75 P. 668 | Cal. | 1904
The plaintiff is the sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco; and this suit was brought, under section
One of the grounds of error urged by the appellant is, that there is no finding as to the alleged assignment of the accounts in question by Atwater to the appellant of date May 20, 1900; and if the alleged fact is to be regarded as material, the ground is obviously well taken. Nor can the contention of the respondent be admitted that the allegation in question was in effect negatived by the facts set up in the respondent's answer and found by the court to be true — that is to say, that the money was collected from debtors of Atwater for his use — or by the finding that the appellant is estopped from pleading the assignment. These, in view of the *115 pleadings and the evidence, must be regarded as findings merely of conclusions of law deduced by the court from the facts before it, and cannot be understood as negativing the facts of the assignment alleged in the appellant's answer and proven without contradiction by the evidence. Assuming the materiality of the fact alleged, the appellant was entitled to a definite and direct finding with reference thereto. We have to inquire therefore simply as to the materiality of the allegation; if this be determined in the affirmative, the judgment should be reversed.
The position of the respondent on this point is, that the finding of estoppel is but a necessary inference from the fact — alleged in the complaint and in respondent's answer, and found to be true by the court — that, under the instructions of the appellant, the execution was levied by the plaintiff, on the accounts in question as the property of Atwater. But the conclusion, we think, is illegitimate. Atwater was not in any way misled to his prejudice by the action of the appellant, but, on the contrary, resisted the proceedings, and succeeded in having the execution and judgment set aside. Nor does it appear that the conduct of the appellant was the result of intentional deceit or gross negligence. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1962, subd. 3; Boggs v.Merced Mining Co.,
It may be added, had the facts been found according to the evidence, — as they should have been (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 470), — it would have appeared that the assignment to the appellant was for collection and for application on the debts of the appellant and two other creditors — thus leaving an interest in Atwater which was subject to execution. If, in view of the rights of the other creditors secured, this mode of collection was improper, it may have been the result of an innocent mistake; and, at all events, the rights of the other creditors to participate in the fund would not have been *116 affected. The appellant must therefore be regarded as representing not only his own rights, but those of the other creditors interested.
We advise that the judgment and order appealed from be reversed.
Chipman C., and Gray, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., Lorigan, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.