Davey v. Mulroy

93 P. 297, 7 Cal. App. 1, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 333.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 P. 297 (Davey v. Mulroy) 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
Davey v. Mulroy, 93 P. 297, 7 Cal. App. 1, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 60 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from an order denying his motion for a new trial, upon a statement of the case.

The action was brought to quiet title to certain land situated in Nevada county. The plaintiff claims title through a homestead patent issued to him by the government of the United States in the month of August, 1893. The defendant’s claim of title is based upon an alleged purchase of the land from the Central Pacific Railroad Company on the first day of June, 1891, it being contended that said land was embraced within the grant to said railroad company from the general government, by virtue of an act of Congress of the United States, approved July 1, 1862, entitled “An Act to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean and to secure to the government the use of the same for postal, military and other purposes,” [12 Stats. 489], and an act amendatory thereof, approved July 2, 1864, [13 Stats. 356], by which the United States granted to said railroad company “each odd-numbered section on each side of the line of its railroad to be located as provided by said acts and which was within twenty miles of said line.” At the time the homestead patent was issued by the government to the plaintiff the defendant had possession of and was living upon a portion of the disputed land; but subsequently to the issuance of said patent to plaintiff, the defendant took a lease of the premises from plaintiff, the same being in writing, at the nominal rental consideration of one dollar per year.

The defendant, after answering by denial the averments of the complaint, sets out, by way of cross-complaint, a history of his title to the land, and upon the facts thus alleged asks for affirmative relief, viz.: That the plaintiff be declared the *3 holder of “said patent and title of said premises in trust for this defendant; that he be directed and obliged to reconvey the same to this defendant,” etc. The court found from the evidence all the allegations of the complaint to be true, and accordingly entered a decree quieting plaintiff’s title to the demanded premises.

■Respondent presents a motion to' dismiss the appeal upon three grounds: 1. Because the appellant “had not legal capacity to sue or be sued or take this appeal”; 2. Because “this court never obtained jurisdiction of the case”; 3. Because the appeal was not taken within the time prescribed by law.

We will first dispose of the second ground of the motion to dismiss in the order in which the several grounds are thus presented.

The appellant served upon respondent, on the seventh day of February, 1907, a notice that he appealed from the order “to the Supreme Court of the State of California.” According to the clerk’s certificate, an undertaking on appeal was filed by appellant on the "sixth day of February, 1907. The notice was dated on the sixth day of February, but it does not affirmatively appear when the notice was filed. But for the purpose of the present discussion the date of filing may be passed without further consideration at this time. If the appeal was perfected or properly taken it was undoubtedly to the supreme and not to this court. On the back of the fly-leaf of the transcript (and the same is true as to the briefs of the respective counsel) the title of the court is as follows: “In District Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, State of California.” The suit is one in equity and of that class of causes of which, therefore, by the terms of section 4 of article VI of the constitution this court is not vested with appellate jurisdiction, except where, as here, the supreme court orders the transfer of the same to a district court of appeal for decision. It is apparent from the record that the appellant sought to take Ms appeal to the proper tribunal, and did do so if he filed and served his notice within the time prescribed by law and took such other timely steps as are essential to the perfection of an appeal. But, through a mistake, due perhaps to a misapprehension of the county clerk, such misapprehension being occasioned, no doubt, by the misleading manner of the printed backing on the tran *4 script and briefs, the cause was placed on the September calendar of this court. Counsel for appellant appeared personally in court and moved for an order transferring the case to the supreme court on the ground that the appeal had in fact been taken directly to that court. The respondent insisted upon his motion to dismiss upon the ground, among others, already enumerated, that this court had no jurisdiction of the appeal. A statement of the nature of the action at once disclosed that the relief sought by both parties was one solely cognizable in a court of equity, and hence it was quite manifest that this court could not acquire jurisdiction of the case by direct appeal. Upon taking up the record, after the submission of the cause, we conceived it to be our duty, in view of the status of the cause before us, to order the same transferred to the supreme court, and accordingly we made such order, and thereafter the case was transferred to this court for decision. Among the papers we find with the record of the case is a document which was filed on the first day of November, 1907, a few days subsequently to the order of the supreme court transferring the cause here for decision. This document is signed by the attorneys for the respondent, and appears to bristle with indignation because this court transferred the case to the supreme court under the authority of rule 32 of this court, and with considerable' warmth the learned counsel declare that it was our duty to have ordered a dismissal of the appeal, and that rule 32 has no application to the circumstances of the case as it appeared on the calendar of this court. It may be that within the ordinarily untrodden range of the recondite learning of the gentlemen representing the respondent, and, therefore, esoterieally hidden from the common view, there is to be found some sound reason for the exercise by this court of the remarkable power of ordering a dismissal of'an appeal taken to the supreme court; but, from our point of view, it seems to be a proposition readily obvious to the average intelligence that this court has no more right to dismiss an appeal to the supreme court, merely because the cause has by mistake or through inadvertence found its way to our calendar, than it would have to dismiss any other appeal to that court upon the motion of counsel. It ought not to be necessary to remark that we have no conceivable authority to interfere with *5 the jurisdiction of the supreme court. And it ought to be equally as unnecessary to observe .that the test determinative of the court to which an appeal is taken, is not the title of the court on the printed back of the transcript or of the briefs, but is the language of the notice of appeal itself. The case could have been removed from our calendar by either of two proper methods, viz.: By striking it from the calendar or by the course adopted and pursued by us. By the latter course, the cause was certain to go where it properly belonged, without further action. By the former, it is probable that an application to the supreme court would have been necessary, in order to get it upon the calendar of that court, for an order requiring the clerk of this court to transmit the record to the former court, thus causing extra trouble and expense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P. 297, 7 Cal. App. 1, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davey-v-mulroy-calctapp-1907.