Bried v. Superior Court

79 P.2d 1091, 11 Cal. 2d 351, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 310
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1938
DocketS. F. 16000
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 1091 (Bried v. Superior Court) 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
Bried v. Superior Court, 79 P.2d 1091, 11 Cal. 2d 351, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 310 (Cal. 1938).

Opinion

*352 WASTE, C. J.

Application for writ of mandate. On September 14, 1937, plaintiff Oscar Nelson brought an action in the superior court against J. A. Bried (petitioner herein), as defendant, for damages for alleged slander. Coincident with the filing of the complaint in that action, the plaintiff filed an undertaking for costs in the sum of five hundred dollars, conditioned as required by the pertinent statute, which provides that a defendant in such an action, within ten days after service of summons, may give notice that he excepts to the sureties on the bond and requires their justification before a judge of the court at a specified time and place to be not less than five nor more than ten days thereafter, except by consent of the parties. Each of the sureties must appear before the judge at the time and place designated, and be examined on oath as to his sufficiency as a bondsman in such manner as the judge may determine. The act further provides that if the “Judge find the undertaking sufficient, he shall annex the examination to the undertaking and indorse his approval thereon. If the sureties fail to appear, or the Judge finds the sureties or either of them insufficient, he shall order a new undertaking to be given. ... In ease a new or additional undertaking is ordered, all proceedings in the case shall be stayed until such undertaking is executed and filed, with the approval of the judge. ’ ’ If the undertaking as required be not filed in five days after the order therefor, the judge or court shall order the action to be dismissed. (Act 4317, Deering’s Gen. Laws 1931.)

The defendant in the slander suit excepted to the sureties on the bond, and demanded that they justify before a judge of the superior court. On November 15, 1937, the court made the following order: “Order exception to justification of sureties sustained—five days to file new bond.” Three days later, plaintiff filed an undertaking with the same sureties as had appeared on the previous bond, the second undertaking being in all essentials identical with the first one filed with the exception of the dates and the notary public before whom the sureties appeared. According to the agreed statement of facts filed herein, no other undertaking has been filed by or on behalf of the plaintiff in said action. Defendant served on plaintiff notice of motion for an order dismissing the action for failure to comply with the order of the *353 court to file a new hond. That motion came on for hearing and was denied. Petitioner applied to the District Court of Appeal for a writ of mandate to compel respondent court to dismiss the action, which application was denied without opinion. He then applied to have the matter heard in this court, and an alternative writ was issued. By way of return to the writ, the respondents filed a demurrer and answer, in which it is alleged that an undertaking as required by the statute was filed on November 18th; that subsequently and on the 26th of November, petitioner herein demurred to the complaint and then filed his exceptions to the sureties on the new bond and a notice of motion to dismiss the action (which motion was denied), and that on the same day the plaintiff in the action served and filed a notice of justification of the sureties on the bond. Respondents herein therefore contend that a bond is on file in the slander suit, and that it was filed within five days after the order of the court requiring a new undertaking to be filed.

Nowhere in the record filed in this court is there any showing as to what preceded the making of the order by the trial judge sustaining petitioner’s exceptions to the justification of the sureties on the original bond. In response to the alternative writ issued out of this court, both parties appeared for argument, and the statement was made for the first time by counsel for the respondents that the judge’s refusal to justify the sureties arose out of the fact that they had not appeared until the eleventh day—the tenth day falling on a Sunday; and that the judge, while admitting the point was rather technical, held that be althe filing of a new bond, and wjluui luj.cc uaj-» hucu undertaking was filed with the same sureties as appeared on the rejected bond. lowed to justify. Thereupon ¡der for

Respondents’ position is that a dismissal of the case would be an abuse of discretion, in that, it “will result in plaintiff’s suffering a bar of the statute of limitations”; that the law favors a trial on the merits, especially where, as here, “plaintiff in good faith originally endeavored to comply with the statute”. The sole question seems to be: Was the second bond tendered by plaintiff a “new bond” as contemplated by the statute; if not, was it mandatory upon the trial court to *354 dismiss the action for failure to file such undertaking for costs within the time specified in the order of the court ?

The object of the statute requiring the plaintiff in an action for slander to give an undertaking for costs is of course to protect the defendant and to secure to him the costs and charges he may be awarded if the judgment is in his favor. The giving of the bond is not jurisdictional. Even after a motion has been made to dismiss the action for lack of a proper undertaking, the court has power to permit the filing of such bond, and then may overrule the motion. (Stinson v. Carpenter, 78 Cal. 571 [21 Pac. 304].) It cannot be said that “no attempt” was made to file an undertaking in the case before us.

The case of Shell Oil Co. v. Superior Court, 2 Cal. App. (2d) 348 [37 Pac. (2d) 1078], relied on by petitioner, was a proceeding in prohibition to preclude the superior court from trying a libel case until the plaintiffs therein had first filed adequate cost bonds as required by the statute. The libel action was instituted by a number of employees of the Shell Company, and five defendants were made parties to the suit. The plaintiffs joined in one complaint, but their causes of action Were kept separate, and each sought $25,000 damages from the defendants. But one bond for costs in the sum of $500 was filed. After answers had been filed, motions were made on behalf of the defendants to dismiss the action or require the filing of sufficient bonds to secure the defendants for their costs against each plaintiff. The appellate court held that the bond given was insufficient; that the lower court was without authority to proceed to try the case without first requiring the plaintiffs to file adequate bonds, reserving to the petitioners (defendants) the privilege of moving to dismiss the cause if the plaintiffs failed to file such bonds after order therefor was made. See, also, Carter v. Superior Court, 176 Cal. 752 [169 Pac. 667],

There is sufficient in this case to distinguish it from the Shell Oil Company ease, supra, for it is apparent, if the argument of counsel for respondents be correct, that the undertaking on file .here was sufficient, the trial court’s refusal to justify the sureties rested on a mere technicality. There is no showing that the bond was in any way defective or the sureties insufficient. Apparently, according to the *355

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 1091, 11 Cal. 2d 351, 1938 Cal. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bried-v-superior-court-cal-1938.