Walkerley v. Greene

37 P. 890, 104 Cal. 208, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 880
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1894
DocketNo. 15712
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 P. 890 (Walkerley v. Greene) 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
Walkerley v. Greene, 37 P. 890, 104 Cal. 208, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 880 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

Beatty, C. J.

This is an original proceeding by mandamus to compel settlement of a bill of exceptions.

Petitioners are some of the residuary legatees of William Walker ley, deceased, whose will was admitted to probate in Alameda county in 1887. In 1892 his executors filed their final account and a petition for distribution of the estate. In August of that year the final account was settled, but the matter of distribution was continued from time to time until November 27, 1893, at which date a decree of distribution was entered, which also embraced the settlement of several- accounts filed by the executors supplemental to their final account. On November 28th, the day following the entry of this decree, the petitioners appealed therefrom to this court, and in due time perfected their appeal. By stipulation of parties, their time to prepare a bill of exceptions to the decree was extended beyond the 16th of December, and on that day they served on all the other interested parties copies of a document entitled in the cause and bearing the following caption:

“BILL OE EXCEPTIONS.
“On appeal from the decree settling the (so-called) final account of the executors and distribution of the estate, made, signed, and filed in the above-entitled action, matter, and proceeding in said superior court, [210]*210on November 27, 1893, and which was appealed from to the supreme court on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1893, by the contestants, Mary S. Doughty and ten other nieces and nephews of William Walkerley, deceased, and beneficiaries under his last will.”

To this proposed bill of exceptions the attorney for the executors proposed amendments, but at the same time he took and reserved the objection that it was not entitled to settlement because it was a sham and a fraud,, purposely omitting nearly every thing that it ought to contain, and false in the matters set forth. The attorney for the other interested parties, without offering any amendments to the proposed bill, contented himself with giving notice of a motion to strike it out upon similar grounds, viz., that it was false and' insufficient and not proposed in good faith. Upon this motion and these objections the proposed bill, the amendments, and the notice of the petitioners that they refused to accept said amendments were submitted to the respondent, one of the judges of the superior court of Alameda county, who, on March 26, 1894, sustained the motion to strike out, and dismissed the application of the petitioners for a settlement of the bill. Whereupon they filed their petition here for a writ of mandate.

Upon the filing of this petition an alternative writ was directed to the respondent, the judge of said court, who, on the return day, showed cause by answer and demurrer, in which the executors and some of the legatees unnecessarily joined.

The demurrer to the petition is general and special, for want of facts and for uncertainty, and the principal point urged in support of these objections is that .it nowhere appears in the petition that the petitioners ever presented to the respondent a fair or proper draft of a bill such as the statute requires them to prepare. This objection is certainly well founded. The petition, though inordinately long, is- mainly composed of matters wholly irrelevant, and contains no allegation in form or substance that the draft of the bill proposed by [211]*211the petitioners (which, it was alleged, embraced numerous exceptions to the findings of fact upon which the decree was based), stated fairly, or at all, the evidence necessary to explain the objections to such findings. The statute (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 648), plainly requires that the bill, when it sets forth exceptions to a verdict or other decision, upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to justify it, must state the objection with so much of the evidence or other matter as is necessary to explain it, and no more. But, of course, this ideal bill of exceptions, if it ever should be realized in practice, would probably owe its perfection to the united efforts of the parties and the court, through the means provided by law for amending and correcting the statement first proposed, and these provisions would be superfluous if we were to hold that a party is not entitled to a settlement of his bill unless he put 3 into it every thing it should contain, and nothing else in the first instance. If a review of the decisions of the superior court could be had only upon such conditions, this court would seldom have occasion to consider the merits of litigated controversies, but would undoubtedly find abundant occupation in trying questions similar to those here involved. The statute, however, does not mean that the party desiring a bill of exceptions must propose a perfect bill in the first draft, or forfeit his right to a review of the decision from which he has appealed. The provisions of section 648 of the Code of Civil Procedure are mainly intended as a guide to the judge in settling the bill, though it also imposes a duty upon' the parties. It is undoubtedly the duty of the moving party to proceed in good faith, and to do his proper share of the work involved in the settlement of the bill. He has no right to put off upon the opposite party or the judge the labor of reducing to writing and incorporating by way of amendment statements of evidence and other matters which he knows a proper and fair bill of exceptions ought to contain. Nor has he any right to include statements or matters that are [212]*212untrue or irrelevant. A corresponding duty rests upon the opposite party, who has no right to propose amendments which he knows ought not to be allowed.' But although these reciprocal duties of the parties are undoubted, it is not easy to decide in a particular case whether or not they have been consciously and deliberately violated; and it is only in a gross case of palpable and deliberate fraud that the severe penalty of striking out the bill and thus denying the party a hearing upon the merits of his case can be properly imposed. In Hearst v. Dennison, 72 Cal. 228, we held that the judge of the superior court was justified in refusing to settle a bill of exceptions, when the draft of the proposed bill was a mere “pretense and fraud,” when it was “so grossly untrue or so foreign to the real history of the case as to come within no' reasonable meaning of ‘a statement of the case’ as used in the code.” In Sansome v. Myres, 77 Cal. 356, this doctrine was perhaps carried even further with respect to a bill of exceptions in a criminal case. But that decision which was made in overruling a demurrer to the answer of the respondent was somewhat modified by the subsequent decision of the same cause upon the facts reported by the referee who tried the issues. (See Sansome v. Myres, 80 Cal. 483.) In effect the right of a judge to strike out or refuse to settle a bill of exceptions was limited to a case of gross and manifest fraud on the part of the one proposing it. Such a case will not often present itself, but cases do arise every day in which there is not only a disagreement of the parties with each other, but an equally radical disagreement between the court and the parties as to what the statement of the case ought to contain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P. 890, 104 Cal. 208, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walkerley-v-greene-cal-1894.