The plaintiff, Mare Bellaire, Inc., a corporation, has appealed from a judgment in favor of the intervener, Division of Labor Law Enforcement, Department of Industrial Relations, State of California.
The basic facts are not in dispute. The defendant Donald E. Fleischman, who was also known аs Mare Bellaire, entered into a contract, under the date of February 11, 1954, with certain persons. In the joint pretrial statement, it was agreed that the latter made such agreement for and on behalf of the corporation, the plaintiff herein, and that it was the contract of the corporation. That contract contained a provision that Fleischman would “receive as salary from the said corporation the sum of $75.00 per week during the first year of his employment, provided the said corporation does not lose more than $7500.00 during such first year.” With respect to the seсond year of his employment, he was to receive “not less than $7500.00 per year as wages.” On or about February 11, 1954, Fleischman commenced his work. His employment was terminated on January 25, 1956. 1 During the period from February 11, 1955, to about January 15, 1956, he was paid $4,550 as wages. On or about October 11,1956, the corporation paid $122.60 ($150 less deductions of $27.40) to the Division of Labor Law Enforcement as a result of a demand made upon the corporation by that agency.
The interest of the intervener, Division of Labor Law Enforcement, in Fleischman’s contract of employment arose out of Fleischman’s obligatiоns to former employees of his in another venture. On April 21, 1955, a judgment in the sum of $2,740.06 was entered against him in favor of the Division of Labor Law Enforcement as assignee of such former employees. On or about February 8, 1956, Fleischman assigned in writing to the intervener herein all wages and penalties accruing because of the nonpayment of wages by the corporation to Fleischman. Before the filing of the present action, the corporation had notice that Fleischman had assigned his right to wages under the contract to the intervener herein. The judgment against Fleischman was unsatisfied at pаrticular dates in amounts (exclusive of interest) as follows: January 31, 1956, $1,689.84; September 27, 1956, $1,689.84; February 14, 1957, $1,567.24; July 28, 1958, $817.24.
On September 27, 1956, the corporation filed the present action in which Fleischman was named as defendant. In the
Upon the trial of the matter, a judgment was entered in which it was declared that there had been no oral modification of the original contract and that there had been no accord and satisfaction with respect to the wages due thereunder; that Fleischman had performed “all of the conditions on his part to be performed” during the period of February 11, 1954, through January 25, 1956; and that since January 25, 1956, the sum of $2,445 had been due, owing and unpaid by the corporation for such wages. It was ordered and adjudged that the intervener recover from the corporation, appellant herein, the sum of $2,445 with interest thereon from January 25, 1956.
The principal contention of the appellant is that, by reason of the entry of the default of the defendant Fleischman, all of the allegations of the appellant’s complaint were admitted and, therefore, the trial court should have received only the
As assignee of Fleischman’s claim for wages (see Lab. Code, § 96), the state agency had an interest in the contract of employment and in the success of Fleischman as against the attempt of the appellant to obtain a declaration that there had been an еffectual modification of that agreement. Such interest was of the nature required for intervention. (Code Civ. Proc., §
387
2
; Dabney
v.
Philleo,
The authority of the intervener to proceed in the present case must be found in section 98 of the Labor Code. That section is as follows: “The division may prosecute actions for the collection of wages, penalties, and demands of persons who, in the judgment of the Labor Commissioner are financially unable to employ counsel, in cases in which the Labor Commissioner believes such claims are valid and enforceable.”
3
Certainly, when the division intervenes to assert rights оf an employee to wages under a contract and to seek a judgment for the amount of unpaid wages, it is prosecuting a claim for wages. In effect, in the present case, it has proceeded as a plaintiff against the employer as defendant. (See
Wall
v.
Mines,
We are brought, then, to the main contention of the appellant, namely, that the default of Pleisehman precluded the granting of any relief to the intervener. In the first place, it is to be noted that the intervention occurred long before Pleisеhman was in default. This is not a ease, such as
Stern & Goodman Inv. Co.
v.
Danziger,
It would appear that in a case like the present where the basic interests of the defaulting defendant and the intervener are the same, so that the intervener is in effect a codefendant, no judgment should or could be entered against the defaulting defendant where thе intervener prevails. The problem under such circumstances would appear to be akin to that before the court in
Plott
v.
York,
In the present ease, the appellant does not urge that there was not substantial evidence in support of the determination of the trial court. Hence, it appears that upon the whole record the appellant was not entitled to prevail as agаinst Pleischman with respect to the asserted modification of the contract of employment and as to the claim of an accord and satisfaction. The fact that payment of the present judgment in full to the intervener will more than satisfy the intervener’s claim so that in that event a substantial amount will be due to Pleischman from the intervener does not dictate a different result because the merits of the appellant’s position with respect to its duties and obligations under the written contract, as determined by the court, could not thereby be affected.
The trial court allowed interеst from January 25, 1956, the date upon which the relationship of employer and employee terminated. The appellant contends that interest should have been allowed only from the date of judgment. There is no merit in that position. When the amount due and payable as of a particular dаte can be made certain by calculation,
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interest is to be awarded from that date.
(Charlton
v.
Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
Notes
No issue was raised in this ease as to the reason for the termination of Fleischman’s employment.
Section 387 of the Code of Civil Procedure is as follows: “At any time before trial, any person, who has an interest in the matter in litigation, or in the success of either of the parties, or an interest against both, may intervene in the action or proceeding. An intervention takes place when a third person is permitted to become a party to an action or proceeding between other persons, either by joining the plaintiff in clаiming what is sought by the complaint, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claims of the plaintiff, or by demanding anything adversely to both the plaintiff and the defendant, and is made by complaint, setting forth the grounds upon which the intervention rests, filed by leave of the court and served upon the parties to the action or prоceeding who have not appeared, and upon the attorneys of the parties who have appeared, who may answer or demur to it within ten days from the service thereof, if served within the county wherein said action is pending, or within thirty days if served elsewhere.”
In this case, we need not be concerned with the financial ability of Pleisehman to employ counsel since a determination by the court of such inability does not appear to be necessary to entitle the Division of Labor Law Enforcement to prevail in this action. That matter appears to be one for dеtermination by the state agency before it undertakes action. (See
MacDonald
v.
Neuner, 5
Cal.App.2d 751, 753-754 [
At the beginning of the trial, it was stipulated that, if the court found that the appellant was liable under the written contract for the sum of $7,500 for the particular year, the balance unpaid was $2,445 "plus whatever interest would accrue, ’ ’ since $5,055 had theretofore been paid.
