Thompson v. Cook

127 P.2d 909, 20 Cal. 2d 564, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 310
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1942
DocketL. A. 17983
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 127 P.2d 909 (Thompson v. Cook) 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
Thompson v. Cook, 127 P.2d 909, 20 Cal. 2d 564, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 310 (Cal. 1942).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

February 13, 1936, Leonard B. Colton On recovered a money judgment against the defendants in the 'sum of $4,012.29 by default. Upon this judgment an execution was issued and certain real property situated in the county of Glenn was sold under said execution to the said Leonard B. Colton for the full amount of said judgment, and said judgment was duly satisfied of record. Thereafter Leonard B. Colton moved the superior court to set aside the satisfaction of said judgment and to revive said judgment on the ground that the real property purchased by him at said execution sale was not subject to execution and sale, and that *566 he recovered nothing in satisfaction of said judgment as a result of the sale of said real property under said execution. Said motion was granted on June 9, 1938. Thereafter and on March 17, 1941, defendants, after due notice to the plaintiff, moved the court to vacate and declare void said order of June 9,1938. Said last named motion was made on the ground that said order of June 9, 1938, was made without notice to the said defendants, or either of them, and for that reason said order was void for “lack of notice and lack of jurisdiction of said defendants or either of them.” This motion was denied by the trial court, and the present appeal is from this order of denial. At the date of the denial of said motion, the court made its order substituting as the plaintiff in said action K. W. Thompson in the place of the original plaintiff, Leonard B. Colton. Plaintiff as hereinafter mentioned refers either to the original or the substituted plaintiff.

The order granting plaintiff’s motion to revive said judgment of date June 9, 1938, consists of a clerk’s entry in the minutes of the court, which contains no recital of service of notice of the motion upon the defendants, and the record contains no proof of any service of any notice of said motion upon the defendants. The motion of defendants to vacate said order of June 9, 1938, reviving said judgment was supported by the affidavits of each of the defendants that no notice of the motion to revive said judgment was served on either of them. The plaintiff in resisting said motion made no denial of these allegations of defendants in their said affidavits. The only fact set forth in the plaintiff’s opposition affidavit which might in any way be considered material at the hearing of said motion was that the plaintiff on October 15, 1938, over four months after the motion to revive the judgment had been made, had sent by registered mail to the defendants a notice that the court by its order dated June 9, 1938, had revived the original judgment in said action.

-Respondent in his brief filed herein asserts that there are really two questions before the court on this appeal and they are stated as follows : (1) Under the facts of this case was the plaintiff required to give defendants notice of his motion to revive judgment after defendants had defaulted in the original action, never appearing therein in any way; and (2) If there was no service of process or of notice on defendants, were they entitled to have the said order of revival vacated on motion (respondent’s emphasis) after nearly three years intervened between the time of making said order of *567 revival and the date of defendants’ motion to vacate the same ? The appellants contend that there is only one question presented here for determination: Did the court at the time it made its order for revival of the judgment without notice to the defendants have jurisdiction to make said order? In our opinion a consideration of the two questions which respondent claims are before the court on this appeal will entirely answer this question of the appellants, and we will therefore confine our opinion to the discussion of the two questions propounded by the respondent.

The motion to revive the judgment was made and granted by the court in pursuance of section 708 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides, among other matters, that “the court having jurisdiction thereof (the action in which the original judgment was rendered) must, after notice and on motion of such party in interest (the party recovering the judgment), or his attorney, revive the original judgment in. the name of the petitioner.” The position of the respondent is that while this section applies generally to ordinary judgments, this section is not controlling in a case wherein the original judgment is by default. He relies upon section 1014 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that “where a defendant has not appeared, service of notice of papers need not be made upon him.” The only authority cited by respondent in support of his position is the ease of Strong v. Shatto, 201 Cal. 555 [258 Pac. 71]. In that action this court held that where a cross-complaint filed by one of the defendants sought only remedies related to the property of the plaintiff, and did not affect in any degree the rights and interests of the other defendants, the defendants who had defaulted in the action prior to the filing of the cross-complaint were not injuriously affected by it or the judgment in favor of the cross-complainant; and they were neither entitled to be served with such cross-complaint nor were they entitled to appeal from the judgment for the reason that they were not “aggrieved thereby.” It cannot with any reason be contended that the appellants in this case were not aggrieved by the order reviving the judgment against them and vacating the satisfaction thereof. Before the order of revival there was nothing of record to show that they owed anything on the judgment; after its revival, if legally secured, the record in the case showed that they owed the entire amount of the judgment. The meaning of section 1014 of the Code of Civil Pro *568 cedure as construed by the ease of Strong v. Shatto, supra, appears to be that “notice of papers” need not be served on a defaulting party if his rights are not thereby affected.

It has been repeatedly held that a defaulting defendant is entitled to be served by an amended complaint when the amendment is as to a matter of substance and not a mere matter of form. (Lubarsky v. Richardson, 218 Cal. 27, 31 [21 P. (2d) 557]; 14 Cal. Jur. 889.) In Cole v. Roebling Construction Co., 156 Cal. 443 [105 Pac. 255], a clear statement of the rule is found at p. 446: “As we have seen, an amended complaint was filed subsequent to the entry of the default which was never served upon appellant. It is earnestly urged that the effect of this was to open the default and make the judgment entered irregular, one inadvertently rendered, and one given without jurisdiction. It is settled by a long line of decisions that where, after the default of a defendant has been entered, a complaint is amended in matter of substance as distinguished from mere matter of form, the amendment opens the default, and unless the amended pleading be served on the defaulting defendant, no judgment can properly be entered on the default. (See Thompson v. Johnson, 60 Cal. 292; Rheinhart v. Lugo, 86 Cal. 399 [21 Am. St. Rep. 52, 24 Pac. 1089]; Witter v. Bachman, 117 Cal. 319 [49 Pac. 202]; Woodward v. Brown, 119 Cal. 304 [63 Am.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P.2d 909, 20 Cal. 2d 564, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-cook-cal-1942.