Johnson v. Superior Court

153 P. 404, 28 Cal. App. 618, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 397
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1444.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 153 P. 404 (Johnson v. Superior Court) 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
Johnson v. Superior Court, 153 P. 404, 28 Cal. App. 618, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 397 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

In an action instituted in the justice’s court in and for Sacramento township in Sacramento County, by the petitioner, P. H. Johnson, against one E. M. Easier, a judgment was entered by the justice of said court, on the thirtieth day of July, 1915, in favor of the petitioner and against said Easter for the sum of $109.50 and costs of suit. Thereafter, “and on the 9th day of August, 1915, a notice of appeal, an undertaking on appeal and notice of filing of undertaking on appeal were served on the plaintiff (in said action, the petitioner herein) and filed with the justice of the peace, and at the same time of filing above papers, the defendant (in said action, Easter) paid to the said justice of the peace the sum of $7.00 and no more as costs on appeal; that thereafter, and on the 17th day of August, 1915, the justice’s clerk delivered all the papers and records in said action, together with a certified copy of the justice’s docket to the clerk of the superior court of the county of Sacramento . . . and paid said clerk . . . the fees which had been paid theretofore by defendant, E. M. Easter, to wit: $7.00 and no more; that said clerk of the superior court filed said action in the superior court of the county of Sacramento. ...”

Thereafter (on the 8th day of September, 1915), the petitioner herein served on the defendant in said action and duly filed a notice of motion in the said superior court to dismiss said action or the appeal therein on the ground that said superior court was without jurisdiction or authority to entertain said appeal or action, and upon the hearing of said motion on the thirteenth day of September, 1915, the respondents herein denied the same.

The petitioner (the plaintiff in the action above referred to) has instituted the present proceeding before this court for the purpose of securing a writ of prohibition peremptorily restraining or prohibiting the respondents from entertaining and passing upon the purported appeal in the action mentioned or trying said action.

The respondents have interposed both a demurrer and an answer to the petition, but the point presented for decision *620 is raised by the demurrer, and we may, therefore, omit any consideration herein of the answer.

The decision of the specific point made by the petitioner depends upon a construction of section 981 of the Code of Civil Procedure whose language is as follows: "No appeal taken from a judgment rendered in a police or justice court in civil matters shall be effectual for any purpose whatever unless the appellant shall, at the time of filing the notice of appeal, pay in addition to the fee payable to the justice of the peace on appeal, the fees provided by law to be paid to the county clerk for filing the appeal and for placing the action on the calendar in the superior court. Upon transmitting the papers on appeal, the justice or judge shall transmit to the county clerk the sum thus deposited for filing the appeal in the superior court and for placing the action on the calendar. No notice of appeal shall be filed unless the fees herein provided for are paid in accordance with the provisions of this section.”

The foregoing section is new, having been added to the chapter on appeals from justice’s to superior courts by the legislature of 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 236), and went into effect the day immediately preceding that on which the notice of appeal was filed in the action with which this proceeding is concerned.

The contention of the petitioner is that the defendant in the action before the justice’s court having omitted, upon attempting to take his appeal, to pay to the justice of the peace the fees contemplated by said section to be by that officer paid to the county clerk upon the transmission of the record on appeal to the latter officer, the superior court failed to acquire jurisdiction of the appeal or of the action.

Section 4300e of the Political Code provides that the fee to be paid to the justices of the peace for * ‘ certificate and transmitting transcript and papers on appeal, shall be one dollar. ’ ’ Section 4300a of said code provides that "the county clerk, in addition to the charges provided for in section forty-one hundred and ninety of this code on the commencement of any action or proceeding in the superior court, except probate proceedings, or on an appeal thereto, to be paid by the party commencing such action or proceeding, or taking such appeal, five dollars.” The same section provides that "on placing any action, except a probate proceeding or default case, on the *621 calendar for trial or hearing, to be paid by the party at whose request such action or proceeding is placed, two dollars.”

Section 4190 of the same code provides: “On the commencement in, or removal to, the superior court of any county in this state of any civil action, proceeding, or appeal, on filing the first papers therein, the party instituting such proceeding, or filing the said first papers, and thereafter any defendant or respondent or adverse party, or intervening party, on Ms first appearance therein . . . shall pay to the clerk of said court (in addition to fees fixed by law) the sum of one dollar as costs, for a fund which shall be designated as the ‘law library fund’ ...”

It will thus be noted that the total amount which a party appealing from a justice to the superior court must pay, upon taking such appeal, is the sum of nine dollars.

The petition, as seen, alleges, and it is not only necessarily admitted by the demurrer but expressly conceded by the respondents, that the defendant in the action referred to, upon filing a notice of appeal from the justice’s court to the superior court, deposited with or paid to the justice of the peace the sum of seven dollars only, or two dollars less than the amount required in such case. In other words, he failed to pay an amount sufficient to cover the fee required for placing the cause on the superior court calendar for hearing or trial.

The proposition submitted to us for solution is, as above stated, whether, under the terms of section 981 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the payment of the fees required by law to be paid to the justice of the peace at the time the notice of an appeal to the superior court from a justice’s court is filed is a jurisdictional prerequisite, or, in other words, whether jurisdiction of such an appeal or action can be conferred on the superior court in the absence of the payment of such fees at the time designated by said section.

Section 981 is in language so plain and unambiguous that its meaning cannot be mistaken or misapprehended. Anri the language seems to be mandatory. Indeed,- we can think of no reason for holding it to be otherwise. The section distinctly and positively declares that an appeal from a judgment rendered in a police or justice court in civil matters shall not be effectual for any purpose unless the fees referred *622 to therein are, at the time of filing the notice of such appeal, paid by the appealing party to the justice or judge and by him transmitted, with the papers on the appeal, to the county clerk for filing the appeal in the superior court.

We cannot' perceive how language could be plainer or its meaning more manifest. Nor is it possible to conceive of language more peremptory or mandatory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P. 404, 28 Cal. App. 618, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-superior-court-calctapp-1915.