Opinion
Dеfendants appeal from a judgment against a corporate surety entered pursuant to former Code of Civil Procedure section 1058a (presently Code Civ. Proc., § 996.440). The judgment was the culmination of plaintiff’s efforts to recover damages from defendаnts for an alleged breach of contract and for services performed. We affirm.
Defendants failed to answer plaintiff’s complaint and on January 21, 1981, a default judgment was entered. On February 6, 1981, plaintiff recorded an abstract of judgment in Sacramento County. On February 10, 1981, defendant Kinestar transferred by deed recorded February 17th certain real property situated in Sacramento County. Plaintiff did not learn of the transfer until March and contacted the title insurer, who requested time to pursue satisfaction from defendаnts or possibly to “bond around the lien.”
On March 17, 1981, defendants moved to set aside the default and to quash service of the summons. Without advising plaintiff, on April 1, 1981, defendants, or the title insurer who had failed to discover the abstract of judgment, recorded an undertaking with defendant Ohiо Casualty as surety for the judgment lien created by plaintiffs abstract of judgment. The motion to set aside the default was heard in April. On July 15, 1981, the trial court granted the motion conditioned upon defendants paying plaintiffs attorneys fees and costs and posting a bond within 30 days in the amount of the judgment plus interest to preserve plaintiffs ability to collect a judgment if obtained. If the conditions were not met within 30 days the motion was to be denied. Although defendants paid plaintiff the attorneys fees and costs, no new bond was filed.
In late Septеmber 1981, defendants Kinestar and ESS, Inc., notified the trial court they had filed for bankruptcy. Plaintiff then moved for judgment against the surety, Ohio Casualty, on the April 1st bond pursuant to section 1058a of Code of Civil Procedure (now § 996.440). The trial court found the April 1st bond did not meet the conditions of the July 15th order as it would cover only the judgment lien created by the abstract of judgment and not any subsequent judgment obtained by plaintiff. The trial court found defendants had failed to
I
Defendants first contend the trial court did not have jurisdiction over the Ohio Casualty bond. They urge the bond was not given “in any action or proceeding” as required by Code of Civil Procedure section 1058a. 1 Their reasoning is: since plaintiff had already obtained a judgment (Jan. 21, .1981), and the trial court had not yet ruled on defendants’ motion to set aside the default (July 15, 1981), there was no action pending (either against defendant or to execute on the property sold) when Ohio Casualty filed the bond on April 1, 1981. We are unpersuaded.
Code of Civil Procedure section 22 defines an “action” as “an ordinaiy proceeding in a court of justice by which one party prosecutes another for the declaration,
enforcement,
or protection of a right, ...” (Italics added.) It has similarly been called “the judicial means or procedure of enforcing a right.”
(Anderson
v.
No-Doz
(1955)
Common law bonds are in effect private contracts and are construed in the same manner as other contracts.
(Fresno Enterprise Co.
v.
Allen
(1885)
Valid common law bonds have been recognized by our courts when filed as a condition to the granting or denial of a court order where such undertakings are not statutorily authorized. (See
Baker
v.
Bartol
(1857)
In the instant case, no court order required the bond as a condition of staying execution on the judgment. The bond was voluntarily filed, as expressed by the title insurer “to bond around the lien.” No stay conditions were contained in the undertaking and plaintiff could have immediately moved for judgment against thе surety. Plaintiff’s failure to take such action upon learning of the bond raises an inference that plaintiff agreed to withhold further collection efforts on the judgment lien pending determination of the motion to set aside the default.
The case law on common law bonds givеs substance to the general rule that parties may enter into a suretyship agreement under terms which best serve the particular circumstances, and the presence of statutory authority is not a prerequisite to the creation of a valid commоn law bond.
In the instant case, no statute prohibits the bond in question and the determinative factor is whether it is in some way violative of public policy. We perceive no public policy reason which prevents defendant from “bonding around” the present judgment lien. Plaintiff is in fact in a more secure position in that he has a bond of fixed value against which to proceed rather than a parcel of real property which must be subject to the expense and delay of execution sale to determine the sufficiency of the value to satisfy the judgment and costs. We discern no reason to preclude defendant and the surety from entering into an agreement under which the surety assumes an almost certain liability. Neither the cost nor the wisdom of assuming such a burden arе matters for public concern or policy.
The bond before us was given for the benefit of plaintiff. To require plaintiff to levy execution against the property now in the hands of third parties in lieu of proceeding directly against the bond posted to sаtisfy plaintiff’s claim is neither logical nor economical of time and money. A somewhat similar situation existed in
Culbertson
v.
Cizek
(1964)
n
Defendants next contend that, assuming the trial court had jurisdiction over the April 1st bond, the bond satisfied the condition of the July 15th order and relief from the default should have been granted. Plaintiff therefore would have no judgment upon which to execute. This reasoning is unpersuasive.
The trial court’s ordеr required defendants to post a bond within 30 days to preserve plaintiff’s ability to collect a
future
judgment in the event plaintiff prevailed after the default was set aside. The April 1st bond obligated the surety only on the existing judgment lien, and not any future judgment. The lien could not exist apart from the default judgment upon which it was based. “Thus, in the ordinary course of events when the judgment is vacated by court order the lien will also cease to exist, because the effect of a vacating order is to eliminate the judgment.”
(Bulmash
v.
Davis
(1979)
The judgment is affirmed.
Sparks, J., and Sims, J., concurred.
Notes
Former Code of Civil Procedure section 1058a (now Code Civ. Proc., § 996.440), in force until January 1, 1983, provided in part: “Whenever аny security is given in the form of a bond or undertaking,... in any action or proceeding, each surety submits himself to the jurisdiction of the court in all matters affecting his liability on the bond or undertaking. . . . The liability of such surety or sureties, if any, may be enforced on motion filed in the trial court without the necessity of an independent action. ...”
Though not specifically addressed by counsel or the trial court in its order granting plaintiff’s motion, the court’s implied finding of a common law bond perforce underlies its order as there was no statutory authority for the bond.
