Weaver v. Pasadena Tournament of Roses Ass'n

198 P.2d 514, 32 Cal. 2d 833, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 268
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1948
DocketL. A. 20623
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 198 P.2d 514 (Weaver v. Pasadena Tournament of Roses Ass'n) 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
Weaver v. Pasadena Tournament of Roses Ass'n, 198 P.2d 514, 32 Cal. 2d 833, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 268 (Cal. 1948).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Four plaintiffs—“on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated”—brought this action in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, each seeking to recover the $100 statutory penalty imposed for the wrongful refusal of admission to the Rose Bowl Game at Pasadena on January 1, 1947—a “place of public amusement or entertainment.” (Civ. Code, §§ 53, 54; Greenberg v. Western Turf Association, 140 Cal. 357, 364 [73 P. 1050].) By demurrer and motion to strike, defendants Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association, Associated Students University of California at Los Angeles, and William C. Ackerman, the “Graduate Manager of Athletics” at the university, appeared in challenge of the propriety of plaintiffs’ maintenance of this action as a representative suit and the jurisdiction of the superior court to proceed upon that basis. At the hearing on this issue as to the appropriate trial forum for the litigation of plaintiffs’ action, defendants prevailed and the court made the following order: “It appearing upon argument of demurrer that this is not and cannot be a representative action, that it involves a money demand for less then $1,000.00, to-wit, statutory penalties in the aggregate amount of $400.00, and that this court is without jurisdiction, this cause is transferred to the Justice’s Court for Pasadena Township, and demurrers and motions are placed off calendar.” From such order, plaintiffs have appealed.

Careful consideration of the allegations of plaintiffs’ complaint compels the conclusion that they have not presented a case properly cognizable as a representative suit, and that in these circumstances the cause was correctly transferred to the justice’s court for disposition in view of the amount of plaintiffs’ claims. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 393, 396.)

Plaintiffs allege the following factual situation as the premise of their action: “That [in] November . . . 1946, the University of California at Los Angeles was selected ... to represent [the] Pacific Coast Conference in the annual Rose Bowl football contest on January 1, 1947”; that thereafter “defendants caused advertisements to be published over the radio and in the newspapers announcing a public sale of *836 ‘approximately 7500’ tickets of admission to the said . . contest, which said sale was to be conducted on or about December 23, 1946, at the Rose Bowl, Pasadena . . .”; that on the day so fixed, “plaintiffs and other persons presented themselves at the box office” at the designated place, and “while waiting in line . . . were given numbered identification stubs, assuring them of their places in line and an opportunity to each of them to purchase two (2) tickets of admission to said Rose Bowl football contest”; that “approximately 3,350 of [such] stubs were . . . distributed . . . but that after only 1,500 . . . tickets of admission were sold, the box office was closed and it was announced by defendants that all of the available tickets had been sold”; that “defendants [made] a fraudulent and unauthorized disposition of approximately 6,000 of [the] 7,500 tickets of admission reserved for public sale” on the designated day “to other persons by private sale and by gift and not by public sale to those holding the aforesaid identification stubs”; that on “January 1, 1947, . . . plaintiffs and other persons” who held the stubs but who had been denied tickets “presented themselves and their identification stubs at the Rose Bowl, . . . demanded that they be admitted and . . . tendered the fixed. admission price . . . but were refused admittance”; that “defendants had ample room and accommodations to receive and admit plaintiffs and other persons holding [the] identification stubs . . . but . . . denied admittance . . . solely by reason of [their] aforesaid fraudulent and unauthorized disposition of the .. . tickets of admission” theretofore advertised as available for public sale. Plaintiffs further allege that “the issues stated in this action and the questions herein to be litigated are of common and general interest to all other persons similarly situated and affect all the other persons in exactly the same manner as these plaintiffs are affected and that such other persons are so numerous, amounting to several hundred individuals, that it is impracticable to bring all of said persons before the court as individual plaintiffs and that, therefore, these plaintiffs sue for themselves and for the benefit of all of the other persons similarly affected.” Accordingly, plaintiffs “on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated pray [for] judgment against defendants in the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) each ...”

The propriety of representative or class suits has long been recognized in our statutory law as embraced in section *837 382 of the Code of Civil Procedure, enacted in 1872 ánd which provides as follows: “Of the parties to the action, those who are united in interest must be joined as plaintiffs or defendants; . . . and when the question is one of a common or general interest, of many persons, or when the parties are numerous, and it is impracticable to bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for the benefit of all.” (Emphasis added.) The italicized portion of this statute is based upon the doctrine of virtual representation, which, as an exception to the general rule of compulsory joinder of all interested parties, “rests upon considerations of necessity and paramount convenience, and was adopted to prevent a failure of justice. ’ ’ (Bernhard v. Wall, 184 Cal. 612, 629 [194 P. 1040]; 20 Cal.Jur., § 7, p. 483.) Even before the cited statute, as plaintiffs note, this doctrine found expression in this state in such cases as Von Schmidt v. Huntington, 1 Cal. 55, and Gorman v. Russell, 14 Cal. 531, each of which concerned the dissolution of a joint association and the distribution of the company assets, with common interests in a common fund permitting representative or class disposition of the issues before the court in conformity with general principles of equity responsive to the exigencies of the situation showing that it was impracticable to require the joinder of all the numerous members “interested in the subject matter” of the proceeding, and that their nonparticipation therein would not affect the full protection of their substantial rights. (Pomeroy, Code Remedies (5th ed.), § 292, p. 444.) While the cited statute—typifying the usual provision adopted in the various states—thus reenacts the long-prevailing equity rule, it applies both to legal and to equitable causes of action, since no restriction or limitation is contained in its language. (Pomeroy, Code Remedies (5th ed.), § 290, p. 441, and cases there cited; see, also, Colt v. Hicks, 97 Ind.App. 177 [179 N.E. 335, 341]; Board of Com'rs of Vanderburgh County v. Sanders, 218 Ind. 43 [30 N.E.2d 713, 714; 131 A.L.R. 1048].) But in any event and regardless of which of the alternative conditions of the statute is invoked as authorizing a class proceeding, it has been uniformly held that there must be a well-defined “community of interest” in the questions of law and fact involved as affecting the parties to be represented. (Pomeroy, Code Remedies (5th ed.), § 286, p. 436; Norian v. Bennett, 179 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P.2d 514, 32 Cal. 2d 833, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-pasadena-tournament-of-roses-assn-cal-1948.