Clark v. Torchiana

127 P. 831, 19 Cal. App. 786, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1046.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 P. 831 (Clark v. Torchiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Torchiana, 127 P. 831, 19 Cal. App. 786, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an appeal, upon a bill of exceptions, from an order granting a new trial in an action for damages for trespass to real property.

The plaintiffs, for cause of action, pleaded practically the following facts: The plaintiffs were the owners of a lot of land peculiarly adapted to residence purposes in the city of Santa Cruz. Plaintiffs purchased this land from the defendants Anderson and Torchiana, and as a part of the consideration for its purchase said defendants agreed with the plaintiffs to cut and construct a public street immediately south of the southerly boundary line of said lot. Subsequent to the sale of the lot the defendants, Anderson and Torchiana, and the Pratchner Company, jointly commenced to construct the proposed street upon lands previously surveyed and staked out, and which if followed would have kept the course of, and location of, said street free and eleár of plaintiffs’ lot. The defendants, in the construction of said street, knowingly and willfully, and without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs, deviated from the surveyed line of said proposed street, and entered upon the plaintiffs’ lot at the southeasterly part *788 thereof, and removed therefrom large quantities of earth and soil, and constructed said street through a portion of said lot, all to plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of $750.

The several defendants answered separately. They, in effect, denied all of the material allegations of the complaint. In addition, however, the answer of the defendant Anderson averred that the construction of the proposed street “was a neighborhood affair, to which all the neighbors beneficially interested donated funds and land, and that the only obligation which this defendant took upon himself was to donate his interest in part of the land covered by said proposed street, and to pay one-half of the total cost of construction less the amount paid by all the neighbors with the exception of his codefendant, H. A. Van C. Torchiana, who agreed to pay the other half; that he acted as agent for all the interested parties, and engaged the contracting firm, the George C. Pratchner Co., a corporation, to cut said street in accordance with the survey previously made, . . . and that he instructed said contracting company to build a good and sufficient grade on and upon the lands conveyed by this defendant and his co-defendant Torchiana for the benefit of himself, his eodefendant and all parties interested. . . . That he did instruct said contracting firm of George C. Pratchner & Co. to proceed with the construction of said road, and that he let a contract, as agent for all the parties beneficially interested in the construction of.said road, to said George C. Pratchner Co., and that he never knew during the construction of said road that said contractor in any way infringed upon the rights of said plaintiffs or either of them, but was only informed after the road was fully finished that said contractor had made a slight mistake and had cut into a small corner of plaintiffs’ land.”

Upon the issues thus framed the ease was tried by the lower court with a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs, upon which judgment was entered against .all of the defendants in the sum of $500.

Subsequently the defendants interposed a motion for a new trial based upon the grounds, (1) a resort by the jury to the determination of chance on the question submitted to them; (2) excessive damages, appearing to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice; (3) insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; (4) that the verdict is against law.

*789 A new trial was granted to all of the defendants by the lower court, for the reason, as specifically stated in the order granting the same, that “There was no evidence whatever to sustain the verdict as to the defendants Anderson and Torchiana.”

Notwithstanding the fact that the lower court based its ruling, in granting a new trial as to all of the defendants, solely upon the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict against two of the defendants, the order appealed from must be affirmed in whole or in part if it can be justified upon any of the grounds which were made the basis of the motion for a new trial. This is conceded by the plaintiffs, and it is not disputed that the order granting a new trial, in so far as it affects the defendants' Anderson and Torchiana, must be affirmed if it can be fairly said that the record fails to show any evidence whatsoever in support of the verdict against said defendants, or that the record shows a substantial conflict in the evidence as to their participation in the trespass complained of. It is insisted, however, upon behalf of the plaintiffs that the record does not reveal a single valid ground upon which the order granting a new trial as to all of the defendants can be justified; and furthermore, that the record shows without conflict ample evidence to support the verdict not only as against the defendant Pratchner Company but as against the defendants Anderson and Torchiana as well. Plaintiffs further contend that even if we should agree with the trial court that the evidence, is insufficient to support the verdict against the two last-named defendants, the verdict and judgment rendered and entered against Pratchner Company should not be disturbed, because the evidence upon the whole case without conflict supports the verdict against that particular defendant.

The case was tried in the lower court apparently upon the theory that the defendants Anderson and Torchiana had interposed and relied upon the defense that the trespass complained of was committed by an “independent contractor.” The point is now made by the plaintiffs that the affirmative allegations of the respective answers of these two defendants did not state facts sufficient to constitute such a defense. This point cannot arise upon an appeal, such as we have in the present case, from an order granting a new trial.

*790 A new trial is a re-examination of an issue of fact, and the sufficiency of the pleadings to support a plaintiff’s cause of action, or maintain any particular defense relied upon by a defendant, is not involved in a re-examination of an issue of fact, and therefore cannot be considered upon an appeal from an order granting a new trial. (Martin v. Matfield, 49 Cal. 42; Brison v. Brison, 90 Cal. 323, [27 Pac. 186]; Crescent Feather Co. v. United Upholsterers’ Union, 153 Cal. 433, [95 Pac. 871]; Riverside Water Co. v. Gage, 108 Cal. 240, [41 Pac. 299].)

Whatever the theory of the defense may have been, and aside from the question of the technical sufficiency of the respective answers of the defendants Anderson and Torchiana to support any particular defense relied upon by them, it is certain that these two defendants, by the specific denials of their answers, put in issue, so far at least as they were concerned, every material allegation of the plaintiffs’ complaint. Under the general issue thus raised, the burden was upon the plaintiffs to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the trespass and damage complained of resulted from the joint act of all of the defendants rather than from the independent, individual act of the defendant Pratchner Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P. 831, 19 Cal. App. 786, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-torchiana-calctapp-1912.