In Re Estate of Dean

87 P. 13, 149 Cal. 487, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 268
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1906
DocketSac. No. 1423.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 87 P. 13 (In Re Estate of Dean) 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
In Re Estate of Dean, 87 P. 13, 149 Cal. 487, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 268 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

These are two separate appeals, on one transcript, the first taken April 11, 1905, from an order or judgment of dismissal (made February 11, 1905), of certain proceedings instituted for the revocation of the probate of a document purporting to be the last will of deceased, and the second, taken June 6, 1905, from an order refusing to vacate said order or judgment and grant a new trial (made May 29, 1905). The dismissal was granted on motion of the defendants upon the ground that the plaintiffs failed to appear on the trial. The appellants are all of the twenty-three contestants, except one, Nathan Morrison, who, at the time the matter was called for trial, was represented by separate attorney, appeared at the time set for the trial, and there practically abandoned his contest. Originally there were two groups of contestants, one of twenty-one, including Morrison, represented by one set of attorneys, and the other of two, represented by another set of attorneys.

Whether or not the lower court erred in giving judgment of dismissal must be determined solely in the light of the facts shown by such papers in the transcript as may properly be held to constitute a part of the judgment-roll, and the settled *490 bill of exceptions. Certain affidavits contained in the transcript, purporting to have been subsequently filed and used on the motion to set aside the judgment and grant a new trial, which affidavits are not contained in any bill of exceptions, cannot, of course, be considered in the determination of such question.

Most of the plaintiffs were non-residents of the state of California. By the bill of exceptions settled for use on appeal from the judgment, the following facts appear: Prior to

answers filed, a demand that plaintiffs give security for the costs and charges that might be awarded against them, as provided by section 1036 of the Code of Civil Procedure, was regularly served and filed, and plaintiffs subsequently regularly complied with this demand. Issues of fact haying been joined, a demand for a trial by jury was regularly made by defendants, and November 14, 1904, was fixed for the trial of the contests. At the last-named time, a motion of plaintiffs for a continuance on the-ground of absence of plaintiffs and witnesses was granted on payment of certain costs, and an order was made continuing the trial to February 7, 1905, at ten o’clock a. m. On January 13, 1905, defendants gave notice of an application, to be made on January 23, 1905, for an order for an additional undertaking in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, as security for costs, and for a stay of proceedings until the same should be given. This application having come regularly on for hearing, the court, on January 24, 1905, made an order—1. Requiring plaintiffs to file such an additional undertaking in the sum of three hundred dollars; 2. Staying all proceedings until such undertaking was filed; and 3. Directing that said undertaking be filed within ten days. The. attorneys for plaintiffs notified the court that it would be necessary for them to have thirty days within which to file such undertaking, on account of the absence of their clients from the state, and claimed that they were entitled to such thirty days under the provisions of section 1037 of the Code of Civil Procedure. No order was made on January 24, 1905, or subsequent thereto, relative to the time of trial of said contest, and no notice was ever given to appellants at or subsequent to the proceedings of January 24, 1905, as to the time of trial. On February 6, 1905, one J. J. Griffin was regularly substituted as attorney for plaintiff Nathan Mor *491 rison, who had hitherto been represented by the attorneys for the group of twenty-one contestants, and who appears to have been a resident of California. On February 7, -1905, at ten a. m., said plaintiff Morrison filed the necessary additional undertaking. This was filed without any notice to any of the other plaintiffs or their attorneys, and none of them knew anything about his intention to file the same or. about the filing until after the submission of the motion to dismiss. At 10:10 a. m. on February 7, 1905, the proceeding was called for trial by the court. None of the plaintiffs or their attorneys were present, except Morrison and his attorney. When the matter was called, defendants answered “Ready,” as did plaintiff Morrison, who further stated that he had no evidence to offer. Defendants having shown to the court that the additional undertaking had been filed that morning, moved that the proceeding be dismissed for failure on the part of the plaintiffs to appear at the time set for the trial of the cause. No proof whatever was made as to any notice given to appellants as to the filing of the undertaking by Morrison, or as to any intention on the part of defendants to ask for the trial of the contest at that time. The court thereupon ordered the matter submitted, and subsequently, on February 11, 1905, made its order granting the motion, whereupon the clerk of the court noted said order on his register of actions.

Other facts, such as that the trial of another case was actually in progress before the court on February 7, at the time this case was called for trial, and that, although a jury had been demanded, no jury had been summoned or was in attendance, and that no witnesses were in attendance, also appear, but these facts would probably be material only on a subsequent motion to relieve from the judgment on the ground of surprise, inadvertence, and excusable neglect. The facts already stated are the only matters shown by the record that are material in determining as to the correctness of the action of the lower court in giving judgment -of dismissal.

Section 594 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “Either party may bring an issue to trial or to a hearing, and in the absence of the adverse party, unless the court, for good cause, otherwise direct, may proceed with his case, and take a dismissal of the action, or a verdict or judgment, as the case may require; provided, however, if the issue to be tried is an *492 issue of fact, proof must first be made to the satisfaction of the court that the adverse party has had five days’ notice of such trial. ’ ’ A court should not dismiss an action under subdivision 3 of section 581 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for failure of the plaintiff to appear on the trial, except upon proof made in compliance with the above-quoted proviso of section 594 of the Code of Civil Procedure, designed to prevent the manifest injustice of dismissing a party’s action, or trying it in his absence, because of his failure to appear at a time at which he could hot be held to have had notice that the trial would be had, or that any proceéding would be taken against him. When upon direct appeal from the judgment of dismissal, it affirmatively appears that such a dismissal has been had against a party, without any showing having been made to the court of notice had by such party of the time of trial, and waiver of such notice on his part is not shown, it seems clear that the judgment of dismissal is- erroneous, and should be reversed. In the absence of a showing to the contrary, such an error must be deemed prejudicial.

We are not here concerned with the question as to what would constitute a sufficient notice, or sufficient proof of such 'notice, to authorize a court to proceed to a disposition of a cause in the absence of a party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 13, 149 Cal. 487, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-dean-cal-1906.