Kelsey Co. v. Spears

173 P. 606, 37 Cal. App. 27, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1844.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 P. 606 (Kelsey Co. v. Spears) 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
Kelsey Co. v. Spears, 173 P. 606, 37 Cal. App. 27, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 310 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.

The appeal is by the plaintiff from an order of the superior court of Merced County entered on the seventeenth day of March, 1916, granting defendants’ motion to set aside a judgment and decree entered on the tenth day of May, 1915. The proceeding is founded on section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

*28 The controversy arose over rights of the respective parties to the use of" water for domestic and irrigation purposes. It appears from an affidavit of defendant, Mrs. Spears, sworn to on November 3, 1915, that the complaint in the action was filed on September 4, 1912; that she employed F. G-. Ostrander as her attorney and an answer to the complaint was filed; that, on May 10, 1915, a decree and judgment was filed in said action wherein it was set forth that “the parties to the foregoing action have in open court stipulated that findings of fact be waived in the foregoing action and that judgment in said action be made and entered as herein provided”; that said defendant never at any time or place gave to said Ostrander or any other person authority to waive findings or stipulate to have judgment entered; that said Ostrander exceeded his authority and acted without deponent’s consent in so stipulating; “that deponent did agree with F. G. Ostrander that judgment might be entered on certain conditions, that is to say, before judgment was entered a copy of said judgment was to be submitted to defendant for her approval and if not satisfactory to her the judgment was not to be filed but the trial of the case was to proceed under the pleadings; that defendant instructed F. G. Ostrander that the judgment must provide for water for domestic use at all times, also that deponent was to have all necessary water for the irrigation of all vegetables or small fruits that might be raised on deponent’s said land whenever she wished to use same, also that the water flowing in the irrigation ditches of plaintiff’s lands was to be allowed to flow to defendant’s land when the same was not being used by plaintiff; that said decree does not provide for either or any of the above stipulations and conditions; that deponent is taken by surprise and a great wrong and irreparable injury will result to deponent if said decree is permitted to stand; that no copy of said decree was ever submitted to deponent by her attorney or any other person until after said decree had been filed; that deponent has made repeated efforts to have her attorney, F. G. Ostrander, amend said decree to conform to deponent’s stipulations and conditions,” but that said Ostrander has failed and refused so to amend said decree.

On the 4th of November, 1915, the present attorney for defendants served and filed a notice of motion to set aside said judgment and decree, said notice specifying the fifteenth day *29 of November, 1915, as the date upon which said motion would be made. The motion was duly made on the ground that F. G. Ostrander “exceeded his authority in having said decree entered and that defendants are taken by surprise. ’ ’

At the hearing of the motion the foregoing affidavit of Mrs. Spears and also an affidavit of defendant, Leonard Spears, containing substantially the same matters, were presented. Counter-affidavits were filed and also oral testimony presented in opposition to the motion. Among the facts brought out by the plaintiff was that, after Mrs. Spears registered her objection to the decree with her attorney, Judge Ostrander, the latter and the attorney for the plaintiff entered into a stipulation agreeing to an amendment of the decree in such manner and to such extent as that Mrs. Spears would be entitled tó the use of a certain specifically named number of inches of water during the time that the decree awarded to the plaintiff the “exclusive use of the said water in said north or main ditch.”

Appellant first insists that the court was without jurisdiction to set aside the decree for the reason that the application was not made within six months after the rendition of the decree, as required by section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The record discloses that the decree was entered on the tenth day of May, 1915, and, on November 4, 1915, defendants filed and served their notice of motion. Thus it will be noted that the notice was filed and served six days before the expiration of the six months’ period within which, under the statute, such a motion must be made. It is the contention, however, that the notice stated that the motion itself would be made on November 15, 1915, five days after the six months’ period elapsed, and it further appears that the motion' waS not in fact made or brought up for consideration by the court until said fifteenth day of November, 1915.

Counsel for the appellant contend: 1. That section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure contemplates that a motion to set aside a judgment for any of the reasons set forth in said section múst not only be filed and served within the period of six months after the rendition of such judgment, but that it must also be pressed to a hearing or made to the court within that period of time; 2. That the court must make an order on the adverse party to show cause on a day fixed why *30 the motion should not he granted; 3. That the opposing party must be duly notified of such order. As to the merits of the controversy, it is contended that, under the general authority of an attorney, the attorney for the defendants was authorized to stipulate that judgment might be entered against his clients and to waive findings of fact; that an attorney is not precluded from consenting to the entry of a judgment against his client except in those eases where his authority is expressly limited by the client to do certain specific acts in the litigation; that there is no showing here that the attorney for the defendants was restricted by the latter to the performance of certain acts or was without the general authority of an attorney in this action.

1. It is conceded by counsel for the appellant that the defendants appeared in court and formally made their motion within the statutory time, but it appears that, after reading the motion, counsel asked that the further consideration thereof be postponed to a later date, to wit, the fifteenth day of November, 1915, which was after the expiration of the six months’ period within which the defendants were authorized to make their application to be relieved from the consequences of the decree. The date for the hearing of the motion having accordingly been fixed for a date beyond the statutory period within which the relief sought might be asked for and granted, the result followed, so 'counsel for the appellant contends, that the court was divested of jurisdiction, and thus the defendants lost any right they otherwise might have had to be relieved. A sufficient and, indeed, a complete answer to this proposition may be found in the comparatively recent case of Brownell v. Superior Court, 157 Cal. 703, 709, [109 Pac. 91, 94], In that case, the motion was filed and served a few days prior to the expiration of the six months ’ limitation, and the court made an order that the motion be heard on October 4, 1909, which was some twelve or thirteen days subsequent to the date of the expiration of the period of limitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P. 606, 37 Cal. App. 27, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelsey-co-v-spears-calctapp-1918.