205 P. 485 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
This is an application for supplementary writs of mandate to carry into full and further effect the peremptory writs of mandate issued out of this court in the above-entitled proceedings on October 25, 1921.
The facts leading up to the issuance of those writs and the supplementary facts occurring thereafter and upon which the present application is predicated are briefly stated as follows: On April 26, 1921, Geo. A. Moore Co. started an action against Hidalgo Plantation Commercial Co., La Zaculapa Plantation Co., and La Zaculapa Plantation and Harrison Co. for the recovery of an alleged indebtedness of $88,607.92, in which action an attachment was issued and levied upon the two lots of coffee involved in the two proceedings before this court. Thereafter the Hawi Mill and Plantation Company filed third party claims with the sheriff levying said attachment as to both lots of coffee who, after receiving an indemnity bond against said Geo. A. Moore Co., refused to deliver up the same to the said claimant, upon which refusal the latter, on August 27, 1921, commenced two actions against said sheriff and also against Geo. A. Moore Co. to recover possession of said two lots of coffee and in these actions presented the statutory claim and delivery bonds sufficient in form to require the sheriff to deliver said property to the coroner, who was the statutory officer entitled to serve process and take delivery of said property in said actions. The defendants in these two replevin suits failed to present a valid redelivery bond within the time provided by the statute. In the meantime, and on the sixteenth day of September, said Geo. A. Moore Co. commenced another action against the said defendants, who were the corporations made parties to its original action, and also against certain other defendants, who were alleged to be the trustees of said defendant corporations, the latter having forfeited their charters under the revenue and taxation laws of this state, to recover from said defendants the sum of $138,607.92. This sum, though larger than that sued *226 for in the original action, is admittedly an indebtedness arising out of the same transaction; and in such suit the said plaintiff, Geo. A. Moore Co., through immediate answers filed by said defendants admitting said indebtedness, procured a judgment in its favor to be entered on the same date of the filing of such suit for the amount of said indebtedness and immediately thereafter, and on September 17, 1921, caused an execution to be issued and levied upon said two lots of coffee in the hands of the coroner at the time. Thereupon the original proceedings for the issuance of writs of mandate were instituted by the plaintiff in said replevin suits in this court to compel the delivery to it of the coffee involved in said suits under the provisions of section 514 of the Code of Civil Procedure. After a hearing upon the merits in both of said proceedings this court issued peremptory writs of mandate commanding the delivery of both of said lots of coffee to the plaintiff in said replevin suits. Thereafter, and on October 31, 1921, said writs of mandate were duly served upon the said sheriff, then in the possession of said property by virtue of said writ of execution, and also upon the defendants in certain proceedings, and the said sheriff thereupon and in response to said writs delivered said coffee to the petitioner in said proceedings, but immediately thereafter, and purporting to act under and by virtue of an alias writ of execution issued upon the last above-mentioned judgment, the said sheriff levied the same upon 1,971 bags of said coffee and took possession of the same, which possession he still holds as such sheriff and by virtue of said alias writ of execution, and refuses to deliver to said petitioner herein upon its demand, hence the application for supplementary writs of mandate herein. In response to said application the respondents herein have filed answers alleging, in substance, that the two original lots of coffee were, on October 29, 1921, in storage in Southern Pacific Warehouse No. 2, then being operated by the Haslett Warehouse Company, a corporation. That on said twenty-ninth day of October, 1921, and prior to the service of the original writs of mandate, as above set forth, the applicant herein assigned and transferred all of its right, title, and interest in and to said two lots of coffee to one J. H. Beamer; and that immediately after the redelivery of said coffee to the applicant herein by the said sheriff in response *227 to said writs the said Haslett Warehouse Company delivered to said Beamer 1,205 bags of said coffee, who thereupon received and removed the same from said warehouse; and said Haslett Warehouse Company at the said time also delivered to said Beamer its negotiable warehouse receipt for the removing of the remaining bags of said coffee, which negotiable warehouse receipt, the respondents allege, has by the said Beamer been assigned, delivered, and transferred to other parties. That by virtue of the foregoing facts the applicant herein has no longer any right, title, or interest in any portion of said two lots of coffee; that the alias execution aforesaid was levied by said sheriff upon said 1,971 bags of coffee after the aforesaid transfers of said coffee had taken place and hence at a time when the said remaining portion of the coffee was subject to the levy of said alias writ. The respondents further allege that on the thirty-first day of October, 1921, and after the aforesaid levy of said alias execution had been made, the said Geo. A. Moore Co. commenced an action against said Haslett Warehouse Company under the provisions of section 18 of an act of the legislature, approved March 19, 1909 (Stats. 1909, p. 440), and amended May 11, 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 398), entitled: "An act to make uniform the law of warehouse receipts," and that an answer had been filed therein by the said Haslett Warehouse Company to the effect that it held in storage said coffee subject to a negotiable warehouse receipt issued to one J. H. Beamer, but upon which the alias execution above referred to had been levied by the sheriff, who had placed one of his deputies in charge of said coffee and had assumed control over the same. That thereafter said J. H. Beamer had presented his said warehouse receipt and demanded possession of said coffee, but that the said sheriff, acting through his said deputy, had refused to allow said defendant to make delivery of the same.
Upon the hearing upon these applications and the answer thereto, the applicant presented and filed a written joinder of said J. H. Beamer and Williams-Diamond Co., to whom portions of said coffee were alleged to have been assigned, in the supplementary petitions of the applicant herein for a further writ of mandate and a request that the relief herein sought be granted to said applicant. There was also presented and filed at the same time a demurrer to the *228 answer of the respondents upon the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense on the part of said respondents or any of them. A motion to strike out portions of said answers was also presented and filed. The matters thus put in issue may, we think, be fully tested out upon the demurrer to the respondents' answers, and since they all relate to the fundamental question as to whether personal property taken in an action upon claim and delivery and thereafter delivered to the plaintiff in said action, under the provisions of section 514 of the Code of Civil Procedure, remains in custodia legis after its delivery by the officer executing the process to the plaintiff so as not to be subject to a writ of execution issued on behalf of, and at the instance of, the plaintiff on the original attachment suit which preceded and compelled the replevin suit, or issued or sought to be levied for the enforcement of a judgment obtained either in that original action or in any subsequent action by the same plaintiff for the enforcement of the same obligation. Upon the hearing upon and submission of the original applications herein for a writ of mandate, this court held that such personal property was in custodia legis while the same was in the custody of the officer executing the process in the claim and delivery action and that the plaintiff in said action was entitled to have delivered to it said property by said officer, or by anyone to whom he had delivered it, notwithstanding the fact that a writ of execution had been attempted to be levied upon said property at the instance of the plaintiff in the action or actions instituted by it to recover upon the original obligation of certain parties not parties to these proceedings and in which action or actions the attachment or the later execution had been levied. This court, therefore, issued the original writs of mandate herein directing the sheriff to deliver the said property, and the whole thereof, to the applicant herein. In these proceedings for the issuance of supplementary writs of mandate this court is asked to go at least so far as to define the rights of the applicant in respect to the property involved therein after the same has passed into its possession by virtue of the execution of the original writs of mandate. This the court is prepared to do.
[1] An examination of the authorities bearing upon this question discloses the following condition and leads to the *229
following conclusions: Prior to the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure in the state of New York in 1848, the courts of that state had decided that personal property taken under a writ of replevin could not be levied upon through a writ of execution, the property being regarded as in custodia legis so long as the replevin suit was pending, the bond given therein being regarded as a substitute for the goods. In Acker v.White, 25 Wend. (N.Y.) 614, the execution creditor was not the original party whose attachment of the property had led to the replevin suit. The Code of Civil Procedure of the state of New York, adopted in 1848, embodied the provisions of the earlier New York statute relating to actions in the nature of replevin under which the above case was decided. (N.Y. Code Civ. Proc., sec.
For the foregoing reasons we are of the opinion that the applicant herein is entitled to the relief prayed for in its supplementary application herein. Let writs issue accordingly.
*233Kerrigan, J., and Tyler, P. J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on March 16, 1922.
All the Justices concurred.
Lennon, J., was absent and Richards, J., pro tem., was not acting.