Noble v. Blanchard

8 P.2d 523, 120 Cal. App. 664, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 127
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8217.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 523 (Noble v. Blanchard) 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
Noble v. Blanchard, 8 P.2d 523, 120 Cal. App. 664, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 127 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The transcript on appeal contains two separate appeals which are set forth in the order stated in the above title. In the briefs counsel discuss the appeals in the reverse order. We will follow the order contained in the briefs.

Noble v. Southern California Bond and Finance Co., Los Angeles Record No. 219043.

This is an action brought to set aside a judgment alleged to be void. The judgment under attack was a judgment foreclosing a street assessment lien. It was entered on August 29, 1924. The action to set aside the judgment was commenced March 9, 1927. The plaintiff named as defendants in this action Southern California Bond and Finance Company, the plaintiff in the foreclosure action and Josephine Blanchard, the purchaser at the commissioner’s sale under execution. The company filed a disclaimer. Josephine Blanchard filed an answer. The court made findings in favor of the defendant and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff appealed. It will suffice to state that the record discloses the fact that satisfaction of the judgment of foreclosure was entered on October 1, 1924, and that there was nothing before the trial court in this action but a moot question. (1 C. J. 973; 15 C. J. 783; People v. Pratt, 30 Cal. 223.) Therefore the trial court did not err in entering a judgment in favor of the defendant, but the judgment as entered should not have been on the merits. It should have been a judgment of dismissal. (1 C. J. 975.)

Furthermore, every issue tendered in this action which has any materiality can be, and was, presented in action No. 199227, which we have discussed below.

The judgment is reversed and the trial court is directed to enter a judgment of dismissal.

Noble v. Blanchard, Los Angeles Record No. 199227.

This is an action to quiet title. In his complaint the plaintiff inserted the usual allegations of a complaint in an *667 action to quiet title and he went further. He inserted what he understood to be the claims of the defendant. The defendant answered by setting forth three defenses. In the first defense she pleaded numerous denials, some admissions, and some allegations of new matter. Then she pleaded what she termed affirmative defenses. The plaintiff interposed demurrers to the affirmative defenses. The demurrers were sustained. The trial court made findings in favor of the defendant and from a judgment entered thereon the plaintiff has appealed.

In substance the court found that the plaintiff’s father purchased the land in controversy under a contract of purchase from Rudecinda F. S. de Dodson in 1918; that the plaintiff’s father resided in Crowley, state of Colorado; that since the said purchase plaintiff’s father and mother have both died and that plaintiff is the sole heir; that prior to the death of the plaintiff’s father, all payments having been made, a deed to the property was made to him and it was received at his home in Colorado, but was not recorded until the nineteenth day of June, 1926; that since the contract to purchase was executed, plaintiff and his parents have been the sole owners and in possession of the property; that except as noted below the plaintiff and his parents have paid all of the taxes assessed against the property; that after the purchase of said property a street assessment proceeding was commenced; that two bonds were issued against said property; that said bonds were duly assigned to Southern California Bond and Finance Company and that on April 24, 1924, said assignee commenced an action against R. F. Dodson for the purpose of foreclosing the assessment lien; that a decree in said action was entered on the twenty-ninth day of August, 1924, and that a sale was had by a commissioner and Josephine Blanchard became the purchaser.

Finding No. VI was as follows: “That in said action, R. F. Dodson, and One Doe, Two Doe and Three Doe, were named as defendants. That the summons in said action was served on Rudecinda F. S. de Dodson, sued under the name of R. F. Dodson, and the cause was dismissed as to all of the other defendants except Rudecinda F. S. de Dodson, and a default was taken as to said Rudecinda F. S. de Dodson, sued as R. F. Dodson; and the said decree *668 after hearing thereon on said default was rendered directing the said property to be sold in accordance with law. That at the time the said suit was brought the said property stood of record in the office of the County Recorder of Los Angeles County, in the name of Rudeeinda P. S. de Dodson.” The plaintiff attacks all of that paragraph except the last sentence. The attack is clearly correct as there is not a word of evidence to support any portion of the part so attacked. The plaintiff produced the files in the action entitled Southern California Bond and Finance Corporation v. R. F. Dodson. Those files disclosed the fact that in the complaint and summons the defendant was designated R. P. Dodson and referred to as a man. In the affidavit of service it recited that the service was made on R. J. Dodson. The default of R. P. Dodson was entered. The judgment recites that service was made on R. P. Dodson and in terms the judgment is against R. P. Dodson. It was stipulated that prior to the twenty-fourth day of April, 1924, the record title stood in Rudeeinda P. S. de Dodson, a married woman. The uneontradieted evidence introduced was that the complaint and summons were never served on Mrs. de Dodson, and that they were served on James H. Dodson, Jr.

Continuing, the plaintiff claims that the trial court never acquired jurisdiction in the foreclosure suit to render any decree because the summons was not served on M. A. Noble, the owner, nor on Rudeeinda P. S. de Dodson, the person in whose name the property stood of record. The claim is well founded. (2 Deering’s Gen. Laws 1923, Act 8199, p. 3372, sec. 79; Page v. W. W, Chase Co., 145 Cal. 578 [79 Pac. 278].)

Finding No. VII was as follows: “The court further finds that R. P. Dodson is not a fictitious or pretended person and that the said decree was not made without service of summons, and that said decree was not wholly or at all void, and that the court did acquire jurisdiction to render said judgment and a decree, and that the sale thereunder was held in accordance with law, and was in no wise void, or of no force and effect.” The plaintiff asserts that said finding is not supported by the evidence. The assertion is well founded. There was no evidence as to whether R. P. Dodson was or was not a fictitious person. There was *669 no evidence that the court acquired jurisdiction to render the said decree.

Finding No. XIII was as follows: “The court finds that in August, 1919, a deed for the real property described in the complaint herein was issued to M. A. Noble of Olney Springs, Colorado, but that said deed was not recorded in the office of the County Recorder until on or about the 19th day of June, 1926; and that the plaintiff herein and the cause of action sought to be maintained by him, is barred by his laches and negligence in failing to record said deed.” The plaintiff attacks the last clause of that paragraph. We think that the attack is well made.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 523, 120 Cal. App. 664, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noble-v-blanchard-calctapp-1932.