Cosby v. Superior Court
Cosby v. Superior Court
Opinion of the Court
Application for prohibition to prevent respondent from proceeding to enforce against petitioner a judgment convicting him of contempt for refusal to comply with a decree of said court.
The material facts appearing from the very voluminous petition and answer may be briefly stated thus: John C. Kofoed and Lillie H. Kofoed brought an action in said superior court against the petitioner, Cosby, and one Samuel B. Gordon, alleging that said Gordon, while employed and acting as their attorney, for the purpose, among others, of procuring the settlement and satisfaction of a certain judgment held by said Cosby against the Kofoeds, entered into a contract with Cosby, without the knowledge of the Kofoeds, whereby it was agreed that for a consideration of two hundred dollars, to be paid Cosby by Gordon, Cosby should assign said judgment to Gordon for the latter’s own benefit; that under this agreement Cosby retained the title to the judgment in his own name, and, at the direction of Gordon, pro
As a result of the trial of said action, a decree was entered in said court, by which it was adjudged that Gordon held whatever rights he had acquired under his contract with Cosby for the benefit of the Kofoeds, and that the latter should be held subrogated to all the rights of Gordon thereunder, provided they should pay or tender to Gordon, on or before the thirty-first day of July, 1893, the sum of seventy-nine dollars and fifty cents, paid out by Gordon in the transaction; and further directed that, upon the payment or tender by the Kofoeds to Cosby of said consideration of two hundred dollars, agreed to be paid him by Gordon, Cosby should receive the same in full satisfaction of said judgment so assigned by him to Gordon, and should convey to the Kofoeds the real property bought in by him at said execution sale. The decree expressly provided “ that, unless the plaintiff shall pay or tender said sum to the said James F. Cosby, and shall also pay to the said Gordon the sums hereinbefore mentioned as payable to him, on or before the thirty-first day of July, 1893, all the right, title, and interest of plaintiffs, or either of them, in and to the said contract and premises hereinbefore mentioned shall cease and be at an end, and thereupon and thereafter neither the said Gordon nor the said Cosby shall be held as trustee for plaintiffs, or either of them, with respect to any of the matters mentioned in this decree.”
Intermediate the entry of said decree, which was on July 17, 1893, and the thirty-first day of July, 1893, the Kofoeds made an absolute transfer and assignment of their rights and interest under said decree to one Bradshaw. On the last-named date Bradshaw tendered to-, and offered to pay, Gordon and Cosby the amounts re
No further steps appear to have been taken by the Kofoeds in the matter until on or about the twenty-fifth day of January, 1895, when they caused a notice in writing to be served upon Cosby and Gordon of their readiness, and renewing their offer to pay the amounts required by the decree, with interests, etc., upon the execution of the required instruments of conveyance-This offer being likewise refused, upon the ground that it came too late, the Kofoeds sued out a second citation against Cosby and Gordon, requiring them to show cause before said superior court on the second day of April, 1895, why they should not be punished for contempt in refusing to comply with said decree. Up to this time the decree had remained of record as originally
The execution of the judgment having been temporarily suspended by the court, petitioner has sued out this writ to prohibit further proceedings thereunder, claiming that the action of the court in the premises was beyond its jurisdiction and void.
We are of opinion that the position of the petitioner must be sustained. It is contended with much force that the superior court had no authority to change or
Some question seems to be made as to prohibition being the proper remedy, but, under the circumstances of this case, we have no doubt that it is. It is conceded that there is no appeal, and the judgment of contempt, although entered, has not yet been carried out or executed. In Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327, 18 Am. St. Rep. 192, the office of this writ is exhaustively discussed, and it is there held that, while the operation of the writ is primarily and principally preventive, rather than remedial, and is excluded where the action of the inferior tribunal is fully completed and nothing remains to be done under its void order, yet, if its action is only partially and not fully completed, further proceedings may be stayed by prohibition.
In the view we have taken of the question discussed, the various other objections to the validity of the judgment in question need not be here considered.
It results that a peremptory writ should issue as prayed, and it is so ordered.
Beatty, C. J., Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Mr. Justice Temple, not having heard the argument, did not participate in the foregoing decision.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JAMES F. COSBY v. SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Trust—Limitation of Time in Decree of Enforcement—Cessation of Right.—In an action to enforce a trust and to compel a conveyance, the court may fix a limitation in the decree of enforcement, within which money must be paid or tendered as a condition of the conveyance, and may provide that, in default of payment or tender made on or before a day fixed in the decree, all the right, title, and interest of the plaintiff shall cease and be at an end, and that thereafter neither of the defendants shall be held as a trustee in respect to any of the matters mentioned in the decree, and the parties may be concluded by such limitation. Id.—Subsequent Oral Modification—Power of Court—Contempt.—It is doubtful whether the court has power, at a date subsequent to the time fixed by its decree, to make a material modification and change in the terms of a decree fixing a time for a payment or tender, after which the rights of the plaintiffs are to cease, if no payment or tender is made, by extending the time for a tender after the plaintiffs have forfeited their rights under the decree by its original terms; but where such attempted modification of the decree was merely announced orally from the bench, and not entered of record, the court has no jurisdiction, upon a subsequent tender by the plaintiff and refusal of the defendants to make a conveyance, to punish the defendants for contempt of court for such refusal. Id.—Criminal Offense—Constructive Contempt—Order not of Record.—Contempt of court is a specific criminal offense, and a party cannot be held guilty of constructive contempt for refusing to comply with a mere verbal announcement of a direction or order having no existence of record. Id.—Decrees of Court — Requirement of Writing — Record — Oral Modification.—Decrees of court are required to be in writing and remain of record, and those affected thereby have a right to stand by such record, and, unless a change is made in the record, and knowledge brought home to the party sought to be charged thereby, he has a right to regard the decree as entered as the final direction of the court, and to disregard any oral modification thereof having only a mere potential existence. Id.—Nunc Pro Tunc Order—Jurisdiction.—The court cannot acquire jurisdiction to punish a defendant for contempt by entering a nunc pro tunc order modifying the decree at the hearing of an order to show cause why the defendant should not be punished for contempt, so as to make the record conform to a prior verbal order not previously entered of record. Id.—Judgment for Contempt—Writ of Prohibition.—There is no appeal from a judgment of contempt, and where such judgment, although entered, has not yet been fully carried out or executed, a writ of pro-' hibition will lie to prevent further proceedings of the court in the matter of the contempt.