Carey v. Brown

58 Cal. 180
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 7,080
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 58 Cal. 180 (Carey v. Brown) 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
Carey v. Brown, 58 Cal. 180 (Cal. 1881).

Opinion

Sharpstein, J.:

The plaintiff alleges that he is the owner and in the possession of certain lots, pieces, and parcels of land, in the County of Yolo, which are described in the first paragraph of the complaint. In the next paragraph he states that the defendants claim to be the owners of an undivided interest of seven eighths of a tract comprising about thirty thousand acres, which includes the land described in the first paragraph, besides the lands of a large number of other persons who derive their titles from the same source that the plaintiff derives his. He states that he brings this action “in behalf of himself, and all other persons interested in common with plaintiff, in the subject-matter, and question hereinafter mentioned, who shall in due time come into Court and seek relief by and contribute to the expense of this action.” He prays, that the claims of the defendants to the lands owned by the plaintiff and others in whose behalf he sues, be determined and adjudged to be invalid.

The complaint was demurred to on several grounds which, [182]*182with one exception, are based upon the attempt of the plaintiff to sue on behalf of persons not named in the complaint. The exception is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. In our opinion it does. If everything relating to. persons other than the plaintiff and defendants named in the complaint should be stricken out, enough would remain to constitute a cause of action as between the parties named. And it seems to us that if the plaintiff attempted to sue on behalf of others as well as on his own, and did not allege the facts necessary to entitle them to participate in the action, his allegations in that behalf were redundant, and might, on motion of the defendants, have been stricken out. Or the insufficiency of the allegations in that respect would constitute a good ground of objection to any participation in the action by persons not named in the pleadings.

The demurrer was overruled, the defendants filed an answer to the complaint, and a trial was had which resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff named in the complaint against the defendants. Afterwards several persons presented petitions to the Court in which they stated in effect that they severally owned land in said thirty thousand acre tract, and that they derived their several titles from the same source as the plaintiff derived his, and that the defendants claimed adversely to them as well as to the plaintiff, and prayed that a decree similar to that entered in favor of the plaintiff might be entered in their favor. The Court thereupon ordered that the defendants show cause why said prayer should not be granted. In response to that order the defendants appeared before the Court and objected to any further proceedings under it upon several grounds, which it seems to us may be reduced to these two, viz.: That the allegations of the complaint were not sufficient to entitle the petitioners to become parties to the action; and that if they were the application came too late.

In this State any two or more persons claiming any estate or interest in lands under a common source of title, in severalty, may unite in an action against any person claiming an adverse estate or interest therein for the purpose of determining such adverse claim. (Code Civ. Proc., § 381.) “And when the question is one of a common or general interest of [183]*183many persons, or when the parties are numerous, and it is impracticable to bring them all before the Court, one or more may sue or defend for the benefit of all.” (Id. § 382.) But a party who seeks to avail himself of this provision must allege facts which bring his case within it. He must show that “the question is one of common or general interest of many persons” or that “ the parties are numerous and it is impracticable to bring them all before the Court.”

According to the allegations of the complaint the claim of the defendants to an interest or estate in the land claimed by the plaintiff, if valid, would be equally valid as to lands claimed by many other persons; and it is contended that this constitutes a question of such common or general interest to many, as will enable one to sue for the benefit of all. It is conceded that their interests in the land are several. There is no privity of estate between them. Is the question in which they are all alleged to be interested one of common or general interest to many persons within the meaning of the code?

The only question involved in this action is one of title to the land claimed by the plaintiff and the defendants adversely. It does not appear that any one had a common or general interest with the plaintiff in that question. A judgment in his favor would simply quiet his title to land in which no one else had any interest.

This case is distinguishable from one in which a creditor sues on behalf of himself and all other creditors to enforce the terms of an assignment for the benefit of creditors; or to set aside such an assignment on the ground that it is illegal and void; or in which one judgment creditor sues on behalf of all other similar creditors to reach the equitable assets, and to set aside fraudulent transfers of the debtor. It is nearly or quite analogous to a case in which one taxpayer attempts to sue on his own behalf and that of all others in a local district to prevent the enforcement of a tax which would be a lien upon all the land within the district. In such a case it has been held that the question is not one of a common or general interest of all the persons affected by the tax. (Newcomb v. Horton, 18 Wisc. 566.) It seems to us that the code permits one to sue or defend for the benefit of many persons, only in cases where they are so united in interest with the [184]*184person who brings the action or defends against it, as to make them' necessary parties, under the first clause of § 382, Code Civ. Proc., which precedes the clause that authorizes one to sue or defend for many.

But even were the complaint sufficient in this respect, the judgment entered in favor of parties other than the actual plaintiff could not be sustained. If the persons referred to, but not named in the complaint, might have intervened in the action at some stage of the proceedings, it is quite clear that they could not do so after a final judgment had been entered in favor of the actual plaintiff against the defendants. Under the practice which prevailed in courts of equity prior to the code, the parties represented might come in after an interlocutory decree had been rendered. But those were cases in which such parties were entitled to share in the relief granted to the actual plaintiff. It is quite clear in this case that the parties who might have united with the plaintiff in bringing the action^ but did not, could only come in, as interveners are permitted to, before the trial. After a trial had been had between the actual parties, and a final judgment entered in favor of one of them, it was Too late for other parties to intervene in the action. They did not ask to share in the relief granted to the plaintiff, but that similar relief might be granted to them. If the recovery had been of something in which persons other than the plaintiff were interested with him, the case would be different. In that case a court. of equity would doubtless have the power to provide for a distribution of the property recovered among those who were entitled to share in it.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-brown-cal-1881.