George v. Stensland

190 P. 1069, 47 Cal. App. 654, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 512
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3378.
StatusPublished

This text of 190 P. 1069 (George v. Stensland) 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
George v. Stensland, 190 P. 1069, 47 Cal. App. 654, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 512 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Elizabeth G. Clarke, from a judgment entered on a verdict of a jury for $514, in the superior court of San Diego County, in an action for the recovery of the reasonable value of attorneys’ fees for professional, services rendered by the plaintiffs to the appellant.

This appeal was originally taken not only from the judgment, but also from an order denying a new trial, and from an order of nonsuit on a cross-complaint, and from an order made in proceedings supplementary to judgment and execution. It is stated, however, by the appellant in her opening brief, that she “waives and abandons any and all her rights to appeal from said order denying a new trial, and from said order in supplementary proceedings,” and prosecutes her appeal exclusive thereof.

[1] The principal point argued by the appellant, and the one she states to be the important feature of the case, is that the judgment was erroneously entered by reason of the fact that said judgment was entered against a married woman in a cause in which she was sued as the wife of another party defendant, named in the complaint as “John Doe,” and said husband of appellant was not served with summons in the action.

The facts pertinent to a discussion of the objection present some unusual features, and it will be necessary to state them rather fully. The plaintiffs sued, as aforesaid, to recover for legal services. The defendants named in the complaint are Elizabeth G. Clarke and John Doe. It is set out in the complaint that the services for wbich recovery is sought were contracted for by the defendant, Elizabeth G. Clarke, “being then and there an unmarried woman, and in the management of her own affairs.” It is further set out *656 in the complaint as follows: “Plaintiffs further allege that they are informed and believe, and on such information and belief allege, that since this cause. of action accrued, the defendant, Elizabeth G. Clarke has married one John Doe, whose true name is unknown to these plaintiffs, but the plaintiffs have not sufficient information to determine whether or not, if defendant is married, her husband is a necessary party defendant, and plaintiffs pray that if it shall appear that the said defendant, Elizabeth G. Clarke is married and that her husband is a necessary party, he may be joined and his true name as defendant herein inserted, and that the true name of the defendant, Elizabeth G. Clarke be inserted herein in the event that she is shown to be married. ’ ’ Answer and cross-complaint was filed by Elizabeth G. Clarke, in which she did not deny the allegation of the complaint upon information and belief, with reference to her marriage. She made no mention of this allegation in any way, and answered under the name of Elizabeth G. Clarke. Appellant’s position is that as the allegations of the complaint regarding defendant’s coverture were admitted by a failure to deny • the same, that it 'became the duty of the plaintiffs to ascertain, by deposition or otherwise, the name of her husband, and to substitute such name for the fictitious name and serve him with summons.

The plaintiffs did, however, attempt to ascertain the facts regarding defendant’s marriage by their demurrer to the answer and cross-complaint, in which demurrer one of the grounds urged is: “The said answer to plaintiffs’ first cause of action is uncertain in that the said answer admits that the defendant Elizabeth G. Clarke is married, by failing to deny the allegation of the complaint that she is married, but does not give her true name nor the true name of her husband, nor allege or set forth facts from which it can be determined whether or not her husband is a proper or necessary party defendant.” Another ground of demurrer to' the answer and cross-complaint is that cross-complainant, Elizabeth G. Clarke, has not legal capacity to sue in that she admits in her answer and cross-complaint that she is married, and that the cross-complaint does not show' that the action is one within any of the exceptions mentioned in section 370 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This demurrer was overruled, obviously because the property sought to be *657 recovered under the cross-complaint was alleged to have been the sole and separate property of Elizabeth G. Clarke, and for the recovery of such property' she had the right to sue alone. The attorney filing the cross-complaint was Theodore Stensland, and he appears throughout as attorney of record for the defendant Elizabeth G. Clarke. In the answer to the cross-complaint, plaintiffs allege: “Plaintiffs and cross-defendants are informed and advised and therefore allege the fact to be that at the time when the defendant Elizabeth G. Clarke claims to have become the owner of the draft mentioned and described in the first paragraph of her cross-complaint, and for some time prior thereto, the said defendant and cross-complainant was the wife of Theodore Stensland, her attorney herein; that the exact date of the marriage of the said Elizabeth G. Clarke and Theodore Stensland is unknown to these plaintiffs and cross-defendants; that Elizabeth G. Clarke is not the true and proper name of the defendant and cross-complainant, and John Doe is not the true name of the husband of the said defendant and cross-complainant, Elizabeth G. Clarke, but that the true name of said Elizabeth G. Clarke is Elizabeth G. Stensland, and the true name of the husband of the said Elizabeth G. Clarke is Theodore Stensland, who was and is her attorney herein, and that there are no facts set forth in said cross-complaint establishing or tending to establish that Theodore Stensland is not a necessary party cross-complainant and defendant as ' hereinafter more specifically set forth and shown. ’ ’

After the granting of motions to strike out portions of the answer to the cross-complaint, relating to the necessity of joining appellant’s husband as a cross-complainant, the cause went to trial upon these pleadings. Plaintiffs never amended their complaint by inserting the true name of the husband of Elizabeth G. Clarke. It does not appear in the record that the husband was or was not served under the fictitious name or otherwise. It would seem, therefore, that in support of the judgment, we must assume that the service ■ was duly made. However, even in the absence of this assumption, and assuming for the moment that the record . must affirmatively show that the husband was served, we do not believe this error calls for a reversal of the judgment under the peculiar facts presented for our consideration.

*658 Defendant Elizabeth G. Stensland did not object to the defect of parties by either demurrer or answer, nor otherwise, and upon the verdict of the jury upon the essential questions of fact involved, the court rendered judgment against her alone.

Reliance is placed by the appellants upon the cases of McDonald v. Porsh, 136 Cal. 301, [68 Pac. 817], and Fassio v. Woolfrey, 37 Cal. App. 754, [174 Pac. 700], holding that the husband, being a necessary party defendant in cases where the wife is sued, he must not only be named in the complaint, but served with summons. Respondent’s reply to this contention is that under the holding in the case of Bogart v. Woodruff, 96 Cal. 609, [31 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 1069, 47 Cal. App. 654, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-stensland-calctapp-1920.