Mountain View Union High School District v. Ormonde

195 Cal. App. 2d 89
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 22, 1961
DocketCiv. 19404
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 195 Cal. App. 2d 89 (Mountain View Union High School District v. Ormonde) 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
Mountain View Union High School District v. Ormonde, 195 Cal. App. 2d 89 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

DRAPER, J.

An almost unbelievable accumulation of procedural snarls in this eminent domain proceeding has led to the present appeal by condemner from judgment awarding costs and attorneys’ fees to defendant eondemnee.

The action was commenced to condemn for school purposes some 50 acres of an 80-acre parcel owned by defendant. Two months later the school board adopted a supplementary resolution, reducing the proposed take to 40 acres, and revising accordingly the metes and bounds description. An “amend *92 ment and supplement to complaint” was filed, setting forth the new resolution.

These resolutions, incorporated in plaintiff’s pleadings, purported to reserve to condemnee, and to exclude from the interest to be taken, certain wells and an easement to transport water therefrom to the lands of condemnee which were not to be taken. Water from these wells joined that of one well on land of condemnee not to be taken, and flowed through a system of pipes and an open ditch over the land to be taken. The resolution, incorporated in the complaint, was hopelessly ambiguous as to the nature of the easement for passage of this water over the land to be taken, and seemed rather clearly to exclude from such easement water from the third well. It failed to provide for access by condemnee to the easement for purposes of maintaining the pipes, and to the wells for purposes of maintenance, repair and replacement of pumps or for cleaning or deepening the wells.

“ There is nothing more obviously essential to plaintiff ’s ease than a sufficient description of that which it proposes thus to acquire.” (Aliso Water Co. v. Baker, 95 Cal. 268, 270 [30 P. 537]; see also Sacramento etc. Dist. v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., 72 Cal.App.2d 638 [165 P.2d 741].) While she might have raised this issue by demurrer, defendant condemnee chose to do so by way of special defense alleged in her answer. At pretrial conference, she asked that trial of the special defenses be separately set before the court, with a later date being set for trial to a jury of the issue of damages. Plaintiff district did not join in the request, and but a single trial date was set, before a jury.

When trial began, the trial court quite properly amended the pretrial order to provide for separate trial to the court alone of the special defenses, commenced trial of these issues outside the presence of the jury, and then excused the jury panel until conclusion of this first phase of the case. After full hearing, the court, on June 2, sustained the defense that complaint and resolution inadequately described the property interest reserved to condemnee, and thus failed to describe the interest to be taken. On July 14, the court filed findings and conclusions, and entered judgment thereon in favor of defendant. The judgment specifically was limited to the one special defense. Significantly, it did not order dismissal of the action or in any way terminate the main proceeding. Rather, it adjudged that the complaint was “uncertain” and “am *93 biguous” as to the extent of the proposed taking, and that the resolution failed to set forth “a sufficient description of the property plaintiff seeks to condemn or the interest in the property that it seeks to take from the defendant.” Despite this clear indication that the sustained defense went only to the form of the complaint and resolution, plaintiff district failed to offer any amendment of the complaint proper or of the resolution pleaded therein. It did, on June 2, but apparently after announcement of the trial court’s decision, offer a written “stipulation” signed by a deputy county counsel, providing that any judgment entered “may include” as a part thereof provisions which would substantially cure the ambiguities of complaint and resolution. Attached to the stipulation were copies of three resolutions of the school board, two authorizing the stipulation and one purporting to “supplement” the resolution to condemn. For reasons which are not apparent, since benefits to the district are not discernible, this stipulation and the resolution attached to it, like the original resolution, provided that defendant’s right to use the water and the easement for it should terminate whenever defendant ceased to use its remaining land for “agricultural purposes.” Nowhere did this stipulation provide for amendment of the complaint. Appellant's briefs do not seek to explain the failure to amend, although in response to a question at oral argument counsel stated that he declined to amend his complaint because he thought the decision of the trial court was incorrect. Significantly, appellant district wholly fails, in this appeal, to assert any error in the sustaining of the special defense to the action as pleaded in the complaint before the trial court.

On August 24, counsel for appellant district prepared a form of “Final Judgment,” which recited the fact of hearing on the special defenses and the filing of findings and conclusions, and provided, “It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the Plaintiff’s condemnation action should be and is hereby dismissed and that the Defendant recover its costs in the amount of $--” This document was thereafter presented to the court and served on defense counsel. Although it was never signed, it was in some mysterious way filed by the county clerk, and an entry made in the register of actions: “Oct 8 Final Judgment Filed.” In equally inexplicable fashion, the filed document disappeared from the clerk’s file, and was reproduced for the record here from counsel’s copy thereof.

*94 On November 13, another judgment, which admittedly was prepared by the county counsel, was presented to and signed by the trial judge. It was in the same form, except for a provision that it was without prejudice to plaintiff’s “right to file a new condemnation action on the subject property,” and except, also, for the fact that the blank for costs was filled in (presumably by the trial judge) as $10,000.

Thereafter, this judgment was vacated on defendant’s motion on the ground that it was inadvertently entered, and on December 4 the ultimate final judgment, from which this appeal is taken, was entered. This judgment recites a finding that plaintiff “has abandoned said action and requested a final judgment of dismissal and that defendant . . . recover her costs.” Interspersed with these involved proceedings following close of trial had been a number of hearings upon motion to tax costs. The judgment taxed these costs at $12,532.64, including attorneys’ fees of $10,000, and an allowance for services of appraisers in preparing for appearance as expert witnesses at trial. Plaintiff’s notice of appeal is limited to the portion of the judgment finding that it abandoned its proceeding, and that awarding attorneys’ fees and costs. The judgment on the special defense is not attacked, either by the notice of appeal or by the briefs.

Costs, in the usual sense of the word, may be allowed or apportioned in the discretion of the trial court (Code Civ. Proc., § 1255). However, to allow attorneys’ fees and necessary expenses in preparing for trial, there must be a voluntary abandonment of the proceedings by the condemner (Code Civ.

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Bluebook (online)
195 Cal. App. 2d 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mountain-view-union-high-school-district-v-ormonde-calctapp-1961.