Summary
In Lewis, the petitioners admitted that their complaint merely sought the impounding of certain funds and the appointment of a receiver, which the appellate court noted was not sufficient to state a cause of action.
Summary of this case from Khmer Buddhist Ass'n v. PasternakOpinion
Docket No. 5197.
March 15, 1926.
PROCEEDING in Mandamus to compel the Superior Court of Los Angeles County to vacate an order setting aside an order appointing a receiver, and to compel said court to pass upon or determine all questions arising on a final report. Hartley Shaw, Judge. Writ denied.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Walter Desmond and Harry L. Cohn for Petitioner.
M.C. Simpson and Denio Hart for Respondent.
The petitioners herein are asking a peremptory writ of mandate to compel Hartley Shaw, as Judge of the Superior Court, to annul and vacate an order rendered by him setting aside an order appointing a receiver in certain consolidated actions set forth in the petition, and to compel said Judge to pass upon and determine all questions arising on a final report. The petitioners admit that their complaints in these various consolidated actions do not, nor does any one of them, state a cause of action except that petitioners state that they would have amended the same to state causes of action, except for the consent of the defendants in their various actions to the making of an order appointing a receiver therein. They further contend that this court should consider said complaints as they would have amended the same, and that the order appointing the receiver was affirmed by the supreme court by a dismissal of an appeal from such order, although the appeal was dismissed upon a motion made upon the sole ground that the order appealed from was an order made by consent.
It appears to this court that the only question involved, therefore, is whether or not the order appointing the receiver was and is absolutely void.
[1] The dismissal of the appeal by the supreme court upon the ground stated would merely hold that the parties appealing were estopped from taking an appeal on the ground that they had consented to the order from which they were attempting to appeal. Such a dismissal does not in any way pass upon the sufficiency of the complaints involved in the various actions, or of the validity of the order appointing the receiver.
[2] It cannot be contended that a complaint merely asking the impounding of certain funds and the appointment of a receiver would state a cause of action, yet petitioners herein admit that this is in effect the form of their complaints, unless the court considers the complaints amended to conform to their affidavits. In matters of this kind a receiver can only be appointed in certain cases where fraud is specifically alleged. That being so, in the matter before the trial judge he was without authority to pass upon or determine any questions arising upon the final report. All that he could do would be to discharge the receiver. He could not, therefore, fix any fees for the services of the attorney for the receiver or any fees for the services of the receiver in such matters so consolidated. Miller v. Oliver, 174 Cal. 407 [ 163 P. 355], Smith v. Los Angeles etc. Co., 4 Cal. Unrep. 237, 238 [34 P. 242], Smith v. Superior Court, 97 Cal. 348 [32 P. 322]; Elliott v. Superior Court, 168 Cal. 727 [ 145 P. 101], and Grant v. Superior Court, 116 Cal. 71 [47 P. 872], all give abundant authority for the foregoing conclusions. In Sullivan v. Gage, 145 Cal. 759 to 771, inclusive [79 P. 437], the supreme court says: "This, it will be observed, does not present the case of a reversal of an order appointing a receiver for mere error or irregularity in its procurement. It presents the case of an order void for want of legal authority, where the receiver, in point of law, was not a receiver but a trespasser. . . . The cases are not infrequent where the court has settled the account of a receiver erroneously appointed and made the amount a charge against the party who has procured the appointment, but no case has been brought to our attention where a court has made such an order when its own judicial act in appointing the receiver was nugatory and void for want of jurisdiction. The receiver is not obliged to accept such appointment, and in such a case as this, as the court was without power to appoint him, it must equally be without power to make any other order depending for its validity upon the order of appointment. The utmost that is left for a receiver appointed under such circumstances is his right of action for compensation against the party procuring his appointment. . . . So here it must result that the order allowing compensation, being based upon a void order appointing the receiver, is itself void."
It is held in the case of Scott v. Hotchkiss, 115 Cal. 89, 94 [47 P. 45], and Baker v. Varney, 129 Cal. 564, 565 [ 62 P. 100], that jurisdiction to appoint a receiver cannot be conferred upon a court by stipulation or consent of the parties. [3] A stipulation of facts which would state a cause of action, of course could be made, but jurisdiction of the subject matter of an action cannot be conferred by stipulation merely in so many words admitting jurisdiction. It would require a statement of facts, sufficient within themselves, stripped of any conclusion of law. [4] If the complaints had been amended so as to contain all of the additional facts as set forth in the affidavits referred to by the petitioners, they would have contained conclusions of the affiants only. For instance, some of the strongest averments being: "The moneys were in fact trust funds and were intended to be held in trust for the making of said improvements. . . . The improvements would be seasonably and timely made." And, further, in one of their affidavits which the petitioners apparently rely on is a statement which could be nothing more than a conclusion of what other parties might have concluded: "We have no hesitancy in stating that each of said purchasers was led to believe that the money they were paying upon said property was to be used for the purpose of making the improvements that we have stated, prior to the time that it was diverted for any other purpose." The mere averment that moneys paid on certain written contracts were in fact trust funds and were intended to be held in trust for making the improvements could not and would not add anything to any complaint unless the facts were set forth sufficiently to show a trust. But in this case before the court, all of the things set forth in the affidavits were merely oral statements, or conclusions that were reached by affiants by reason of conclusions made at the time the oral statements were made by the parties, and would not and could not modify the written agreements unless they were executed oral agreements.
We have treated this proceeding as being directed against Hartley Shaw as Judge of the Supreme Court, and we are not passing upon the question as to whether the peremptory writ would have to be limited to the exact, identical, and full scope of the alternative writ.
The petition for a writ is denied.
Conrey, P.J., and Houser, J., concurred.