6 P.2d 944 | Cal. | 1932
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *564 Appeal from judgment in favor of defendants after order sustaining demurrer to plaintiff's complaint without leave to amend.
The complaint in substance states that on September 7, 1923, the Bank of Italy brought suit in the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco against the plaintiffs in this action to recover certain sums of money claimed by said bank to have been received by the plaintiffs in this action for and on behalf of said bank. The action was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the bank and against the plaintiffs herein in the sum of $5,000. From this judgment the plaintiffs in this action appealed to the Supreme Court, where the judgment was affirmed on October 18, 1928, by Department One of said court. On the same day the plaintiffs herein learned for the first time that at all times during the pendency of said action in the trial court, the judge thereof who tried said action and rendered said judgment was a stockholder of the plaintiff in said action, the Bank of Italy, and by reason thereof was disqualified from acting as a judge in said action. Within a few days after acquiring knowledge of the disqualification of said judge, the plaintiffs herein filed their petition to the Supreme Court asking for a hearing in bank of said cause, and at the same time filed a motion in the Supreme Court to vacate said judgment upon the ground of the disqualification of the trial judge. This court granted said petition for a hearing in bank and set the case for hearing on its merits and the motion to vacate *565
said judgment down for argument. After argument this court affirmed the judgment of the trial court and denied the motion to vacate the judgment. (Bank of Italy v. Cadenasso,
On this appeal the plaintiffs contend that they have followed the procedure suggested by the court in its opinion denying the motion to vacate the judgment made in the Supreme Court and that the complaint filed by them in the superior court states a good cause of action against the defendants entitling them to a judgment vacating the judgment in the former action.
In support of the sufficiency of their complaint herein, they contend that the judgment in the former action is void for the reason that the judge rendering it was disqualified from acting in said action by reason of the fact that he was a stockholder of the Bank of Italy, the plaintiff in said former action. They rely upon the following decisions of this court: Lindsay-StrathmoreIrr. Dist. v. Superior Court,
While not admitting the contention of the plaintiffs just stated, the defendants seek to support the judgment of the trial court upon various grounds. [1] The first of these we will consider is that the plaintiffs in this action have waived their right to have the judgment in the prior action vacated. According to the complaint the plaintiffs first knew of the disqualification of the trial judge on October 18, 1928, the date of the first decision of this court affirming said prior judgment. They did not commence this action for over four months thereafter, but filed a petition and obtained a rehearing in the former action, and after the rehearing was granted they argued the case in this court and endeavored to secure a reversal of said former judgment. As already noted, plaintiffs at the time they filed their petition for a rehearing, also filed their motion to vacate the former judgment upon the ground of the disqualification of the trial judge. Upon the rehearing being granted, this court considered at the same time the appeal upon its merits and plaintiffs' motion to vacate said judgment, and thereafter affirmed the judgment and denied plaintiffs' motion to vacate the same. These facts show that plaintiffs at the very first opportunity, and within a few days after receiving knowledge of the trial judge's disqualification, took steps to have the judgment vacated. The fact that they mistook the forum in which to initiate said proceedings, while rendering said proceedings ineffectual would not in any sense indicate that they intended to waive their right to have said judgment vacated. In fact, it shows directly to the contrary. Neither would the further fact, in our opinion, that they asked for a rehearing of our decision affirming said judgment constitute a waiver of their right to have said judgment vacated. We must, in passing upon this question, take into consideration all the acts of plaintiffs taken in this and the former action to determine whether they waived their right to have said judgment vacated, and when we do so we are convinced that they are not sufficient to show any waiver. It is true that this action was not commenced until four months after the plaintiffs gained knowledge of the disqualification of the *567
trial judge, but when we take into consideration the other steps taken by plaintiffs to vacate said judgment, we cannot say that plaintiffs have not acted with due diligence in the institution of this action. The only authorities cited by the defendants tending to show that the plaintiffs have not acted with due diligence in this matter are Rudy v. Slotwinsky,
[2] Furthermore, it is expressly held in the Lindsay-Strathmore case, quoting with approval from the case ofJohnson v. German etc. Co.,
[3] Defendants further contend in support of the judgment in the present action that the complaint herein fails to state a cause of action in that it contains no allegation that the plaintiffs in the present action have any substantial defense to the cause of action set up in the complaint in the former action, and, furthermore, that the complaint fails to show that a like judgment would not result from a new trial of the former action. In support of this contention the defendants rely upon Lee v.Colquhoun,
[4] The contentions of the defendants that plaintiffs were guilty of laches and that the action is barred by the statute of limitations are also without merit. We have already held that the plaintiffs acted with due diligence in the commencement of this action after the discovery of the disqualification of the trial judge rendering the judgment in the former action. In fact, they took steps within a few days by motion in the former action to have the judgment vacated, and instituted this action in about four months after the discovery of the disqualification of the trial judge. On the other hand, the defendants herein must have known at all times that the trial judge was one of its stockholders. By calling the court's attention to that fact they could have easily and effectively avoided any further proceeding before the trial judge. The defendants are hardly in a position to set up any defense based upon laches on the plaintiffs' part.
[5] As to the plea of the statute of limitations, this action was brought before the judgment in the former action had become final. Whether it might have been brought after said judgment became final, we express no opinion. We think, however, that the plain inference from the decision of the court in the case ofLindsay-Strathmore Irr. Dist. v. Superior Court, supra, page 332, is that objection to the disqualification of the trial judge by reason of his interest in the subject matter of the suit may be made at any time before the judgment becomes final. Defendants cite subdivision 1 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure as providing that an action based upon a liability created by statute must be commenced within three years. This provision of the code has no application to the present action. It is not an action based upon a liability created by statute. The action is one in equity to set aside a void judgment and the statute of limitations has no application to such an action. (15 Cal. Jur., p. 57; Estate of Pusey,
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to overrule said demurrer.
Seawell, J., Shenk, J., Richards, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.