Wutchumna Water Co. v. Superior Court

12 P.2d 1033, 215 Cal. 734, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 479
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13438.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 1033 (Wutchumna Water Co. v. Superior Court) 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
Wutchumna Water Co. v. Superior Court, 12 P.2d 1033, 215 Cal. 734, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 479 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is a proceeding in certiorari to review a conviction of contempt imposing a fine of $500 on petitioner Wutehumna Water Company and a fine of $50 each on petitioners Heberling and Huff.

The judgment of contempt is based on petitioners’ violation of a preliminary injunction granted upon the application of plaintiffs in an action to restrain an alleged unlawful diversion of the waters of the Kaweah River by petitioners and others who were named as defendants in said action. It is petitioners’ contention that said injunction is void. No one may be punished for contempt for disobedience of a void order. (Harrison v. Hebbard, 101 Cal. 152 [35 Pac. 555] ; Maier v. Luce, 61 Cal. App. 552 [215 Pac. 399]; 14 Cal. Jur. 281; 5 Cal. Jur. 918.)

*737 The judge who found petitioners guilty of contempt also heard the application for an injunction. He did not sign a written order therefor, but on May 20, 1929, the clerk, in pursuance of proceedings had at the hearing, entered in her minutes an order for the issuance of a preliminary injunction which on its face is complete and regular in all re.speets unless, as petitioners contend, an order for an injunction is required to be signed by a judge. Petitioners also make the point that the minute order is void because it does ‘ not correspond to the oral pronouncement of the judge. They allege in their petition for review that at the conclusion of the hearing the judge merely said: “The injunction will issue. Bond in the sum of $75,000. Usual conditions of course.” The order as entered in the minutes is complete in detail and follows substantially the notice of motion for an injunction, restraining diversions by petitioners in excess of specified quantities depending on the flow of said Kaweah River.

The presumption is that the minute order correctly records the judgment of the court. Petitioners’ allegation as to the statement made by the court upon the conclusion of the injunction hearing is unsupported by the record before us. However, for the reason that the court in the contempt proceeding refused to permit petitioners to introduce in evidence the transcript of the injunction hearing, from which the oral pronouncement of the court would have appeared, and for the further reason that respondents’ briefs virtually admit the correctness of said allegations, we prefer to dispose of the ease as if they found support in the record.

It has been declared to be the “almost invariable rule” that decrees in equity are signed by the judge. (Wheeler v. Superior Court, 82 Cal. App. 202 [255 Pac. 275].) This practice is due in part to the fact that such decrees may be of considerable length and complexity, and their careful formulation is as much a part of the court’s decision as the indication of the party in whose favor the decision is to be rendered. But where the judge is satisfied that relief upon an application for a preliminary injunction may be granted in the language of the prayer or motion, there is no rule, statutory or otherwise, which requires that he make and sign a decision in writing. The entry of his *738 order, announced orally in open court, in the clerk’s minute-book makes the decision a matter of record.

Whether remarks made at the conclusion of a hearing are a rendition of the court’s decision, on the matter before it, or a mere announcement or memorandum of the decision which the court contemplates making by signed order, depends on the intention of the court. (14 Cal.Jur. 856; 1 Freeman on Judgments, p. 81.) It is vital that parties should not be misled to their prejudice by remarks of an equivocal nature. There is no precise 'formula in which the direction must be given to the clerk to enter an order for an injunction according to the terms of the applicant’s prayer. That the judge in the instant case intended his oral pronouncement at the injunction hearing to constitute his decision on the application, is placed beyond the realm of speculation by his remarks while presiding at the contempt hearing now before us. That the applicants for the injunction thus understood it is evidenced by the fact that on June 20, 1929, they filed an undertaking and obtained a writ of injunction upon the clerk’s minute order and caused it to be served on petitioners. Petitioners assert for the first time upon this review of the contempt judgment that the oral pronouncement was a mere indication of a decision to be thereafter rendered by signed decree. After the issuance of said injunction they made no attempt to have the minute order declared void. Instead they made objections to the sureties on the injunction bond, a number of which were sustained. Petitioner Wutchumna Water Company, in its answer to the affidavits initiating the contempt proceeding, claimed that the minute order did not correctly record the decision of the court in that it did not reserve to the court the right to dissolve the injunction at any time, and on the contempt hearing petitioners sought to have it modified in this respect, thereby conceding that the oral pronouncement of the court had a judicatory effect. They did not allege that the oral pronouncement of the judge was not intended to be the decision of the court.

In support of the injunction order it must be presumed that the phrase “usual conditions’’ was intended to refer to the conditions of the undertaking in the sum of *739 $75,000. Said undertaking was required to contain the usual conditions, which are those prescribed by statute.

Wheeler v. Superior Court, supra, relied on by petitioners, is a case where remarks of the court, similar to those in the case herein, were intended by the court, and understood by all parties to be preliminary to a signed decree. It was properly held in that case that the signed decree was the judgment of the court.

If the minute order as entered in the case herein failed to conform to the true judgment of the court in that it contained no reservation óf a right to dissolve the preliminary injunction, the judgment or decision was not thereby rendered void, but petitioners’ remedy was to obtain an amendment or correction of the minute order by appropriate proceedings in order that the judgment should speak the truth. (Halpern v. Superior Court, 190 Cal. 384 [212 Pac. 916]; Takekawa v. Hole, 170 Cal. 323 [149 Pac. 593] ; San Francisco v. Brown, 153 Cal. 644 [96 Pac. 281] ; Kaufman v. Shain, 111 Cal. 16 [52 Am. St. Rep. 139, 43 Pac. 393]; People v. Ward, 141 Cal. 628 [75 Pac. 306] ; 1 Freeman on Judgments, pp. 84, 287, 298.) As a matter of fact, an order making this correction subsequent to the contempt hearing has been made a part of the record presented to us.

Nothing herein said is in conflict with Maier v. Luce, 61 Cal. App. 552 [215 Pac. 399], and Cosby v. Superior Court, 110 Cal. 45 [42 Pac.

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12 P.2d 1033, 215 Cal. 734, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wutchumna-water-co-v-superior-court-cal-1932.