any fraud, make any fraudulent representation which will cause a monetary loss to a purchaser, seller, financing agency, or governmental agency. ’ ’
During the same period of time, section 205 of the Vehicle Code was, in part, as follows: “If any person shall suffer any loss or damage by reason of any fraud practiced on him or fraudulent representation made to him by a licensed dealer or one of such dealer’s salesmen acting for the dealer, in his behalf, or within the scope of the employment of such salesman; provided, such person has possession of a written instrument furnished by the licensee, containing stipulated provisions and guarantees which the person believes have been violated by the licensee, or shall suffer any loss or damage by reason of the violation by such dealer or salesman of any of the provisions of Division 3 or 6 of this code, such person shall have a right of action against such dealer, his said salesman, and the surety upon the dealer’s bond, in an amount not to exceed the value of the vehicle purchased from or sold to the dealer. ’ ’
That action was actually filed on December 2, 1958. The complaint in the present ease was filed on January 20, 1959.
In the record on appeal, there is a copy of the minute order of the court in that action. That order was made on January 20, 1959, which was the date upon which the present action was filed. Therein it is stated in part: “. . . and defendant Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland is ordered and directed to file its Cross-complaint in inter-pleader joining all known claimants on it’s [sic] Bond so that the respective rights of all claimants including plaintiff herein [Santa Monica Finance Company] may be adjudicated. ’ ’
It is true that in the earlier action, the order of January 20, 1959, which ordered Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland to file a cross-complaint therein, also ordered that Santa Monica Finance Company “be and is hereby restrained from further prosecution of this action as against Douglass V. Neale . . . until further order of this court.” We do not pass on the validity of that order but, in any event, the preliminary injunction in the present action in effect precludes the appellant herein from seeking to be relieved of such restraint by application to the court in the earlier case.