Cerf v. Oaks
Cerf v. Oaks
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for the recovery of certain goods and chattels, or their value. The plaintiff had judgment, and defendant’s motion for a new trial being denied, this appeal was taken.
From the findings of the Court it appears that by virtue of an attachment issued out of the District Court, in a suit wherein Schaeffer & Co. were plaintiffs, and one Bennett was defendant, the defendant herein, who was Sheriff of San Luis Obispo County, on the 16th day of January, 1879, seized the personal property in controversy in this action; that thereafter, on the same day, said Bennett filed in the County Court of said county a petition as an insolvent under the act of May 4th, 1852, and its amendments; that the Judge of the County Court, on said 16th day of January, made an order staying all proceedings against said insolvent, and directed the clerk to give notice of a meeting of creditors, to be held March 3d, 1879, which notice was published, and that the first publication of said notice was more- than forty days prior to the day fixed for the meeting; that on the 4th day of February, 1879, the proceedings in insolvency not having been brought to the notice of said District Court, the said
The Court can acquire jurisdiction to discharge an insolvent from his debts only by due publication of the notice to creditors—certainly so unless all the creditors appear on the day fixed for their meeting. (McDonald v. Katz, 31 Cal. 167; Langenour v. French, 34 id. 92; Flint v. Wilson, 36 id. 24.) But the jurisdiction to make the orders which precede publication of the notice to creditors attaches when the petition and schedule are filed. The order to stay proceedings was, therefore, valid. It operated by its own force, and the law did not require any notice of it to the Sheriff. (Taffts v. Manlove, 14 Cal. 47.)
By the insolvent law of 1880, it is provided that all attachments made within one month of the commencement of the proceedings shall be dissolved. (§ 17.) This exact provision is not found in the act of 1852. But by the sixth section of the supplementary act it is enacted: “ If any debtor shall be adjudged insolvent, either under this act or the acts to which it is supplementary, all attachments upon the property of said ■debtor which were levied at any time within two months before filing the petition are dissolved, and all such property shall vest in the manner and with like effect as provided in said acts, in the assignee or assignees to be appointed in such
It follows that the attachment levied on the day the petition was filed, was dissolved by the orders requiring the creditors to show cause, directing the clerk to ssue and publish a notice to creditors, and staying proceedings against the debtor (act of 1852, §§ 5, 8, 9), and, by the same orders, the property which had been attached vested in the assignee (act of 1876, § 6), with the right in him to recover possession of the same. (Act of 1852, § 34.)
Judgment and order affirmed.
Thornton, J., Boss, J., Sharpstein, J., Morrison, O. J., and McKee, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ERNEST CERF, Assignee, etc. v. W. J. OAKS
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- 2 cases
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- Published