Donohue v. Baker

2 Cal. Super. Ct. 19
CourtCalifornia Superior Court
DecidedApril 5, 1926
DocketNo. 15443
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Cal. Super. Ct. 19 (Donohue v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donohue v. Baker, 2 Cal. Super. Ct. 19 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

[21]*21This is an appeal from the Small Claims Court of Petaluma Township. The appeal is taken by the defendant from the judgment of Justice of the Peace John P. Gallagher, sitting as a justice, presiding in the Small Claims Court, who gave judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $33.10.

The notice of appeal does not state whether the appeal is taken on questions of law or fact, nor does the section of the code authorizing an appeal to be taken from the Small Claims Court to the Superior Court indicate how the case is to be disposed of in the Superior Court — whether it is to be heard on a statement or is to be tried de novo.

Section 927 — j, C. C. P. provides as follows:

“The judgment of said court (Small Claims Court) shall be conclusive upon the plaintiff. If the defendant is dissatisfied, he may, within five days from the entry of said judgment against him, appeal to the Superior Court of the county in which said court is held, and if final judgment is rendered against him in such Superior Court, then he shall pay, in addition to said judgment, an attorney's fee to the plaintiff in the sum of fifteen dollars.”

It will be noted that this section, granting the right of appeal from the Small Claims Court, gives to the defendant, if dissatisfied, the right of appeal but denies the same privilege to the plaintiff. The Court cannot avoid the contusion [22]*22that in giving the defendant the right of appeal and denying the same right to the plaintiff an arbitrary discrimination has been made between the parties and do.es not give the plaintiff an equal protection of the law with the defendant, and is therefore in violation of the Federal and the State Constitutions. The fourteenth amendment of the Federal Constitution forbids any state to deny to any person the equal protection of its laws, and the State Constitution requires that all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation (Article I, Section 11) and prohibits the Legislature from passing special laws regulating the practice of courts of justice (Article IV, Section 25). Numerous cases are to be found holding that a law is general and uniform in its operation if it applies to all persons within a class founded upon some natural or intrinsic distinction but is special and not uniform if dependent upon any other sort of classification (Mordecai vs. Board of Supervisors of Madera Co., 183 Cal. 434). .

The provisions of section 1195, C. C. P., which allowed an attorney's fee to foreclose a mechanics lien to plaintiff, if successful, but making no allowance for an attorney’s fee for defendant, if successful, was held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Builders Supply Depot vs. O’Connor, 150 Cal. 265. In that case the Court says:

“This provision is in our opinion vio-lative both of the Federal and the State Constitution — of the fourteenth amendment of the former, which guarantees to [23]*23every person the equal protection of the law and of the provisions of the State constitution which provide that general laws shall be uniform, prohibit special laws and. declare the inalienable rights of all men of acquiring, possessing and protecting property. A statute which gives an attorney’s fees to one party in an action and denies it to the other, and allows such fee in one kind of action and not in other kinds of actions where, as in the statute here in question the distinction is not founded on constitutional or natural differences, is clearly violative of the constitutional provisions above mentioned.”

Section 927-j, which gives the defendant the right of appeal and denies the plaintiff the same right, also allows the plaintiff an attorney’s fee on appeal, if judgment is rendered against defendant, and therefore is subject to the same objection as was urged against section 1195, C. C. P., in Builders Supply Depot vs. O’Connor, supra.

The question involved here of allowing one party to the action to appeal and not allowing the other party to the action to appeal, while not having been passed upon directly in this State so far as the Court has been able to find, has been directly passed upon in other jurisdictions. In Hecker vs. Illinois C. R. Co. 231 Ill. 574; 83 N. E. 456, the Supreme Court of Illinois had under consideration a statute regulating appeals from the Appellate Courts to the Supreme Court of that State, which statute permitted one party to the action to appeal and not the other. In that [24]*24case the Court holding the statute unconstitu tional says:

“This amendment gives an appeal on the facts to the appellee if judgment goes against him because of the facts, and denies such appeal to the appellant under the same circumstances. * * * The amendment is not, in this respect, a valid enactment. It denies to suitors the equal protection of the law, and confers special privileges, thus violating Section 22 of Article 4 of the constitution of the State. The parties do not come into the Appellate Court on equal terms. The law discriminates between them. They do not stand equal before the law, and do not receive its equal protection. * * * The Legislature has the right to regulate appeals and writs of error, but it has no right to discriminate between the parties. It cannot allow an appeal to one party from an adverse decision and deny it to the other. It is obvious that a law providing that the defendant should have the right to appeal from the judgment of the trial court but the plaintiff should not, would be an unjust discrimination. * * * If the matter is still open for an appeal, it must in justice be equally open to either party. The litigants should be looked on with equal favor by the law and have the same right to appeal, and the same questions should be open to each.”

[25]*25Hecker vs. Illinois C. R. Co., supra, holding a statute similar to the one under consideration in the instant case unconstitutional, is cited and approved and the same rule announced in re Rochester, 224 New York, 386.

Section 927-j being in conflict with the provisions of the Constitution and therefore invalid, the only question remaining is, can an appeal from the small claims court be taken under the provisions of the Code regulating appeals from the justice’s court. Section 974, C. C. P., provides that a party dissatisfied with the judgment of a police or justice’s court may appeal therefrom to the Superior Court.

It has been suggested that the statute creating the small claims court does not create a new court, and that the court therein provided for is in fact the justice’s court. If an action brought in a small claims court can be construed as an action brought in the justice’s court, then an appeal might be had under section 974, C. C. P., but an examination of the act relative to the small claims court can lead but to the conclusion that the Legislature intended to create a new and separate court.

The title of the act creating the Small Claims Court and by which the sections relating to the small claims court were added to the code in 1921, is as follows:

“An act to amend part two, title eleven, chapter twelve, of the Code of Civil Procedure by adding thereto seven[26]*26teen new sections, to be numbered and designated sections nine hundred twenty-seven to nine hundred twenty-seven p, inclusive, creating a Small Claims Court, prescribing the procedure therein and prescribing the method of appealing therefrom.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Application of Ahart
159 P. 160 (California Supreme Court, 1916)
Builders' Supply Depot v. O'Connor
88 P. 982 (California Supreme Court, 1907)
Mordecai v. Board of Supervisors of County of Madera
192 P. 40 (California Supreme Court, 1920)
Balkum v. State
40 Ala. 671 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1867)
Hecker v. Illinois Central Railroad
83 N.E. 456 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Cal. Super. Ct. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donohue-v-baker-calsuperct-1926.