Maguire v. Cunningham

222 P.2d 838, 222 P. 838, 64 Cal. App. 536, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4096.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 838 (Maguire v. Cunningham) 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
Maguire v. Cunningham, 222 P.2d 838, 222 P. 838, 64 Cal. App. 536, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 279 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

This action was commenced in the county of Los Angeles. The complaint consists of three counts. The first of these is in the ordinary form of a complaint to quiet title, but the real property involved lies in the county of Alameda and in the city and county of San Francisco. The second count partakes of a hybrid character, being in form a complaint to quiet title to the real property described in the first count and to personal property consisting of $3,000 in cash. The third count is for the recovery of money had and received in the sum of $3,000. Plaintiff had judgment and the interveners appeal.

*539 Before disposition is made of the appeal a preliminary matter engages our attention. Appellants move the court “to dismiss the . . . action, and for an order . . . ordering and directing” the trial court “to dismiss said action, and for an order and decree therein that” the trial court, “and, therefore the above-entitled court, never had jurisdiction of said action, or right or power to try the same.” The motion is made “on the ground that said action involves the title to real property, all of which is situated, lying and being in the county of Alameda, . . . and that said action was commenced in the superior court in and for the county of Los Angeles, . . . and not commenced in the superior court in and for the county of-Alameda, ...”

Whatever may be said of the first and second counts of the complaint, it is at once evident that the grounds upon which the motion is based do not reach the third count. The cause of action there pleaded, plainly, does not involve the title to real property, situate in the county of Alameda, or elsewhere. Accordingly, the motion, addressed as it is to the action in its entirety, falls to the ground. As we we cannot under the motion dismiss the cause of action pleaded in the third count, we cannot dismiss the action as a whole.

There may be some question whether the motion made by appellant is proper practice. We are, therefore, not to be understood as passing upon that point. It is also to be understood that we are not determining several questions which appear to present themselves on the face of the complaint: 1. Does the second count set forth two causes of action without separate statement? 2. If it does not, is the first count properly joined with the other two? 3. Is the third count properly joined with the other two? These questions will receive mention later.

The motion made by appellants was an afterthought, that is, the notice of the motion was served and filed long after the filing of both appellants’ opening brief and the brief of respondent Michael Edward Maguire. Respondent Cunningham, administrator, has filed no brief. The point made in support of the motion is under the statute available on appeal, for the right to object to the jurisdiction of the court is always open (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 434), at least, in favor of a defendant—and we state this qualifica *540 tion, for reasons which will hereafter appear, because the presentation of the point under the motion here is made by appealing interveners. We are now confronted with the question whether we shall consider the question of jurisdiction as arising upon the appeal, notwithstanding the fact that it is not presented in the briefs on appeal, but only in the briefs under the motion. We have concluded that it is our duty to do so. In the first place, the point is one which arises under the constitution of the state (art. VI, sec. 5), the provision also finding its echo in the Code of Civil Procedure (sec. 78). It is the settled policy of the state that actions to quiet title, and certain others which affect real property, shall be commenced in the county in which the real property is situated. Moreover, the question is one which cannot be waived (Fritts v. Camp, 94 Cal. 393 [29 Pac. 867]). Further, by the presentation of the motion appellants haVe indicated a desire to avail themselves of this state of the law, and it appears to us that we should allow the point the same effect upon the appeal, provided, of course, that it possesses merit, that it would have had under the motion if the latter had been addressed to the separate counts of the complaint, and not to the pleading as a whole. Again, the point has been argued under the motion and it is therefore fully before us, in form at least. For these reasons we shall proceed to consider it upon the appeal, after we have made disposition of a point made by the appearing respondent, to whom we shall hereafter refer as if he were the sole respondent.

Respondent contends that appellants, being interveners, may not raise the question of jurisdiction, because of the well-established rule that an intervener must take the action into which he projects himself as he finds it. This principle has found expression in many cases, but none of them supports the contention made by respondent here. In fact, the statement of the rule, in terms, that is, that an intervener must take the action “as he finds it,” would seem to exclude the contention of respondent. Objections to the jurisdiction and the objection that a complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action are always open to the defendants (Code Civ. Proe., see. 434), and we have already seen that the objection that there is no jurisdiction of the subject matter cannot be waived (Fritts v. *541 Camp, supra). So the interveners “found” this action when they were permitted to intervene. As the original defendants could have objected to the jurisdiction as well after the intervention as before, it seems that the same right must inhére in the interveners. From an examination of the authorities on the subject we are satisfied that the rule for which respondent contends is correctly stated in a note to Walker v. Sanders, 123 Am. St. Rep. 276, 292, thus: “It is sometimes said that an intervener must take the case as be finds it, and by this is generally meant that he cannot avail himself of or urge irregularities in the proceeding which the original parties have expressly or impliedly waived, nor of defenses which are personal to them. ’ ’ Later on in this same note are one or two general statements which seem to uphold the contention of respondent, it is true; but an examination of the cases cited in support of them will show that the editor in making them did not have in mind such a question as is presented here, that is, whether the trial court had jurisdiction of the subject matter. It certainly cannot be the law that an intervener cannot object that the complaint in the action in which he intervenes fails to state a cause of action. The contrary has been directly decided (Hanchett v. Gray, 7 Tex. 549). We are convinced that the right to object to the jurisdiction must be placed in the same category.

It cannot be questioned that appellants’ objection to the jurisdiction, as applied to the first count of the complaint, taking it alone, is good; and we say “taking it alone” for the reason that we shall later have something to say of the pleading in its entirety as made up of three counts. It will be remembered that the first count was presented to the superior court in and for the county of Los Angeles for the purpose of quieting title to real property in the county of Alameda and in the city and county of San Francisco.

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Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 838, 222 P. 838, 64 Cal. App. 536, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maguire-v-cunningham-calctapp-1923.