253 P. 954 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *369 Petitioner prays for an order of this court directing and commanding each of the respondents herein to desist and refrain from further proceedings under three several orders as set forth in the petition and heretofore issued out of the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles in a suit for divorce then pending therein between Lillita Louise Chaplin and Charles Spencer Chaplin, wherein and whereby in effect W.I. Gilbert and Herman Spitzel, as receivers theretofore appointed in said action, and Charles Spencer Chaplin, the defendant therein, were ordered to pay for the support and maintenance of Lillita Louise Chaplin (the wife of said Charles Spencer Chaplin) and the two minor children of said parties the sum of $8,000 forthwith, the further sum of $4,000 on the seventeenth day of February, 1927, and a like sum of money on the fifteenth day of each *370 and every month thereafter pending the final determination of said suit for divorce; and in addition thereto, that said Charles Spencer Chaplin pay forthwith to said Lillita Louise Chaplin the sum of $6,400 on account of attorneys' fees, costs, and expenses to enable said Lillita Louise Chaplin to prosecute such divorce suit.
It is the contention of petitioner that neither prior to the issuance of either or any of said orders nor since said time or times had the trial court jurisdiction of the person of the defendant in said suit for divorce, and consequently that each of said orders is void.
Section
No question is here raised regarding the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, excepting as to the jurisdiction over the person of the defendant in the suit for divorce between the parties thereto.
Generally speaking, as provided by statute, the writ of prohibition will lie for the purpose of arresting the proceedings of any tribunal exercising judicial functions when such proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, where no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy exists in the ordinary course of law. (Secs. 1102, 1103, Code Civ. Proc.)
The first question, then, to be here considered is whether the Superior Court was acting without or in excess of its jurisdiction in making each of the several orders to which reference has been had.
By section 416 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is provided that:
"From the time of the service of the summons and of a copy of the complaint in a civil action, where service of a copy of the complaint is required, or of the completion of the publication when service by publication is ordered, the court is deemed to have acquired jurisdiction of the parties, and to have control of all the subsequent proceedings. . . ."
And: "A defendant appears in an action when he answers, demurs, or gives the plaintiff written notice of his appearance, or when an attorney gives notice of appearance for him. . . ." (Sec.
So far as any of the statutory requirements for obtaining jurisdiction over the person of the defendant in the suit for divorce are concerned, it is admitted by respondents that none of them was complied with in either form or substance. In the absence of obtaining service upon the defendant in any or either of the modes prescribed by statute, the ordinary rule appears to be that an order made by the court of the nature of those here under consideration is unauthorized and void. (Baker v.Baker,
But it is urged by respondents upon facts which appear by affidavit, as well as by the return to the writ herein, that because one of the attorneys now representing petitioner herein was present in the trial court at the time such orders, or some of them, were made, such appearance by said attorney constituted an appearance for and in behalf of said defendant. The facts, however, in connection with the presence in court of said attorney at said time are that he was there merely as a spectator, and that he took no part whatsoever in the proceedings before the trial court; or, at most, that at the time when one of such orders was made, he appeared only for a defendant in the action other than Charles Spencer Chaplin, the petitioner herein. No record is shown of any appearance having been made by any attorney in behalf of defendant; in fact, each of such orders recites in effect that the defendant was not represented at either of such hearings.
Respondents further contend, on alleged facts likewise appearing, that said defendant Chaplin left the state of California for the express purpose of avoiding service upon him of the summons and a copy of the complaint in said action, and that because of said fact, together with the further alleged fact that there have been various communications to defendant (including letters, telegrams, newspaper articles, and the radio), defendant has been, and at the time of the making of each of said orders was, as fully notified of the pendency of said action as though he had been personally *372 served with the summons and a copy of the complaint therein.
[1] With reference to the proposition advanced by respondents, in effect, that because of the mere presence of one of defendant's attorneys in the trial court, whether as a spectator or as representing some other party defendant, at the time one of the orders under consideration was made, the appearance of defendant in the action was thereby legally indicated, the authorities are not in exact harmony. The cases ofRoth v. Superior Court,
While from the several rulings made in such cases it is apparent that the means for adjudging the appearance of a defendant in an action as specified in section
In the case of Vrooman v. Li Po Tai,
"But it is contended by respondent that by taking and filing the stipulation extending the time to answer, and by accepting and acting upon the agreement to grant successive extensions in consideration of certain payments made, defendant appeared in the action. Section
"The defendant entered into no stipulation in regard to the case. Plaintiff granted him certain privileges, reserving the right to enter default and judgment in case defendant failed to comply with the conditions."
The case of Davenport v. Superior Court,
If, according to the latest expression on the subject by the court of last resort of this state, the obtaining by a defendant of an order from the judge of the trial court extending the time within which he might plead to the action did not amount to an appearance by such defendant, it should follow that the mere presence in court of an attorney (who afterward represented the defendant), either as a spectator or in the capacity as counsel for other defendants in the action, would not constitute an appearance. The decision in any case should depend upon the solution of the question of what was the legal intention of the defendant in the premises, and the answer to which can be determined only from the circumstances surrounding each given case. It is clear enough that if a defendant "intentionally submits himself to the jurisdiction of the court, . . . for the purpose of obtaining any ruling of the court going to the meritsof the case," he has made an appearance in the action. Surely the presence in court of an attorney who at that time was acting only for another party to the litigation, under a most strained construction, could not be taken as an act "going to the merits of the action" so far as any other defendant was concerned, or one by which the defendant intentionally submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court; much less could the fact that such attorney was but a curious spectator of the proceedings in any manner affect the merits of the controversy so as to amount to such intentional submission to jurisdiction.
The case of Honeycutt v. Nyquist, Peterson Co.,
"We are not inclined to regard the acceptance of service of the motion to sell the attached property as in itself amounting to a general appearance in the action. . . . But the paper referred to was not the summons nor petition. It ought not to be held, we think, that a mere acknowledgment of service upon the defendant of such a motion operates as a submission of his person to the jurisdiction of the court for all purposes of the case. It cannot be said that the fact that a defendant has engaged an attorney to look after his interests either generally or in a particular cause amounts to a voluntary general appearance, for it may occur that the attorney shall conclude that his client's interests will be better subserved by not appearing, or he may be engaged merely to enter a special appearance and contest the question of jurisdiction. The same reasoning might apply in respect to the mere presence of the defendant and his attorney in court at the time fixed for the hearing of the motion, although it is unnecessary to decide that question. Certainly they would have had a right to be in court as spectators, without submitting the person of the defendant to the jurisdiction of the court in a particular case pending therein, if they did not participate in any of the proceedings in the case. . . ."
In Fulton v. Ramsay,
[2] The second suggestion of respondents, that is to say, that because of the alleged evasion of service of process upon him and the publicity through the medium of the press and the radio, and the probability of the receipt by defendant of *376
private letters and telegrams concerning the pendency of the action against him, he must have had notice of the pendency of the action, would seem equally unavailing to establish either the equivalent of service of process on the defendant or his voluntary appearance in the action. In support of such contention the attention of this court has been directed to the case ofFoley v. Foley,
Section
With reference to the necessity of actual service or the constructive service in proper cases, the supreme court, through Mr. Justice Field, in Peabody v. Phelps,
In Matthews v. Matthews,
"An abandoned wife where, as in this case, her husband is a nonresident, may sequester his property; but the service of the summons by publication must be commenced as herein stated. After he has been served by publication and is in default of appearance or pleading, the court can enter judgment and dispose of sequestered property as it deems best for the interest of the wife and children. If the defendant appears, of course there is no difficulty."
This court is disinclined to accept a construction which in its nature would have the effect of so broadening the apparent intent of the language of the present statute as to make it of no consequence as a legal requirement before service of *378 process may be obtained. The natural expansion of the principle suggested by respondents would include hearsay and rumor of every description and practically prevent or forbid at his peril any person who had been sued in an action from reading a newspaper or holding any communication whatsoever with his fellowman. The results of such a rule would be far-reaching, and if not disastrous, would at least be intolerable.
Other objections interposed by respondents to the issuance of the writ are that petitioner comes into this court with unclean hands; and in any event that each of the several orders, which together constitute the subject matter here under consideration, is appealable; also that the forum within which the remedy to which defendant was entitled, if any, should be administered, was that in which the objectionable orders were issued; for all of which reasons it is contended by respondents that the writ of prohibition should not issue.
[3] With reference to the alleged "unclean hands" of the petitioner, it is urged that because the suit for divorce is equitable in its nature, and because the court in which such action is pending has made the several orders here in question — all of which the defendant therein has seen fit to ignore — he should not now be heard in this court in a prayer for relief therefrom. But at least one of the difficulties with the position thus assumed by respondents is that it fails to take cognizance of the foundational fact that the defendant has never been served with summons, nor has he made an appearance in the action in the lower court; and consequently that from a legal standpoint he has never had notice of the pendency of the action. If the order issued by the Superior Court was in excess of the jurisdiction of such court, it is plain that the defendant was under no compulsion to obey it (Maier v. Luce,
[4] Regarding the remedy open to defendant by appeal from the several orders, as suggested by respondents, it is a general rule that prohibition will not lie where the petitioner has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. (Sec. 1103, Code Civ. Proc.) The *379
exception to the rule also is well established that although the order or the judgment to which exception is taken by the person upon whom it operates may be appealable and thus come within the general rule which forbids the issuance of a writ of prohibition, nevertheless, if in the circumstances of a given case it may be clearly discernible that such a remedy will not properly subserve the ends of justice by affording the relief to which the petitioner may be entitled, the fact that, ordinarily speaking, the remedy is "plain, speedy and adequate" will present no obstacle to the issuance of the writ. (Lieberman v. SuperiorCourt,
[5] As is stated in volume 2 of Ruling Case Law, section 14, page 333: "It is a well settled general rule that an appeal from or a writ of error to judgment of a court of general jurisdiction operates as a general appearance in the case." It is therefore apparent that if by appealing from all or any of the several orders under consideration a general appearance of the defendant in the instant case would result, *380 the appeal would be useless, and effective relief from the several orders made without or in excess of the jurisdiction of the trial court would be entirely denied to the defendant.
Assuming, without deciding, that the filing of a notice of motion to vacate the orders in question would likewise constitute a general appearance by the defendant (Grinbaum v. SuperiorCourt,
The return to the writ herein shows conclusively that any application which might be made to the Superior Court to vacate all or any of the orders made by it would be denied.
[6] In the case of Keeley v. Superior Court,
[7] As a conclusion from the foregoing, it will appear that in the absence of service of process on the defendant, or of his legal appearance in the action, each of the orders to which reference has been had was void, and that for the reasons heretofore expressed herein the defendant is entitled to the writ directing and commanding the respondents, and each of them, to desist and refrain from further proceedings under the orders, and each of them, referred to in the petition herein. It is so ordered.
Conrey, P.J., and York, J., concurred.