68 P. 1022 | Cal. | 1902
Respondent herein applied to the court below for a writ ofcertiorari for the purpose of annulling a judgment of the justice's court in the case of Harvey Moore v. H.E. Adams and John Elder. Judgment was rendered in his favor and the defendants have appealed. The ground of the application is, that the petitioner had no notice or knowledge of the time fixed for the trial of the cause in said justice's court, that he had no knowledge of the recovery of the judgment therein for more than thirty days thereafter, and that he had no appeal, or any plain, speedy, or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law in the premises. The return to the writ on behalf of the appellant shows that the cause of Moore v. Adams et al. was commenced August 27, 1894; that on October 25th of the same year said Elder answered in said action by general denial and a plea of discharge in insolvency; that for some reason unexplained the cause was allowed to slumber for over four years, until April 22, 1899. The following from the return shows the only notice given, or attempted to have been given, setting the cause for trial: He (the justice) upon the application of the plaintiff, "thereupon called up said Edwards on the telephone and informed him that attorney for plaintiff in said action desired the case set for trial at 10 o'clock A.M., May 3, 1899, if it would suit him, said Edwards; that said Edwards replied in substance that he did not remember the case, and that said justice told him the title of the case, and that it was an old case of Justice Austin's docket, in which said Edwards appeared as attorney for John Elder, a defendant therein; that said Edwards replied that he remembered appearing for a man of that *366 name, but had not seen him for a long time; did not know where he then was, but that it would be all right to go ahead." A transcript of the docket accompanying the return shows that at the trial said defendant failed to appear, either in person or by counsel.
It is provided by section
The appellant in fact says he is not "contending that a verbal notice over a telephone constituted a sufficient notice under section
The notice setting the case for trial is jurisdictional, and proof of service is as essential as in case of the summons. The code not only requires the notice to be in writing, but also prescribes the mode of serving the same. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1010, 1011.) Service of summons may be waived by appearance, which is made a matter of record, not by *367
talking over the telephone; and the like rule applies in the case of this notice setting the cause for trial. In Jones v. Justice'sCourt,
This cause was heard in the court below upon the petition or affidavit of the respondent, and the return thereto on the part of the appellant, and findings were not necessary, if required at all, in such proceeding. "The review upon this writ cannot be extended further than to determine whether the inferior tribunal, board, or officer has regularly pursued the authority of such tribunal, board, or officer." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1074.) Under the facts and circumstances disclosed in this case, certiorari was the proper remedy, and it cannot well be said there was unnecessary delay when it appears the proceeding was initiated as soon as the respondent had knowledge of the judgment against him, and then the time for appeal had expired.
Respondent having failed to file any brief, appellant suggests that he "seems to have lost interest in the case after he obtained the release of the property levied upon by the judgment." If this be so, it does not follow that the judgment appealed from should be reversed without some material errors appearing, and we have failed to discover any such.
The judgment is affirmed.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied. *368