Favorite v. Superior Court of Riverside Co.

184 P. 15, 181 Cal. 261, 8 A.L.R. 290, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 347
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 6096.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 184 P. 15 (Favorite v. Superior Court of Riverside Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Favorite v. Superior Court of Riverside Co., 184 P. 15, 181 Cal. 261, 8 A.L.R. 290, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 347 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to prevent the superior court of Riverside County from proceeding in a cause pending in said court wherein the said petitioners are plaintiffs and the Security Investment Company and others are defendants. This proceeding for prohibition was begun in the district court of appeal for the second district and after decision there was transferred to this 'court for rehearing. The original petition was filed on December 16, 1918. An amended petition was filed on December 19, 1918.

Honorable Hugh H. Craig is the regularly elected judge of the superior court of Riverside County, before whom the cause originally came on for disposition. On December 9, 1918, the petitioners here, without notice to the other party, presented to Judge Craig, ex parte, a paper purporting to set forth a motion to change the place of trial in the action. The sole ground for the motion was stated therein as folows: “On account of the disqualification of yourself to try the same.” The fact which caused the disqualification referred to was not stated. Petitioners did not then file said paper, or any papers in the case, but stated to the judge that they would renew the motion on the following day. On December 10, 1918, the petitioners filed an application to change the place of trial of said cause on the sole ground that the wife of the judge was a stockholder in the said corporation and that Judge Craig was for that reason disqualified to try the cause or make any order therein other than to change the place of trial, as prescribed by section 398 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The attorneys for the defendants appeared to this motion and the hearing was postponed to December 12, 1918, on which day the parties appeared, the motion was argued by the respective attorneys and was denied by the court. It was made to appear that the wife of Judge Craig *264 had disposed of her stock in. the corporation on December 10, 1918. On the same day Judge Craig requested Honorable J. W. Curtis, judge of the superior court of San Bernardino County, to sit for him on the following day for the purpose of disposing of the said cause. On December 13,1918, Judge Curtis presided in the said court and the said cause was called for further proceedings. Thereupon the petitioners objected to any further proceedings therein and moved the court to change the place of trial thereof upon the ground that the wife of Judge Craig was a stockholder in the defendant corporation during the pendency of the action at all times prior to December 10, 1918; that on ’ December 9, 1918, the petitioners had made the application above mentioned to Judge Craig; that they had filed a motion for change of place of . trial on December 10, 1918, as above stated; that the matter was heard on December 12, 1918, at which time it had been denied by Judge Craig. This application was heard by Judge Curtis, then presiding in the court, and, after argument, was denied. Thereupon, as before stated, this proceeding in prohibition was instituted against said superior court, and also against Hugh H. Craig, as presiding judge thereof. The object of the proceeding is to restrain the said court from making any order in the said cause except an order changing the place of trial to the nearest or most accessible superior court, the judge of which is not disqualified from trying the same.

[1] The cause was submitted on a demurrer to the petition. The facts alleged are therefore admitted to exist. But other facts, though pertinent to the prayer of the petition, cannot be considered.

[2] Upon the argument here, it was stated that Judge Craig had been the owner of stock in the corporation de- ' fendant prior to June 13, 1917, and it was urged that he was and continued thereafter to be disqualified by reason of such fact, so long as his direct liability as a stockholder continued to exist. On this point we need only say that neither in the petition nor in the notice of motion is it alleged that he ever owned any stock in said corporation. The mere recital of the fact that Judge Craig had stated “that he had disposed of all his stock in said corporation to his wife,” is not an allegation of the fact of ownership. It cannot be regarded as such allegation, and particularly in view of the fact that it is not assigned either in the petition or in any *265 motion addressed to the superior court as ground for the application to change the place of trial. Nor can statements made by counsel in argument, or statements in an affidavit filed in behalf of the respondent, cure the lack of a material allegation in the petition. This court, therefore, cannot consider the effect of such ownership, if, as a matter of fact, Judge Craig ever did own such stock. The decision of the ease must depend wholly on the effect of the alleged and admitted fact that his wife was the owner thereof at the time the application was made to the court when Judge Craig was presiding therein, to change the place of trial.

[3] There is no merit in the motion of respondent to quash the writ of prohibition issued by the district court. The motion was based on the claim that the case before the superior court was an action in equity—a case in which appellate jurisdiction is, by the constitution, lodged in the first instance, in the supreme court alone (Const., art. VI, sec. 4), from which fact, it is argued, an original proceeding in prohibition to prevent action by the superior court in such a case is cognizable only in the supreme court. This assumption is not correct. The same section of the constitution gives equal and concurrent jurisdiction to the district courts and to the supreme court to issue writs of prohibition in all proper cases. So far as jurisdiction to do so is concerned, the questions of appellate jurisdiction and of the nature of the action in which the act sought to be prohibited is threatened, are entirely immaterial. As a matter of policy and practice, both this court and the district courts, respectively, have at times refused to take jurisdiction of an original proceeding where the case involved was in the superior court and was originally appealable to the other court.' (Collins v. Superior Court, 147 Cal. 264, [81 Pac. 509]; Estate of Turner, 39 Cal. App. 56, [177 Pac. 854].) But this practice was not adopted because of any. want of original jurisdiction in such cases in either court. This was expressly stated in the Collins case.

[4] If the fact that the wife of Judge Craig owned stock in the corporation on December 10, 1918, when the application was filed and presented to him as judge of the superior court, is sufficient to disqualify him from sitting or acting as judge in that action, there is no doubt, under our decisions, that it was his duty, upon the fact being established, to grant the application and make an order transferring the case as *266 provided in section 398 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Livermore v. Brundage, 64 Cal. 299, [30 Pac. 848]; Krumdick v. Crump, 98 Cal. 119, [32 Pac. 800].) There was but one judge of the superior court of Riverside, County and hence the rule stated in Oakland v. Oakland etc. Co., 118 Cal. 249, [50 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
184 P. 15, 181 Cal. 261, 8 A.L.R. 290, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/favorite-v-superior-court-of-riverside-co-cal-1919.