13 P.2d 405 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
Suit on foreign judgment for money.
On October 20, 1923, O.W. Richardson Company, a corporation, procured a judgment against defendants Halleck F. Johnson and Ralph E. Johnson, in the Marshall County Circuit Court, comprising the forty-first judicial circuit (since changed to the seventy-second judicial circuit) of the state of Indiana, in the sum of $579.39, together with *636 interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum until paid. Plaintiff filed this action as assignee of said O.W. Richardson Company, a corporation, against said defendants on said judgment with the result that judgment was rendered herein in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Halleck F. Johnson for the sum of $795.65. The defendant Ralph E. Johnson was not served with process herein; nor did he make any appearance. From the judgment said Halleck F. Johnson has appealed.
Copies of the record of the Indiana court, viz.: Judgment, summons together with sheriff's certificate of service thereof upon defendants, and answer to complaint denying the averments thereof and purporting to have been filed in behalf of defendants, were received in evidence over the objection of appellant. All of said records were authenticated in accordance with the requirements of our section
"Come now the parties by counsel into open court. This cause is now submitted to the court for trial and after hearing the evidence adduced the court finds for plaintiff and finds the allegations of plaintiff's complaint are true, and that there is due plaintiff from defendants on the account sued on the sum of $569.49, . . . together with costs of this cause herein taxed at $9.90."
[1] Judgment is then ordered for plaintiff against defendants in said action for $579.39. Said recitals are sufficient to show jurisdiction of the court over the persons of the defendants therein; and the court will take judicial notice that under the laws of the state of Indiana the circuit court which rendered the judgment is one of general jurisdiction (sec. 1875, Code Civ. Proc.); and it will be presumed that said court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. (15 Cor. Jur. 827, sec. 146, citing many cases.) *637
In support of his contention appellant cites and relies upon the cases of Young v. Rosenbaum,
"We are not unmindful of the decision in Wickersham v.Johnston,
We think the rule applicable is that mentioned in said quotation and applied in the later cases of Uplinger v.Yonkin,
"First point: That the Illinois judgment has not been proved as required by law, in this, that an authenticated copy of the judgment alone was received in evidence without the judgment roll. This question has been determined adversely to appellant's contention in McHatton v. Rhodes,
Each of the cases of Uplinger v. Yonkin, supra, andCummings v. Cummings, supra, was an action upon a money judgment procured in a sister state; and in each case the judgment sued upon showed jurisdiction over the defendant upon its face; and the last-mentioned case justifies the introduction of the judgment on that ground.
[2] We hold that where a judgment for money rendered by a court of general jurisdiction of a sister state shows jurisdiction over the defendant upon its face, it is admissible in evidence in an action in this state based upon said judgment, though unaccompanied by a copy of the complaint; and that the judgment in question was properly received in evidence.
[3] Connected somewhat with the appellant's first point is his further contention that the trial court should have determined as a fact that the Indiana court did not have jurisdiction over the person of appellant. Appellant testified that he was not served with summons in said Indiana action and that he did not authorize counsel who filed the answer for him and his co-defendant to do so. He admitted, however, that he was living at Plymouth (Marshall County), Indiana, on December 18, 1922, the date when, as shown by the sheriff's return, he was served with summons, but was uncertain as to whether he was in town on that particular day; and he also admitted that he was acquainted with the deputy sheriff who made return of service and with the attorney who filed the answer and who appeared at the trial. His testimony was indefinite in respect to his alleged indebtedness. In reply to the question "Did your firm ever owe O.W. Richardson Company anything?" he replied: "Not to my knowledge. I don't know. I didn't take care of that end of the business." The presumption that an attorney who has made an appearance for a party was authorized to do so is firmly established. (6 Cor. Jur. 631, citing many cases.) Many California cases so hold. The record evidence, if considered alone, was prima facie sufficient to justify the findings and judgment of the trial court in favor of plaintiff. *639
Appellant complains because the court did not act upon his testimony denying service of summons upon him and denying the authority of counsel to appear for him. A court may reject the most positive testimony. (People v. Knutte,
[4] It is also contended that the cause of action sued upon is barred by the provisions of section 336, subdivision 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to the effect that an action upon a judgment must be commenced within five years. It is admitted that under the Indiana statute an appeal may be taken at any time within 180 days from the time judgment is rendered. The time within which an appeal could have been taken from said judgment therefore did not expire until April 17, 1924. The record does not disclose that any appeal was taken. Said judgment did not become final until the time within which an appeal might have been taken therefrom expired; and the statute of limitations did not begin to run against the cause of action until the judgment became final.
"An action will not lie upon a judgment until it has become final. Until that time has arrived no cause of action upon the judgment has accrued. (Hills v. Sherwood,
The present action having been commenced by the filing of the complaint on March 20, 1929, it was begun within the period of five years after the statute of limitations began to run and was not barred by the provisions of that statute.
[5] The remaining point raised is that the assignment of the judgment to plaintiff was invalid for the reason that it did not comply with the requirements of the Indiana statute covering the assignment of judgments. Said statute provides as follows:
"Judgments and decrees of a court of record for the recovery of money, and judgments obtained before a justice of the peace, may be assigned by the plaintiff or complainant, and the assignee thereof successively, on or attached to the entry of such judgment or decree; and the assignment, when attested by the clerk of the court or of such justice of the peace, shall vest the title to such judgment or decree in each assignee thereof successively." (Sec. 654, Burns Ann. Ind. Stats. 1926.)
The assignment herein was made by a separate instrument and is not attested by the clerk of the court. Such assignment is in the usual form, and no claim of insufficiency is advanced except a noncompliance with the requirements of said Indiana statute.
The general rule in respect to such statutory provisions concerning the assignment of judgments is that they merely provide a cumulative method by which assignment may be *641 accomplished. Thus it is stated in 34 Corpus Juris, page 640, section 985:
"Where the statute authorizing the assignment of a judgment provides a mode of assignment, its requirements must be followed in order to pass the legal title and secure to the assignee any rights which depend solely on the statute. But where such a statute does not expressly exclude other modes, it is regarded as cumulative merely, and does not prevent the making of an assignment in any other way which is recognized as sufficient in equity."
Notwithstanding the provisions of said Indiana statutes the courts of that state recognize that assignments made not in pursuance thereof are valid as equitable assignments and authorize suit thereon in the name of the assignee (Chicago S.E. Ry. v. Higgins,
The judgment is affirmed.
Barnard, P.J., and Marks, J., concurred. *642