Coley v. Hecker
272 P. 1045, 206 Cal. 22, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 444
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1928
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3992.
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases
This text of 272 P. 1045 (Coley v. Hecker) 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
Coley v. Hecker, 272 P. 1045, 206 Cal. 22, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 444 (Cal. 1928).
Opinion
A hearing in bank was ordered in this cause after a decision thereof by department one of this court. Upon a further consideration of the cause upon such hearing we are satisfied with the decision of the department, and hereby adopt the same as the decision of the court in ■bank. Said decision reads as follows:
“This appeal is from an order denying the demand of appellants for the change of the place of trial from the county of San Joaquin, in which county the action was commenced, to the place of the residence of the respective appellants, to-wit, the city and county of San Francisco. It is the contention of respondent that the action is one to remove a cloud upon his real property and for the determination of an interest in said real property situate in said county of San Joaquin and that the venue is, under the provisions of section 392, Code of Civil Procedure, where said real property is situated.
*24 “The only papers offered upon the hearing in support of the motion were the complaint and the demurrers of the respective appellants, general and special.
“In considering the appeal the allegations of the complaint must be taken as true. The allegations of the complaint are to the effect that respondent was the owner of a large number of lots, pieces and parcels of land situate in said county of San Joaquin; that on May 18, 1925, and while he was and continued to be such owner, one Barbara Hecker recovered in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco a judgment in the sum of $12,925.73 and costs against him and his co-surety, J. L. Craig, upon an appeal bond jointly executed by them with one Walter F. Hogan, as principal. On May 19, 1925, respondent and said Craig took an appeal from said judgment by filing in the office of the county clerk of the city and county of San Francisco a notice of appeal and entering into a written undertaking on appeal in the sum of $26,000 to stay the execution of said judgment, with two sureties, and on said day notified appellants herein that said undertaking had been filed. On May 21, 1925, said appellants served upon respondent, J. A. Coley, and his co-surety, J. L. Craig, notice of exception to said sureties. Five days thereafter, to-wit, May 26, 1925, said respondent, Coley, and Craig served upon appellants notice of justification of sureties and filed said notice on the same day in the office of the county clerk of said city and county of San Francisco. The time therein fixed for justification was May 28, 1925. On the date last above mentioned one of the original sureties and a third person, who was substituted in place of the other original surety, appeared and justified before a judge of the superior court of said city and county of San Francisco upon a written undertaking as required by law in the sum of $300 for costs and in more than double the amount named in said judgment, to-wit, the sum of $26,000. Said undertaking was then and there, in the presence of Harry I. Stafford, the agent and attorney for appellants, regularly approved by said judge of the superior court. Said appellants were, on said May 28, 1925, regularly notified that said undertaking staying execution had been filed and that said sureties had justified and that said bond had been approved by said judge of the superior court.
*25 “It is next alleged that on the day following the filing of said stay bond, to-wit, May 29, 1925, appellants, acting maliciously and with the evil purpose of vexing and annoying respondent and slandering the title to all lands owned by him in the county of San Joaquin and clouding the title thereto, recorded in the office of the county recorder of San Joaquin county an abstract of judgment in said action, well knowing that said abstract of judgment was inoperative and of no legal effect by reason of the filing of said undertaking in said city and county of San Francisco and that said appellants well knew said abstract of judgment when filed by them would be a cloud upon and a slander against all the lands owned, or which might thereafter be owned, by respondent situate in said county of San Joaquin. It is further alleged that the recordation of said abstract of judgment decreased the value of said real property and rendered it unmarketable to the damage of respondent in the sum of $26,000.
“As an additional damage respondent alleged that appellants in recording said abstract of judgment were moved by malice and a desire to oppress him and as a penalty therefor he prayed for punitive and exemplary damages in the sum of $25,000. The prayer of the complaint is that appellants be required to set forth the nature of their claims; that it be decreed and adjudged that appellants have no interest or estate in said lands situate in San Joaquin county and that respondent’s title be decreed to be valid in all respects; that appellants be enjoined from asserting any title thereto adverse to respondent; that the recordation of said abstract of judgment recorded in the county of San Joaquin be can-celled and declared null and void, and for general relief.
“ The first and principal point presented by appellants is that respondent having joined a real and personal action, to-wit, an action to quiet title to real property with an action to recover for a slander of title did thereby lose his right to hold the case in the county where the real property was situate. This contention is based upon the claim that an action for the recovery of damages for slander of title sounds in personal action and does not bring the venue within the purview of section 392, Code of Civil Procedure. Said section provides:
*26 “ ‘Actions for the following causes must be tried in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated, subject to the power of the court to change the place of trial, as provided in this code.
“ ‘1. For the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein, or for the determination in any form of such right or interest, and for the injuries to real property. . . .
“ ‘3. For the foreclosures of all liens and mortgages on real property.’
“We think the language of the section clearly justifies the construction that the owner of the slandered title is given the right to bring and maintain the action in the county where the real property is situated upon the theory that the action is one in which the determination of the owner’s right or interest therein is properly adjudicated, and for the additional reason that slander of title is an injury to real property. It is difficult to discern a single consideration which may be assigned as the legislative reason for the adoption of the code section as to the venue of actions affecting the ownership of an interest in real property that may not with equal force be applied to actions to recover damages for injury for the false and malicious disparagement of the owner’s title by another, a wrong which has by use become a recognized phase of the law known as ‘slander of title.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
272 P. 1045, 206 Cal. 22, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coley-v-hecker-cal-1928.