289 P. 206 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
This case is before us on motion of respondent to dismiss an appeal of appellant from a judgment in an action on a promissory note. After the demurrer of plaintiff to defendant's answer was sustained without leave to amend, judgment was granted as prayed. The present motion to dismiss the appeal therefrom is based upon the pleadings, records, papers and files in the action, including the transcript on appeal, together with the respondent's affidavit. The grounds relied upon for a dismissal are that the judgment has been completely settled and compromised; that all questions involved have become moot and abstract by reason of the payment of the amount claimed and the settlement of all issues, and that a decision in the cause would serve no useful purpose.
The salient facts may be gleaned from the affidavits of the respective parties. It appears that on December 8, 1925, respondent filed in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County an action against this appellant. He caused an attachment and garnishment to be issued and levied upon the Home Insurance Company of New York and upon the Springfield Fire Marine Insurance Company attaching and garnishing moneys in their possession belonging to appellant by reason of certain fire insurance policies written by them in his favor, and by reason of fire which destroyed certain property of appellant, which property was covered by the policies. On January 16, 1929, judgment was rendered in certain actions instituted by appellant against the insurance companies in Yuma, Arizona, in the sum of $2,100 in each case, based upon the fire insurance policies. On January 20, 1929, respondent received judgment against appellant in the sum of $3,016, this being the judgment upon which this appeal is based. No stay bond was filed. On June 12, 1929, each of the insurance companies filed their respective complaints in the United States District Court in Phoenix, Arizona. In these *390 cases the parties herein were named as well as all other parties claiming an interest in appellant's judgment which he obtained by reason of his policies and the fire. The parties, as well as all others who were interested therein, filed pleadings in the suits in the United States District Court.
The money represented by the judgments obtained by appellant was deposited with the clerk of the United States District Court to be distributed in accordance with the decree to be rendered by such court. Respondent filed his answer and cross-complaint in each of the actions, asserting a claim to the funds superior to the claims of the other defendants. This claim was grounded upon the theory that the judgment he had obtained in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County and the attachment theretofore issued in said action gave to him this right. Appellant answered the cross-complaint in each action, admitting the judgment was granted after a demurrer was sustained without leave to amend and alleging that he intended to prosecute an appeal therefrom. The demurrers filed by respondent to the answers, and each of them, were sustained by the federal court with leave to file amended answers. Appellant did not file amended answers in either of said actions.
On January 13, 1930, appellant and respondent, as well as the other parties to the United States District Court actions, entered into certain stipulations allowing the District Court to enter its decree distributing the funds deposited with the court in accordance with the allegations of the pleadings in the actions. The stipulation, after the opening part thereof, states: ". . . that the Court may enter its decree herein distributing the funds deposited with said Court in accordance with the rights of the respective parties as shown by the facts as alleged in the pleadings herein." Thereafter, pursuant to the stipulation, the money in the District Court was distributed to the parties who were found by that court, upon the facts stated in the pleadings, to be entitled thereto. Respondent in the federal actions obtained the full amount due him on his superior court judgment. Thereafter, without the consent or knowledge of appellant, he executed and filed a satisfaction of judgment in the superior court case.
Respondent contends that the United States District Court judgments, wherein the money was distributed, have fully *391 satisfied the superior court judgments. He further contends that this appeal should be dismissed, claiming that all questions involved herein have become moot by reason of the judgments or decrees of the District Court, which decrees were rendered pursuant to stipulation of all parties, and that the decrees, in ordering distribution of the money to the various claimants, had the effect of satisfying the superior court judgment upon which this appeal is based. The general rule that the voluntary satisfaction of a judgment deprives a party of the right of appeal is, however, subject to certain other well-established principles of law.
[1] Section
[2] It has been held by our Supreme Court that the voluntary payment of a judgment will not deprive a party of his right to appeal unless it is shown that the payment was by way of compromise or with an agreement not to take or prosecute an appeal. (Warner Bros. v. Freud, supra; Hayes v. Nourse, 107 N.Y. 577 [1 Am. St. Rep. 891, 14 N.E. 508].) The principle is stated in 2 Ruling Case Law, page 65, section 47, as follows: "As a general rule, however, one against whom a judgment or decree for a sum of money has been rendered does not, by voluntarily paying or satisfying it, waive or lose his right to review it upon a writ of error or appeal unless such payment or satisfaction was by way of compromise or with an agreement not to *392
pursue an appeal or writ of error. . . . The better view accordingly is, that though the execution has not issued the payment of a judgment must be regarded as compulsory, and therefore as not releasing error, nor depriving the payer of the right to appeal. Certainly the fact that the satisfaction of the judgment is coerced by execution or other process, such satisfaction being in invitum, does not operate as a waiver of the right to an appeal or writ of error." The foregoing rule finds support in Warner Bros. v. Freud, supra; Nashville, C. St. L.R. Co. v. Bean,
In Patterson v. Keeney,
The logic of the foregoing rule may be found in the quotation from Freeman on Judgments, section 480a, which is quoted in full in Warner Bros. v. Freud, supra, as follows: "One against whom a judgment is entered, if he fails to satisfy it, must expect to see his property seized and sold at a sacrifice, and it is difficult to conceive how his payment of the judgment can give rise to any estoppel against his seeking to avoid it for error. The better view we think is that though the execution has not issued, the payment of a judgment must be regarded as compulsory, and therefore as not releasing errors nor depriving the payer of the right to appeal."
[3] In the instant case the superior court judgment was not final for the reason that an appeal was pending. (Smith v.Smith,
Had the court ruled as it did without any stipulation there is no doubt but that the payment to respondent would be considered involuntary. [4] Did the execution of the stipulation make the payment voluntary? Conceding, but not deciding, that it did, can it be said that such payment had the effect of a compromise or a settlement of the obligation? *394 We are sure that it had not. It is perfectly clear that there was no agreement to refrain from further prosecuting the appeal from the judgment. A fair and liberal interpretation of the stipulation shows that the parties agreed to a distribution of the money in the hands of the clerk "in accordance with therights of the respective parties as shown by the facts allegedin the pleadings herein." (The italics are ours.) The facts alleged by respondent showed that he had a valid judgment, even though not final, against appellant for a certain amount and that the same was unpaid. Also that he had previously obtained a preference over the money by reason of an attachment and garnishment. The stipulation amounted to nothing more than saying to the federal court that it could make a distribution of the money in accordance with the rights of the parties as shown by the facts alleged therein.
Undoubtedly, if the judgment is reversed, the appellant will not be without his remedy. The superior court judgment, as stated, was not final. If we dismiss the appeal and the dismissal becomes final it will be tantamount to an affirmance of the judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 955.) We would by such affirmance forever preclude appellant from having an appellate tribunal determine whether the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to his answer without leave to amend, which ruling ultimately resulted in the judgment that appellant is now endeavoring to have this court reverse. The question presented in this appeal, which question concerns the action of the superior court, could not have been raised in the federal courts, but only in the state courts.
The rule is well settled as to when a matter is moot and when it is not. The Supreme Court of South Dakota, in Clark v.Beadle Co.,
From the foregoing authorities it clearly appears that where there is left any material or vital question for determination — and we have found that such question exists here — the court should not dismiss the appeal but should permit it to be heard on the merits.
Motion to dismiss is denied.
Craig, Acting P.J., and Thompson (Ira F.), J., concurred.