Black v. Vermont Marble Co.
Before: Harrison
Synopsis
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
HARRISON, J.
The plaintiff’s testator was at the time of his death the owner and in possession of certain personal property, and after his death the same came into the possession of the plaintiff as the administratrix of his estate. While it was in her possession the sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco, by virtue of an execution issued out of the superior court of that city and county upon a judgment given by -said court in favor of the defendant herein, and against the plaintiff’s intestate in his lifetime, levied upon the property and sold the same. At such sale the ■defendant herein, the plaintiff in that action, purchased the property described in the complaint. The judgment under which the sale was had was afterwards reversed by this court, and upon a new trial of the cause the plaintiff therein was nonsuited, and the judgment entered thereon was afterwards, and before the commencement of the present action, affirmed by this court. After the reversal of the judgment under which the property was sold, the plaintiff made a demand •upon the defendant for its delivery to her, which was refused, .and thereupon the present action was commenced for the delivery of said property, or its value, in case a delivery could not be had. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the value of the property, and the defendant has appealed.
Upon the reversal of the judgment under which the property described in the complaint was sold to the defendant, •the plaintiff herein became entitled to the restitution of that property.
(Reynolds
v.
Harris,
14 Cal. 667 ;
1
Code Civ. Proc., sec. 957.) As the property had been purchased by the .judgment debtor, and the price therefor applied in part satisfaction of its judgment, there were no equitable rights of a
,bona fide
purchaser to be protected. Neither does the case •present any ground upon which the defendant can invoke an
[685]
estoppel against the plaintiff. If the plaintiff had received the money for which the property was sold to the defendant, or if the proceeds of that sale had been applied towards the payment or satisfaction of an undisputed claim or debt against her intestate, there might have been some ground for invoking an equity against her present claim; but the subsequent judgment in the cause determined that the defendant had no claim or debt against her intestate, and that it gave no consideration for the property purchased by it, and can therefore assert no equity against the plaintiff’s right to its restitution.
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