Hayden v. Hayden

46 Cal. 332, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 181
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
DocketNo. 3,374
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 46 Cal. 332 (Hayden v. Hayden) 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
Hayden v. Hayden, 46 Cal. 332, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 181 (Cal. 1873).

Opinion

By the Court, Belcher, J.:

This action was commenced in April, 1868, to set aside a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, Jane Leonora [336]*336Hayden, and against the plaintiffs, in June, 1861, and to establish the right of the plaintiffs as the heirs at law of one David Hayden to an interest in about seventy acres of land in the Western Addition to the City of San Francisco. In May, 1869, the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint, to which the defendants, of whom there are about two hundred, answered. On the 10th of January, 1871, the case, being then reached in its order on the calendar for trial, by the consent of the attorneys for the plaintiffs and defendants expressed, in open Court, was set down for trial on the tenth day of April then next. On the 11th of March, 1871, the attorney for the plaintiffs served upon the attorneys for the defendants a notice that he would move the Court for leave-to amend the complaint, and with it he served a copy of the complaint as proposed to be amended, and an affidavit made by himself, setting forth, among other things, “that since the bringing of said action and the arguments of the demurrers to the defendants’ answers filed therein, and from a fuller acquaintance with the facts of said case, acquired since said arguments, and in consequence of the death of a principal witness, upon whom the plaintiffs relied to prove said case in its present form, this affiant has become convinced that it is expedient and advisable for plaintiffs to amend their complaint herein in the manner and to the extent set forth and shown in the amended complaint hereto annexed.” The motion to amend was thereafter heard upon the affidavit of the plaintiffs’ attorney and affidavits filed by the defendants’ attorneys, and denied. Afterwards, on the eighteenth of April, the case being called for trial, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint and for judgment, on the ground: “First-, that said complaint does not set up any equity, nor does it state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; second, that the claim of said plaintiffs therein set forth is stale, among other reasons, because it is not averred when, [337]*337where, or how the alleged discovery of the supposed fraud was made.”

The Court granted the motion and dismissed the action, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

1. The statute provides that Courts, upon affidavits showing good cause therefor, and upon such terms as may be just, may allow an amendment to any pleading or proceeding. Undoubtedly, Courts should be liberal in allowing amendments, to the end that cases may be fully and fairly presented upon their merits, and that equal and exact justice may be done between the parties. Motions to amend are not, however, to be granted as a matter of course, but only when good cause is shown therefor. Upon looking into the complaint, as amended, we fail to see any good cause for the changes made. It spates the cause of action no more fully than it was already stated in the complaint on file. It omits, it is true, certain admissions favorable to the defendants, but assuming those admissions to be true, and there is no suggestion to the contrary, we are unable to see why they should be stricken out on the eve of a trial, after they had stood for nearly two years, and especially when, as claimed by the defendants, new answers would thereby be made necessary, and different and increased evidence on their part be required. Nor do we perceive that the proposed complaint is less obnoxious than the one to be amended to the objection which afterwards prevailed and caused a dismissal of the action.

2. It is alleged in the complaint that the female plaintiffs are the children and heirs at law of one David Hayden, who intermarried with the defendant Jane Leonora Hayden, in July, 1853, and died in April, 1856; that prior to his intermarriage with the defendant Jane Leonora, he purchased the land in controversy, and for certain reasons, which are stated, caused the title to be conveyed to one Dameron, [338]*338who took and held the same in trust for the said David until on or about the 28th day of April, 1854, when he conveyed the same to the said David, but used the name of the said Jane Leonora as the grantee in the deed; that the property nevertheless remained and was the separate property and estate of the said David at the time of his death, when the undivided two thirds thereof immediately passed to and became vested in the female plaintiffs as his heirs at law; that after the death of the said David the said Jane Leonora wrote to some of the plaintiffs, announcing that fact; but in her correspondence with them then and subsequently, not only concealed from them the fact that he had died the owner of an interest in the said tract of land, but falsely and fraudulently represented that he was not at the time of his death the owner of any property whatever, and that she by his death was left without any means of support; that subsequently to the death of the said David the said Jane Leonora made numerous efforts to sell the whole interest owned by him at the time of his death in the said land, but failed to do so because she was unable to make title to more than one undivided third part thereof, and that thereupon, to overcome this obstacle and with the purpose and intent to defraud these plaintiffs, she, on the 30th day of August, 1860, commenced an action in the District Court of the Twelfth Judicial District against all the plaintiffs, and in her complaint, among other things, alleged that the conveyance as made by Dameron on the 28th day of April, 1854, was in fact a deed of gift from the said Dameron to her, and that the said land then became and was her separate property, and that she was entitled to have and to hold the same as her separate property and estate, free and discharged of any claims of the defendants; and the prayer was, in substance, that her title be quieted, and that it be adjudged by the Court that the defendants (the plaintiffs here) had no title or interest in and to the said premises; that, to obtain an [339]

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. 332, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-hayden-cal-1873.