Argenti v. City of San Francisco

30 Cal. 458
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 Cal. 458 (Argenti v. City of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Argenti v. City of San Francisco, 30 Cal. 458 (Cal. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:

The first question is, 'what was the judgment of this Court on the former appeal ? Mr. Justice Cope, in closing his opinion (16 Cal. 275) says: “ Our conclusion is that the right of the plaintiff to recover is limited to the amount specified in the contracts to which we have referred, and legal interest upon such amount. The judgment is for a larger sum than the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and must, therefore, be reversed. Upon the return of the cause, the Court below will render a judgment in accordance with this opinion.

“Judgment reversed and cause remanded.”

Mr. Chief Justice Field concurred in the judgment.

Upon the petition for a rehearing, the Chief Justice delivered an opinion which concludes as follows: “ The former judgment must stand, reversing the judgment of the Court below, with directions to strike out so much of the demand as rests upon the warrants alone, and to enter judgment only for the amount due upon the contracts.

“ Rehearing denied.”

Mr. Justice Cope, concurring specially, says: “I concur in the denial of the rehearing and adhere to the views expressed in my original opinion.”

Thus the judgment first rendered was left standing as the judgment of the Court. That judgment was in no respect changed or modified in passing on the petition for a rehearing; and this must be so for two reasons :

First—Because it was not the proper practice, as wras held in Clark v. Boyreau, 14 Cal. 638, to make a material modification of the judgment upon a petition for a rehearing, but if made at all it was to be done after the rehearing was had; and, Second—If any modification was attempted by the Chief Justice, it did not take effect, as it was not concurred in by Mr. Justice Cope, whose concurrence was confined to the denial [462]*462of the rehearing. In other words, the judgment was left as it would have been had all the language we have quoted from the opinion of the Chief Justice been omitted, except the words, “ Rehearing denied.” As, however, the words in which he stated the judgment were different from those in which it was pronounced, they may serve to assist us in ascertaining what the judgment, about which there is such a conflict among counsel, really was.

The language of Mr. Justice Cope, “ that the right of the plaintiff to recover is limited to the amounts specified in the contracts,” if read literally, is fatally ambiguous, for no amount is specified therein, but when read in connection with the preceding portion of his opinion, the meaning appears to be that the right of the plaintiff to a recovery is limited to the contracts as causes of action, to the exclusion of the warrants. This is the meaning the Chief Justice gave to the language, as appears from the words he employs, to express what had been decided in respect to the causes of action, “ with directions to strike out so much of the demands as rests upon the warrants.”

One point is clear. The judgment of the Court below was reversed. The consequence of a simple reversal usually is, that the parties in the Court below.have the same right which they originally had.” (Phelan v. San Francisco, 9 Cal. 16; Stearns v. Aguirre, 7 Cal. 443.) But the reversal may practically end the controversy, and when such is the case it is usually accompanied by an order dismissing the action; On the former argument we thought it unusual, if not improper, to say that a judgment was reversed, which was directed to be modified. When the appellate Court renders the judgment, instead of directing the Court below to modify its judgment, of course the judgment of the Court below is reversed, otherwise there would be two judgments for the same cause of action. It is proper to say here that on the former argument we were led in some measure to attribute more significance to the order of reversal, standing by itself, than was absolutely demanded by the terms of the whole judgment, in consequence [463]*463of the position taken by the counsel for the plaintiff that “the whole judgment of the Court below was upon the warrants and was regulated by the amount of the warrants,” and that the Court below ruled “ that the warrants were evidences of indebtedness and furnished the real cause of action,” for if the judgment of the appellate Court in effect strikes out the real cause of action, it is very indicative of a reversal in its purest and simplest form. But that is not the position he now holds.

The appellete Court may add to the judgment of reversal directions, among others, that the cause be tried de novo ; or that a particular issue be tried, leaving all the other facts found by the Court remaining as facts in the case, as was ordered in Soule v. Dawes, 14 Cal. 247 ; (see also Soule v. Ritter, 20 Cal. 522; Manziou v. Pioche, 10 Cal. 545;) or that the Court enter a judgment upon certain specified facts in the case. The defendant holds that the first was the form of judgment adopted in this case. But this cannot be maintained, for the order to the Court below to enter judgment for the plaintiff in any amount, is entirely inconsistent with a trial de novo.

The plaintiff, on his first argument, contended that the judgment was in the second form above indicated—that the cause was remanded to try the sole issue of the amount due upon the contracts; and accordingly, when the cause reached the Court below, he introduced evidence to prove the amount and value of the work performed under the contracts. His position now is that the cause was remanded with directions to enter judgment on the findings for an amount to be ascertained by computation.

We have given this question the attention and the careful consideration that the magnitude of the interests involved and the subject matter of interpretation demands, and our conclusion is that the judgment of the appellate Court did not direct a new trial of any issue in the cause, but that it required the Court below to enter judgment upon the findings for the amount due upon the contracts. It may not be improper to say that both of the Judges who participated in the decision state that the j udgment they intended to render was the same [464]*464as that which we ascertain from an interpretation of the language in which it was expressed.

The complaint alleges the making of the contracts, their assignment to the plaintiff, the performance of the work under the contract, the value of the work', and that the same is unpaid; and it further states that the defendant being indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of eighty thousand dollars, delivered to him certain warrants drawn by the Controller upon the Treasurer, payable to the plaintiff or bearer; that certain other warrants were drawn in like manner in favor of other persons, and by them assigned to the plaintiff; that all of said warrants remain unpaid—they being set out in the complaint. The Court found the making and assignment of the contracts ; the performance of the work therein specified ; that the accounts for the work were duly audited, and that in consideration thereof the warrants described in the complaint payable to the plaintiff or bearer

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30 Cal. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/argenti-v-city-of-san-francisco-cal-1866.