Thorndyke v. Jenkins

142 P.2d 348, 61 Cal. App. 2d 119
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 13928; Civ. No. 13929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 P.2d 348 (Thorndyke v. Jenkins) 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
Thorndyke v. Jenkins, 142 P.2d 348, 61 Cal. App. 2d 119 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

SHINN, J.

In separate actions default judgments for damages were rendered against appellant R. B. Jenkins in favor of Maude Thorndyke and Edna D. MeKenney. Defendant made a motion in each case, after judgment, to quash service of summons and to vacate the judgment on the ground that no service had been made and, after denial of these motions moved in each case before a judge of another department to vacate the defaults and judgments under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, on the grounds of alleged mistake and excusable neglect. These motions also were denied. Appeals from the several orders have been consolidated and are presented upon a single set of briefs.

The proof as to service was the same in each case, the motions to quash were heard together and may be treated by us as a single motion. Affidavits were filed on behalf of plaintiffs by deputy sheriffs to the effect that they had made repeated unsuccessful efforts to make service upon defendant [121]*121Jenkins before the process was placed in the hands of one Tetta Price for service. Tetta Price stated in her affidavit that, after several attempts to serve the papers, she stationed herself near defendant’s residence, that as defendant emerged from the rear door and started toward his garage she entered the adjoining yard with the summonses, complaints, and two subpoenas duces tecum in her hand; that when defendant saw her he exclaimed, “I won’t take it, I won’t take it; you’re too smart, but I won’t take it,” and that affiant then threw the papers, which were folded together and had a rubber band around them, over an openwork wire fence between the two yards and that they landed at the feet of defendant, as she said to defendant, “It doesn’t make any difference to me, Dr. Jenkins, whether you take them or not, they are court summonses.” It is not contended by appellant that the acts of Tetta Price, as stated in her affidavit, were insufficient to constitute legal service. The contention is that the court, upon the motion to quash, should have rejected the foregoing averments in the affidavit of the process server because they were denied in the affidavit of defendant and contradicted as to the manner in which the papers were thrown over the fence, in an affidavit by a neighbor who witnessed the proceedings. There is little more than a token argument upon ’the point. Counsel for appellant in their opening brief state, “. . . appellant recognizes that when an order or judgment finds support in facts determined by the trial court upon any substantial evidence, such order or judgment will not be disturbed on appeal.” The affidavit of the process server, stating in unequivocal terms the facts we have recited, considered with other evidence which tended to prove that defendant had been evading service, furnished substantial evidence to support the orders denying the motions to quash, and the implied finding that the facts were as stated in the affidavit is conclusive upon appeal.

Upon the motions to set aside the defaults and judgments, additional affidavits and counteraffidavits were filed in support of and against defendant’s contention that his failure to appear in the action resulted from his mistake and excusable neglect. These motions were presented together and upon the records and files in both cases. In his affidavit on these motions defendant stated that he had received letters from counsel for the respective plaintiffs stating that sum[122]*122mons had been served on March 3, 1942, and notifying him that unless he made appearance within a stated time, which was in excess of that allowed by law, his default would be entered, that he had answered the letters, denying that the papers had been served and had thereafter received other letters from the attorneys informing him that default judgments had been taken against him. The affidavit further stated that defendant, after learning of the judgments, consulted his attorneys and told them that at no time had any person served or attempted to serve him with process. By affidavit of one of defendant’s counsel it was shown that defendant had told his attorneys that no papers of any sort relating to said actions had been served upon or received by him. (It was after they had been so informed that his counsel, relying upon his statement, moved to quash service of summons.) However, defendant did not make his motions under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure until four and a half months after service of summons and 44 days after the motions to quash had been denied. The motions to set aside the defaults and judgments were filed more than three months after the judgments were rendered.

The facts we have stated, considered with the court’s decision that defendant had been personally served on March 3, 1942, show no abuse of discretion in the denial of the mo-' tions to vacate the defaults and judgments. When the second motions were presented defendant was relying in part upon his affidavit that service had not been made and he did not admit the truth of the foregoing statements of the Yetta Price affidavit. Since the court, in denying the first motions, had accepted as true the facts stated in the Yetta Price affidavit, and as no application was made to vacate the first orders, the judge who heard the second motions properly concluded that defendant had not truly or fully informed his attorneys of the acts of the process server and of his own remarks to her, which the court had held constituted valid service.

Upon the second motions the only question was whether defendant’s failure to appear had resulted from his mistake or excusable neglect. It is insisted that the court should have found that defendant and his attorneys were acting under a mistake of law but there was no evidence that they were mistaken upon any point of law, and it does not appear that any question of law could have arisen under de[123]*123fendant’s version of the facts. We do not see how the court could have failed to hold, in passing upon the second motions, that defendant’s failure to appear was due solely to his denial that service had been made. If he had given his attorneys a complete and accurate statement of the facts and if it had been shown that they had believed that under those facts there had not been valid service, an entirely different question would have been presented, for it would then have appeared that they had acted under a mistake of law. We also would have a different question to determine, and the case of Waite v. Southern Pacific Co., (1923) 192 Cal. 467 [221 P. 204], relied upon by appellant, would be in point. In that ease defendant’s counsel failed to appear in a state court after the action had been removed to the United States District Court and defendant’s default had been entered while the matter was pending in the latter court, although it was later remanded to the state court. The court reversed an order denying a motion to vacate the default and judgment, but this was done upon the sole ground that defendant had acted under a mistake of law as to the jurisdiction of the state court, which the court held was a reasonable one and excusable under the circumstances. We have no such situation here. When defendant based his right to relief upon an issue of fact he could not, after the issue was decided against him, assert a mistake of law which, if meritorious, would have to be founded upon facts which were contrary to his sworn statements and necessarily contrary to his belief. He asserted no mistake of law whatever but persisted in his denial that he had been served at all.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P.2d 348, 61 Cal. App. 2d 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorndyke-v-jenkins-calctapp-1943.