102 Cal. 620 | Cal. | 1894
The plaintiff brought this action to establish a trust in certain lands in the city and county of San Francisco against the defendant Brickell. Maria Baker Batchelder, the mother of plaintiff, was made a party defendant, but failed to appear, and her default was duly entered. The case was tried, and judgment given and entered in favor of the plaintiff. From that judgment, and an order denying his motion for a new trial, Brickell appealed to this court, where the judgment and order were reversed and the cause remanded. (Baker v. Brickell, 87 Cal. 329.) When the case went back to the trial court the plaintiffi filed an amendment to his complaint and also a supplemental complaint. The defendant demurred to the supplemental complaint, and his demurrer was sustained. The case was then again tried, and the findings and judgment were in favor of the defendant, from which judgment and an order refusing him a new trial the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
In the opinion delivered on the former appeal the facts of the case are very fully stated, and the law applicable thereto is declared. And in the late case of Whelan
The amendment to the complaint stated no new facts and added nothing material to the amended pleading. The averments were simply of rights resulting from facts already stated.
The demurrer to the supplemental complaint was properly sustained.
In his original complaint plaintiff alleged that, in May, 1876, an action was commenced against him, then a minor about fourteen years of age, in the name oí his mother, Maria Baker Batclielder, as plaintiff, to quiet her title to the land now in controversy, and that in August, 1876, “ a judgment and decree of the court was ordered and signed, quieting the title of the plaintiff in said action against this plaintiff as defendant therein.” The complaint makes various charges of fraud on the part of the defendant Brickell, in the institution and prosecution of that action, which, as found by the court in this case, were wholly without foundation, and false. An appeal was taken by the defendant in that case, and in May, 1889, the judgment was affirmed. (Batchelder v. Baker, 79 Cal. 266.)
The supplemental complaint “avers that since the commencement of this action, and during the progress of the first trial thereof, .... said defendant Brickell, at his own cost and expense, and without the consent or knowledge or authority of said Maria Baker Batch-elder, caused said decree in said action” of Batchelder v. Baker, 79 Cal. 266, “to be entered, and that such entry was the first entry of said decree ever made, and was more than ten years after the signing thereof, and' that such entry of s-aid decree was ordered by the attorneys herein of said Brickell, and being so ordered and
A supplemental complaint must allege “ facts material to the case occurring after the former complaint.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 464.)
No facts material to the case are alleged in the supplemental complaint here. In the original complaint it is stated.that a judgment and decree of the court was ordered and signed, and the evidence introduced by the plaintiff shows that findings'and decree were signed by the judge and filed September 1, 1876. It was then, and thereafter, the ministerial duty of the clerk to enter and docket the judgment, and to prepare and file the judgment-roll (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 633, 668, 670-72), and he could not, by neglecting to perform that duty, destroy or impair the effect of the judgment. (Casement v. Ringgold, 28 Cal. 335; In re Newman, 75 Cal. 213; 7 Am. St. Rep. 146; In re Cook, 77 Cal. 220; 11 Am. St. Rep. 267.) It was therefore immaterial who set the clerk in motion to discharge this ministerial duty or who paid him his fees therefor. He might perform his duty of his own motion, or the court could direct him to do it, or any party interested in having it done could procure him to do it. Here it appears that Brickell was interested in having the judgment entered, for it is charged in the complaint that, through the mortgages which Mrs. Batchelder and her husband-had given him, and the foreclosure of those mortgages, and the sale by the sheriff under the decree of foreclosure and the purchase at such sale, he had acquired all the estate or interest of Mrs. Batchelder in and to the lands in question. This was in November, 1878, and the “ consent,” “ knowledge,” or “ authority” of Mrs. Batchelder that the judgment be entered in January, 1887, was clearly not necessary. She could not, by withholding her con
On the authority of the former decision in this case, the judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Temple, C., and Vanclief, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J., Harrison, J.