93 F. 339 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1899
This is an application on the part of the Bpreckels Bros. Commercial Company for leave to file a petition in intervention. The suit in which the intervention is thus sought was brought for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed by the Bear Valley Irrigation Company to the Savings & Trust Company of Cleveland, Ohio, and also for the foreclosure of certain receivers’ certificates issued by the authority and direction of this court in a former suit brought herein by one James Gilbert Foster against the Bear Valley Irrigation Company and others, in which suit that company, under and pursuant to an order therein made by this court, conveyed all of its property to certain receivers therein appointed, including the property covered by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in the present suit. From those receivers the title to the property passed, under the orders of this court, to, and is now held by, the receiver appointed in the present suit. The validity of neither the mortgage; nor the receivers’ certificates, to which title is asserted by the complainant, is questioned by the petition now sought to be filed. The latter, is based upon certain indebtedness due from the Bear Valley Irrigation Company to the Spreckels Bros. Commercial Company, which arose and exists, according to the aver
In respect to judgment liens, a statute of California provides:
•‘A transcript of the original docket, certified by the clerk, may be filed with the recorder of any other county, and from' the time of the filing the judgment becomes a lien upon all the real property of the judgment debtor not exempt from execution in such county, owned by him at the time, or which he may afterwards, and before the lien expires, acquire. The lien continues for two years unless the judgment be previously satisfied.” Code CiV. Proc. Oal. § 674.
Assuming that the effect of the filing of a certified copy of the judgment is the same as the filing of “a transcript of the original docket, certified by the clerk,” as prescribed by the statute, yet, at the time of the filing in San Bernardino and Riverside counties of certified copies of the judgment in favor of the Spreckels Bros. Commercial Company, the Bear Valley Irrigation Company owned none of the real property covered by the complainant’s mortgage or the receivers’ certificates sued upon, nor has it since acquired ownership thereof. The Spreckels Bros. Commercial-Company, therefore, has not acquired any judgment lien upon any of the realty covered by the mortgage or receivers’ certificates upon which the bill is based, and has only a personal judgment against the Bear Valley Irrigation Company. Savings & Trust Co. v. Bear Valley Irr. Co., 89 Fed. 32. “And the same reasons, or reasons equally strong as those which have settled the question that a judgment subsequently acquired in another court, or in the same court in another suit, does not create a legal lien on any of the property being administered, exclude the holder from acquiring thereby an equitable lien or right of preference in the assets.” Mercantile Trust Co. v. Southern States Land & Timber Co., 30 C. C. A. 359, 86 Fed. 711, 721; Hollins v. Iron Co., 150 U. S. 371, 14 Sup. Ct. 127; Richmond v. Irons, 121 U. S. 27, 7 Sup. Ct. 788.
The petitioner, therefore, occupies the position of a general creditor, only, of the defendant Bear Valley Irrigation Company, having no lien upon any of the real property which forms the subject of the foreclosure suit. It was not, therefore, a necessary party to the suit, and, if made such, could do nothing by way of defense to the complainant’s suit. Stout v. Lye, 103 U. S. 66, 70. Nevertheless, as such general creditor the petitioner has an interest in any surplus that may remain after the complainant’s liens are satisfied; and, since the possession and control of the property by the court through its receivers have prevented, and still prevent, the petitioner from proceeding against it under its judgment, the petitioner ought, I think, to be allowed to come into this suit, in order that it may be, in the language of the circuit court of appeals for the Seventh circuit in the case of Louisville Trust Co. v. Louisville, N. A. & C. Ry. Co., 28 C. C. A. 205, 84 Fed. 539, 541, “in condition to keep an eye on the proceedings,” find in condition to secure protection of its interest in any such surplus. The motion for leave to file the petition in intervention is granted.