200 P. 85 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1921
Upon filing the petition herein an alternative writ of prohibition was issued, in response to which the respondent has made return, from which and the petition it appears that on June 9, 1919, Eva D. Dell obtained an interlocutory judgment for divorce against George L. Dell, petitioner herein, as to the validity of which judgment no question is made. Thereafter the parties effected a reconciliation and in December, 1919, resumed their marital relations which, except for temporary interruptions, continued to April 28, 1921, when they again separated and Eva D. Dell instituted another action for divorce against *438 her husband, wherein she asked for an order requiring him, as defendant therein, to pay certain moneys as attorney's fees, alimony, and costs. About the same time, by a motion made in the first action based upon the ground that subsequent to the rendition of the interlocutory judgment therein the parties had resumed their relations as husband and wife, she applied to the court asking it to annul and vacate the interlocutory judgment, which motion the court threatens to and will, unless restrained, grant.
[1] As stated, the regularity and validity of the judgment is not questioned, and the application to so annul it was not made until nearly two years after its rendition. The law seems to be well settled that a court has no power. to set aside or vacate on motion a judgment not void upon its face, unless the motion is made within the time fixed by section
[2] While the court in a divorce action, as held in Olson v.Superior Court,
Conceding the court is without jurisdiction to grant the motion, respondent insists that petitioner's remedy for such unwarranted action, if had, is by an appeal. [3] While it is true that a writ of prohibition will not ordinarily issue where there is a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law (Lindley v. Superior Court,
The trial court is without jurisdiction to entertain the motion or make the order therein applied for, and under the circumstances, conceding that petitioner might appeal therefrom, it would not afford him an adequate remedy for the unwarranted action.
The alternative writ of prohibition heretofore granted is made permanent.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred. *440