Lundy v. Lettunich

195 P. 451, 50 Cal. App. 451, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3441.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 195 P. 451 (Lundy v. Lettunich) 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
Lundy v. Lettunich, 195 P. 451, 50 Cal. App. 451, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 17 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

The defendant, E. B. Lettunich, appealed from an order denying a motion for change of venue. Upon his death, Stella E. Lettunich, as executrix of his will, was substituted in his place.

The action, which is personal in its nature, having been commenced in the city and county of San Francisco, summons was regularly served on June 16, 1919, in the county of Santa Cruz. The defendant appeared by filing a demurrer on July 16, 1919, service of the demurrer having been admitted by indorsement under date of July 11th. With the demurrer was served and filed an affidavit showing, among other things, that the defendant was a resident of Santa Cruz County. At the same time the statutory demand in writing was served and filed that the trial be had in the proper county. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 396.) [1] It is contended by the respondent that the affidavit of merits was insufficient. The contention appears to be unfounded, but its consideration is unnecessary. The appellant in his brief asserts that whether or not it was sufficient is immaterial. This is true, because such an affidavit is amendable. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 473; Palmer etc. v. Barclay, 92 Cal. 201, [28 Pac. 226]; Pittman v. Carstenbrook, 11 Cal. App. 229, [104 Pac. 699]; Jaques v. Owens, 18 Cal. App. 114, [122 Pac. 430].) [2] The filing of the affidavit and *453 demand at the time of the first appearance is all that is required to establish the right of a defendant in a personal action to have the place of trial changed to the county of his residence (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 395, 396), but, as was pointed out in Bohn v. Bohn, 164 Cal. 535, [129 Pac. 983], the remedy by which this right is to be enforced is a different thing. It was there said: “While an absolute right, if it is insisted on, it is one which a defendant may waive, and which he does waive unless he follows the procedure provided for asserting it.” Section 397 provides that the court may on motion change the place of trial. In the Bohn case (p. 536) the court said: “The filing of the demand and affidavit do not operate ipso facto to change the place of trial. They have no such force. The change can only be effected through an order of court after its judicial action has been invoked, by bringing the matter on for hearing, where the right of the defendant to the transfer can be contested by the plaintiff. The court must be applied to for an order of transfer. Such an application is a motion (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1003), and under section 397, a motion for the change must be made in addition to the demand and affidavit, as one of the necessary steps in the procedure to obtain the order of transfer.”

[3] So far as the court is informed there is no decision holding that the notice of motion must accompany the affidavit and demand. They are entirely separate matters. Section 396 requires only the demand and affidavit to be served and filed with the demurrer or answer. The motion could not be made at that time unless notice under section 1003 were waived. The proceeding, it is true, must be prosecuted with diligence. (Cook v. Pendergast, 61 Cal. 79.) The motion should be made at the earliest opportunity. (Pearkes v. Frear, 9 Cal. 642; Jones v. Frost, 28 Cal. 246.) If it is made afterward the applicant must explain any seeming lack of diligence on his part. (Smith v. Pelton Water Wheel Co., 151 Cal. 401, [90 Pac. 932, 1135].)

[4] In the present case a notice of motion was served and filed with the demurrer and other papers, in which the time of presentation was fixed as July 18, 1919. 'There was no order shortening time. The time allowed was less *454 than that required by section 1005 of the Code of Civil Procedure. There was no calendar called on July 18th. On July 22d an order shortening time of service was made and a new notice of motion for July 25th was served and filed. On that day the record shows that an order was made, which, omitting immaterial matters, was as follows: “The motion to change the venue herein, the notice of which was filed July 16, 1919, coming on regularly to be heard, ... it is now by consent of counsel for defendant ordered said motion be denied without ”prejudice. Thereupon the motion for change of venue, the notice of which was filed on (July 23, 1919', , came on to be heard and objection was made by plaintiff that the notice of motion was filed too late and that it was not given at the time of the defendant’s first appearance and that defendant’s affidavit of merits was not sufficient.” The court, over the plaintiff’s objection, granted the defendant five days to amend the affidavit of merits. This was done; and the matter again coming on on August 29th, after evidence and argument, it was submitted. On September 30, 1919, the motion for change of venue was denied.

While in the respondent’s brief, the argument is divided into ten sections, there are really but two points involved in the appeal. They are, first, whether or not the court had power to consider the motion made on the second notice, and if so, whether the showing of right on the part of the appellant was sufficient. Following the respondent’s elaboration of these two points, a conclusion in favor of the appellant is reached on both.

1. The respondent relies on the decision in McNeill etc. v. Doe, 163 Cal. 339, [125 Pac. 345], to support his proposition that the denial by consent of the motion insufficiently noticed exhausted the power of the court. In that case it was decided that unconnected and successive motions for change of venue could not be entertained because the statute contemplated a single and prompt assertion of the substantive right. Under the facts disclosed by the record in this case, the first "notice being insufficient, the court could not properly have entertained the motion based upon it. The motion based on the second notice came on at the first call of the calendar *455 after the appearance, affidavit and demand were filed. There is no difference in substance between a statement that the single motion was made, as it was on the second notice, and the statement that the motion on the first and insufficient notice was denied without prejudice. The court immediately and properly entertained what was in effect the only motion presented for judicial action and the only one which the record shows was contested.

2. It has already been stated that whether or not the first affidavit of merits was sufficient is conceded by the respondent to be immaterial, and that it was amendable. Permission to amend was granted properly and the amendment made to meet the objections to the original, which objections appear to have been unfounded.

3. It is argued that the original affidavit was insufficient, but, as the respondent states, that is Immaterial to this appeal.

[5] 4. It is contended that the amended affidavit is insufficient because it fails to state when the defendant stated the.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P. 451, 50 Cal. App. 451, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lundy-v-lettunich-calctapp-1920.