98 Cal. 311 | Cal. | 1893
— A judgment was rendered against the appellant in the justice’s court of Bodie Township, in Mono County, on the thirty-first day of December, 1888, and an execution thereon was issued out of said court on the twenty-seventh day of November, 1891. By virtue of this execution the sheriff of Mono County, on the thirtieth day of November, 1891, levied upon “ the franchise to collect toll and all the rights and privileges thereunder or belonging thereto, of the said H. C. Blanchard,” on a certain toll road, and on the 14th of January, 1892, sold the same to the plaintiff, and' executed to him a certificate of such sale. Thereupon the plaintiff notified the defendant of such purchase and demanded to be let into the possession thereof, and, upon his refusal, made an application to the superior court of Mono County for a writ of mandate commanding him “to let the petitioner, S. W. Gregory, immediately into the possession of said franchise, and of all property necessary for the exercise of the powers and the. receipts of the proceeds thereof.” After a hearing upon the application the court granted the writ, and the defendant has appealed to this court.
1. The superior court was not authorized to issue a writ of mandate in aid of the execution of the judgment rendered in the justice’s court. For the purpose of a complete execution of a judgment resort should he had to the court in which the judgment was rendered. If for that purpose it is necessary to place the purchaser in possession of the property sold by virtue of the judgment, as in the case of a purchaser at a sale under the foreclosure of a mortgage, any writ or process for that purpose must be issued by the court in which the action is pending. If resort is had to another tribunal for the purpose of enforcing the rights acquired by such purchase, it must be by an action in that court, and not by a summary proceeding. The purchaser of property at a sheriff’s sale has no greater right to a writ of
2. A franchise is merely a privilege, and is not the subject of sale and transfer without the consent of the authority by which it was granted. “The persons to whom such privileges are granted hold them in personal trust, and, therefore, they cannot be transferred by forced sale (Munroe v. Thomas, 5 Cal. 470; Thomas v. Armstrong, 7 Cal. 286); nor by voluntary assignment, unless by the permission of government, and even then, if a special mode of transfer is pointed out, that mode must be followed.” (Wood v. Truckee Turnpike Co., 24 Cal. 487; People v. Duncan, 41 Cal. 509.) In the absence of a statutory provision therefor, a franchise cannot be levied on or sold under execution. (Freeman on Executions, sec. 179; Stewart v. Jones, 40 Mo. 140; Gue v. Canal Co., 24 How. 263.) Whenever such a provision exists, the extent as well as the mode of such levy and sale are limited thereby. Section 388 of the Civil Code provides that “for the satisfaction of any judgment against a corporation authorized to receive tolls, its franchise and all the rights and privileges thereof may be levied upon and sold under execution, in the same maimer and with like effect as any other property.” This provision is by its terms limited to a sale of the franchise held by a “corporation” against whom the judgment has been rendered, and we have not been referred to any other provision of the code suspending or changing the rule declared in the above cases. Section 523 of the Civil Code, referred to by the respondent, makes only the provisions of the title in which that section is found applicable to individuals as well as corporations, and has no reference to the transfer of a franchise. That title (title V. of part IV.) purports to define certain rights and obligations of the owners of wagon roads; and this section makes those
3. Inasmuch as a franchise is only a privilege, and is not capable of manual delivery, the provision in the judgment, as well as in the writ thereon, requiring the defendant “to deliver the possession of said franchise to collect the tolls on the Bodie and state line toll road,” is not susceptible of execution. The further provision therein that he deliver to the plaintiff “the possession of all property necessary for the exercise of the powers and the receipt of the proceeds of said franchise,” is too indefinite to constitute a determination of the rights of the parties. The court should determine what property is “necessary” for the exercise of those powers, and not leave it to the arbitrament of the defendant. The plaintiff, moreover, did not claim to have purchased at the execution sale anything but the “ franchise” with its rights and privileges, and even if the franchise had been subject to a sale under that judgment, the. purchaser in any suitable proceeding for its recovery must have been limited to that which he had purchased; but if it could be established that the rights and privileges incident to the franchise included any articles of property, such property should have been designated in the judgment, and not left to be the matter of a future investigation upon the question whether the writ had been complied with.
The judgment and order are reversed.
Paterson, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.