Quirk v. Rooney

62 P. 825, 130 Cal. 505, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 875
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1506.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 P. 825 (Quirk v. Rooney) 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
Quirk v. Rooney, 62 P. 825, 130 Cal. 505, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 875 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This action was brought for the purpose of having the court decree that the plaintiff is the owner of an undivided one-ninth interest in certain lands described in the complaint, and that defendant Mary Rooney holds the title' thereto in trust for plaintiff. Findings were filed and judgment entered as prayed for in the complaint. This appeal is by Mary Rooney from th'e judgment on the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions. The facts and history of this litigation, so far as material here, are as follows: One Bryan Lynch resided in Humboldt county and died there, being ¡the owner of the lands described in the complaint at the time of his death. He died intestate, leaving no wife, children, father, or mother, hut leaving a sister, Catherine Clark, living in this state. The estate was administered, and during the administration Catherine Clark made a deed of conveyance of the estate to her daughter, Mary Rooney, the appellant. Upon final settlement of the estate, and upon proper notice as require^. by statute, the court found as a fact that Catherine Clark was the only *507 heir, and the property was distributed to appellant as the grantee of Catherine Clark. After the said estate was settled, and the final decree of distribution so made, the children of one Patrick Lynch, a brother of deceased Bryan Lynch, who was living in Ireland at the date of said decree of distribution, but since deceased, brought an action for the purpose of having it adjudged and decreed that they were the owners of an undivided one-third of the land and that appellant held the land as trustee for them, and that the same should be partitioned. In the said last-named action the children of Nancy Plunkett, a deceased sister of said Bryan Lynch, intervened and asked that an undivided one-third of the land be adjudged to be theirs, and that Mary Booney be adjudged a trustee and directed to convey the said one-third to them. Plaintiff, as one of the children of said Nancy Plunkett, deceased, was a party in intervention in said action. The relief prayed for in the complaint, by the heirs of Patrick Lynch, and in the complaint in intervention by the heirs of Nancy Plunkett, was granted, and it was adjudged that appellant Mary Booney held one undivided one-third of the land as trustee of the heirs of Patrick Lynch, and one undivided one-third thereof as trustee of the heirs of Nancy Plunkett. Prom this decree an appeal was taken to this court—Lynch v. Rooney, 112 Cal. 282—and it was held, on the appeal, that the decree of distribution in the estate of Bryan Lynch, deceased, was final as to the heirs of Nancy Plunkett, and the judgment was reversed as to the intervening children of Nancy Plunkett, deceased. In discussing the rights of the said last-named intervenors the court, in its opinion, said:

“It is substantially claimed that upon Mary Rooney’s evidence, given upon the hearing of the application for the decree of distribution, the court found as a fact that her mother was entitled to the whole estate as the only heir; that Mary Booney was mistaken as to the fact of her mother being the only heir, inasmuch as there were other heirs, and that, by reason of her mistake of fact in so testifying, the court rendered a wrong judgment; and that Mary Booney thereby gained the entire estate by a mistake of fact, and should be declared to be an involuntary trustee of two-thirds thereof, as provided by the terms of the section just quoted.
*508 “It is insisted that the interveners, in asking this relief, are not attacking the decree of distribution, but are se'eking relief thereunder. Many eases are cited to support this contention, but they fall short of the mark and present no question similar to the one here involved. The court, in hearing the petition for the distribution of the estate of Bryan Lynch, deceased, upon legal and proper notice to the entire world, took evidence as to who were the h'eirs of his estate, entitled to take 'the sam'e, and thereupon made a finding of fact that Catherine Clark was a sister and the only heir, and, as a conclusion of law, held that said Catherine Clark was entitled to the entire estate. That decree has never been modified, nor even assailed, and, as far as any collateral attack is concerned, it piust stand forever as binding and conclusive upon the question of heirship. Whatever counsel may say as recognizing the validity of the decree, and claiming under it, is not strictly tfue, for that decree declares-as a fact that Catherine Clark is the only heir of Bryan Lynch; and to give the interveners the relief here sought that finding must be first set aside as untrue, and that cannot be done in this action. If such a thing could be done, the stability of judgments and decrees would b,e a thing of the past. Decrees of distribution would be as -instable as the sands, for omitted heirs from such decrees would be seeking to have involuntary trusts declared ther'eon at most inopportune times, and in direct opposition to the law as declared by section 1908 of the Code of Civil Procedure pertaining to the conclusiveness and finality of judgments and decrees.?’

The decision, therefore, is res judicata as to the rights of the plaintiff in this case as one of the heirs of Nancy Plunkett, deceased.

Upon the cas'e being remanded to the court below on November 7, 1896, the action, as between the last-named intervenors and the appellant here, was again submitted upon the testimony introduced at the former trial, findings waived and judgment ordered December 23, 1896, that the intervenors, the children of Nancy Plunkett, deceased, take nothing by their complaint in intervention, and that appellant have judgment for her costs as to them. On January 22, 1897, an interlocutory decree in partition was accordingly entered, and -on Sep *509 tember 25, 1897, a final decree was entered. This action was commenced by plaintiff, as one of the heirs of Nancy Plunkett, deceased, September 21, 1896, The appellant filed her amended answer September 25, 1897, and in said answer pleaded the judgment of January 22, 1897, in the former suit of Lynch v. Rooney et al., as a bar to the action, and also pleaded that the action of Lynch v. Rooney et al. was still pending, and was and is prosecuted for the same cause of action, including the same parties and the same subject matter as the present action.

The court below found the facts in substance as herein stated, but undertook to differentiate the present ease in some respects from the action in which the former final judgment had been entered, and held that the matter was not res judicata. In this we think the learned judge was in error. By the former decision of this court the decree of distribution in the estate of Bryan Lynch, deceased, was held final and conclusive as to the plaintiff here. Upon the cause being remanded, the court below followed the law as laid down by this court, and upon the same pleadings and evidence made its decree.that the heirs of Nancy Plunkett (including plaintiff) were not 'entitled to any relief. The interlocutory decree was entered January 22, 1897, and was appealable. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 963, subd. 2.) Unless appealed from within sixty days after entry it became final and conclusive of the rights of the parties to it. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 939, subd. 3; Lorenz v. Jacobs, 53 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 825, 130 Cal. 505, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quirk-v-rooney-cal-1900.