Garrett v. Jensen
Garrett v. Jensen
Opinion of the Court
Defendants, other than defendant Lady, moved in the court below to change the place of trial from Los Angeles County to San Francisco. Lady resides in Los Angeles County; the other defendants reside in San Francisco. From an order granting the motion plaintiff appeals.
The case alleged in the complaint is substantially as follows: Prior to the commencement of the present action the plaintiff here had brought an action in the superior court of Los Angeles County against an insurance company to recover certain money due on insurance upon the life of Edward E. Garrett. William Edward Garrett, a minor, of whose person and estate the defendant Emma L. Jensen is guardian, appeared in that action by his guardian as a rival claimant of the insurance money. The insurance company appeared in the action, deposited with the clerk of the court the insurance money sued for, $4,074, asked to be discharged from all liability, and, having thus interpleaded the two rival claimants- for the money, the company was duly discharged from further liability. On November 12, 1915, the court rendered a judgment in that action whereby it adjudged that the minor was entitled to the insurance money—the $4,074 that had been so deposited in court by the insurance company—and, on the same day made an order staying execution of the judgment for ten days. After the expiration of the ten days’ stay, namely, on December 15, 1915, the judgment was entered. On December 24, «1915, the plaintiff in that action, who likewise is the plaintiff in this, served and filed her notice of appeal from the judgment that, on December 15, 1915, had been entered in favor of the minor; and on December 29, 1915, she perfected the appeal by filing the necessary undertaking. The judgment so appealed from was reversed by the district *102 court of appeal, that court holding that plaintiff, as the widow of the insured, was entitled to the insurance money. (See Garrett v. Garrett, 31 Cal. App. 173, [159 Pac. 1050], for a report of that case.) Mean-while, after the expiration of the ten days’ stay of execution that had been granted by the trial court at the time when it rendered judgment in favor of the minor but prior to plaintiff’s appeal from that judgment, namely, on December 23, 1915, one of the defendants herein, Emma L. Jensen, as guardian of the minor’s person and estate, came into possession of $3,975.10, a part of the $4,074 that had been so deposited by the insurance company with the clerk of the court. In securing possession of the money for her ward, defendant Jensen was assisted by the minor’s attorney of record in that action, Charles S. Peery, whom plaintiff has made one of the defendants herein, and likewise by the defendant Lady, who, it seems, had appeared as attorney for the insurance company in the other action. The circumstances under which the minor’s guardian, with the assistance of defendants Peery and Lady, came into possession of the money that the insurance company had deposited in court to be contended for by the two rival claimants thereto were substantially as follows: The money, after its deposit with the clerk of the court by the insurance company, was' transferred by the clerk to the county treasurer, with whom it remained on deposit to abide the final determination of the rights of the two claimants, the widow and the minor child; on December 23, 1915, Lady caused a certificate to be made by the county clerk certifying that, by judgment entered December 15, 1915, the minor, William Edward Garrett, was awarded the $4,074. On the same day Lady made demand on the county treasurer for the payment of the $4,074 to the minor, and made oath that the same was justly due to the minor from the clerk and the treasurer. On the same day Lady also requested the judge before whom the cause had been tried in the superior court to make an order directing the county auditor to allow, and the county treasurer to pay, to the minor the $4,074 to which that court had adjudged him entitled, less any moneys due the county for taxes. Thereupon the court did make such an order. Upon the making of this order Lady caused the auditor to issue his warrant for, and the treasurer to pay to one or more of the defendants here, but which one plaintiff is unable to say, the sum of *103 $3,975.10. The auditor’s warrant was made payable to the Humboldt Savings Bank of San Francisco, and was signed by the defendant Emma L. Jensen as guardian of the person and estate of the minor, William Edward Garrett. In his reply brief counsel for appellant admits that, from the record of the transaction as detailed in the complaint, “the money was paid to the guardian. ’ ’ Indeed, the complaint alleges that on February 15, 1916, plaintiff was informed that the money had been drawn from the county treasury, “and was at the time deposited in the account of said Emma L. Jensen in some bank in the city of San Francisco. ” It is alleged that, since the withdrawal of the money from the county treasury, “defendants have appropriated to their own use and disposed of and dissipated a large part of said money”; also that, unless enjoined by the court, they “will dispose of and dissipate the whole thereof.”' In her prayer for relief plaintiff asks that she have judgment against each defendant for $4,074, with interest and costs, that defendants be restrained from further disposition of the money, and that they be directed to pay back into the custody of the court so much of the money as may remain unexpended.
To support her contention that the complaint states a cause of action' against Lady, or that he is a necessary party defendant, appellant must be able successfully to maintain one, at least, of the three following propositions: (1) That the transaction whereby Lady and the other defendants caused the money to be paid by the county treasurer to the minor’s guardian was an unlawful conversion of money to which plaintiff was entitled, and that, therefore, Lady, with the other defendants, is liable in damages by reason of such unlawful conversion; or (2) That, after the money was paid to the guardian and while it was in her hands or on deposit in bank to her credit, it was a trust fund held by her in trust for plaintiff’s benefit, and while so held by her as a trust fund it, or some part of it, was received by Lady from the guardian and appropriated to his own use; or (3) That, in order to insure due protection to plaintiff’s rights, it is necessary that an injunction or restraining order issue against Lady, restraining him from making any disposition of the money.
We do not think that, on the facts alleged in the complaint, appellant can successfully maintain any one of these positions. *104 And unless she can successfully maintain at least one of them, it must be held that the complaint does not state a cause of action against Lady, that he is not a necessary party defendant, and that the court properly granted the motion for change of venue to the place of residence of the other defendants.
If, at the time when the money was paid over to his guardian, the minor was entitled to an enforcement of the judgment that had been made in his favor, and he unquestionably was, then the fact that Lady had been the attorney for the insurance company and was not the attorney of record for the minor cannot lay him under any liability. If, as we hold, the guardian, at the time when the money was paid to her by the county treasurer, had the right to enforce the judgment that had been made in her ward’s favor and compel payment to herself as guardian, the means and instrumentalities whereby she accomplished that result do not concern plaintiff.
The complaint does not allege when it was that Lady appropriated a part of the $4,074 to his own use. Non constat but that whatever part of the $4,074 he may have received and kept was received by him from the guardian before the judgment of the district court of appeal became final. In fact, if, on this appeal, we may take judicial notice of the record on the appeal in Garrett v. Garrett, supra, we know that necessarily whatever sum or sums may have been *107 “appropriated” by Lady as alleged in the complaint herein, i. e., sums received by him from the guardian after the latter had received the money from the county treasurer, must have been so appropriated by Lady before the judgment of the district court of appeal became final, and, therefore, before any part of the money that had been paid over to the guardian could be regarded as money held by her as a trust fund in trust for appellant. This is so because the present action was commenced August 8,1916, and if we take judicial notice of the judgment of the district court of appeal, we know that that judgment did not become final before September 28,1916. If it can be maintained that any moneys which may have been paid to Lady by the guardian before the judgment of the district court of appeal in Garrett v. Garrett should be regarded, at all times after that judgment, as moneys held by him in trust for plaintiff, the answer is that the complaint does not allege facts showing that that judgment had become final prior to the commencement of the present action; and, if we may take judicial notice of the record on appeal in Garrett v. Garrett, we know that, at the time when this action was commenced, it could not truthfully be alleged that the judgment of reversal had become final prior to the filing of the complaint herein.
For these reasons we do not think the complaint alleges any cause of action against Lady or shows him to he an interested party defendant, and that, therefore, the remaining defendants were entitled to have the place of trial changed to the city and county of their residence.
Order affirmed.
iSloane, J., and Thomas, :J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- IVA L. GARRETT, Appellant, v. EMMA L. JENSEN, Guardian, Etc., Et Al., Respondents
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published