Darlington v. Butler

86 P. 194, 3 Cal. App. 448, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 313
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1906
DocketCiv. No. 194.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 P. 194 (Darlington v. Butler) 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
Darlington v. Butler, 86 P. 194, 3 Cal. App. 448, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 313 (Cal. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action to determine the respective rights of the parties to certain school land situated in El Dorado county. Plaintiff had judgment from which and from the order denying his motion for a new trial intervener Kohn appeals.

The record presents the following facts: In 1888, defendant Butler filed her application in the state land office to purchase the land; thereafter one Graham filed therein a similar application, and on demand and protest of Graham the surveyor general referred the conflicting claims of Graham and Butler to the superior court for adjudication,- on May 4, 1889, a complaint was filed by Graham in said court in the action entitled Graham v. Butler, and summons issued, but no return was made thereon; on May 7,1903, appellant, intervener Kohn, “presented his application to purchase and protest to the surveyor general, who refused to file the same on the ground that the matter had been proferted to the superior court of El Dorado county, and until judgment was had they (sic) had no jurisdiction to receive the same”; on May 22, 1903, Kohn, by leave of court, filed his complaint in intervention, and an alias summons issued thereon, and on August 19, 1904, “was duly certified and returned” to the court, and on the same day Graham filed his answer to said complaint in intervention, “disclaiming any interest in the land therein described or in the cause of action; and the default of said Sarah Butler for not appearing in answer to said summons was duly entered”; on July 16, 1903, Darlington, plaintiff herein, filed *450 his complaint in intervention, in which he alleged that he had made application to purchase the land from the state on April 11, 1903, which presumably was refused as Kohn’s had been; on January 3, 1905, the court “dismissed the proceedings of Graham v. Butler, on motion of said intervener Darlington, upon the ground that summons in said action had not been served and return thereon made within three years after the commencement of said action.” It appears from a statement made by the judge, Honorable N. D. Arnot, presiding in the case, as follows: “It was the practice of the presiding judge in this case ... to announce his decision to the clerk and require the clerk to make an entry in the minute-book; and that has been his practice since he became judge of the superior court of El Dorado county. . . . When the judge presiding made his order in the case of Graham v. Butler, dismissing the case, he followed the practice he had hitherto pursued.” The deputy clerk of the court testified that he remembered the decision of the court in Graham v. Butler, a copy of which the court gave to the clerk, and the direction the court gave him and he supposed it went into the minute-book and that the court told him as the attorneys came in to give them a copy of the decision; that Darlington came to the clerk’s office about closing time and the clerk gave him a copy but did not remember to have given Kohn’s attorney a copy; the latter testified that he did not know of the judgment dismissing the case until January 5, 1903, on which day a second judgment of dismissal was entered. The judgment of January 3d is as follows (title of court and cause entered in full): “In this action the motion of intervener, Abe Darlington, that said action be dismissed having come on regularly to be heard, and the court having rendered its decision and order that said action be dismissed; wherefore, by reason of the law and decision and order aforesaid, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said above-entitled action be, and the same is hereby dismissed. Judgment rendered January 3, A. D. 1905. ’ ’ There appears in the record a judgment to like effect signed by the judge and dated January 5, 1905. It is not necessary to set out this judgment fully. It recites the proceedings leading up to it more fully than the judgment of January 3d, and differs from that judgment only in form. It directs that the action be dismissed and the matter referred to *451 the surveyor general for such further proceedings as may he proper in the premises and that a copy he filed in the office of the surveyor general. The court found among the facts that the judgment of January 3d “was never vacated nor set aside and at all times after its said entry was and is in full force and effect.” Among its conclusions of law the court found that “the judgment of this court made and entered on the 3d day of January, 1905, was and is the final judgment in the action of J. S. Graham v. Sarah Butler, and that the judgment made and entered on the fifth day of January, 1905, was unauthorized and was not and is not the final judgment therein.” It appears that the judgment of January 3d, was entered “on page 598 of judgment-hook ‘B,’ records of the superior court of El Dorado county, in words and figures as follows” (Then follows copy as above given). The judgment of January 5th was introduced as having been “made and entered by this court on the fifth day of January, 1905, and forming part of the judgment-roll in the case, ’ ’ but it does not appear where it was entered. On minute-book J of the court is an entry as follows: “January 3d, 1905. Present, Hon. N. D. Arnot, Judge. J. S. Graham v. Sarah Butler. The motion to dismiss is granted.” The court found that on January 4, 1905, plaintiff filed in the office of the surveyor general a certified copy of the judgment of January 3, 1905, “and, on said fourth day of January, 1905, and after the filing of said copy of said judgment, he filed in the office of the surveyor general his application, in due form, for the purchase of the land described in his complaint and a duly verified pretest against the allowance or approval of the application of said Sarah Butler and demanded that the contest arising thereon be referred to this court for adjudication”; that “thereafter, to wit, on the fifth day of January, A. D. 1905, the surveyor general, in compliance with said protest and demand of plaintiffs, made and entered in the record boobs of his office an order, which recites the fact of said application made by defendant in his office for the land aforesaid and of the application made and filed by plaintiff as aforesaid and the said protest and demand of plaintiff filed therewith, and orders and directs that the contest, as set forth between the parties herein, be referred to the superior court . . . for adjudication.” On January 6, 1905, Kohn, intervener, presented to the sur *452 veyor general a certified copy of the said judgment of January 5th, and at the same time presented his application and demand to purchase said land and was refused ‘ ‘ on the ground that he had issued his proferí to this court to determine the conflicting claims of said Abe Darlington and said Sarah Butler and hence was without authority to receive any further application.” Thereupon Kohn, by leave of court, intervened in this action, the cause was tried and judgment passed in favor of plaintiff and against both the defendant and the intervener.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 P. 194, 3 Cal. App. 448, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darlington-v-butler-calctapp-1906.