14 Cal. 661 | Cal. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, J. and Field, C. J. concurring.
Respondents, in 1854, recovered judgment against one Jacob BE. Gardenhire, for some six hundred dollars and costs. On the same day the plaintiff therein assigned the judgment. Mitchell, without authority from the assignee, caused execution to be issued, and levied upon certain personal property, a portion of which was claimed by S. M. Gardenhire, a son of Jacob, the debt- or. Mitchell indemnified, and the Sheriff sold the property. S. M. Gardenhire sued the Sheriff for trespass, and recovered judgment for six hundred and fifty-three dollars. The plaintiff not making the money out of the property of the Sheriff, brought suit against the obligors on his official bond, Haekett & Dickenson, and recovered judgment against them for the amount, which they paid. The Sheriff then assigned to them the indemnifying bond which was made by Mitchell, as principal, and others as sureties. Haekett & Dickenson instituted suit upon the bond, and recovered judgment for the amount paid by them for the Sheriff. Upon this judgment they issued execution, and placed the same in the hands of the then Sheriff, who levied on certain personal property of Mitchell, and advertised it for sale. Pending this proceeding, Mitchell procured another execution to be issued upon the judgment against Jacob H. Gardenhire, and caused the same to be levied on certain personal property in possession of Jacob H. Gardenhire, the debtor. Afterward S. M. Gardenhire and one H. H. Martin, a son-in-law of Jacob
We understand the substance of the bill and proof to be this : That Mitchell having sold and transferred this judgment, afterward pretended to be the owner of it, and issued execution, and dealt with the debt as his own; that he agreed to satisfy it, and have satisfaction entered of record of the judgment, in consideration of a note to be made to him by Gardenhire & Martin, and that he assigned this note to Dickinson & Haekett, in discharge of the execution and judgment against Mitchell and others, in favor of Haekett & Dickenson. Assuming that Mitchell, after the transfer of the judgment, and the entry of the fact of transfer on the records of the Court where the judgment was rendered, could have made this arrangement with the defendants in execution, the defendants not knowing the true state of facts, yet it is clear that whenever the makers of the note discovered the fact that Mitchell had no authority to deal with the judg
The Sheriff took this note and made a return of satisfaction on the execution. But this return is not conclusive; perhaps, under the circumstances, would not be even prima fade evidence of the fact that the execution was satisfied; for the Sheriff is not authorized by his general powers, to receive anything but legal currency in satisfaction of an execution, and the return does not show any authority to receive this note in payment. The case then resolves itself into this simple proposition : The plaintiff in execution, after having assigned a judgment, pretended falsely and fraudulently, to be the owner of it, and so pretending, made a contract to discharge the judgment by taking a note not negotiable, in the mercantile sense, in payment; the makers of the note agreed to this arrangement, under the notion induced by him, that he was the owner; they afterwards discovered that he was not. "When they did so ascertain, they refused to pay the note. They certainly wore not, to say the least, bound to confirm and give effect to a contract which would result in defrauding the true owner of his property. They were no more bound to pay after giving the note, than before; and knowledge of the true ownership of the judgment, charged them as effectually any time before payment, as it would have charged them, if, knowing before making this arrangement the fact of this assignment, they had gone on to make it. In other words, they dealt with Mitchell as if he were owner, on his representation of that character—but they so dealt as not to bind themselves either to him or to his assigns, if the representations were fraudulent; they have discovered that the representation was false, and they can now, on that ground, rescind the contract.
The obvious equity of this view of the case, impressed the learned Judge below with the conclusion just expressed; but he reversed his first decision upon the construction he gave to the opinion of this Court in the case of Morley v. Dickenson, (12
Mitchell files this hill to carry out, in effect, this fraudulent arrangement. But he must do equity before he can ask it. The defense of this fraud is set up in the answer. It is true, that a payment was made by Mitchell on this arrangement, for costs of the suit. But this sum may be deducted from the judgment, or he may be credited with it, which would do complete equity between the parties. The outstanding note, or his indorsement, does not stand in the way of this conclusion; for the note, as to the makers, has already been disposed of by the judgment, and the decree would effectually protect the indorser.
We have taken the case as the record seems to give it, though the statement is so made up, that it is not a little difficult to ascertain the facts which were legally proven. But when the case goes back it can be fully tried de novo, if the parties desire. It was irregular for the Judge to grant the new trial, and then immediately proceed to render a contrary judgment without hearing or notice.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.