22 Cal. 635 | Cal. | 1863
It is objected that, as the notice appeal was not filed until the lapse of more than one year from the date of default entered against John G. Gimmy, the appeal as to him is too late, and should be dismissed. The statute, however, clearly gives the parties a right to appeal at any time within one year from the rendition of the final judgment in the case. Any interlocutory judgment which may have been rendered does not form the basis for an appeal, and if it did, it would not bar the right of the defendant to appeal from the final judgment which determines the suit between the parties. (Gray v. Palmer, 9 Cal. 616; Johnson v. Dopkins, 6 Id. 83.)
The appellants also contend that the complaint merely avers that certain property is common properly, and does not state sufficiently the particular facts, showing that it is entitled to that character, and that, therefore, it contains no cause of action, referring to the case of Dye v. Dye (11 Cal. 163). The averment is, that “ during the cohabitation of said parties he was possessed of certain real estate, their common property,” etc. The rule is well settled that where a statute gives a right of action, where none existed before, the complaint in such case should show “ that the offense or act charged
It is also objected that the homestead of the parties is not common property, and therefore not the subject of division after the parties are divorced. The homestead may be established upon the common property of the husband and wife, or the separate estate of the husband. (Taylor v. Hargous, 4 Cal. 273; Revalk v. Kraemer, 8 Id. 71; Lies v. De Diablar, 12 Id. 330; Gee v. Moore, 14 Id. 474.) When a homestead is once impressed upon the common property, the character of the estate is to a certain extent changed, and it is no longer subject to some of the incidents of common property. It can no longer be sold, conveyed, or incumbered by the husband alone, as it could before, and this was clearly the meaning of this Court when it said, In the matter of Buchanan’s Estate (8 Cal. 509), “ the homestead is not common property, but a sort of joint tenancy, with the right of survivorship.” (Cook v. McChristian, 4 Cal. 27; Taylor v. Hargous, 4 Id. 273; Pool v. Gerrard, 6 Id. 73; Estate of Tompkins, 12 Id. 125.) There is no valid objection to a division of the homestead, which may have
The complaint sufficiently alleges the fraudulent character of the judgments confessed by the husband, and of the conveyance by him to his mother, and of the intention of the parties to defraud the plaintiff thereby, to sustain the injunction and the final decree relating thereto.
We see no good reason for disturbing the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.
The decision in this case was rendered at the same time with that in the preceding case of Gimmy v. Gimmy, and a petition for rehearing, applicable to both cases, was filed by appellant, upon which the following decision was rendered by Crocker, J.—Norton, J. concurring:
The appellant, in his petition for a rehearing in the above cases, relies with much confidence upon the alleged insufficiency of the averments in the complaints respecting the property which was the subject matter of the litigation. It is true that these averments are quite too general in them terms, there being a want of precision and certainty, and if demurrers had been filed to them on the ground that they were ambiguous and uncertain they would undoubtedly have been sustained. But the appellant having failed to demur, he is deemed to have waived the same. (Practice Act, Sec. 45.) They do not properly come within the latter clause of said section, because sufficient facts are stated, although they lack the requisite precision and certainty in the manner of their statement.
Rehearing denied.