JOHN C. TORJESEN, Plаintiff and Respondent, v. HARRY MANSDORF, Individually and as Trustee, etc., et al., Defendants; JAIME DeJESUS GONZALEZ, Third Party Claimant and Appellant.
No. B263377
Second Dist., Div. Four
July 5, 2016
111
[No. B263377. Second Dist., Div. Four. July 5, 2016.]
JOHN C. TORJESEN, Plaintiff and Respondent, v.
HARRY MANSDORF, Individually and as Trustee, etc., et al., Defendants;
JAIME DeJESUS GONZALEZ, Third Party Claimant and Appellant.
Counsel
Long Beach Legal, John C. Feely; and Jaime DeJesus Gonzalez, in pro. per., for Third Party Claimant and Appellant.
John C. Torjesen, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Opinion
WILLHITE, J.—The Enforcement of Judgments Law (
In the case before us, a judgment creditor obtained a judgment against a judgment debtor (individually and as trustee of the debtor’s trust), but did not levy on the debtor’s property until after the debtor died. A third party claimant to the property filed a third party claim, and the judgment creditor filed a petition under the EJL to invalidate the third party claim. The trial court granted the judgment creditor’s petition. The third party claimant did not appeal from that ruling. Two years later, the third party claimant filed a motion to vacate the order granting the petition, on the ground that it is void becausе the trial court did not have jurisdiction to proceed under the EJL. The trial court denied the motion, and the third party claimant appealed.
We conclude that the underlying order invalidating the third party claim was voidable, not void, and became final once the time to appeal that order ran. Therefore, we hold the trial court properly denied the third party claimant’s belated motion to vacate that order.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff John C. Torjesen obtained a $2 million judgment against defendants Harry Mansdorf, individually and as trustee of the Mansdorf Family Revocable Trust (the Trust) on Januаry 31, 2012. On September 17, 2012, he obtained a writ of execution1 and on October 11, 2012, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department, at the direction of Torjesen, levied on property (the Malibu property) owned by Mansdorf as trustee of the Trust. Mansdorf, however, had died on August 27, 2012.
On March 6, 2013, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department mailed to the Trust a notice that the Malibu property was scheduled to be sold at a sheriff’s auction on April 18, 2013. Eight days later, third party claimant Jaime DeJesus Gonzalez filed a third party claim to ownership and possession of the Malibu property pursuant to
In response, on March 25, 2013, Torjesen sought and obtained a temporary restraining order to enjoin the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department from releasing the Malibu property from the execution levy until the trial court could hear and determine a petition on the validity of the third party claim. Two days later, Torjesen filed a petition under the EJL to invalidate Gonzalez’s third party claim. The petition alleged that (1) Gonzalez was not a valid third party claimant under
wаs altered, which rendered it void; (5) there was no effective delivery of the grant deed from Mansdorf to Gonzalez; and (6) Gonzalez’s claim of ownership under joint tenancy was contrary to representations he made in federal court that the Malibu property passed to Mansdorf’s еstate upon his death.
Gonzalez’s opposition to the petition was due a week later, on April 3, 2013. The day before the opposition was due, Gonzalez’s attorney sought an extension of time to file the opposition, citing a medical issue, but the trial court denied the request. The next day, Gonzalez filed a declaration by Mansdorf’s widow in support of his third party claim; he filed no points and authorities in opposition to Torjesen’s petition.
On April 8, 2013, the day before the scheduled hearing, Gonzalez’s attorney substituted out of the case, and Gonzalez, in propria persona, filed a request for dismissal without prejudice of his claim. The court entered the dismissal that same day. A week later, Torjesen filed an ex parte application asking the trial court to reconsider its ruling dismissing Gonzalez’s claim, arguing that under the EJL, proceedings to determine the validity of a third party claim cannot be dismissed without the consent of the judgment creditor. On April 15, 2013, the trial court granted Torjesen’s request for reconsideration, retracted its order dismissing the third party claim, and granted Torjesen’s petition to invalidate Gonzalez’s third party claim. Gonzalez did not aрpeal the trial court’s order.
Two years later, Gonzalez, represented by new counsel, filed an ex parte application to vacate the trial court’s order invalidating his third party claim. Gonzalez argued that the third party claim process used in the case was unlawful bеcause the judgment debtor had died before the execution lien was perfected (citing
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Gonzalez argues that the April 15, 2013 order invalidating his third party claim was void ab initio because
an execution lien at the time of the debtor’s death. Therefore, he contends, the trial court’s March 18, 2015 order denying his motion to vacate the April 15, 2013 order also is void and appealable.
We agree that judgment creditor Torjesen proceeded to enforce his judgment in a manner that unquestionably was improper.2 The statutory scheme could not be more clear: following the death of a judgment debtor, a judgment cannot be enforced against the judgment debtor’s property, or property in his trust, by levying on that property under a writ of execution, and the judgment creditor must instead proceed under the Probate Code. (
A. Law Governing Attacks on Final Orders and Judgments
“A motion to vacate a judgment, mаde after the expiration of the six-month period allowed in
In People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 653 [16 Cal.Rptr.3d 76, 93 P.3d 1020], the Supreme Court addressed when a jurisdictional error renders a judgment (or a final order) subject to collateral attack. The court explained that “jurisdictional errors are of two types. ‘Lack of jurisdiction in its most fundamental or strict sense means an entire absence of power to hear or determine the case, an absence of authority over the subject matter or the parties.’ [Citation.] When a court lacks jurisdiction in a fundamental sense, an ensuing judgment is void, and ‘thus vulnerable to direct or collateral attack at any time.’ [Citation.] [¶] However, ‘in its ordinary usage the phrase “lack of jurisdictiоn” is not limited to these fundamental situations.’ [Citation.] It may also ‘be applied to a case where, though the court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties in the fundamental sense, it has no “jurisdiction” (or power) to act except in a particular manner, or to give сertain kinds of relief, or to act without the occurrence of certain procedural prerequisites.’ [Citation.] “[W]hen a statute authorizes [a] prescribed procedure, and the court acts contrary to the authority thus conferred, it has exceeded its jurisdiction.” [Citation.] When а court has fundamental jurisdiction, but acts in excess of its jurisdiction, its act or judgment is merely voidable. [Citations.] That is, its act or judgment is valid until it is set aside, and a party may be precluded from setting it aside by ‘principles of estoppel, disfavor of collateral attack or res judicata.’ [Citation.] Errors which are merely in excess of jurisdiction should be challenged directly, for example by motion to vacate the judgment, or on appeal, and are generally not subject to collateral attack once the judgment is final unless ‘unusual circumstances were present whiсh prevented an earlier and more appropriate attack.’ [Citations.]” (People v. American Contractors Indemnity Co., supra, at pp. 660-661.)
B. The Trial Court Properly Denied Gonzalez’s Motion to Vacate
In his appellant’s opening brief, Gonzalez does not specifically address the trial court’s fundamental jurisdiction or the difference between void and voidable orders. Instead, he relies upon language from Casa Eva I Homeowners Assn. v. Ani Construction & Tile, Inc. (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th 111 [36 Cal.Rptr.3d 401] (Casa Eva) to assert that “[t]he trial court had no jurisdiction to utilize an expressly unauthorized statutory scheme to entertain the Third Party Claim process nor enter the April 15, 2013, Order.” His reliance on Casa Eva is misplaced.
To be sure, the appellate court in Casa Eva referred to an order madе in contravention of the EJL as void: “ ‘These judgment lien statutes are subject to strict construction because they are purely the creation of the Legislature.
[Citations.] Thus, where a statute requires a court to exercise its jurisdiction in a particular manner, follow a particular procedure, or be subject to certain limitations, an act beyond those limits is in excess of its jurisdiction and void.’ [Citations.]” (Casa Eva, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at pp. 778-779, citing Pangborn Plumbing Corp. v. Carruthers & Skiffington (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 1039, 1056 [119 Cal.Rptr.2d 416] and Epstein v. Abrams (1997) 57 Cal.App.4th 1159, 1167 [67 Cal.Rptr.2d 555].) But Casa Eva, and the cases upon which it relied, did not involve collateral attacks on final judgments or orders. Rather, those cases involved direct attacks on judgments or orders by means of timely appeals. Thus, the appellate courts declared those voidable judgments void, not because the trial courts lacked fundamental jurisdiction, but because they acted in excess of their jurisdiction. Those cases have no bearing on the present case.
Because the present case involves a collateral attack on a final order, the relevant question is whether the trial court had fundamental jurisdiction, i.e., jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties. Gonzalez appears to argue that the statutory scheme at issue here—
Without question, the superior court has jurisdiction over disputes related to the enforcement of judgments and the validity of claims to property that has been levied upon. (See, e.g.,
The trial court’s error in this case was in allowing Torjesen to proceed under the EJL.4 But that error was an act in excess of jurisdiction, which could have been addressed in an appeal from the order granting Torjesen’s petition. Because Gonzalez did not appeal from that order, it is a final order not subject to collateral attack. Therefore, the trial court properly denied Gonzalez’s motion to vacate the earlier order.
DISPOSITION
The order denying Gonzalez’s motion to vacate the April 15, 2013 order is affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Epstein, P. J., and Collins, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 25, 2016.
