This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to compel the entry of satisfaction of judgment.
Briefly, the facts of the case are that on November 17, 1916, plaintiff Murphy obtained a judgment against the defendants Davids and Lindsay in the sum of $15,000 for malicious prosecution. An appeal from said judgment was noticed on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1916, and the judgment was affirmed by the supreme court on December 17, 1919 (
[1] In support of their appeal these appellants argue that the San Francisco orders crediting the portion of the Los Angeles judgment in payment of the San Francisco judgments are final and conclusive orders in each of the four San Francisco cases and are not subject to attack in a collateral way in this proceeding pending in Los Angeles County. But it is to be noted that in each of the four orders made by the San Francisco court the property of the judgment debtor M. A. Murphy was alone involved. The notice of motion specifically called for an order to apply the property of that judgment debtor, and the order related solely to the application of his property. In none of the San Francisco cases did that court endeavor to determine the question of Murphy's ownership of any property, and, of course, the San Francisco court did not attempt to determine any existing rights in the Los Angeles judgment. Naturally, this could not have been done without first giving to the claimants thereof their day in court. The effect of the orders of the San Francisco court is, therefore, that whatever property the judgment debtor M. A. Murphy had in the Los Angeles judgment, and that property alone, was to be applied in satisfaction of the four several judgments in the San Francisco actions.
[2] When, therefore, these four orders were presented to the Los Angeles court on the motion which is now before us, one of the questions presented to that court was, What property did M. A. Murphy have in the Los Angeles judgment which was to be applied in satisfaction of the San Francisco judgments? This issue was squarely joined by the answer of the intervener, San Bernardino National *Page 67 Bank, and, in support of the order of the superior court denying the motion, it must be assumed that the court found the facts alleged by the intervener to be true and that Murphy had no interest in said judgment which could be applied in satisfaction of the San Francisco judgments. But, irrespective of any hearing on this motion, the precise question was finally determined by the same court in its order of August 14, 1920, when it denied the motion to offset the San Francisco judgments against the judgment in this case.
Order affirmed.
Sturtevant, J., and Langdon, P. J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on June 28, 1923.
