Colusa v. Superior Court of County of Glenn

161 P. 1011, 31 Cal. App. 746, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 375
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1414.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 161 P. 1011 (Colusa v. Superior Court of County of Glenn) 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
Colusa v. Superior Court of County of Glenn, 161 P. 1011, 31 Cal. App. 746, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 375 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

In the above-entitled cause a rehearing was ordered by this court. The facts may be stated as fol *747 lows: Petitioner is a railroad corporation and, as such, it brought in the superior court of Glenn County a suit in eminent domain to secure a right of way over respondent’s land. With the assistance of a jury, a trial was had on April 26, 1915, which resulted in a verdict awarding plaintiff (petitioner herein) the 12.18 acres sought to be condemned, fixing the value of said land at the sum of $2,801.40, and assessing the damages, by reason of severance to that portion of the land of defendant not taken, at the sum of $14,130, making a total of $16,931.40 damages. Thereafter, on June 2, 1915, the Honorable Wm. M. Pinch, judge of said superior court, made and entered a judgment adopting said verdict and containing the usual formal recitals, and also certain stipulations of the parties as to how the road should be constructed and concluding as follows: “It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that upon the payment of the said sum of $2,801.40 and the said sum of $14,130, to wit, the sum of $16,931.40 assessed, the plaintiff shall be entitled to a final order of condemnation which shall describe the property condemned and the purpose of such condemnation, which property shall be as described in the complaint herein, and which purpose shall be as stated in the complaint herein and that said railroad on said right of way shall be constructed in the manner prescribed in this decree, and the said property hereinafter described is hereby taken as a public use for the purposes described and set forth in the complaint, reference to which is hereby made, upon the said payment of the said total sum being made,” and then followed a description of the land condemned. On June 11th, the plaintiff filed with the clerk of said court a notice of appeal, and on June 16th, said plaintiff filed a proper undertaking for costs on appeal. The petition for supersedeas herein alleged: ‘ That notwithstanding the said perfecting of said appeal . . . defendant has applied to the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Glenn, and the Hon. Wm. M. Pinch, judge of said court, for an order directing and compelling the clerk of said superior court to issue an execution in said action on said judgment for the said sum of $16,931.40 and costs of suit, and the said superior court and the said judge thereof has entertained said motion and said application and threatens to grant the same and order said Clerk of said Court to issue said execution to the end that it may be levied *748 upon the property of your petitioner, the plaintiff in the above entitled action, and the said -defendant is not entitled to such order or such execution and your petitioner is entitled to a writ of supersedeas for the reason that the appeal taken from said judgment has suspended said judgment and the jurisdiction of said superior court . . . and said judgment has by reason of said appeal been stayed until after the final determination of said appeal. . . . That your petitioner, the plaintiff in the above entitled action, has not taken possession of the land involved in said action or any portion thereof and has not made and is not now making any attempt to take possession of said land.”

In the opinion hereinbefore filed for reasons therein stated, an order was directed denying the writ. The decision was based largely upon our conception of what had been held by our supreme court in certain cases, to which attention was directed. The fundamental principles leading to the conclusion which we reached are manifestly that the judgment rendered in the superior court is “a money judgment” in the sense of section 942 of the Code of Civil Procedure and that such judgment is the “final judgment” contemplated by section 1251 of said code.

We venture to consider again the various decisions cited and to endeavor to clear up what seems to be a somewhat complicated situation. In doing so, we shall not attempt to segregate these decisions as they bear more directly upon one or the other of these propositions, but it will be more convenient to view them rather indiscriminately as they relate to one or both of these principles.

At the outset, it may be said that of course there is no contention that the judgment has become final in the sense of a “final conclusion of the litigation.” It is admitted by both parties that, as said in Gillmore v. American C. I. Co., 65 Cal. 63, [2 Pac. 882], “Until litigation on the merits is ended, there is no finality to the judgment, in the sense of a final determination of the rights of the parties, although it may have becomfe final for the purpose of an appeal from it.” It is, though, claimed by respondent that section 1251 of the Code of Civil Procedure providing that “the plaintiff must within thirty days after final judgment pay the sum of money assessed” does not refer to the end of litigation, but to the judgment as entered or rendered in the superior court *749 and, of course, it is contended that this judgment is one directing “the payment of money” in the sense of section 942 of said code. If it were res integra, I should be inclined to the conclusion that said expression used in said section 1251, “after final judgment” has the same signification as “after judgment becomes final.” The peculiar form of expression, the definite article the being omitted before the word final is a significant circumstance in this connection. Respondent’s interpretation would be more persuasive if the legislature had provided that the money should be paid within thirty days “after the final judgment.”

Again, the use of the term “final” is of great importance. Why should the word be used at all if it was intended to make the judgment of the superior court the initial point for computation of the time? Is it not fair to say that if such had been the intention, it would have been provided that the money should be paid within thirty days “after judgment,” or “after the judgment,” or “after judgment in the superior court ? ’ ’ Any of these expressions or equivalent ones would have placed the matter beyond question, and it seems hardly credible that the deliberate use of the qualifying term “final” was not for the purpose of postponing the declared effect of the judgment until finality had attached to it.

Again in section 1254 where the legislature had in mind the judgment as rendered in the superior court, it is interesting to notice the nomenclature used. Therein it is provided: “At any time after trial and judgment entered or pending an appeal from the judgment to the supreme court, whenever the plaintiff shall have paid into court, for the defendant, the full amount of the judgment, and such further sum . . . the court . . . may . . . authorize the plaintiff ... to take possession of and use the property during the pendency of and until the final conclusion of the litigation. . . . The defendant, who is entitled to the money paid into court for him upon any judgment, shall be entitled to . . . receive the same . . . upon obtaining an order therefor from the court. It shall be the duty of the court . . . upon application ...

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Bluebook (online)
161 P. 1011, 31 Cal. App. 746, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colusa-v-superior-court-of-county-of-glenn-calctapp-1916.