Stanley W. Taylor, plaintiff below, appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court of Santa Clara County in favor of the defendant and respondent, S & M Lamp Company, rendered upon the court’s granting defendant’s motion to exclude evidence. The first question presented is whether the complaint states a cause of action. It was filed in propria persona and is far from a model pleading. However, in view of the policy of the law to construe pleadings liberally, to the end that eases will be tried on their merits rather than disposed of on technicalities of pleadings (Code Civ. Proc., § 452;
Mix
v.
Yoakum
(1927),
“• • • a motion to exclude evidence based on insufficiency of the complaint is in the nature of a general demurrer and may be sustained only if the allegations of the complaint, deemed true for this purpose, are totally insufficient to support a judgment for plaintiff. And, a demurrer which attacks an entire pleading should be overruled if one of the counts therein is not vulnerable to the objection.”
(Brunson
v.
Babb
(1956),
Although a plaintiff may have misconceived his remedy, if his complaint states a cause of action upon any theory he is entitled to introduce evidence thereon and it is error to sustain a general demurrer or to grant a motion to exclude evidence.
(Clark
v.
Lesher
(1951),
We now turn our attention to the allegations of the first cause of action. It seeks damages for conversion of personal property belonging to plaintiff. It alleges that plaintiff at all time mentioned was the owner of a business known as Stephens Foundries; that on November 17, 1956, the plaintiff notified the defendant of his ownership of Stephens Foundries; that on November 18, 1956, with full knowledge of plaintiff’s ownership and possession of Stephens Foundries, and without plaintiff’s consent, the defendant “surreptitiously and outside of ordinary business hours” caused plaintiff’s locks to be removed from the foundry premises, and caused the equipment, supplies, books and records of Stephens Foundries to be removed from the premises, and has refused to account to plaintiff for same. These allegations are followed by allegations of specific items of damage caused by the removal of the property.
“As held in
Hutchings
v.
Castle,
In
MacDonald
v.
Kingsley
(1957),
The second cause of action is based on allegations that the plaintiff was a judgment creditor of Ben and Eugene Stephens; that at the time of the judgment, and continuing until the conspiracy complained of, the judgment debtors were possessed of substantial assets; that in November 1956, the defendant conspired with the judgment debtors in concealing their assets and thus prevented plaintiff from recovering on his judgment, thereby damaging him in the amount of the judgment, to wit, $29,397.84. In support of the judgment which followed upon the court’s granting its motion to exclude evidence, the respondent argues that since a conspiracy is not actionable in and of itself, in the absence of an actionable wrong, a fortiori, the bare allegation of a conspiracy does not state a cause of action. The answer to this argument is that the second cause of action alleges, in essence, the commission of a tort by the judgment debtors, to wit, a concealment of their assets for the purpose of defrauding their principal creditor, the plaintiff, and that they did so with the assistance and in concert with the defendant.
“ A tort has been defined as the unlawful commission or omission of an act infringing on the right of another or causing him substantial loss of money ... or as the violation of a duty imposed by general law or otherwise on persons occupying the relation to each other that is involved in a given transaction. The vagueness of such definitions stems mainly from the fact that the field of tort law includes
“ Civil liability for conspiracy to commit a tort has long been recognized in this state. . . . Generally speaking, the liability exists where there has been formed and operated a conspiracy to accomplish by concerted action a criminal or unlawful purpose or a lawful purpose by criminal or unlawful means which results in actual damage.”
(Clark
v.
Lesher, supra
(1951),
It is contrary to public policy for a debtor to convey or to conceal his property for the purpose of defrauding his creditors. (Civ. Code, § 3439.07 and Pen. Code, §§ 154 and 155.)
“Every person is bound, without contract, to abstain from injuring the person or property of another, or infringing upon any of his rights.” (Civ. Code, $ 1708.)
It is established that one who purposely and wrongly induces another not to perform a contract thereby commits a tort and is liable for the harm caused.
(Elsbach
v.
Mulligan
(1943),
In addition to the allegations of the second cause of action heretofore summarized there were allegations as to bankruptcy proceedings instituted by Ben and Eugene Stephens. The respondent argues that the said allegations must be disregarded, and the complaint examined without them. It is unnecessary for us to discuss the validity of the defendant’s argument that the bankruptcy allegations must be disregarded because we hold that the second count states a cause of action in tort without reference to the bankruptcy allegations. Assuming that such allegations are irrelevant, under the rule of
Domino
v.
Mobley, supra,
The court’s ruling excluding evidence was therefore erroneous as to both causes of action and the judgment based on such error must be reversed.
Before turning to another subject we take this opportunity to direct the attention of judges who conduct pre
Our next inquiry deals with the legal effect of a charging order (Corp. Code, § 15028.) The subject receives our attention because of uncertainty on the part of the trial court as to the legal effect of such an order, as applied to the asserted facts in the case.
Prior to California’s adoption of the Uniform Partnership Act (Corp. Code, § 15001 et seq.) a judgment creditor of a partner whose personal debt, as distinguished from partnership debt, gave rise to the judgment, could cause a sale at execution of partnership assets, including specific items of partnership property, to satisfy his judgment.
(Jones
v.
Thompson
(1859),
“(c) A partner’s right in specific partnership property is not subject to attachment or execution, except on a claim against the partnership. ...”
“(1) On due application to a competent court by any judgment creditor of a partner, the court which entered the judgment, order, or decree, or any other court, may charge the interest of the debtor partner with payment of the unsatisfied amount of such judgment debt with interest thereon; and may then or later appoint a receiver of his share of the profits, and of any other money due or to fall due to him in respect to the partnership, and make all other orders, directions, accounts, and inquiries which the debtor partner might have made, or which the circumstances of the ease may require. ’ ’
Corporations Code, section 15028, corresponds to section 28 of the Uniform Partnership Act. Section 28 was taken from the English Partnership Act of 1890 (68 C.J.S. 405;
Ribero
v.
Callaway
(1948),
" When a creditor obtained a judgment against one partner and he wanted to obtain the benefit of that judgment against the share of that partner in the firm, the first thing was to issue a fi. fa., and the sheriff went down to the partnership place of business, seized everything, stopped the business, drove the solvent partners wild, and caused the execution creditor to bring an action in Chancery in order to get an injunction to take an account and pay over that which was due the execution debtor. A more clumsy method of proceeding could hardly have grown up.” (28 Wash. L. Rev. 1; see also 9 Cal. L. Rev. 117.)
It was to prevent such “hold up” of the partnership business and the consequent injustice done the other partners resulting from execution against partnership property that the quoted code sections and their counterparts in the Uniform Partnership Act and the English Partnership Act of 1890 were adopted. As we view those code sections they are not intended to protect a debtor partner against claims of his judgment creditors where no legitimate interest of the partnership, or of the remaining or former partners is to be served.
Although the complaint makes no reference to a charging order or to a sale at execution the briefs deal largely with questions of the rights, if any, acquired by the plaintiff under either, or both, a charging order on which he relies, and his
Ben and Eugene Stephens, and R. K. Corbin, a nephew, were partners in a business known as Stephens Foundries, in Gilroy, California. The plaintiff held a judgment for approximately $30,000 against Ben and Eugene, individually, but not against Corbin or the partnership. To enforce his judgment plaintiff obtained a charging order against the interest of Ben and Eugene in the partnership. No court order supplementing the charging order was obtained or sought by the plaintiff. Instead he obtained a writ of execution on his judgment and caused the sheriff to levy on “all the beneficial rights and interests of Ben J. Stephens and Eugene S. Stephens, in the partnership commonly known as ‘ Stephens Foundries’ . . . .” The sheriff thereupon “conducted a sheriff’s sale under the writ of execution and appellant purchased whatever interest the sheriff was selling. ’ ’
Plaintiff further alleges that Ben and Eugene filed bankruptcy petitions and were adjudicated bankrupt in the federal district court on the day of the sheriff’s sale; that two days prior thereto a partnership dissolution agreement was entered into, as a part of which Ben and Eugene purported to transfer all of their interest in the partnership to Corbin “subject to the charging order,” in return for Corbin’s assumption of the partnership debts in an undisclosed amount; that Corbin immediately purported to transfer the assets of the partnership or former partnership to the defendant, who was a customer of Stephens Foundries, in consideration of
On the basis of some of the foregoing allegations (not all of them being before the court because of its ruling excluding evidence), the court, in due course, filed a memorandum of opinion, the material portions of which read as follows:
“The charging order of October 24, 1956 impressed a lien on the interests of Ben and Eugene Stephens in the partnership, but the proceeding thereafter followed by plaintiff did not conform to the law. Another order could have been obtained directing the sale of said interests. A sheriff’s sale is not proper in the premises.
“Charging orders on partnership interests have replaced levies of execution as the remedy for reaching such interests. ’ ’
This is a correct statement of the law as applied to the ordinary case, i.e., (1) where the partnership continues a bona fide existence and (2) where there is no transfer of partnership assets without a fair and adequate consideration or in fraud of creditors of either the partnership or of individual partners. But, if as alleged, (a) dissolution occurred (see Corp. Code, §§ 15029 and 15031 as to definition and causes of dissolution), or (b) there was a transfer of partnership assets to one or more of the remaining partners, or to a third party, without a fair and adequate consideration or
Counsel has referred us to no authority and our independent research discloses none, which even remotely touches upon the alleged facts of this ease.
Sherwood
v.
Jackson
(1932),
Counsel for defendant acknowledges that plaintiff’s charging order impressed a lien on the partnership interest of Ben and Eugene Stephens. This is the legal effect of a charging order because “ ‘In its broadest sense and common acceptation, it [a lien] is understood and used to denote a legal claim or charge of property, either real or personal, as security for the payment of some debt or obligation. ... It includes every ease in which personal or real property is charged with the payment of a debt. ’ ”
(Gray
v.
Horne
(1941),
Clearly the purpose of the lien of a charging order is to permit the judgment creditor to realize on his judgment against an individual partner by appropriate supplementary proceedings or orders against that partner’s interest in the partnership. (Corp. Code, § 15028.) Corporations Code, section 15026, defines that interest as, “A partner’s interest in the partnership is his share of the profits and surplus, and the same is personal property.”
It is equally clear that there will be no profits or surplus out of which the lienholder may satisfy his lien if the partnership assets are transferred to a third person, directly or
It is unnecessary for us to determine whether the alleged acts of the defendant constituted a conversion in the accepted sense. Ordinarily an action for conversion does not lie unless the plaintiff was in possession of, or had a right to the immediate possession of the property at the time of the alleged conversion. (48 Cal.Jur.2d 607;
Thomson
v.
Culver City Motor Co.
(1935),
Where a legal wrong has been committed it is the duty of the court to grant appropriate relief. No principles of law are more firmly established than: “No one can take advantage of his own wrong” (Civ. Code, § 3517), and “For every wrong there is a remedy” (Civ. Code, § 3523).
To withhold relief upon count one of the complaint, under the alleged circumstances of this case, solely because the plaintiff has misconceived his remedy, or because the facts alleged do not fit the pattern of one of the more commonly designated causes of action, e.g., conversion, would render “idle and meaningless” the legislative expression of the quoted maxims. (See
Hogan
v.
Anthony
(1919),
We refrain from expressing an opinion as to the rights, if any, which the appellant acquired' through purchase at the sheriff’s sale. On the one hand we know of no reason why, when a partnership has been dissolved, and the purposes which Corporations Code, sections 15025 and 15028 are designed to protect no longer exist, a judgment creditor of an individual partner should be prohibited from pursuing the same remedy of levy and sale at execution which is available to judgment creditors in nonpartnership matters. On the other hand if, as alleged, the levy in this case was made some weeks before dissolution, and at a time when such levy was forbidden by Corporations Code, section 15025, subdivision (2) (c), a separate question would be presented; specifically, what rights, if any, are acquired by a purchaser at a sale based upon a void or a voidable levy where dissolution of the partnership intervened between the date of the charging order and the date of the sheriff’s sale? Under our view of the law governing the rights of the holder of a charging order, in relation to the alleged facts of this case, which for the purposes of a motion to exclude evidence must be treated as true (39 Cal.Jur.2d 448), the appellant’s rights may be enforced without regard to the sheriff’s sale.
We also refrain from discussing superior rights, if any, of third parties, e.g., partnership creditors (see Corp. Code, §§ 15038, 15041) because that question has not been raised.
The judgment is reversed, and the ease remanded for trial upon both causes of action.
Tobriner, Acting P. J., and Duniway, J., concurred.
