63 P. 1012 | Cal. | 1901
Upon January 22, 1896, A. Anderson, defendant and appellant herein, commenced an action in the *592 superior court of the county of Alameda against one William Schmidt to recover a money judgment. Thereafter, on the twenty-fourth day of January, at the hour of 12:30 P.M., he caused an attachment to be levied upon certain real estate of William Schmidt, a member of the copartnership of George F. Smith Co., which real estate is situated in the city and county of San Francisco. At the hour of 4:20 P.M. of the twenty-fourth day of February, 1896, a petition was filed in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, asking that the partnership of George F. Smith Co. be adjudged insolvent. An adjudication to this effect was given on the seventeenth day of November, 1896, upon which day Scoville, plaintiff herein, was appointed assignee. Meanwhile, by order and permission of the court in insolvency, Anderson was allowed to prosecute his action then pending in the superior court of Alameda county to a judgment, and he did so. He subsequently caused execution to be issued upon his judgment and the land in San Francisco upon which the attachment had been levied was sold on the first day of September, 1896, Anderson himself being the purchaser at the sale. On the fifth day of September, 1897, he received his sheriff's deed for the land. Upon the twenty-ninth day of May, 1897, Scoville, as assignee of the insolvent copartnership, commenced this action to quiet title to the land, and from the judgment and decree so quieting the assignee's title Anderson appeals.
Upon his appeal he presents two points for consideration: 1. That Scoville's action is a collateral attack upon the order of the superior court granting Anderson permission to prosecute his action, and upon the judgment and execution of the superior court of Alameda county; and 2. That the attachment in the action prosecuted in the superior court of Alameda county was levied more than one month prior to the initiation of the insolvency proceedings.
It is conceded that the fee of the property was in William Schmidt, and that all of Schmidt's title except as affected by the lien of the attachment passed to the assignee under his appointment, so that the assignee took title by relation as of the twenty-fourth day of February, 1896. (Insolvent Act 1895, sec. 21, Dambmann v. White,
Respondent relies upon the provisions of section 21 of the Insolvent Act, declaring that the "assignment shall dissolve any attachment made within a month next preceding the commencement of the solvency proceedings." Appellant, recognizing that the validity or invalidity of his attachment lien depends upon this section, insists that in the computation and measurement of time, to protect his private right, the law will regard the fractions of a day, and that between 1:30 o'clock in the afternoon of January 24, 1896, and 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon of February 24, 1896, more than one month had elapsed, and that his attachment lien therefore was not dissolved. In measuring and computing time it has been the rule from a very early day in this state to exclude the day upon which the event happened, a rule and method of computation differing from that of the earlier English practice, which was the inclusive method, under which the time began to run upon the day of the happening of the event. Thus, while in People v. Clark,
But it is still further insisted by appellant that having due regard to the private rights of the parties litigant, the law will regard fractions of a day. The principle here involved was expressed in Iron Mountain Co. v. Haight, supra, as follows: "Fractions of days are not to be noticed unless in a case in which it becomes necessary to ascertain the relative order of occurrences happening on the same day." The supreme court of the United States in National Bank v. Burkhardt,
The case at bar, then, involves the question of the measurement of time, as to which it is clear that the law will not regard fractions of days, and that the attachment lien was, therefore, avoided by the initiation of the insolvency proceedings upon the twenty-fourth day of February. The same conclusion was reached by the supreme court of Connecticut in a parallel case arising under its Insolvent Act. (Miner v. Goodyear etc. Mfg. Co.,
The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.