Swallow v. Tungsten Products Co.

270 P. 366, 205 Cal. 207, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 516
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1928
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8544.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 270 P. 366 (Swallow v. Tungsten Products Co.) 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
Swallow v. Tungsten Products Co., 270 P. 366, 205 Cal. 207, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 516 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

*209 SEAWELL, J.

The petition for an order transferring this cause after decision by the district court of appeal, second appellate district, division one, to this court was granted May 3, 1928. At that time we had before us a petition requesting the transfer of the cause entitled O. E. Vaughn v. Pine Creek Tungsten Co., a Corporation, to this court after decision by said district court of appeal, 89 Cal. App. 759 [265 Pac. 491], That petition was denied. Both proceedings were attacks made upon the same judgment in a different form. The latter case presented the question whether the defendant was entitled to have the judgment therein obtained vacated and set aside on the ground that defendant, a foreign corporation, had not been personally served with summons. The specific ground upon which the motion was pressed was that the person served as the general manager and designated agent of said foreign corporation was neither the manager nor designated agent of said corporation and therefore no service was made upon said corporation. Other points were made but they are not germane to a consideration of the question here in hand. The district court of appeal had held in that case that no fraud was charged against the plaintiff in the motion and no charge was made that any fraud was committed on the court by said plaintiff, and, the motion being faulty in the respects pointed out, was not supported by the case of McGuinness v. Superior Court, 196 Cal. 222 [40 A. L. R. 1110, 237 Pac. 42], in which case the motion was based upon the extrinsic fraud of the party to the action wherein the review was sought and fraud was found to have been committed upon the court. It was further held that a motion to set aside a default and vacate a judgment entered thereon on matters dehors the record in a case where no extrinsic fraud is alleged should be limited to one year from the time of entry of judgment on personal service. The fact that the notice of motion was served more than one year after entry of judgment constituted one of the grounds assigned for denying the relief sought.

The order of transfer was made in the instant case to give opportunity for a fuller consideration of the two important questions raised by petitioner, to wit, first, that a defendant, in an action to quiet title cannot collaterally at *210 tack a judgment valid upon its face and which forms one of the links in plaintiff’s title; second, that a subsequent purchaser of lands encumbered by the lien of a judgment valid on its face and whose rights in said lands were not affected by the rendition of the judgment has not the right to attack the judgment on grounds of fraud or mistake which the original judgment defendant would have had. Authorities are to be found in this and other states which give a color of support to the claims made by both appellant and respondent.

The present action was brought by respondent to quiet his title to certain mining claims, all of which is more fully set forth in the opinion of the district court of appeal, which we append as a part of the opinion on the case. There is no doubt that the answer sets forth all substantive matters necessary to constitute a direct attack on the judgment. The allegations of fraud are fully set out and are in the usual form. The attack upon the judgment is direct and in no sense collateral. The discussion of this branch of the case comes well within the rule announced in Follette v. Pacific L. & P. Corp., 189 Cal. 193 [23 A. L. R. 965, 208 Pac. 295]. The cross-complaint, although not so designated by the pleader, is such in substance. It is therein alleged that the Pine Creek Tungsten Company was the owner of and in possession of said group of mining claims or locations from October 28, 1918, to December 28, 1922, on which last-named day it sold and transferred all of its interest, right, title, and claim in said mining claims to the Soda Products Company, a corporation; that the corporation last mentioned entered upon and took possession of said group of mining claims and developed, operated, and prospected the same to March 14, 1923, on which day it sold and transferred its interest therein to the Tungsten Products Company, a foreign corporation; that said foreign corporation thereupon entered upon and took possession of said mining claims; that it has since been in the possession of said claims and it and its predecessors in interest have expended more than $150,000 in opening, developing, and prospecting said mining claims and in purchasing machinery for the operation of the same; that respondent and his grantor have at all times known of the work of development and the large sums of money that were being expended by the several alleged owners of *211 said claims, but that each remained silent and that none of said corporations from which appellant claims to deraign title had notice at any time, direct or indirect, of the commencement or pendency of said suit wherein Vaughn was plaintiff and the Pine Creek Tungsten Company was defendant until April, 1924; that upon making said discovery appellant took prompt action to protect its rights.

The judgment sought to be voided was rendered in the ease of Vaughn v. Pine Creek Tungsten Co., 89 Cal. App. 759 [265 Pac. 491], The complaint was filed June 19, 1922, and summons was issued forthwith and returned as served June 30, 1922. Default judgment was entered on July 17, 1922. On February 10, 1923, an amended return of service of summons was filed. The writ of execution was issued on said judgment February 19, 1923, and said group of mining claims was sold to the judgment creditor, O. E. Vaughn, March 29, 1923. The sheriff executed and delivered his deed to O. E. Vaughn on April 12, 1924. On April 14, 1924, said Vaughn quitclaimed to A. H. Swallow, Esq., who brought an action to quiet his title in and to said group of mines. The judgment going in his favor, this appeal was taken.

The trial court took the position that the judgment being valid upon its face was immune from what was regarded as a collateral attack by a party who had no interest in the subject of the action at the time the judgment was entered. Being of this view the court excluded all offers of evidence which, if true, would have had the effect of impeaching the integrity of the judgment. There has been much discussion by counsel as to whether false averments in the return of service of summons, which, if not inserted, would render the service invalid, fall within the definition of extrinsic or intrinsic fraud.

“Fraud practiced upon the court is always ground for voiding the judgment as where the court is deceived or misled as to material circumstances, or its process is abused, resulting in the rendition of a judgment which would not have been given if the whole conduct of the ease had been fair.” (34 C. J. 282.) The species of fraud that furnishes the best example of extrinsic fraud is that kind which is practiced upon a defendant to keep him away from the trial, or to prevent him from claiming his rights in the *212 premises, or from setting up an available defense. The judgment in the instant ease was a default judgment entered by the clerk.

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Bluebook (online)
270 P. 366, 205 Cal. 207, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swallow-v-tungsten-products-co-cal-1928.