Holland v. Superior Court of S.F.

146 P. 878, 169 Cal. 361, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 509
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1915
DocketS.F. No. 7084.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 146 P. 878 (Holland v. Superior Court of S.F.) 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
Holland v. Superior Court of S.F., 146 P. 878, 169 Cal. 361, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 509 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Patrick Holland applied for a writ of mandate to require the respondent judge of the superior *362 court to certify as correct a certain offered 'bill of exceptions (a copy of which is included in the petition) if he finds it to be correct, or to fix a time and place for the settlement of a proper bill of exceptions, excluding therefrom all matters occurring after the entry of a certain purported judgment of December 19, 1913, and particularly those things which happened after January 9, 1914.

Respondents filed both a demurrer and an answer to the petition.

From the petition it appears that Patrick Holland filed a complaint in equity, naming Julia McCarthy as the principal defendant. Issue was joined and the case was tried before the Hon. George A. Sturtevant, judge of the superior court, and a jury. A verdict on three of the counts was rendered in favor of defendant McCarthy on December 18, 1913, and on the following day the clerk of the court entered that which purported to be a judgment based thereon. On January 2, 1914, Patrick Holland, the plaintiff, appealed from said judgment. On January 3d he filed his undertaking on appeal and on the 14th of the same month gave notice of such filing to the defendant Julia McCarthy. Later he served upon the said defendant his proposed bill of exceptions, and on April 20, 1914, she served upon Patrick Holland her proposed amendments thereto, which were not accepted by him. On April 30, 1914, the bill and the proposed amendments were delivered to the clerk for the judge and later counsel met the respondent judge for the purpose of settling the bill of exceptions. By his attorney, Patrick Holland consented to one of the amendments, but objected to all of those proposed which related to matters occurring after December 19, 1913, and after the service of the proposed bill of exceptions. The respondent judge overruled these objections and directed the attorney for Julia McCarthy to rewrite the bill of exceptions, including the proposed amendments and such written formal objections as might be submitted by the representative of Patrick Holland. He also directed counsel for the respective parties to return at some other time. On May 1, 1914, Patrick Holland served his formal written objections to defendant’s proposed amendments. On May 5, 1914, the attorney for Mr. Holland wrote to the attorney for Julia McCarthy, telling him that the judge was ready to sign a certain bill of exceptions, a copy of which was sent with the letter, and in *363 forming him that the engrossed bill would be presented to the said judge at a certain hour of that day. Julia McCarthy’s attorney did not attend at the hour named and the judge signed and certified a document which was intended to be the engrossed bill for the use of Patrick Holland on his appeal from the judgment of December 19, 1913. Subsequently Patrick Holland served notice of motion to strike out the bill of exceptions filed May 5, 1914; to authenticate and certify a form of a bill of exceptions served with the notice; or to fix a time for the settlement of said Holland’s proposed bill. This motion was fully heard and the judge stated that he would not settle nor allow any bill of exceptions to be used on the appeal from the judgment of December 19, 1913, unless said bill should contain a statement of matters which occurred subsequent to that date. These matters were: 1. An ex parte order made by the court of its own motion on April 1, 1914, purporting to vacate and set aside the judgment of December 19, 1913, and directing counsel for Mrs. McCarthy to prepare findings of fact and conclusions of law; 2. Findings of fact and conclusions of law signed and filed April 1, 1914; and, 3. A judgment based upon said findings and conclusions, and entered on April 2, 1914.

Petitioner also asserts that during the hearing of his motion on June 26, 1914, the- judge wrote upon the bill of exceptions previously signed by him the words “and the said bill is hereby settled and allowed as such” and that said bill was never refiled after said addition to it.

The ex parte order which petitioner desires to have eliminated from the bill of exceptions recites that the judgment of December 19, 1913, was inadvertently entered, the inadvertence “consisting in this, that said judgment was entered by said clerk before -making and signing and- filing of findings of fact and conclusions of law in said action and before the rendition by said court of any judgment in said action said judgment so entered as aforesaid having been entered by said clerk upon the verdict of the jury in said action.”

Petitioner contends that by the perfecting of his appeal from the judgment of December 19, 1913, the court lost all jurisdiction over the judgment and was divested of all power to impair the efficacy of that appeal by supplying omitted findings or in any other manner. In this behalf he cites such cases as Livermore v. Campbell, 52 Cal. 75; People v. Center, *364 54 Cal. 236; Parkside Realty Co. v. MacDonald, 167 Cal. 342, 343, [139 Pac. 805], and Peycke v. Keefe, 114 Cal. 212, [46 Pac. 78],

Respondent, on the other hand, contends that the judgment in question was a nullity and that therefore the lower court retained jurisdiction to set it aside ■ and to enter a proper judgment based upon the decisions, findings, and conclusions of the court rather than upon the verdict upon which the clerk erroneously acted without direction from the court. Respondent’s position is this:

1. In an equity ease the trial is not terminated when the jury renders its verdict but when the court renders a judgment (citing Bates v. Gage, 49 Cal. 126; Warring v. Freear, 64 Cal. 54, [28 Pac. 115] ; Bell v. Marsh, 80 Cal. 411, [22 Pac. 170] ; Spottiswood v. Weir, 66 Cal. 525, [6 Pac. 381] ; Reclamation District v. Thisby, 131 Cal. 574, [63 Pac. 918].)
2. The premature entry of the judgment of December 19, 1913, was a clerical misprision.
3. Such an error being clerical rather than judicial, may be corrected by the trial court at any time after appeal, if such correction do not affect substantial rights of the appellant (citing Brady v. Burke, 90 Cal. 1, [27 Pac. 52]; City and County of San Francisco v. Brown, 153 Cal. 644, [96 Pac. 281] ; Egan v. Egan, 90 Cal. 15, [27 Pac. 22] ; San Joaquin L. & W. Co. v. West, 99 Cal. 345, [33 Pac. 928] ; Fay v. Stubenrauch, 141 Cal. 575, [75 Pac. 174] ; Boust v. Superior Court, 162 Cal. 345, [122 Pac. 956], and other authorities).
4. This correction, or rather this entry of a directed judgment in place of the unauthorized one entered by the clerk, did not materially affect the rights of Patrick Holland.

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Related

Williamson v. Superior Court
20 P.2d 988 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Oliver v. Superior Court
227 P. 647 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)
Crawford v. Meadows
203 P. 428 (California Court of Appeal, 1921)
Holland v. Kelly
169 P. 1000 (California Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 878, 169 Cal. 361, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-superior-court-of-sf-cal-1915.