Mulcahy v. Buckley

35 P. 144, 100 Cal. 484, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 822
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1893
DocketNo. 14669
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 35 P. 144 (Mulcahy v. Buckley) 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
Mulcahy v. Buckley, 35 P. 144, 100 Cal. 484, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 822 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Vanclief, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment enforcing a mechanic’s lien for the value of labor performed, and materials furnished in repairing and altering certain buildings and structures on two lots of the defendant situate in the city and county of San Francisco; and comes here on the judgment-roll without any bill of exceptions.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury; and the only points made by appellant are that the court erred in that it failed to find on certain alleged issues.

1. In paragraph VIII of the complaint it is alleged in due form that plaintiff filed and recorded his claim of lien in the recorder’s office in the city and county of San Francisco, “in the words and figures following”:

[Here follows a copy.]

The only answer to this paragraph of the complaint is that defendant “has no information or belief upon the subject sufficient to enable him to answer the allegations or any allegation contained in paragraph VIII of said complaint, and, placing his denial upon that ground, he denies each and ever allegation in said paragraph contained.”

The court disregarded this part of the answer, holding that all the material allegations of the eighth paragraph of the complaint should be deemed admitted; but appellant contends that this answer was sufficient to put in issue every material allegation of the paragraph to which it relates.

I think the court did not err in this respect. Section 437 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “ If the defendant has no information or belief upon the subject sufficient to enable him to answer an allegation of the complaint, he may so state in his answer, and place his denial on that ground.”

[487]*487But a defendant is not at liberty to answer an allegation in this form, when he may be presumed to know, or when he is aware before answering that he has the means of ascertaining whether or not such allegation is true. In this case it appears, at least that the defendant knew before answering that he could certainly ascertain whether or not plaintiff had recorded his claim of lien as alleged in the complaint by examining a public record in the city and county in which his lots, upon which the lien is Claimed, were situated. (Hathaway v. Baldwin, 17 Wis. 616; Goodell v. Blumer, 41 Wis. 444.)

I am unable, however, to find that the provision of the code above quoted has ever been held inapplicable to a case in which the defendant was merely conscious of having the means of obtaining knowledge as to whether the allegation denied was true; nor have I found anything to the contrary. The question seems to be open in this state. The case of Read v. Buffum, 79 Cal. 77; 12 Am. St. Rep. 131, cited by appellant, is not in point. In that case the allegation denied for want of information or belief was that of an assignment to plaintiff of the account on which the action was brought, and there is nothing indicating that defendant had any knowledge or means of ascertaining whether the account had been assigned to plaintiff or not; and that the question was not mooted.

The corresponding provision in the codes of other states generally is that a denial of “ any knowledge or information” of the allegation controverted, “sufficient to form a belief,” without expressly denying it, will raise an issue. Speaking of these, Mr. Bliss, in his work on Code Pleading, section 326, says: “The obligation to verify the pleading implies an obligation to state the truth; hence the permission to deny any knowledge or information, etc., is not absolute. If the fact charged is evidently within the defendant’s knowledge—as, an act done by himself and within the period of recollection, or where he has the means of information—a denial of information in the language of the [488]*488statute would be clearly false or evasive, and such, an answer should be disregarded.”

In Goodell v. Blumer, 41 Wis. 444, the complaint alleged the execution and recordation of a deed, and set it out in Time verba. The defendants traversed the allegation by averring that they have not sufficient knowledge or information to form a belief, and, therefore, deny the same.” The court, by Cole, J., said: “It seems to us that when a party is pointed to the record of an instrument, in the pleadings, he is not permitted to answer that he has no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief whether there is such an instrument or not. There is a public record which he can consult, and which it was intended he should resort to in order to inform himself upon the subject (citing cases). The principle of these decisions is, that a party cannot plead ignorance of a public record to which he has access, and which affords him all the means of information necessary to obtain positive knowledge of the fact. We therefore hold that the answer practically admitted the execution of the deed of Samuel Stout and wife to the plaintiff, and that no proof of it was necessary.”

The Practice Act of 1851, of this state, section 46, authorized the traverse of an allegation by denial of any knowledge thereof sufficient to form a belief;” but this was repealed in 1854, and was not re-enacted until it was incorporated in section 437 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in July, 1874. In speaking of the repeal of this provision of the Practice Act, Mr. Justice Field, in Curtis v. Richards, 9 Cal. 38, said: “In practice, this mode of denial was found to furnish a convenient pretext for evading the statute. In some instances defendants became critical in their judgments, as to the extent of knowledge sufficient to form a belief, and would without hesitation deny, in that form, facts upon the existence of which they did not hesitate to act in other matters. In 1854 the forty-sixth section was amended to the present language, and the wisdom of the amend[489]*489ment is well illustrated by the present case.” In the interim between 1854 and 1874 there were but two forms in which the allegations of a verified complaint could have been controverted so as to raise an issue: 1. Positively, when the facts were within the knowledge of the defendant; and 2. Upon information and belief, when the facts were not within his personal knowledge. During that interim, and since, it has been decided that an allegation of a verified complaint could not be controverted on information and belief when the alleged fact was presumably within the knowledge of the defendant, nor when the defendant had the means of ascertaining whether or not it was true. (San Francisco Gas Co. v. San Francisco, 9 Cal. 467; Loveland v. Garner, 74 Cal. 298.) In the first of these cases Mr. Justice Field said: “But the statute imposes upon the defendant if a natural person, and if a corporation upon its officers and agents, the duty of acquiring the requisite knowledge or information respecting the matters alleged in the complaint, to enable them to answer in the proper form.” Is not the same duty imposed upon a defendant who proposes to deny an allegation on the ground that he has “no information or belief?” I think it is, under the circumstances and facts disclosed by the record upon which this appeal is presented. Beyond this it is unnecessary to express an opinion.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 P. 144, 100 Cal. 484, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulcahy-v-buckley-cal-1893.