Young v. City of Los Angeles

260 P. 798, 86 Cal. App. 13, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 231
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 11, 1927
DocketDocket Nos. 5525, 5526.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 260 P. 798 (Young v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Young v. City of Los Angeles, 260 P. 798, 86 Cal. App. 13, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 231 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

WORKS, P. J.

The second cause above entitled, City of Los Angeles v. Morris, No. 5526 in the files of this court, is an action for the condemnation of real property for street purposes. It was commenced pursuant to the provisions of an act of the legislature commonly known as the act of 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 376; and, as variously amended, Act 8198, Deering’s Gen. Laws 1923), and such proceedings were had that an interlocutory decree of condemnation was entered in the action. From this decree the defendant Annie F. Young, appellant here, in due time prosecuted an appeal and the interlocutory decree was affirmed (City of Los Angeles v. Morris, 74 Cal. App. 473 [241 Pac. 409]). Six months after the filing of the affirming opinion the supreme court rendered a decision in which it is now contended that questions of law were settled which strike at the very foundation of the proceedings involved in City of Los Angeles v. Morris. This decision of the supreme court was pronounced in O. T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, 198 Cal. 308 [245 Pac. 164]. Thereafter defendant Young made her motion in the trial court in City of Los Angeles v. Morris, pursuant to notice filed about May 18, 1926, for an order setting aside and vacating the interlocutory decree of condemnation, and also the final decree, which theretofore had been entered therein, and for an order dismissing the action. The motion was denied and the defendant Young now prosecutes her appeal from the order denying it. Mrs. Young also, after the decision in O. T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, and on May 4, 1926, commenced the action which is above entitled Young v. City of Los Angeles, No. 5525 in the files of this court. The purpose of the action was to quiet her title to the property attempted to be taken under the decree in City of Los Angeles v. Morris. A demurrer was interposed to the complaint as amended in this new action, it was sustained without leave to- amend, and judgment was accord *15 ingly rendered against the plaintiff. From this judgment Mrs. Young also appeals.

The two appeals are argued together in a single set of briefs, and it is conceded that the questions of law presented by them are identical. We may, then, look to the complaint as amended in the action to quiet title for the facts upon which a determination of the legal questions is to depend, for the pleading alleges specifically matters not to be found in an ordinary complaint in such an action. The allegations of the complaint as amended are, in part and in effect, as follows, taking them in the order in which they are presented in the pleading:

In City of Los Angeles v. Morris, which for convenience will hereafter be referred to as the first action, the “City of Los Angeles sought to condemn and have condemned and now claims that it did condemn and have condemned for street purposes, the property” of appellant and of the other defendants in the action. The city now claims the right to use for street purposes the property which dt so claims to have condemned, and makes such claim of right to use because of such condemnation. The complaint in the first action was filed June 29,1921, and the answer of appellant therein was filed September 29, 1921. When the first action “was brought and tried, the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company of California held and was the owner of a mortgage indebtedness on” the property of appellant which was sought to be condemned in the suit ‘ and because thereof was made a defendant in said action.” This mortgage “indebtedness since the entry of the final judgment in said action was voluntarily paid by some person other than” appellant “and without her consent, authority, request or confirmation.” The first action was tried by jury as to appellant and the insurance company upon their demand in that behalf, and a verdict was rendered April 26, 1923. On April 27, 1923, “an interlocutory judgment or decree on said verdict of said jury was entered in said action as to the property of” appellant “and as to said mortgage in favor of” the insurance company. Appellant took her appeal from the interlocutory decree on July 11, 1923, and thereafter the decree was affirmed by the district court of appeal. At “the end of sixty days thereafter the remitti,tur in' said fiction . . . was sent down and thereafter *16 filed.” After that event the trial court “purported and attempted to make, give and enter a final decree or judgment in said action wherein and whereby said court recited that it was adjudged and decreed that” appellant’s “property was condemned to the City of Los Angeles” for the street purposes alleged in the complaint in the first action. Under the various ordinances leading up to the first action “and by virtue of said interlocutory judgment or decree and said final judgment or decree . . . the defendants now assert and claim that” appellant’s property is part of “a public street of the City of Los Angeles” and “now claim and assert that said city is the owner, for street purposes, of the right to use” appellant’s property “and for such purposes to pave and otherwise improve, and to maintain and use the same.” After the affirmance of the interlocutory decree in the first action, after the sending down of the remittitur pursuant thereto, and after the entry of the final decree, “and believing and having good cause to believe that said judgment was valid and binding” and that the trial court had jurisdiction to render it, appellant “received from the county treasurer of the county of Los Angeles the sum of” $38,205.44, “which said sum had been paid to said treasurer by the county clerk of said county, to whom the same had been paid with other money in satisfaction of said judgment . . . and who therefor satisfied said judgment.” At that time “there was an assessment against the remainder of” appellant’s “property for the proposed improvement then amounting to the sum of” $8,897.56 “and which amount plaintiff, on the day she received said money . . . , paid to the authorities of the City of Los Angeles in satisfaction and discharge of such assessment, leaving the sum of” $29,307.88 “as the net amount which” appellant “thus received on said judgment and because thereof. . . . Whatever other moneys if any may have been paid on account of or in satisfaction of said judgment to any other person or corporation were paid without” appellant’s “authority, knowledge, request or confirmation.”

It is of course obvious from this statement of facts that appellant, in her present situation, is remediless unless the legal questions settled and declared in O. T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, supra, have an application under *17 the facts of the first action. Notwithstanding this patent truth we find it unnecessary to decide the question whether those points do apply here. It will be understood, therefore, that in nothing we say in this opinion do we intimate that the points determined in O. T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 798, 86 Cal. App. 13, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1927.