7 P.2d 297 | Cal. | 1932
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This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment of dismissal entered upon the sustaining of a demurrer to their second amended cross-complaint. The action was brought by plaintiff to quiet title to a described parcel of real property. Defendants filed an answer denying plaintiff's ownership of the lot in dispute and a cross-complaint containing certain allegations of fraud and concluding with a prayer for judgment decreeing that plaintiff holds the legal title as trustee for the use and benefit of itself and the defendants, reforming a certain written contract so as to make it comply with an asserted prior oral declaration of trust, and for damages in the sum of $18,500 alleged to have resulted to the defendants by reason of plaintiff's fraud. To this threefold cross-complaint the plaintiff demurred on the grounds that it failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, that it improperly seeks to join with an action to quiet title an action for damages, and that several causes of action have been improperly united and not separately stated, in that an action at law for damages is united with a bill in equity for reformation of a contract. The trial court sustained the demurrer with leave to the defendants to amend within ten days. Standing upon their second amended cross-complaint, the defendants declined to further amend, whereupon the judgment of dismissal from which this appeal is taken was entered. *623
[1] A plaintiff, or cross-complainant, who declines to avail himself of leave to amend his pleading after a demurrer thereto is sustained, which demurrer is both general and special, must stand upon his pleading as against both grounds of demurrer. (Aalwyn v. Cobe,
The written agreement, which is attached to the cross-complaint as an exhibit, differs materially from the alleged oral understanding, in that it constitutes a contract of sale under and by the terms and provisions of which the plaintiff agrees to sell and the defendants to buy lot 2 for $30,000, payable $7,500 on the signing thereof and $7,500 each year thereafter until paid.
[2] We find no merit in the contention that the matter set up by the second amended cross-complaint is not a proper subject of cross-complaint. A cross-complaint can be maintained when the defendant seeks affirmative relief "relating to or depending upon the contract, transaction, matter, happening or accident upon which the action is brought, or affecting the property to which the action relates, . . ." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 442.) It has been held that under the cross-complaint statute the "test is whether the matter set up by cross-complaint bears the necessary relation *625
to the matter constituting the cause of action. If such relation is present, it is immaterial that the relief sought by the cross-complaint is independent of that prayed for in the complaint; the cross-complaint need not tend to diminish or defeat the plaintiff's recovery, but may demand affirmative relief distinct from that demanded by the plaintiff." (Hanes v.Coffee,
[3] We are of the opinion that defendants' cross-complaint falls within the "transaction" clause of section 442, supra. In Clark on Code Pleading, page 454, it is stated that "the liberality with which the facts constituting the transaction are selected depends upon the individual case". The manner in which the complaint is drawn is not conclusive. The facts surrounding the cause of action and not the form of the complaint are determinative of what constitutes the transaction. (Hanes v.Coffee, supra; Story Isham Com. Co. v. Story,
[4] Having determined that the cause of action set out in defendants' second amended cross-complaint falls within the "transaction" clause of the cross-complaint statute, *626 and therefore forms the basis of a proper cross-complaint, it is unnecessary that we now determine whether or not defendants have any "interest" in the property involved in plaintiff's quiet title suit, so as to bring the cross-complaint within the scope and purview of the "subject" clause of the cross-complaint statute. It is sufficient, of course, if the cause of action of a cross-complaint fall within either the "transaction" clause or the "subject" clause of the cross-complaint statute. It need not satisfy both requirements.
[5] Taking up first the general demurrer, we find, upon an examination of the authorities, that sufficient facts are alleged in defendants' second amended cross-complaint to warrant a reformation of the written contract. It is therein averred, and for purposes of demurrer these allegations are admitted to be true, that the defendants without knowledge of the true facts, and solely by reason of the plaintiff's fraudulent representations, were deceived and misled into signing a written contract differing materially from the prior oral understanding of the parties. It is elementary that when through fraud, or mutual mistake of the parties, or a mistake of one party which the other at the time knew or suspected, a written contract does not truly express the intention of the parties, it may be revised. (Civ. Code, sec.
[8] It is unnecessary, therefore, that we determine whether the cross-complaint alleges facts sufficient for the declaration of a trust or the imposition of damages. [9] A general demurrer challenges the sufficiency of the pleading to state any cause of action and must not be sustained if the pleading states facts from which any liability results, although not for some or all of the relief sought to be obtained. (Hall v. Bell,
In support of its general demurrer plaintiff also relies onArcher v. Miller,
[10] This brings us to a consideration of the second and third grounds of demurrer, which may be treated together. The second amended cross-complaint does not improperly join an action for damages with one to quiet title, nor does it improperly unite several causes of action without separately stating them. The relief sought by way of damages is but incidental and ancillary to the prayer for a decree *629
reforming the written contract and declaring plaintiff to hold lot 2 in trust for the purpose alleged. [11] In an action of equitable cognizance, it is the policy of our law to allow a party to obtain in one action all the relief to which he may be entitled on account of a single transaction, although such relief may be of a character that would require several suits under the strict rules relating to the forms of common-law actions prior to the adoption of the codes. (Murphy v. Crowley,
[12] The seeking of different kinds of relief does not establish different causes of action. (San Diego Water Co. v.San Diego Flume Co.,
[13] In our opinion, the case at bar presents a situation where, under one cause of action, the cross-complainant is *630 entitled to several species of remedy. But one transaction is relied on as a basis for the threefold prayer for relief. In such a case the question of joinder of causes of action does not arise. There is but one cause of action — one right to be enforced, although several remedies may be sought. It follows that the two grounds of special demurrer are also without merit.
The judgment is reversed with directions to the court below to overrule plaintiff's demurrer to the defendants' second amended cross-complaint.
Curtis, J., Preston, J., Langdon, J., Richards, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.