Meier v. Superior Court

227 P. 490, 67 Cal. App. 135, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 288
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2820.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 227 P. 490 (Meier 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
Meier v. Superior Court, 227 P. 490, 67 Cal. App. 135, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 288 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent court and the judge thereof, on a motion to that end, made in said court, to make and enter an order dismissing the appeal in a certain action appealed to said court from the justice’s court of Newman township, in the county of Stanislaus.

The motion to dismiss was based upon section 981a of the Code of Civil Procedure, which was added to said code by an act of the legislature of 1923, the title of which reads as follows: “An Act to add a new section to the Code of Civil *137 Procedure, to be numbered 981a relating to dismissal of appeal.” (Stats. 1923, p. 755.) Said section reads as follows: “No action heretofore or hereafter appealed from the justice court to the superior court, shall be further prosecuted, and no further proceedings shall be had therein, and all such actions heretofore, or hereafter appealed must be dismissed by the court to which the same shall have been appealed, on its own motion, or on the motion of any party interested therein, whether named in the complaint as a party or not, where the appealing party fails to bring such appeal to trial within one year from the date of filing such appeal in said superior court, unless such time be otherwise extended by a written stipulation by the parties to the action filed with the clerk of the superior court to which the appeal is taken; provided, however, that in any appeal pending when this section takes effect, a judgment or dismissal shall not be entered under the direction hereof sooner than January first, 1924; and provided, further, that any superior court may, by existing rule or by rule hereafter to be enacted, provide for dismissal of such appeal within a time less than one year.”

The petition for the writ of mandate shows: That the petitioner, on the twenty-first day of February, 1922, commenced an action in the justice’s court of said Newman township against one John H. Elfers and his brother, Louis Elfers, to obtain a judgment for moneys alleged to be due petitioner for materials furnished and labor performed at the special instance and request of said Elfers Brothers; that said Louis Elfers did not answer the complaint, but that within due time said John H. Elfers answered the complaint and as to him the case came to issue, was subsequently tried and judgment rendered and entered in favor of the petitioner against both defendants in the sum of $297.10, with interest, all amounting to the sum of $356.11; that on the twenty-second day of December, 1922, the said John H. Elfers appealed the case to the respondent court, upon questions of both law and fact; that on the second day of January, 1923, attorney for defendant and appellant caused the case to be set for trial on the eighth day of May, 1923, at 10 o’clock A. M. in department one of the respondent court, presided over by the respondent judge; that several days prior to and' on the eighth day- of May, 1923, the respondent *138 judge informed the respective attorneys of the appellant in the court below and the petitioner (respondent in the case on appeal) that it would not be possible to try said case upon that day (May 8, 1923), and that the trial thereof would have to be postponed to a later date, “because of the precedence of another trial upon the calendar” of said court; that thereafter “neither the appellant nor his attorney ever made any effort to set the said case for trial and to determine the appeal herein until after the lawful period for setting said cause had expired; that said appeal was not brought to trial within one year from the date of filing such appeal in said superior court. ’ ’

The petition further states that, on the tenth day of January, 1924, the petitioner filed with the clerk of respondent court and served a written notice, dated January 5, 1924, that he would, on the fourteenth day of January, 1924, move the said court for an order dismissing the appeal of said John H. Elfers in said case “upon the ground that the said appeal had not been brought to trial within one year from the date of filing such appeal in said superior court,” it being further alleged that the time within which the statute requires such action on appeal to be brought to trial was not extended by stipulation of the parties filed with the clerk of the superior court. The written notice of motion followed the language of section 981a of the Code of Civil Procedure and not only called for a dismissal of the appeal but also a dismissal of the action.

On the fourteenth day of January, 1924, said motion to dismiss was heard upon the papers in the case and affidavits by the respective parties and their respective attorneys, and, the matter having been on that day submitted for decision, the respondents took the same under advisement and later made and caused to be entered an order denying said motion, and at the same time set the case down for trial for the twenty-fifth day of February, 1924.

To the petition here the respondents, as a return to the order to show cause, have filed an answer setting forth a brief history of the case from its inception in the justice’s court to the date of the hearing of the motion to dismiss, including the pleadings in said case and affidavits filed in the respondent court by the appellant there in support of his resistance to the motion and counter-affidavits *139 likewise filed by the petitioner. The salient facts stated in the petition are not denied nor controverted.

The court in its written decision denying the motion, which is embodied in the return to the application for the writ herein sought, found that no written stipulation entered into by the parties extending the time for bringing the action to trial beyond the time prescribed by section 981a, had ever been filed with the clerk of the said court, nor was there an oral stipulation made in open court extending the time, “but the court denies the motion to dismiss on the ground that the section relied on, to wit: section 981a of the Code of Civil Procedure, provides for the dismissal of the action as well as the appeal from the judgment, and that, as the motion to dismiss follows the exact language of the section and is as broad as the section itself, a granting of the motion to dismiss would have the effect of putting respondent (petitioner here) out of court on his own motion. The motion to dismiss,” proceeds the decision, “is also denied on the ground that section 981a is void for uncertainty.”

The language of the section seems plain enough, but, literally viewed, involves the very quintessence of absurdity. The section seems to place solely upon the appealing party the duty of bringing the action to trial within the year limit prescribed thereby, and if he defaults in that particular there is, viewing strictly the language of the section, no alternative left to him or some other interested party, or the court on its own motion, but to dismiss the action. In other words, the section affords no choice as between dismissing the appeal, if such a course be authorized thereby and dismissing the action, but, in mandatory language, declares that the action must, in any event, be dismissed. Thus the respondent in the court below would be compelled, without fault or negligence on his part, to suffer the loss of the fruits or benefit of the judgment he obtained in the inferior court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P. 490, 67 Cal. App. 135, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meier-v-superior-court-calctapp-1924.