Rosenthal v. McMann

29 P. 121, 93 Cal. 505, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 589
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1892
DocketNo. 13614
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 29 P. 121 (Rosenthal v. McMann) 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
Rosenthal v. McMann, 29 P. 121, 93 Cal. 505, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 589 (Cal. 1892).

Opinion

Temple, C.

This record presents three appeals, — from the judgment, from the order refusing a new trial, and from an order made after judgment refusing to dismiss the action because judgment was not entered within six months after its rendition.

The action was brought to recover, damages for the conversion of five hundred dollars, and it is averred in the complaint, “ that on the fourteenth day of June, A. D. 1887, plaintiff was possessed of five hundred ($500) dollars in gold coin of the United States, and that she [508]*508then was, and ever since has been, and now is, entitled to the possession thereof.” Conversion and damage are then charged, but there is no averment of ownership".

The defendants, did not demur, but answered by a general denial and plea of a former judgment in bar.

On the trial, no objection was made to the sufficiency of the complaint, but the issue of fact was, whether the money belonged to plaintiff or her husband, whose creditors had attached it.

It is now claimed that the complaint is insufficient to support the judgment, which was for the plaintiff, because it does not aver ownership or title in the plaintiff.

To enable a plaintiff to recover for property taken by a wrong-doer, he must have the general ownership or a special ownership in the goods, and one having the possession merely is the owner as against a wrong-doer.' But it is said that possession is merely probative. One may recover against a wrong-doer upon a complaint averring ownership, although he prove possession only; because as against a mere trespasser that proves ownership, but here it is claimed the question is not one of evidence, but of pleading. But even on that theory, the facts necessary to show a cause of action in the plaintiff are all contained in the complaint, although some essential fact may appear only by inevitable inference. If the findings had included the facts averred, and had gone further, and stated that the property was not plaintiff’s, but belonged to some third person, whose bailee she was, it would have supported the judgment.

In fact, the allegation formerly deemed requisite, or at least held to be sufficient, — “ was lawfully possessed, as of his own property,” — contained nothing more. The possession would be presumed lawful, and as against a trespasser, even one who obtained possession wrongfully, ■was deemed to have been lawfully possessed.

It is claimed that the judgment is not sustained by the findings. Finding No. 3 shows that the plaintiff, July 21, 1887, commenced an action against these defendants for the same cause of action set up in the [509]*509complaint herein; that the defendants appeared and answered in that action; that aftewards, November 5, 1887, a notice, demanding from plaintiff security for costs on the ground that she resided out of the state, was served on plaintiff's attorney in that suit, and thereafter, to wit, December 7, 1887, no undertaking having been given, the court ordered said action to be dismissed, and judgment was accordingly duly made, given, and entered, dismissing said action.

The proceedings which resulted in that judgment were under sections 1036 and 1037 of the Code of Civil Procedure, It is contended that the judgment so entered dismissing .the action was a judgment on the merits, and therefore a bar to any other action founded upon the same cause of action. It is not denied that this suit is identical in that respect with the first suit.

The argument in support of this position is as follows: Section 581 of the Code of Civil Procedure enumerates six different cases in which judgment of dismissal or nonsuit may be entered. Judgment of dismissal for failure to give security for costs, as authorized by section 1037, is plainly not one of the cases provided for in section 581. The next section, 582, reads: “In every case other than those mentioned in the last section, judgment must be rendered on the merits.”

This case is not one of those mentioned, and therefore it is a judgment on the merits.

This contention may be summarily disposed of by reference to subdivision 2 of section 1908 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by virtue of which the judgment is made a bar, if it be one. “ The judgment or order is, in respect to the matter directly adjudged, conclusive,” etc.

The matter directly adjudged here was, that plaintiff had failed to give security for costs, and therefore could not be heard, and not that she had no cause of action, or that defendants had a valid defense.

A judgment upon the merits is one which determines, either upon an issue of law or fact, which party is right. A judgment that a party cannot be heard can only con-[510]*510elude as to that question. It could not determine the merits of the action which the court refused to consider at all. Although not on the merits, should it preclude an absent plaintiff, after becoming a resident here, or after he is able to give security, from bringing another suit? Not being a bar under the statute, we see no reason why it should.

There is nothing in the objection to the admission in evidence of certain statements of plaintiff, and the matter seems utterly harmless if admitted to have been erroneous.

There was a substantial conflict in the testimony, and we cannot review it. The alleged discrepancies in plaintiff’s testimony are too obvious. When speaking of her lack of means, she must refer to means furnished by her husband. She speaks of her lack of money and her five thousand dollars in bank almost in the same breath. She was not asked to explain. Her evidence, however, does not seem very satisfactory, but she positively states the essential facts of her case, and the court may have concluded from the appearance and bearing of defendants’ witnesses that they were unworthy of belief. At any rate, under the well-established rules, this court cannot interfere.

The appeal from the order refusing to dismiss the case, because judgment was not entered within six months after its rendition.

The findings were filed March 11, 1889. Notice of motion to dismiss was served September 17th, and judgment was recorded September 19th. The notice was given, therefore, five days after the six months, had expired, and the judgment was entered seven days after the expiration of that period.

Two excuses were given for the neglect. One that plaintiff’s attorney paid four dollars, which he avers the rules of the court required as a fee for the entry of judgment, but did not tell the clerk to enter or to forbear entering the judgment. He claims that this was equivalent to an order to enter it. Appellants deny the exist[511]*511ence of the rule, and the rules are not brought up. We still have, however, the affidavit of plaintiff’s attorney that he paid four dollars to the clerk as a fee for recording the judgment.

The other excuse is, that he informed the clerk of defendants’ attorney that he would not proceed on the judgment until the motion for a new trial was disposed of. This fact is denied by appellants’ attorney, and it seems a little inconsistent with other reasons given for the delay. It appears that appellants were not injured by the delay. The affidavit of their attorney shows that he did not know that judgment had not been entered.

But appellants claim that section 581 of the Code of Civil Procedure is mandatory, and that the court had no discretion in the matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 P. 121, 93 Cal. 505, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-mcmann-cal-1892.