Dillon v. Superior Court

142 P. 503, 24 Cal. App. 760, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 137
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1265.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 142 P. 503 (Dillon v. Superior Court) 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
Dillon v. Superior Court, 142 P. 503, 24 Cal. App. 760, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 137 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Writ of prohibition to restrain the defendant from proceeding to hear and. determine a certain cause. There is no substantial dispute as to the facts. It appears that, on September 16, 1913, plaintiff obtained a judgment against one Cooley, in the justice’s court of Washington Township, Nevada County; that, on October 11, 1913, an undertaking on appeal in due form ivas filed in said justice’s court and said justice indorsed the same—“Filed Oct. 11, 1913, A. McGagin, Justice of the Peace, said Township,” and, on the same date, made the following entry in his docket in said cause: “October 11. Undertaking on appeal filed with A. Scwartz and N. M. Melrose as sureties.” It appeared by the affidavit of the justice that, on October 11, 1913, “Cooley the defendant in said cause, brought to affiant an undertaking on appeal, now on file in said cause, *761 and requested affiant to take the affidavit of the sureties thereon. That affiant thereafter took the affidavits of the sureties on said undertaking and indorsed a filing mark on said undertaking as of the date of October 11, 1913, the date that said undertaking was verified by the said sureties. That he was not requested to file said undertaking by the said M. D. Cooley or by any other person, and that after taking the affidavits of the said sureties he returned the said undertaking to said M. D. Cooley, who, as affiant is informed and believes, returned the same to Fred Searls, one of his' attorneys at Nevada City. That the said undertaking was not placed in the files of the said.justice’s court but was delivered to the said M. D. Cooley to be returned to Nevada City, and said undertaking was not placed among the papers and files in said cause until October 14, 1913.” As it was, on October 11, returned to Cooley it, of course, could not then have been placed among the papers. Affiant further deposed that, on October 14, 1913, he received from Mr. Searls, by letter, “the said undertaking on appeal together with notice of appeal and request that said notice of appeal and said undertaking be filed in said action,” and that, “upon the receipt of said notice on appeal and undertaking on appeal affiant filed the notice of appeal and placed the undertaking on appeal without any additional filing mark thereon among the papers in the said cause, and • thereafter affiant transmitted said papers to the county clerk of the county of Nevada.” Mr. Searls’s letter was directed to the justice of the peace and contained the following directions: “Herewith find notice of appeal and undertaking on appeal in the matter of F. Dillon, plaintiff, v. M. D. Cooley, defendant. File the notice of appeal and undertaking and send down transcript of your docket to George Coughlin, clerk of the superior court, Nevada County.” The justice’s docket as transcribed, with all the papers, was sent to the clerk, on October 17, 1913, and contains no entry after entry of the judgment, except the following: “October 11. Undertaking on appeal filed with A. Scwartz and N. M. Melrose as sureties. October 14. Notice of appeal received and placed on file.”

Attorney Searls’s clerk, J. W. O’Neill, deposed: “That on or about the 10th day of October, 1913, he forwarded to M. *762 D. Cooley, the defendant in said cause, an undertaking on appeal with instruction to the said M. D. Cooley to have the same executed at once by two good and sufficient sureties; to have said sureties verify the undertaking before A. W. MeGagin, justice of the peace in and for Washington Township; . . . and then return the said undertaking to Fred Searls, Esq., at Nevada City, California, to be by him forwarded for filing to the said justice of the peace”; that it was received on October 12th and on the 13th was sent back to the justice by mail together with notice of appeal and, as above stated, was received by the justice on the 14th, at which date the notice of appeal was filed, but there was no further filing of the bond noted either on the bond or in the docket.

On December 19, 1913, plaintiff’s attorney filed a motion in the superior court to dismiss the appeal on the ground “that no bond for costs on appeal has been given or filed in said action by appellant as required by the provisions of the statute in such case provided.” Thereafter, on January 12, 1914, the motion came on to be heard and, in opposition thereto, appellant filed the foregonig affidavits of the justice of the peace and Mr. O’Neill and the letter of Mr. Searls. The court made the following order:

“It is therefore ordered that appellant be and he is hereby given permission to supply the omissions, if any exist, of the marking as filed on October 14th, 1913, of an undertaking on appeal and of the making of the entry of filing such undertaking in the docket of the justice of the peace of Washington township by applying to said justice to so mark such undertaking and to make such entry, and if such application is granted by said justice, then said justice shall certify said entry to this court. Permission to withdraw said undertaking on appeal in this matter from the files of this court is granted appellant for presentation of the same to the said justice of the peace, said undertaking to be returned to said files of this court, with the certificate of such entry on the docket, if any is made by said justice, within fifteen days from the date of this order. And in the mean time, respondent’s motion to dismiss said appeal is hereby ordered continued until the further order of this court.”

Pursuant to said order and on notice given by defendant to plaintiff, the matter came before the justice on February 23, *763 1914, who, as is alleged and not denied, ‘ ‘ changed the original filing mark on said undertaking by simply changing the figure 11th to 14th by converting the unit 1, in the date 11th, to a figure 4, but did not in any other manner whatever refile said undertaking or place any other filing marks thereon. Thereafter, and on February 27, 1914, said so-called amended copy of docket and amended filing of said undertaking, was filed in said cause in said superior court,” and, on April 6, 1914, said court denied said motion to dismiss said appeal.

The demurrer of respondent to the petition presents the question to be determined.

Section 978a of the Code of Civil Procedure provides as follows: “The undertaking on appeal must be filed within five days after the filing of the notice of appeal and notice of the filing of the undertaking must be given to the respondent. The adverse party may except to the sufficiency of the sureties within five days after the filing of the undertaking, and unless they or other sureties justify before the justice or judge within five days thereafter, upon notice to the adverse party, to the amounts stated in their affidavits, the appeal must be regarded as if no such undertaking had been given. ’ ’ It was held, in Goodman v. Superior Court, 19 Cal. App. 457, [126 Pac. 185] : “Upon an appeal from a justice’s court to the superior court, where the undertaking on appeal was prematurely filed, before the filing of the notice of appeal, the superior court acquires no jurisdiction of the appeal.”

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 503, 24 Cal. App. 760, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-superior-court-calctapp-1914.