MacLay Co. v. Superior Court

117 P. 568, 16 Cal. App. 489, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 858.
StatusPublished

This text of 117 P. 568 (MacLay Co. 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
MacLay Co. v. Superior Court, 117 P. 568, 16 Cal. App. 489, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 275 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Prohibition. The history of the litigation out of which springs the cause for seeking the writ in this action will be found in the opinion of Justice Hart in the case of Maclay Company v. N. S. Meads, Charles P. Doe, H. G. Cox and G. L. Ray, as Individuals and as Copartners Under the Firm Name and Style of Petaluma Transportation Company, 14 Cal. App. 363, [112 Pac. 195], and an opinion on rehearing, at page 374 of 14 Cal. App., [113 Pac. 364], The narrative of facts brings the history down to the judgment in favor of plaintiff against Meads, Ray and the Petaluma Transportation Company, entered November 27, 1909. It also therein appears that, on November 29, 1909, the defendants appeared, filed a motion to set aside the default entered against them in the action, and also filed a demurrer to the complaint; that on December 3, 1909, plaintiff caused a writ of restitution to be issued which was by the sheriff returned executed by putting the plaintiff in possession of the premises on December 6th; that on the same day, December 6, 1909, the motion of defendants tó set aside the default was heard and denied, permission being given, however, to notice and file a motion to vacate and set aside the judgment and such motion was made on the grounds: 1. That the court was without jurisdiction to enter the judgment; 2. That the judgment *491 is not supported by the pleadings; 3. That the default of defendants was not entered. The motion was heard on December 13th and on December 20, 1909, an order was made granting the same. The order from which the appeal to this court was taken read as follows: “The motion to set aside the judgment and default of Petaluma Transportation Company is granted. ’ ’ For the reasons very fully shown in the original opinion it was held that “the court made no error in granting the motion as to the Petaluma Transportation Company,” and the order was affirmed. On rehearing plaintiff urged that the judgment of this court should have been “that the order appealed from, in so far as it affected the defendants who were served with summons as well as those not served but who made a general appearance on the motion to vacate the judgment, be reversed, ’ ’ although, as suggested by counsel, “the order vacating the judgment is rather ambiguous.” After pointing out that the order of this court was as broad as the order it was asked to review, the court said: “If the trial court failed to dispose of the motion, in so far as it applied to the defendants, Meads, Doe, Cox and Ray, it was no doubt an oversight, which should, of course, be rectified. The parties are entitled to have the motion as to all the defendants who participated therein directly and clearly acted upon by the court below. But, as stated, we cannot see our way clear to reverse or affirm or modify or in any way to interfere with an order where, as here, we are by its ambiguity led into a state of uncertainty as to its scope and! effect, or whether, indeed, any order in this case as to Meads, Cox, Doe and Ray was made at all.” Speaking of a possible implication by the order that the motion might be deemed denied as to the other defendants, it was further said: “Still the court might not have acted at all on the motion in so far as it affected the defendants other than the Petaluma Transportation Company.” The suggestion made at the close of the opinion on rehearing, that the motion as to the defendants other than the Petaluma Transportation Company should not have been granted, had reference wholly to the question discussed in the original opinion, where it is shown that by the general appearance these defendants submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, but it was not intended to direct the trial court in the exercise of its discretion on grounds *492 other than as sueh discretion might be affected by the decision that the appearance made by the defendants was general.

It is alleged in the petition for the writ that the trial court, in granting defendants’ motion to set aside and vacate the judgment, made its order in the form as it appeared in the bill of exceptions on appeal, as shown above, and that the trial judge certified to the bill as correct on February 2, 1910; that thereafter the defendants filed their motion in the said superior court, that they would, on February 14, 1911, moke the court to restore to the calendar of said court their demurrer theretofore filed in the action, which was opposed on the ground that said defendants had by their demurrer submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of said court, and that said judgment rendered against them is valid and binding, and was so declared in the judgment on appeal to this court. It is then set forth that at the hearing of said motion there were considered by the court the affidavits of two attorneys in behalf of defendants in which, among other things, it was alleged that the order made by the trial court, on December 20, 1909, vacating and setting aside said judgment, was as follows: 11 This cause having been heretofore submitted to the court for consideration and decision on motion to set aside default and judgment, the court now orders after having fully considered the same that the default and judgment herein be and the same is hereby set aside”; and that “no appeal has ever been taken by the plaintiff or defendants from said order.”

It is then set forth in the petition that notwithstanding the objections of plaintiff to ■ the consideration of said motion, “the said superior court on the 2nd day of March, 1911, ordered that the demurrer of said defendants filed November 29, 1909, be restored to the calendar of said court for determination”; that unless the said court is restrained, the said court “will proceed to hear and determine the said demurrer, and will proceed to take other and further steps in the said action”; that “the said superior court was, on said 14th day of February, 1911, and ever since has been, and now is without any jurisdiction whatever to make or enter any order restoring said demurrer to the calendar for hearing, or to proceed to the hearing of said demurrer for the reason that the judgment entered in said action of the 27th day of *493 November, 1909, is a valid, binding and subsisting judgment as against the defendants . . . and the time for appeal therefrom has elapsed.”

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Related

MacLay Company v. Meads
112 P. 195 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P. 568, 16 Cal. App. 489, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclay-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1911.