Jones v. Green

168 P.2d 418, 74 Cal. App. 2d 223, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1946
DocketCiv. 12951
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 P.2d 418 (Jones v. Green) 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
Jones v. Green, 168 P.2d 418, 74 Cal. App. 2d 223, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

Terissa Jones, the mother and guardian ad litem, of Beverly J ones, an infant, brought this action under section 196a Civil Code against the appellant, claiming that he is Beverly’s father and should therefore be compelled to support the child.

Terissa was married to one Sam Jones in Tennessee but she has not seen him for many years. Plaintiff alleged, and it is an undisputed fact, that she and appellant never have been married.

At the trial appellant was not represented by counsel. TTis *226 present attorney came in after judgment and made a motion for a new trial.

The appellant’s principal contention is that the court abused its discretion in proceeding with the trial when he had no lawyer. Because of this contention the history of the litigation and the lengthy proceedings prior to trial are of importance.

An order was issued requiring the defendant to show cause why he should not support the child pending the litigation. The defendant promptly filed his answer denying paternity, and the matter of temporary support came on for hearing before Judge Harris on June 16, 1944. The answer had been drawn by an experienced lawyer, who represented appellant at all the hearings for temporary support and continued as his counsel until the morning of trial. There were about six hearings, culminating in an order pendente lite, made by Judge Harris on July 17, 1944, directing appellant to pay $10 a week. The plaintiff later caused a garnishment to be levied on appellant’s employer, but it yielded nothing. There has been no compliance whatever with the order.

Counsel for respondent claim there was an understanding that on the order to show cause the entire matter would be gone into so that a trial (in all but a technical sense) could be obviated. Appellant’s former counsel did not admit this, but the fact remains that the case was extensively presented by both sides at the hearings. That they amounted to “practically a trial of the case” was stated at the trial by appellant’s former counsel. At the hearings a number of witnesses were examined on the question of paternity, about eight on plaintiff’s side, and two or three on defendant’s. The transcript of the first day’s hearing shows that the mother (who came into court with Beverly in her arms) testified that she met appellant on Easter Sunday, in April of 1942; that he came to live with her at her home on Broad Place, in San Francisco, where they slept together and where they continued to live until she moved to Willow street in June of 1942; that he moved her belongings from the old to the new location, and lived there with her until the baby was born, which was on January 31,1943. The transcript shows that she testified that when she was pregnant appellant made no claim that the child was not his, and that after she returned from the hospital “he said that he knew he did not do right ... he was coming home and do right”; “he said he was going to do all he could for me and the baby.” She also testified as shown by the *227 transcript that when she returned from the hospital appellant had departed and that “Every time I asked him for money, he claimed he did not have it.” After he absented himself, . when she saw him on the street he would “turn and go some other way.” When Beverly was about six months old the appellant told Terissa “the kid wasn’t his’n” and repeated it, and when she asked him why not, the only reason he gave was that “The kid did not have hair like him.” Terissa’s cross-examination was confined to but three subjects, none of which materially weakened her direct testimony as to her relations with appellant: (1) that when she had alleged in the complaint that “ever since the month of February, 1941” until the child’s birth she and appellant lived together, she had been mistaken as to the date, for when she arrived in San Francisco she had been pregnant for about eight months with another baby born in February, 1942, who lived but a few days; (2) that the father of this deceased baby was in Tennessee and was neither Jones nor appellant; and (3) that she had been confined to the Sonoma State Home for a while.

In January, 1945, the case was set, and thrice reset, for trial. On January 9 appellant’s former lawyer sent him, registered, a lengthy letter stating that the plaintiff and her attorney were insisting on a trial and that it had been set for the 10th, but he had obtained a postponement to the 17th. He reminded him that he had told him at several conferences that Judge Harris’ decision on the order to show cause “was a strong indication of what would be the ultimate outcome of the trial of the case upon the same evidence.” In the letter he continued: “In other words, the case was practically tried once before Judge Harris” and “I told you then, and I now repeat, that unless there is available to you evidence which was beyond our reach or not known to us at the time ... it is practically a foregone conclusion that another judge trying the same issues upon the same evidence would inevitably find as did Judge Harris. I say again to you that I feel that it would be a waste of time and money on your part to contest this matter further, unless, of course, you are- possessed with additional strong evidence to establish that some other person is the father of the child.” He concluded by saying he would be reluctant to accept a fee to defend the case further because of his doubt that he “could be of material assistance,” and asked for an immediate answer. On the 22nd the attorney wrote appellant another registered letter, as lengthy as the *228 first, stating that the case had been on that morning’s calendar for trial and that the presiding judge in again continuing it—to the 29th—had stated that the trial “would have to proceed at that time ... or a default judgment [would be] entered against you.” He then advised him as to the consequences of a default judgment, including possible criminal proceedings. He stated “that without more evidence ... I see no chance of your prevailing” and that he did “not feel that even if you had the money you should spend it for counsel fees for what seems to be a lost cause. ’ ’ He concluded by saying he wished to withdraw as attorney, and enclosed a form of consent which he asked appellant to sign.

On January 29,1945, the case was assigned to Judge Sehonfeld for trial. Appellant was there, as was the attorney who had represented him from the outset. Plaintiff’s attorney was present but the guardian ad litem—the baby’s mother—was not. Appellant’s attorney expressed his desire to withdraw from the case and explained the steps he had taken to obtain appellant’s consent in writing. The letters of January 9 and 22, both of which appellant received, went into evidence. Appellant’s former counsel stated that the matter had been thoroughly heard before Judge Harris, before whom “There was practically a six-day trial on it,” and that any judge trying the case would, in his judgment, reach the conclusion already reached, that appellant was the father; that he could not accept any further fee and that appellant’s case was “a lost cause in the face of the evidence already presented. ... I thought it foolhardy to proceed fúrther. ...” He stated that at the hearing appellant had admitted having had intercourse with Terissa on two occasions within ten months prior to the baby’s birth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P.2d 418, 74 Cal. App. 2d 223, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-green-calctapp-1946.