Dewing v. Gin S. Chow

19 P.2d 12, 129 Cal. App. 441, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1146
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1933
DocketDocket No. 7522.
StatusPublished

This text of 19 P.2d 12 (Dewing v. Gin S. Chow) 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
Dewing v. Gin S. Chow, 19 P.2d 12, 129 Cal. App. 441, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1146 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*443 WORKS, P. J.

This is an action to recover fees for services rendered by an official reporter of the superior court. Judgment went for plaintiff, and defendants appeal.

Early in the brief of appellants six certain points are stated as those made for a reversal of the judgment. Each of these points is circumstantially couched and was evidently drawn with care. They are inserted at the close of the portion of the brief devoted to a statement of the facts of the case. In the remaining portion of the brief, that devoted to argument, not one of these six points is inserted, in terms, as a heading to any portion of the printed discussion. One or two of them do not appear, even in briefer style, as headings. One or two are set down as headings in a much curtailed and abbreviated form. In disposing of the appeal we shall pay no attention to the six points, unargued as they are, but shall consider only the arguments advanced, all .being put forth, as we have said, under “points” otherwise stated. Such a course is proper under the well-known rule that questions suggested in a brief but not argued are not to be considered. The points which are discussed in the brief are four in number.

The first point is thus stated: “Full performance a condition precedent to right to fees.” This cryptic and unenlightening group of words is made intelligible by the argument which follows it. The service rendered to appellants by respondent consisted in the delivery to their counsel, daily, of transcripts showing the testimony taken on the day preceding each delivery and while the trial of an action in which appellants were parties was in progress. There was also a daily copy delivered to the judge, for which appellants were to pay one-half the charge. These daily transcripts were rendered as the trial proceeded, during practically all of the trial days over a period of five months, or thereabouts. The installments were paid for daily for some time, but payment was never made for those delivered during the latter portion of the period. This action was commenced to recover the balance thus left due. We now come to the specific point made by appellants. The daily transcripts were not certified by respondent as correct. Section 269 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads, in part: “[I]f directed by the court, or requested by either party [the phonographic reporter] must, within such reasonable *444 time after the trial of such case as the court may designate, write out the same [the record], or such specific portions thereof as may be requested in plain and legible longhand, or by typewriter, or other printing machine, and certify to the same as being correctly reported and transcribed, and when directed by the court, file the same with the clerk of the court.” Appellants insist that under this section it was the duty of respondent to certify to the correctness of the daily transcripts, and that they are not required to compensate the labors of respondent, aided by his transcribers, in the absence of such certificates.

There are several answers to this contention. In the first place, section 269 has no reference to daily transcripts rendered during a trial, but only to complete transcripts of all the evidence taken, or transcripts of desired portions thereof, to be written after a trial is concluded. This is plain from the face of the enactment. The reporter (italics being ours), “within such reasonable time after the trial of such case as the court may designate”, is “to write out the same”—the record. It is, of course, only to such a transcript, made at such a time, that the stenographer is to append his certificate.

Further, these transcripts were received throughout the unusually long trial, both by counsel and by the court, without objection and without remark as to the absence of certification. Not only so, but the daily copies were paid for during a considerable portion of the trial, as we have already observed. Under these circumstances we think appellants cannot now be heard to urge a nonliability to compensate for labors unremittingly and substantially performed, the fruits of which they have enjoyed. We think appellants are estopped to deny liability to respondent.

A somewhat fuller statement of the facts is necessary to an understanding of the second point made by appellants. The tremendous trial during which respondent acted as stenographic reporter was really the hearing on the merits of three consolidated cases. The counsel who ordered the daily transcripts with which we are concerned on this appeal represented appellants, who were plaintiffs in one of the cases, and also all but one of the plaintiffs in the other two eases, that single plaintiff having been represented by other counsel. The counsel who appeared for all these *445 plaintiffs but- one was James F. Peek. The counsel representing the single remaining plaintiff was Charles Black-stock. Before the trial of the consolidated cases was begun Peek ordered a daily transcript of the evidence. Blackstock stated that he required no transcript. A daily transcript was also ordered for the defendants in the cases and one was ordered for the judge. The present action was commenced against the plaintiffs in but one of the consolidated cases, and the cause was dismissed as to one of these. In view of the fact that the plaintiffs represented by Peek in the other two actions are not parties defendant here, and in view of the dismissal just mentioned, appellants contend that any liability to respondent for the daily transcripts was joint as to all the plaintiffs represented by Peck, and that therefore an action against less than all must fail. Appellants support this contention by mere assertion, not by substantial argument, as it appears to us. Nor can we see how the liability can be joint. Respondent insists that it is joint and several, and under the law there is a presumption that it is of that nature. Section 1659 of the Civil Code reads: “Where all the parties who unite in a promise receive some benefit from the consideration, whether past or present, their promise is presumed to be joint and several. ’ ’ The language of this section, under the facts of the present case, completely meets the terms of section 1431 of the same code, which runs in part: “An obligation imposed upon several persons ... is presumed to be joint, and not several, except in the special cases mentioned in the title on the interpretation of contracts.” Section 1659 is under a title of the code headed “Interpretation of Contracts”. Indeed, despite the apparent general character of section 1431, a joint contractual liability is quite an unusual creature under the law. The section is robbed of much of its apparent import by the language of section 1659. Another despoiler of its effect is section 1660 of the same code, the nature of which is not of direct importance here. As to the effect of these various sections see Gummer v. Mairs, 140 Cal. 535 [74 Pac. 26]; Wood v. Longyear, 197 Cal. 723 [142 Pac. 932]; Webb v. Casassa, 82 Cal. App. 307 [255 Pac. 541].

The next point made is that “The dismissal of one of the joint defendants was a dismissal of the liability as *446 to all of them.” This point falls with the determination that there was no joint liability.

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Related

Webb v. Casassa
255 P. 541 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)
Wood v. Longyear
242 P. 932 (California Supreme Court, 1925)
Gummer v. Mairs
74 P. 26 (California Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 12, 129 Cal. App. 441, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewing-v-gin-s-chow-calctapp-1933.