Moyle v. Landers

20 P. 241, 78 Cal. 99, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 545
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1889
DocketNo. 11906
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 20 P. 241 (Moyle v. Landers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moyle v. Landers, 20 P. 241, 78 Cal. 99, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 545 (Cal. 1889).

Opinion

Works, J.

This is an action to recover a money judgment and to declare a trust in certain real estate. There was judgment on demurrer for the defendants in the [100]*100court below, and the plaintiffs appeal. The defendant Michael Landers died after judgment.

One Sieberst appeared as attorney for all the defendants during the proceedings in the court below. The death of Landers occurred October 20, 1886. The notice of appeal was served on said Sieberst on the 21st of the same month. Sieberst, without disclosing the fact of Landers’s death, if he knew it, acknowledged service of the notice as attorney for all of the defendants. In this court there was a suggestion of the death of the defendant Landers by the appellants, and upon their motion the respondents, Amy Landers, wife of said Michael Landers, and William J. Landers, his brother, who had been appointed administratrix and administrator of said estate, were substituted as parties in his stead. The said personal representatives now move the court to dismiss the appeal herein as to them, on two grounds: 1. On the ground that the service of the notice of appeal on Sieberst was no service as to the defendant, who was then dead; 2. That the appeal bond is insufficient.

1. It must be conceded that the question is one of jurisdiction, and that, independent of any acts or conduct on the part of said respondents estopping them to question the jurisdiction of the court, it must be shown that notice of appeal was served as provided by law. The authority of Sieberst as attorney for Landers ceased with the death of the latter, and service of the notice upon him and his acknowledgment of such service could not bind the personal representatives subsequently appointed. (Judson v. Love, 35 Cal. 463.)' And if this were the only question presented, the appeal should be dismissed. (Shartzer v. Love, 40 Cal. 93; Hayne on New Trial, sec. 210, p. 631.)

There was no service of notice of any kind upon the personal representatives, or either of them, before or after the order of substitution of them as respondents, which order was made and entered September 26, 1887.

[101]*101The appellants meet the motion by an affidavit of the appellant Moyle, which alleges the service of the notice of appeal on Sieberst, who indorsed thereon: —

“ Service and receipt of a copy of the within notice of appeal, after filing, is hereby admitted, this twenty-first day of October, 1886. “ H. G. Sieberst,
“ Attorney for Defendants, Respondents.”

And alleges further, that W. J. Landers and Amy Landers were respectively duly appointed and qualified as administrator and administratrix of the estate of Michael Landers; that soon thereafter, and on or about the 27th of November, 1886, at the request of W. J. Landers, administrator, he, deponent, went to his office, and he then stated that his object in wishing me to call was to talk about a settlement of this suit, so far as the administrator and administratix were concerned. After considerable conversation, he fixed another time, a few days later, saying that he wished to talk further with H. G. Sieberst and D. L. Smoot, the attorneys; at the second time, he said that it had been decided to make a settlement with us, but it could not be consummated until after ten months had expired, so that no other parties could come in and make a claim on similar grounds, and requested me to keep quiet and give myself no further trouble about the appeal. He also stated that as administrator and administatrix they had retained H. G. Sieberst as their attorney and counsel, to appear for them, to attend to this suit in the supreme court, and for no other purpose, and had paid him his fee, which was one thousand dollars; that D. L. Smoot had also been retained by them in other matters connected with the estate, and that he advised with the said Smoot in this and in all matters pertaining to the estate.

“Deponent further says that said W. J. Landers asked deponent for a copy of the transcript on appeal herein, which deponent gave to him. That on the 3d of June, 1887, and within seven months after the first publication [102]*102of notice to creditors of the estate of Michael Landers, I served upon said W. J. Landers, administrator, a duly verified creditor’s claim against said estate, which contained, in substance, the complaint in this action, and enumerated all the several sums of money therein alleged to have been fraudulently obtained from plaintiff» by said Landers in his lifetime, and the total amount and interest claimed against the estate by reason thereof, and the parcels of real estate which had been purchased in said Landers’s name with the funds thus fraudulently obtained, and a statement that this suit, therefor, was still pending and undetermined; that at this time I asked said Landers, administrator, for an admission of service of said paper, but he said he desired to submit it to D. L. Smoot, their attorney, for his instructions; that several times after this I called on him for said admission of service, and he each time told me that said Smoot had not returned it to him.

“Finally, on September 14, 1887,.and before the expiration of the ten months after first publication of notice to creditors of said estate, I delivered to him another exact copy of said creditors’ claim, duly verified, specifying the amount claimed in the pending suit then on appeal in the supreme court, andón that date I obtained his written admission of service, in the following words and figures, to wit:—

“I acknowledge the presentation of the within claim to me as administrator of the estate of Michael Landers, deceased, this fourteenth day of September, 1887, at San Francisco, California.
“William J. Landebs, Administrator.
“ Deponent further says that on July 16,1887, and before the expiration of the ten months allowed by law for the presentation of claims against the estate of Michael Landers, he delivered to Mrs. Amy Landers, administratrix, personally, at her residence, 812 Shot-well Street, in the city of San Francisco, and- left.with [103]*103her, an exact copy of the said creditors’ claim, and referred to the suit then and now pending on appeal in-the supreme court above specified.
“Deponent further says that H. G. Sieberst, at the time of Michael Landers’s death, and for a long time prior thereto, had been his intimate friend, had his office on the same floor with him, and was in the habit of meeting him daily at his office or at his dwelling, and if said Michael Landers died on the 20th day of October, 1886, of which this deponent then had no intimation, and has now no personal knowledge, said Sieberst knew of his death when he signed the admission of service of notice of appeal for him and his co-defendants, and purposely concealed the fact from deponent. And deponent never did for a moment suspect that said Michael Landers was dead at the time he received said admission of service from Sieberst, nor that it was so claimed until he saw it in Sieberst’s affidavit on which he based his first motion to dismiss the appeal, in December, 1887.
“And deponent is informed and believes, and upon such information and belief states the fact to be, that said D. L. Smoot knew as early as June, 1887, of the deceit practiced by said H. G.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P. 241, 78 Cal. 99, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyle-v-landers-cal-1889.