O'Brien v. Chamberlain

California Supreme Court
O'Brien v. Chamberlain, 50 Cal. 285 (Cal. 1875)
1875 Cal. LEXIS 145

O'Brien v. Chamberlain

Opinion of the Court

By the Court:

The court below errecl in refusing to charge the jury as requested by the defendants. One of the questions in issue was whether the purchase by O’Brien at the sheriff’s sale was in fact made for Moffiitt and with his money. It is unnecessary to determine whether a failure by a purchaser at a judicial sale to take possession of personal property purchased at such sale, will render the sale fraudulent per se under our statute, as against the creditors of the judgment-debtor. But if the purchaser permits the property to remain in the possession of the judgment-debtor, and allows him to exercise acts of ownership over it after the sale, the jury is authorized to consider this circumstance in determining the question of actual fraud.

Judgment reversed and cause-remanded for a new trial.

Reference

Full Case Name
THOMAS O'BRIEN v. WM. CHAMBERLAIN, J. L. LYONS and WM. McKIBBEN
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published
Syllabus
Feaud in Pubohase of Goods at Shebiff’s Sale.—If the purchaser of personal property at sheriff’s sale permits it to remain in the possession of the judgment debtor after the sale, and allows him to exercise acts of ownership over it, the court or jury must take this circumstance into consideration in determining the question whether the sale was fraudulent as to the creditors of the judgment debtor. Idem.—The question not decided as to whether a failure by a purchaser, at a judicial sale, to take possession of personal property, will render the sale fraudulent per se under out statute as against the creditors of the judgment debtor.