17 P.2d 993 | Cal. | 1932
THE COURT.
Pursuant to stipulations of the parties, the above-entitled twenty-four cases have been consolidated for decision, it being agreed that all of the cases may be determined upon the briefs and arguments filed in L.A. 13122. Whatever is said in this opinion, therefore, in reference to the Halperin case will apply equally to the other twenty-three cases.
L.A. 13122 involves an appeal by the plaintiff, the City of Los Angeles, from a judgment dismissing a condemnation action, which judgment of dismissal allowed respondent Halperin his costs, including attorneys' fees. The other twenty-three appeals involve other defendants in the condemnation suit who were likewise awarded costs and attorneys' fees. The facts giving rise to the present controversy are as follows:
In November of 1923 the City of Los Angeles filed a complaint in condemnation, naming respondent Halperin and the other respondents and other parties as defendants. The complaint was in the form usual in such actions, alleging the passage of an ordinance of intention by the city council, designated as Ordinance No. 45501 (N.S.), and asking that, in pursuance to that and other supplementary ordinances, portions of the lands of respondent Halperin and of the *190 other respondents and others be condemned for the purpose of opening, widening and extending Mines Avenue and Tenth Street in the City of Los Angeles. Respondent Halperin, and the other respondents, filed separate answers putting into issue the value and severance damages to their respective pieces of property sought to be condemned.
Early in May of 1929 the city was served by respondent Halperin with a notice of motion to dismiss the action. The notice of motion recited that respondent Halperin intended to move the court "to dismiss the above entitled action for the reason that the same has been abandoned by the plaintiff, and will also move the court for a judgment of dismissal and for costs and attorneys' fees herein under and pursuant to the provisions of section 1255a of the Code of Civil Procedure.
"Said motion will be made upon the ground that said action has been abandoned by the plaintiff, and will be based upon the affidavit of Wm. B. Himrod herewith filed, and upon the records, files and papers in the above entitled action."
The affidavit above referred to of William B. Himrod, one of the attorneys for respondent Halperin, recites that the condemnation suit had been instituted by the city pursuant to the Street Opening and Widening Act of 1903 (Stats. 1903, p. 376) for the condemnation of certain lands for street purposes; that respondent had appeared and answered; "that subsequent to the filing of said answer as aforesaid, plaintiff herein abandoned the above entitled action and has brought another suit in connection with the same proceedings, which said suit is now pending in the above entitled court". No counter-affidavit was filed by the city. No other affidavit was filed on behalf of respondent. So far as the record shows all that the trial court had before it when it decided the motion to dismiss was the notice of motion to dismiss, the affidavit of William B. Himrod, and the files and records in the condemnation suit. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss. The judgment recites that "it appearing to the court that the plaintiff has failed to prosecute said action and has abandoned the same . . . Now, therefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the above entitled action be and the same is hereby dismissed, and it is ordered that said *191 defendant Robert L. Halperin have judgment against the plaintiff for costs [including attorneys' fees] in the sum of $1,653.50."
From this judgment the city has prosecuted this appeal. [1]
Appellant contends that although it does not appear in the record now before us, as a matter of fact, when the motion to dismiss was argued there was presented to the trial court, in writing, a copy of a final judgment of the superior court permanently enjoining the city from further prosecuting the condemnation suit here involved. Appellant presented this injunction to the trial court in explanation of its failure to further prosecute the condemnation suit. Appellant also states that it appealed from the judgment in the injunction matter, but that that judgment was affirmed by this court. The injunction proceeding was entitledO.T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, and the opinion of this court is to be found in
[2] There is still another reason why, in this case, the interests of justice will be furthered by judicially noticing the O.T. Johnson Corporation judgment. According to the record now presented to us, and without considering the injunction, all the trial court had before it when it granted the judgment of dismissal together with costs and attorneys' fees, was the notice of motion to dismiss, the affidavit of Wm. B. Himrod, and the files and records in the condemnation suit. The affidavit contains the allegations that *194 the city had abandoned the condemnation action, and had commenced another suit in connection with the same proceeding. No statement of the facts which were claimed to constitute the alleged abandonment appear in the affidavit or elsewhere, nor does it appear what the nature of the pending suit was or whether it involved the same questions involved in the Halperin action. An allegation that the condemnation suit had been abandoned is nothing more than a mere conclusion of law. This necessarily follows because of the fact, as we hold later in this opinion, that it is not every abandonment by the condemnor which entitles the defendant to his costs and attorneys' fees. Since this is so, it was necessary for the respondent to show that the abandonment here involved was of such a nature as to entitle him to his costs and attorneys' fees. The record contains no such showing, and if we were inclined to strictly construe the record we would be compelled to reverse the judgment solely on the ground that there is nothing in the record to show that the abandonment here involved was of such a nature as to entitle respondent to his costs and attorneys' fees. However, we are not inclined to decide this case adversely to respondent because the record is technically insufficient, any more than we are inclined to decide it adversely to appellant on the technicality already discussed. Particularly is this so when the technical deficiency of the record, both as to appellant and respondent, consists in the failure of the record to disclose the existence of the injunction judgment. In fairness to both parties, we think the interests of justice will best be served by deciding the case on the merits and by judicially noticing the existence of the injunction judgment.
We turn then to a discussion of the question as to whether, when a condemnation suit is permanently enjoined, the defendants are entitled to attorneys' fees. [3] It must be remembered that attorneys' fees, in actions generally, are not recoverable as costs. Attorneys' fees are only recoverable when specifically allowed by statute. (Coburn v. Townsend,
"The City Council may, at any time prior to the payment of the compensation awarded the defendants, abandon the proceedings, by ordinance, and cause the said action to be dismissed, without prejudice, and if any of the assessments levied to pay the expense of the improvements, as hereinafter provided, shall have been actually paid in money at the time of such abandonment, the same shall be refunded to the persons by whom they were paid. If the proceedings be abandoned or the action dismissed, no attorney's fees shall be awarded the defendants, or either of them." (3 Deering's Gen. Laws, 1931, Act 8198, sec. 14, p. 4506.) The last sentence above quoted prohibiting the allowance of attorneys' fees has been held to be unconstitutional. (City ofLos Angeles v. Cline,
[5] Section 1255 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides for the allowance of costs generally, after judgment, in the *196
discretion of the trial court. That section does not permit the allowance of attorneys' fees. It refers to "costs" only, and it is well settled that the word "costs", appearing by itself and undefined, means only the ordinary costs of suit, and does not include attorneys' fees. In fact, it has been specifically held that the word "costs" appearing in section 1255 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not include the right to attorneys' fees. (Lincoln Northern Ry. Co. v. Wiswell,
Whenever the condemnor voluntarily abandons it is only fair and equitable that the defendants in the condemnation suit should be recompensed, but where the condemnor, as here, has conclusively shown that it in good faith was prosecuting the action, and only desisted because of an injunction, no good reason exists why the defendants should recover their attorneys' fees. Neither the letter nor spirit of the statute covers this situation. We can find no language in the statute authorizing the recovery of attorneys' fees where the abandonment has been involuntary. Even at the expense of being repetitious it is well to state again that unless respondent can show not only an abandonment, but an abandonment within the spirit and intent of section 1255a of the Code of Civil Procedure, no attorneys' fees can be recovered. As we read the section and giving it the most liberal construction possible, it applies only in the case of a voluntary abandonment. Although no case has been decided by the courts of this state directly in point, Illinois has held, in interpreting a provision very similar to section 1255a, that it does not apply to an involuntary abandonment. In the case of City of Mound v.Mason,
"It is contended by appellee that the provision of this statute is broad enough to include the dismissal of a petition for condemnation, not only where the same is voluntarily dismissed by the petitioner, but, also, where after a preliminary hearing the court on the motion of the defendant dismisses the same. Appellee insists in support of his position that the constitutional provision that private property shall not be taken for public purposes, except upon payment of just compensation, should be construed so as to require a petitioner to pay, not only compensation fixed by a jury and costs of the suit, as ordinarily understood, but also that it should be construed to require that the petitioner in a condemnation petition where the same is dismissed by the court over its objection, and where the property is not taken, as a matter of fact, shall be required *199 to pay, not only the costs of the suit, but also the attorneys' fees and other expenses incurred by the owner of said premises in and about the defense made by him in connection with such condemnation proceeding. In other words, appellee insists that even though the provision of the statute in question is not broad enough in its literal terms to include a judgment against a petitioner for attorneys' fees and other expenses, where a petition for condemnation is dismissed by the court, that the courts in construing such statute should give it that effect.
"In his brief and argument appellee cites the following cases in support of his contention: Chicago N.W. Ry. Co. v. Cityof Chicago,
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
"A careful reading of each of these cases discloses that they cannot be held to support the contention of appellee in this case. The language of the above statute seems so clear that it hardly admits of construction. However, in the recent case ofChicago Great Western R. Co. v. Ashelford,
"It would seem from the language of this case that the Supreme Court has left but little doubt as to the construction that it places on this statute, and that it only applies where the petition is voluntarily dismissed by the petitioner or where the petitioner fails to pay the compensation within the time fixed by the statute. It is well to bear in mind in the construction of a statute, with reference to the allowance of attorneys' fees, to be taxed against the opposite *200 party, that such statute is in derogation of the common law and that there is no right to have such feees so taxed unless the provision of such statutes clearly warrants the same.
"For the reasons above mentioned the judgment of the trial court is reversed without remanding."
That section 1255a of the Code of Civil Procedure was not intended to apply to an involuntary abandonment is made evident not only by the language used, but also by the evils the statute was intended to remedy. Before section 1255a was added to the Code of Civil Procedure in 1911, the condemnor had the ability to abandon the condemnation suit, even after judgment, and the only expense to the condemnor was the payment of costs, a nominal expense. Under such a situation, whenever the award granted the defendants was, in the condemnor's estimation, excessive or unsatisfactory, the condemnor would abandon the action, pay the nominal costs, retry the action, and repeat this process until a satisfactory award was arrived at. It was to remedy the evils connected with a situation which permitted the condemnor to resort to an action without seriously intending to prosecute it to a conclusion that section 1255a was enacted. (Pacific Gas Elec. Co. v. Chubb, supra.)
Under the general provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure respondents are entitled to their costs as taxed by the trial court, as distinguished from attorneys' fees. For the foregoing reasons, however, it is our opinion that that portion of the judgment of dismissal purporting to allow respondent Halperin attorneys' fees should be, and hereby is reversed. The same reasoning applies to the other twenty-three cases above listed, and for that reason those portions of the various judgments in all of the said cases purporting to allow the respective respondents their attorneys' fees are, and each is hereby reversed. Both sides to bear their own costs on this appeal.
*201Rehearing denied.