159 P. 595 | Cal. | 1916
The above-entitled appeals arise out of the same case. Number 2284 is an appeal by the defendants from an order of the superior court made on July 16, 1914, setting aside a default and judgment theretofore entered in the case in favor of the defendants against the plaintiff. Number 2295 is an appeal by the plaintiff from the judgment which was vacated by the order involved in the other appeal. It will make for convenience and brevity to consider the two appeals together.
The complaint stated a cause of action to foreclose a mortgage for the sum of four thousand dollars. The defendants filed an answer containing allegations "by way of cross-complaint," to the effect that the plaintiff sold and conveyed to C.H. Steenbergh the tract of land mortgaged, for the price of six thousand dollars; that Steenbergh paid two thousand dollars thereon, and gave said mortgage as security for the remainder; that plaintiff induced Steenbergh to buy *96 the land by false and frandulent representations as to its quality and character; that on discovering the fraud Steenbergh offered to reconvey the property and rescind the sale and demanded the return of the two thousand dollars paid. The prayer was that the plaintiff take nothing, that the note and mortgage sued on be declared void and canceled, that the sale be rescinded, and that Steenbergh recover of plaintiff two thousand dollars. This document was served on the plaintiff on December 1, 1913, and was filed on December 2, 1913. The default of the plaintiff for not answering the cross-complaint included therein was entered by the clerk on January 12, 1914. On June 1, 1914, the clerk, on motion of the defendants, entered judgment against the plaintiff for the relief asked in the cross-complaint, as above specified. Plaintiff moved to vacate this default and judgment, upon the grounds, first, that the clerk was without jurisdiction to enter the default, and that the court was without jurisdiction to enter the judgment; second, that the default was entered through the mistake, inadvertence, surprise, and excusable neglect of the plaintiff and his attorneys. The court, as above stated, granted the motion and set aside the default and judgment.
The authority of the clerk to enter judgments on default of a party is derived from the first subdivision of section
"1. In an action arising upon contract for the recovery of money or damages only, if . . . no answer has been filed with the clerk of the court within the time specified in the summons, or such further time as may have been granted, the clerk, upon application of the plaintiff, must enter the default of the defendant, and immediately thereafter enter judgment for the amount demanded in the complaint, including the costs, against the defendant."
In the performance of the functions devolved upon him by that subdivision the clerk acts ministerially. He exercises no judicial functions, but is only an agent by whom the judgment is written out and placed upon the record. Consequently, he must conform strictly to the provisions of the statute or his proceedings will be void. (Stearns v. Aguirre,
The question of vacating the default requires further consideration. (See Wharton v. Harlan,
The only other objection to the sufficiency of the showing is that the affidavit of plaintiff's attorney does not expressly *99 declare that he did not discover the fact that it included a cross-complaint, or that he would have filed an answer thereto if he had known the fact, or that he was surprised by the default. While it is true that these statements are not expressly made, the facts stand forth by inference from nearly every act of the parties, as related in the affidavit, between the 1st of December, 1913, and the 1st of June, 1914, when the judgment was entered by the clerk. We shall not give them in detail. The court was amply justified in inferring from the facts stated, and not denied, that the plaintiff's attorney had failed to discover the character of the paper filed as an answer, and that his failure to answer the same, or to proceed earlier to attack the entry of the default, was due solely to inadvertence due to his ignorance of the character of the paper and of the entry of the default. There was no abuse of discretion in setting aside both the default and the judgment.
The judgment which is the subject of the appeal in No. 2295 was vacated by the court below, and, as we have concluded that the order vacating it should be sustained, the proper course for the disposition of the appeal is to dismiss it, since the judgment from which it was taken is no longer in force. The appeal therefrom was taken after the defendants had appealed from the order vacating the judgment, and was made necessary, as a matter of prudence, by the contingency that the defendants might possibly be successful in their appeal from the order. Under such circumstances defendants should not be allowed costs on the dismissal of the appeal.
The order vacating the default and judgment is affirmed and the appeal from said judgment is dismissed. The plaintiff will recover his costs on both appeals.
Sloss, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
*100Hearing in Bank denied.