Armstrong v. Superior Court

63 Cal. 410 | Cal. | 1883

Per Curiam.

Certiorari. Petitioner prays for the annulment of an order of the Superior Court setting aside an order made in response to an application by defendant in an action, wherein one Estep is plaintiff and the petitioner is defendant, for a change of the place of trial from Lake to Sonoma County.

The motion was made on the ground that the action had been brought in the wrong county, and was supported by the defendant’s affidavit that he was, and for many years had been, a resident of Sonoma. The plaintiff resisted the motion, asking that the cause- be retained in Lake County, and filed and read an affidavit setting forth facts tending to prove that it would be for the convenience of witnesses to retain the cause. As the motion was made before answer the plaintiff was not authorized to resist it on the ground that it would be more convenient for witnesses to try the action in Lake. (Cook v. Pendergast, 61 Cal. 72.)

January 29, 1883—the return day of the motion—the court below ordered: “ That the motion to change the place of trial be granted, upon the payment by defendant of all fees accrued in this court to date.”

A demurrer to the complaint had been filed by the defendant contemporaneously with his demand for a change of venue, and, on the 12th day of February, 1883, the plaintiff asked the court to set down the demurrer for argument and proceed with the determination thereof, claiming that a reasonable time had elapsed since the making of the order respecting a change of the place of trial, and the defendant had not paid the costs as therein required.

Thereupon it was by the court ordered:—

“Whereas, in this cause, the court, on the 29th day of January, 1883, made an order, on the application of the defendant, that the same be transferred for further proceedings to the Supe*412rior Court of the county of Sonoma, upon payment by defendant of all costs accrued and to accrue in this court, and whereas at this date said defendant has not paid said costs, nor offered any excuse for his failure to do so; now, therefore, it is ordered by the court that the order made on the 29th day of January, 1883, be annulled and set aside.” And it was then and there further ordered “that the demurrer aforesaid be set for hearing on the 29th day of February, 1883.”

It is insisted by the petitioner that the condition in the order of January 29th, as to the payment of costs, was and is void, being a condition which the court had no right to require, and, as a consequence, that the order should be read as if no such condition had been inserted, and was and is an order granting the motion for a change of the place of trial; that the order granting the change necessarily included an adjudication as to the defendant's residence; that the power of the court was exhausted in the premises when it found that the defendant resided in Sonoma and granted the motion, and that, immediately upon the entry of the order, the Superior Court of Lake lost, and the Superior Court of Sonoma acquired, jurisdiction of the action.

The intent and meaning of a judicial order are to be derived from its language. Even if the court had no power to insert in the order the condition as to costs, there is no strict analogy between the order and a deed—for example—which may take effect as a conveyance, although it contains a condition, void because against public policy, or for any other reason. An order that a motion be granted, upon the payment of certain costs, is an order denying the motion, unless the costs be paid. We are not authorized to exclude the condition, and thus make the order the reverse of, or distinctly different from, what it was evidently intended to be. The order of the 29th of January is not an order absolute, either granting or denying the motion for the change of the place of trial. It’provides that the motion shall be granted, if, within a reasonable time, the costs are paid by the defendant; that the motion shall be denied if a reasonable time shall elapse without the payment of the costs by the defendant. It is ah order to take effect in the future as an order granting, or as an order denying, the motion, as one of two events shall occur. In determining its meaning it is entirely immaterial *413whether the court had or had not power to insert the condition, or whether the insertion of the condition was error. In any case the defendant did not get the order which he asked for unconditionally; he did not get it at all, nor did he entitle himself to an order final, based upon the payment of the costs—if such further order was necessary—because he did not pay the costs.

If, in response to the defendant’s motion, the court had no jurisdiction to make an order other than an order unconditionally granting or denying the motion, petitioner is not entitled to have annulled the order setting aside the order of the 29th of January. The effect of the order of February 12th would be simply to disencumber the record of the Superior Court of an order it had no jurisdiction to make, and would leave the motion for a change of venue undisposed of. If the order of the 29th of January was one which the Superior Court had power to make, it ivas not and did not purport to be a final order, taking effect, in the then present, as an order granting or denying the motion, and we know of no reason why the court did not have power to set it aside. Certainly, as the defendant did not pay the costs within a reasonable time, or offer to pay them, he cannot complain of the order setting aside the order of January 29th — whether his failure to pay did or did not of itself operate as an order denying the motion for a change of the place of trial.

But we are of opinion that the order of the 29th of January wTas, in its nature, interlocutory, and contemplated—in case the defendant should fail to pay the costs—another and subsequent order, based upon a finding that a reasonable time had elapsed without the costs having been paid. We have assumed, as is claimed by petitioner, that the order of the 12th of February is to be treated as an independent order setting aside the previous order. It may be that the proceedings of the day last mentioned read together constitute only a declaration that a reasonable time had passed, and the defendant had not paid the costs, followed by an order setting down the demurrer for argument, the legal effect of which was finally to deny the motion for a change of the place of trial. Upon this last matter we express no'opinion. If the order setting the demurrer for argument, following upon an adjudication that a reasonable time had expired without pay*414ment of costs by defendant, was an order denying the defendant’s motion for a change of venue, the defendant—petitioner—had an appeal from that order.

But treating the action of the court on the 12th of February, which preceded the setting down of the demurrer, as an independent order setting aside the order of the 29th of January, the petitioner cannot have the order of the 12th of February annulled, because up to the last named date, no final order had been made granting the motion for a change of the place of trial.

It is not necessary to decide whether the Superior Court would have power to set aside a final order changing the place of trial.

The petition and proceedings thereunder are dismissed.