287 P. 149 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
The appeal is taken upon the judgment-roll, which discloses the record to be as follows: The original complaint named as defendants H.S. McLaughlin and H. Sydney McLaughlin in addition to O'Dea, who is the respondent here. It is alleged that in June, 1924, O'Dea, through his attorney H.S. McLaughlin, had filed a complaint seeking recovery of money claimed to be due on the rental of certain real property; that the return on the summons showed personal service thereof by H. Sidney McLaughlin and that thereafter judgment by default was entered against the appellant on which a writ of execution was served over two years after the commencement of the action, by virtue of which appellant's money on deposit in a bank was seized and turned over to O'Dea and H.S. McLaughlin, and his safe deposit box attached; that appellant was never in fact served with summons and had no knowledge of the commencement or pendency of the action until October of 1926, when his bank *191 account was levied on; "that if this plaintiff had any knowledge in due time of the issuance of said summons and complaint he would have defended said action or had he the knowledge that a default had been entered therein he would have moved to have said default set aside and vacated on the ground that the plaintiff had then, and now has a good, meritorious defense to said action, to-wit: that he paid the moneys claimed by said O'Dea in his said complaint, also on the ground that he never received said summons and complaint and never knew of their issuance until October 29, 1926, as aforesaid"; that by reason of the acts of the three defendants in thus procuring a judgment by means of a "false and fraudulent representation and return" as to service of process, known to them to be false when made and made with intent to obtain judgment by default, and by reason of the execution levy, the plaintiff's credit had been impaired, his health injuriously affected and his bank deposit seized. The relief prayed for as against all three defendants was $3,156 compensatory and $3,000 punitive damages and that the judgment in the former action be set aside and the action dismissed.
Demurrers having been sustained, appellant dismissed the action as to the two McLaughlins and filed an amended complaint in which O'Dea was named as sole defendant. The allegations and prayer of this amended complaint are substantially the same as in the original pleading except that punitive damages are not sought.
The respondent demurred to the amended complaint upon the ground, among others, that several causes of action were improperly united and not separately stated, to wit, one in equity, to vacate a judgment, and one for damages. He also moved for a judgment of dismissal upon the ground that the plaintiff had dismissed the action as against his co-defendants "with prejudice" and that as they had all been sued as joint tort-feasors the release of the McLaughlins by dismissal of the action as to them operated as a release as against respondent also. The demurrer and motion coming on for hearing at the same time, the motion was granted, the demurrer was ordered off calendar and there followed the judgment of dismissal, from which this appeal is taken.
[1] The original complaint set up two distinct causes of action without attempting to state them separately. One *192
of the causes of action so pleaded was for damages alleged to have been suffered by appellant as a result of the "false and fraudulent representation and return" as to service of summons upon him, made, as the complaint alleged, "with intent to deceive in order to obtain said default judgment." According to the allegations of the original complaint all three of the defendants joined in the commission of the tort giving rise to this cause of action and hence a retraxit of the cause of action in favor of any of them operated as a release of all of them. As said inChetwood v. California Nat. Bank,
[4] Appellant further urges that the dismissal signed by his attorneys cannot operate as a retraxit because a retraxit cannot be given by an attorney, but only by the plaintiff in person. This was the rule at common law, but is not the rule in California, where, under the statutory provisions relating to attorneys at law (sec. 283, Code Civ. Proc.), "this authority must be considered as conferred upon the attorney of record in a cause." (Merritt v. Campbell,
[5] As to the cause of action sounding in tort the motion to dismiss was properly granted, but, as we have said, two causes of action are stated in the amended complaint. The facts alleged therein are sufficient, irrespective of any question as to damages by reason of wrongful conduct, to state a cause of action against the respondent for the vacation of *194
a judgment obtained by him against the appellant by the employment of extrinsic fraud. (Dunlap v. Steere,
[6] Instead of ordering the demurrer off calendar the court below should have sustained it with leave to amend, thus enabling appellant to separate his equitable cause of action from that sounding in tort and, upon dismissal as to the latter, to proceed to trial upon the former. The dismissal as to the equitable cause of action was clearly erroneous.
Judgment reversed.
Craig, Acting P.J., and Thompson (Ira F.), J., concurred. *195