78 Cal. 418 | Cal. | 1889
Application for a writ of prohibition. Order granting alternative writ, with leave to the respondent to move to vacate the same. The motion to vacate has been made, and presents the questions to be considered.
The facts as they appear from the petition are substantially these: On the second day of January, 1889, one W. R. Tolies, being in insolvent circumstances, made an assignment to the petitioner of the property in controversy, for the benefit of her creditors. The necessary inventory and bond was filed, and the property taken into his possession. On the 16th of the same month one Sachs, a creditor of Mrs. Tolies, brought his action in the court below to recover his debt, and caused the property assigned to the petitioner to be attached, whereupon the petitioner brought his action against the
It is alleged in the petition here that the court below, without notice to the petitioner, ordered the receiver to take possession of and sell the property assigned to him, and it was contended at the argument that the court had no jurisdiction of the person of the petitioner, and therefore no power to adjudicate upon the question as to his right or title to the property, and no authority to order his property to be sold.
But the petition shows upon its face that the court below did not assume or undertake to adjudicate upon the title or claim of the petitioner to any property, nor did it order the sale of any specific property, or any property owned or claimed by him. The whole proceeding appears upon the face of the petition and exhibits, and shows that the order was, that the receiver take charge of “all property of said insolvent, real, personal, and mixed,” and that “all persons having the same, or any part thereof, in his or their possession are thereby directed to deliver the said property to said receiver,” and the same property is ordered to be sold.
The proceedings and order, being set out as a part of the petition, must control in determining what action was taken by the court below as against the allegations of the petition itself.
The order of the court below could not affect the petitioner’s rights in any way. If the receiver has taken property belonging to the petitioner under the order, he has done so without authority, and is a mere trespasser. This being the case, the petitioner has his remedy against the person •claiming te act as such receiver, and
Motion to vacate order granting the alternative writ of prohibition is allowed.
Beatty, 0. J., McFarland, J., Sharps tein, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.