City of Vallejo v. Superior Court

249 P. 1084, 199 Cal. 408, 48 A.L.R. 610, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 288
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1926
DocketDocket No. S.F. 12061.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 249 P. 1084 (City of Vallejo 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
City of Vallejo v. Superior Court, 249 P. 1084, 199 Cal. 408, 48 A.L.R. 610, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 288 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The petitioner herein applies to this court for the issuance of a writ of mandate directed to the *410 Superior Court of the county of Napa and to the Honorable Percy S. King, as judge thereof, respondents herein, commanding said respondents to transfer the cause referred to in said application to another court the judge whereof is qualified to act in said cause, and for an order of this court restraining said Superior Court and the’ judge thereof from- taking any other action or proceeding in said cause except the action of transferring the same as above prayed for; and for such other and further relief as may be meet in the premises. The facts upon which said application is predicated, and which are admitted except as otherwise herein noted in the answer of the respondents herein, are as follows: On the twenty-sixth day of May, 1925, the said City of Vallejo commenced an action against Eva Coghlan and John T. Vest to condemn for the uses and purposes of said city and the inhabitants thereof a tract of land consisting of 164.04 acres, of which the said Eva Coghlan was alleged to be the owner and the said John T. Vest the lessee; and also and on the same date commenced another action against the same defendants to condemn a right of way upon and across a certain larger tract of land owned and leased by the same defendants respectively, and of which the above smaller tract was a portion, both of said actions having for their purpose the establishment and maintenance of a reservoir for the impounding of waters for the public use of the City of Vallejo and its inhabitants. The -summons in each of said actions was thereupon issued and served upon the defendants, who appeared and answered in each of said actions, which were thereafter consolidated and came on for trial before the said Superior Court, the said judge thereof and a jury on the ninth day of March, 1926. Upon the trial and submission thereof to the jury that body returned their verdict in each of said cases, by the terms of which they awarded to Eva Coghlan the sum of $45,000 as the value of the 164.04 acreage proposed to be taken, and the further sum of $20,000 damages for the severance of the same from the larger tract of land; and further awarded to the same defendant the sum of $10,000 as the value of the right of way sought to be condemned, and $15,000 as damages for the severance. The jury also awarded to her codefendant, John T. Vest, the sum of $2,000 as compensation for the loss of his leasehold interest in the said smaller tract and in the right *411 of way over the larger tract. On April 5, 1926, the clerk of said court, in supposed response to said verdicts, entered a money judgment against said plaintiff and in favor of said Eva Coghlan for the sum of $90,000, and in favor of said John T. Vest for the sum of $2,000, said judgments, however, not having been signed or authorized by the judge of said court. Thereafter and on the ninth day of April, 1926, the judge of said court signed and caused to be filed a document entitled “Interlocutory Decree,’’ wherein there was recited and set forth the verdicts returned by the jury in said consolidated actions and wherein also the judge of said court found and decreed that the plaintiff should take, acquire and have for the aforesaid uses the said lands and right of way so condemned and should pay to the said defendants the respective amounts awarded by the terms of said verdicts. The said judge, while adopting said verdicts of the jury in its said decree, filed no other or further findings of fact or conclusions of law in said actions, or either of them, except such as are embraced in said decree. During the progress of the actual trial of said actions the defendant Eva Coghlan had filed, by leave of the court, an amended answer setting forth the fact that the Bank of Napa, a banking corporation, having its principal place of business in the City of Napa, was the owner and holder of a deed of trust, covering the property sought to be condemned and affected by such condemnation, to secure the payment of a promissory note for the sum of $18,900, which deed of trust and note bore the date of July 15, 1924, as that of their execution, and which note was payable eighteen months after its said date, and was therefore, at the time said amended answer was filed, overdue. The petitioner herein alleges that neither the said plaintiff nor its attorneys or agents had any knowledge or actual notice of the existence of said deed of trust or of the note secured thereby, other than such constructive notice thereof as is imparted to the world by the recordation of said trust deed, prior to the fourteenth day of April, 1926; and further alleges that on said last-named date said plaintiff, City of Vallejo, through its attorneys, discovered for the first time that the Honorable Percy S. King, judge of said court, was a stockholder and director of and in the said Bank of Napa and had been such for a long period of years prior to said April 14, 1926, and still continued so to *412 be. That on the fifteenth day of April, 1926, the said plaintiff, City of Vallejo, through its attorneys, duly served and filed its notice of intention to move for a new trial in said actions, specifying that the same would be made upon each and all of the grounds set forth in the Code of Civil Procedure regulating such matters, and stating that the same would be made upon the minutes of the court and also upon affidavits to be thereafter prepared and filed. The said plaintiff also and on the same date served and filed a verified petition in said actions, setting forth the facts as above recited with respect to the ownership and holding of said deed of trust by said Bank of Napa, and also in respect to the relation of the judge of said court to said Bank of Napa as a stockholder and director therein, upon the basis of which averments as embraced in its said verified petition the said plaintiff asserted therein that the said judge of said court was disqualified to sit or act in said cases because of his interest therein under section 170, subdivision 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The said plaintiff further and on the same date served and filed its motion to vacate and set aside the judgment or decree theretofore given, made and entered in said actions, basing the same upon the foregoing alleged facts as showing the disqualification of the judge of said court to give, make or enter the said judgments, and making the same upon all the papers, records and files in said action and upon certain affidavits setting forth the foregoing facts then presented and filed. The date noticed for the hearing of said last-named motion was that of April 20, 1926. Upon said date said matter came on for hearing-before said court, the Honorable Percy S. King presiding. At said time the said plaintiff further presented to said court and the judge thereof its formal motion for a change of the place of trial of said actions upon the ground that the said judge of said court was disqualified by reason of his said interest to sit or act in said cases or in any further proceedings therein, which said motion was accompanied with a demand for a change of place of trial of said actions as provided in the Code of Civil Procedure; and also with an affidavit setting forth the foregoing facts. Upon the hearing of the several matters the defendants in said actions presented their opposition thereto in the form of affidavits and other evidence, wherein they denied the plaintiff’s repeated *413

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 1084, 199 Cal. 408, 48 A.L.R. 610, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-vallejo-v-superior-court-cal-1926.