Engleman v. Superior Court

288 P. 723, 105 Cal. App. 754, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 720
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 1930
DocketDocket No. 313.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 288 P. 723 (Engleman 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
Engleman v. Superior Court, 288 P. 723, 105 Cal. App. 754, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 720 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

BARNARD, Acting P. J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition, based upon the following facts:

On December 29, 1929, there occurred in the city of Fresno an automobile collision between an automobile driven by petitioner, H. B. Engleman, and another automobile driven by Wm. PI. Johnson. On March 11, 1930, the said Wm. H. Johnson began an action in the Superior Court of Fresno County against H. B. Engleman and one E. V. Moore, claiming damages in excess of $10,000 on account of injuries to himself and his property, resulting from said collision. After summons in said action had been served on the said H. B. Engleman, and on the fourteenth day of March, 1930, petitioners herein began an action in the justice’s court of *756 the third township of the county of Fresno, against the said Wm. H. Johnson, claiming damages in the sum of $966.50 on account of damages sustained by petitioners arising from injuries received by their minor child, in the same collision. On April 4, 1930, the said Wm. H. Johnson filed in said action in the Superior Court a supplemental complaint asking that petitioners be restrained from prosecuting the above-mentioned action in the justice’s court. In this supplemental complaint it was alleged that the collision described in the complaint filed in the justice’s court was the same identical collision, transaction and event described in the original complaint in the Superior Court; that the justice’s court had no jurisdiction of Johnson’s claim because of the amount thereof; that the Superior Court did have jurisdiction to entertain the claim of Engleman by way of either cross-complaint or counterclaim; and that a failure to plead his cause of action in the justice’s court might result in Johnson being barred because his claim grew out of the same transaction .as the one set up by Engleman in the justice’s court. An injunction was issued by the Superior Court restraining petitioners from taking any further steps or proceedings in said justice’s court action, during the pendency of said action in the Superior Court, or until the further order of that court. Thereupon, this petition was filed, asking that respondents be prohibited from taking further proceedings on said supplemental complaint and from enforcing the above-mentioned injunction.

It is conceded by petitioners that Christine Engleman, as the wife of H. B. Engleman, was a proper but not a necessary party in said justice’s court action, and that this matter should be determined on the real point in dispute, without pressing the claim that the parties are not the same.

The claims of the respective parties hereto arise out of the same transaction and out of the same accident, within the meaning of sections 438 and 442 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Morris v. Warner, 207 Cal. 498 [279 Pac. 152].)

A somewhat similar controversy was passed upon by the Supreme Court in the case of Gregory v. Diggs, 113 Cal. 196 [45 Pac. 261]. In that case the defendant therein had sued the plaintiff therein in a justice’s court for a balance of $132 on the purchase price of certain goods. The plaintiff in that *757 action had appeared in the justice’s court setting up a counterclaim for $500 damages, for breach of warranty. This plea having been stricken out by the justice on the ground that he had no jurisdiction in an amount over $300, an action was filed in the Superior Court asking that the justice be enjoined from further proceeding with the case before him, but that the entire matter be litigated in the Superior Court. The court held that the jurisdiction of the justice’s court was too limited to afford relief to the parties, and that the action should be tried in the Superior Court.

Petitioners contend that the case just cited has no application to the facts here under consideration, for the reason that the decision in that case refers only to a counterclaim and not to a cross-complaint. It is argued that the essential difference between a cross-complaint and a counterclaim consists in whether or not affirmative relief is demanded. It is further argued that under section 442 of the Code of Civil Procedure, one entitled to set up a cross-complaint has the option either to file such a pleading or to file a separate suit, while the holder of a counterclaim has no such option. It is contended that this right to file a separate suit is an absolute one,-that may not be taken from him. It is therefore argued that since petitioners were demanding affirmative relief, they had the right to either file a cross-complaint or a separate action, and that their right to file a separate action in the justice’s court was one that the Superior Court was without power to interfere with. This is the only-question presented on this application.

We are unable to follow petitioners in their conclusion that the fact that they are asking affirmative relief is determinative of this matter. As we read the case of Gregory v. Diggs, although a counterclaim is mentioned therein, the decision does not rest upon the proposition that affirmative relief was not asked for. As a matter of fact, the plaintiff therein appears to have been seeking some affirmative relief. If he had desired merely to offset his adversary’s claim, the matter could have remained in the justice’s court. He, however, demanded $525, which was beyond the jurisdiction of the lower court. Whether he could obtain the excess under the provisions of section 666 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or otherwise, was not the decisive point. The ease was de *758 cided entirely on the ground that under the circumstances existing the jurisdiction of the justice’s court was too limited to afford relief to the parties.

The parties here are in the same position. While an earlier trial may be had in the justice’s court, the claim of Johnson is not within the jurisdiction of that court, he should not be compelled to remit the greater part of his claim in order to appear there, and no part of his claim should be barred by his failure to there set it up. As the court said in Gregory v. Diggs, supra;

“If plaintiffs are entitled to this remedy, it is solely upon the ground that under the peculiar circumstances of the case the jurisdiction of the justice court is too limited to afford them relief. They cannot be required to remit a portion of their demand to enable them to put in a counterclaim of which the justice has jurisdiction, and a judgment entered in the justice court by default or consent would probably be a bar to the suit for damages in the superior court.
“But, whether this would be the case or not, the entire issue is one which the practice here authorizes the parties to have determined upon one trial, and evidently that cannot be done in the justice’s court.
“This is a well-known ground of equitable jurisdiction. It is not a case in which a party being entitled to some remedy, which only a court of equity can give, and which having obtained jurisdiction for one purpose will proceed to adjudicate upon the whole controversy; nor is it a case where a court of equity will interfere to prevent a multiplicity of suits.

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288 P. 723, 105 Cal. App. 754, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engleman-v-superior-court-calctapp-1930.