Roberts v. Superior Court

159 P. 465, 30 Cal. App. 714, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1536.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 159 P. 465 (Roberts v. Superior Court) 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
Roberts v. Superior Court, 159 P. 465, 30 Cal. App. 714, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 109 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is a petition for a writ of review.

The facts as shown by the petition are: On the nineteenth day of August, 1915, one S. N. McBride instituted an action in the justice’s court of Modesto township, county of Stanislaus, jointly against the petitioner herein and his wife, Louise C. Roberts, for the recovery of the sum of $222.29, alleged to be due the plaintiff from the defendants in said action for services alleged to have been performed by the plaintiff “at the special instance and request of defendants and each of them in checking, leveling, cultivating, farming, and irrigating a tract of land belonging to the said defendants and located in the said township, county, and state.” The complaint was in three different counts, each setting out the same cause of action in different forms and in each of which it was alleged: “That at the time defendants employed plaintiff'to do said work and labor, and at the time said obligation was incurred, the said defendants and each of them resided in the said township, county, and state.”

The petition here alleges that, upon the filing of the complaint in said action, “process issued, and petitioner who was one of the defendants in said complaint named, was served in the county of Los Angeles, state of California, on or about the twenty-sixth day of August, 1915. ’ ’

It is further likewise alleged that “the defendants are not, and never were, residents of the township of Modesto, county of Stanislaus”; that thereafter, to wit, on the third day of September, 1915, counsel for the defendants in said action made what is termed in his written motion as a special appearance for said defendants “only for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court over the persons of the defendants and the subject matter of the litigation herein,” and moved for a dismissal of the complaint “on the ground that prior to and at the time of the issuance of the summons herein, the defendants were and still are residents of Los Angeles, in the state of California, and that any contract to perform any obligation to the plaintiff herein was to be performed in the said county of Los Angeles, and that there is no special contract in writing to the contrary.”

*717 The said motion was supported by the affidavit of each of the defendants, deposing that they and each of them were residents of Los Angeles at and prior to the commencement of said action and the issuance of summons therein, and are still residents of said place, and “that any contract to perform any obligation to the plaintiff herein was to be performed in the county of Los Angeles, and there is no special contract in writing to the contrary.”

In opposition to said motion and the affidavits of the defendants, the plaintiff in said action filed an affidavit in which he declared, as his complaint in effect alleged, that “the obligation sued upon herein was incurred in Modesto township, county of Stanislaus, . . . that all work therein referred to was performed in said township, . . . and that there is not, and never was, a special or any contract to the effect that said contract or the obligation herein sued upon was to be performed in any other place than the said Modesto township, ... or that the money herein sued for should be paid in any other place.”

On the fifteenth day of October, 1915, having overruled the motion to dismiss the action, and the defendants failing to answer the complaint, the justice’s court rendered and entered judgment by default in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum sued for, with interest and costs.

Thereafter, and within due time, the defendants took an appeal to the superior court of Stanislaus County from the judgment so entered. The appeal was upon questions of law alone, and was supported by a statement of the ease.

On the ninth day of February, 1916, having heard the appeal, the superior court rendered its judgment affirming the judgment of the justice’s court, and directed the justice of the peace to proceed to issue execution upon said judgment or to take such other action in the premises as might be legal and proper.

It is the judgment so rendered by the superior court which it is the object of this proceeding to have annulled and set aside on the ground that said court, in rendering it, acted in excess of its jurisdiction; the specific point being, that (so it is contended) inasmuch as the defendants resided in Los Angeles County and did not contract in writing to perform the obligation sued on at the place where the action was *718 brought, the service of summons upon the defendants in Los Angeles County or outside the county wherein the action was instituted was void and of no effect; that, therefore, the justice’s court never acquired jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, and that, as a consequence, the judgment entered against them by said court was coram non judice; that, of necessity, since the judgment appealed from was void, the superior court did not, and could not, acquire jurisdiction to review the ease and enter a judgment therein.

The place of trial of actions commenced in justices’ courts is fixed by section 832 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Therein it is provided, inter alia: “Actions in justices’ courts must be commenced, and, subject to the right to change the place of trial, as in this chapter provided, must be tried: ... 7. When a person has contracted to perform an obligation at a particular place, and resides in another county, township, or city — in the township or city in which such obligation is to be performed, or in which he resides; and the township or city in which the obligation is incurred is deemed to be the township or city in which it is to be performed, unless there is a special contract in writing to the contrary.”

Section 848 of said code contains, among other provisions, the following: “The summons cannot be served out of the county wherein the action is brought, except in the following cases: ... 4. In all cases where the defendant was a resident of the county when the action was brought, or when the obligation was incurred, and thereafter departed therefrom, in which event he may be served wherever he may be found.”

Reading the foregoing sections together, in the light of the facts as they are presented by the record certified to this, court, there is but one permissible conclusion to be arrived at here, viz., that the action was properly brought in the justice’s court of Modesto township, in Stanislaus County, and that the summons was properly served on the defendants in Los Angeles County.

These facts are expressly and plainly made to appear by the complaint in the action and were nowhere or in no manner denied: That the obligation sued on was incurred in Modesto township, Stanislaus County; that the defendants, at the time the obligation was incurred, resided in said township and county, and (by necessary inference) if they resided in Los Angeles County at the time the action was brought, de *719

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Neihaus v. Superior Court of Sacramento Cty.
69 Cal. App. 3d 340 (California Court of Appeal, 1977)
Diaz v. Quitoriano
268 Cal. App. 2d 807 (California Court of Appeal, 1969)
Kallman v. Henderson
234 Cal. App. 2d 91 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
New York Times Company v. Sullivan
144 So. 2d 25 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1962)
Crabtree v. Superior Court
197 Cal. App. 2d 821 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)
Hernandez v. National Dairy Products Co.
272 P.2d 799 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
Guardianship of Lee
267 P.2d 847 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
Proctor & Schwartz v. Superior Court of San Mateo County
221 P.2d 972 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
California Prune & Apricot Growers' Ass'n v. H. R. Nicholson Co.
158 P.2d 764 (California Court of Appeal, 1945)
Raps v. Raps
125 P.2d 826 (California Supreme Court, 1942)
McLean v. McLean
290 N.W. 913 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1940)
Inga v. Blum
25 P.2d 473 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Adolph M. Schwartz, Inc. v. Burnett Pharmacy
112 Cal. App. 781 (Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California, 1931)
Taylor v. Superior Court
269 P. 727 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Firpo v. Superior Court
246 P. 165 (California Court of Appeal, 1926)
Clark v. Forbes
168 P. 155 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P. 465, 30 Cal. App. 714, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-superior-court-calctapp-1916.