114 P. 978 | Cal. | 1911
Petitioner asked for a writ of review directed to the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, and Hon. Thomas F. Graham, one of the judges thereof. Upon reading and considering said petition, this court, being of the opinion that the appropriate remedy under the facts stated was an alternative writ of mandate, such writ was accordingly issued.
There is no controversy respecting the facts alleged in the petition, which, briefly stated, are as follows: On October 27, *476 1909, judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the justices' court of the city and county of San Francisco in the case of H.S. Ripley v. Golden Gate Tile Co., a corporation. On November 3, 1909, defendant regularly served and filed its notice of appeal from said judgment and on the same day an undertaking on appeal was duly filed. On the twenty-fourth day of November, 1909, notice of the filing of said undertaking was duly served on plaintiff's attorneys and filed. It will be seen that all of these transactions occurred within a period of twenty-eight days. Subsequently a motion to dismiss the appeal was made and after a hearing by the court was granted. The ground of the motion was that the appellant had not complied with the provisions of section 978a of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The first question which we shall determine is this: Conceding that the superior court's finding that it was without jurisdiction to consider the case on appeal was erroneous, may this court by a writ of mandamus compel it to proceed to a trial of the action? For a long time this court held that where a superior court erroneously concludes that it is without jurisdiction to try a cause appealed from a justice's court, its action in dismissing the appeal cannot be disturbed. That the court now inclines to a different doctrine is evidenced in the granting of the alternative writ herein, as well as in making peremptory by an order from the bench a similar writ: In the Matter of R.B. Vinson, S.F. No. 5472. The facts in that case were as follows: A notice and an undertaking on appeal were filed, but the sureties having failed to justify after exception, a second motion was filed and all the steps required to perfect the appeal were taken within the time prescribed by law. This court held that the first attempted appeal was ineffectual for any purpose; that the other appeal was properly perfected; and that the superior court should proceed to try the cause. In the Matter of Vinson, application for a writ had been made to the district court of appeal of the first appellate district. Being unable to agree, the justices of that court filed separate opinions setting forth their views.
Mr. Justice Kerrigan, in his opinion, while conceding that the case of Buckley v. Superior Court,
"Mandamus lies to compel an inferior court to act when it has neglected or refused to do so. (19 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., p. 827.) A writ of review is the proper remedy when such a court has acted, but in acting has exceeded its jurisdiction. (Spelling on Injunctions and other Extraordinary Remedies, vol. 2, sec. 1958.)
"Where a superior court has no jurisdiction of an appeal from a justice's court, because, for example, of some defect in the appeal, the superior court may be restrained from proceeding to hear and determine such a case. (Swem v. Monroe,
"And it would seem that the converse of this proposition must be true, and that where a court has jurisdiction of a cause, it should not be permitted, by an arbitrary or erroneous order, to divest itself of jurisdiction, but it should be compelled to proceed with the case to judgment. Under the circumstances mentioned it has been held that either writ of mandamus or the writ of review is proper. (Snover v. Tinsman,
"In the case of State ex. rel. Shannon v. Hunter,
"Merrill on Mandamus, after reviewing the authorities on the question whether mandamus lies in case of the erroneous dismissal of an appeal by an inferior court, says (at pages 256 and 257, sec. 205): `The weight of authority seems to be that a writ ofmandamus will lie in all cases to compel the reinstatement of an appeal except when another remedy . . . is provided by statute.' Again in section 203 he says: `When a court refuses to proceed to try a cause, erroneously deciding that it has no jurisdiction, it will be compelled by the writ of mandamus to assume jurisdiction and proceed with the cause.' (See, also, section 206.)
"In the case of State ex rel. v. Philips, 97 Mo. 331, [10 S.W. 855, 3 L.R.A. 476], after citing and quoting from a great many cases, the court says (at page 346): `The weight of authority, and certainly of reason, would seem to say that, if the lower court has plainly erred on a point of practice, either by misapprehending its own rules, or a plain rule of law, and in consequence has dismissed an appeal, mandamus will lie to correct and remedy the erroneous or arbitrary exercise of its discretion, notwithstanding it has acted.'
"And In re Parker,
"Again in Harrington v. Holler, U.S. 796, [4 Sup. Ct., 697, 28 L. Ed. 602], it was held that a dismissal was a refusal to hear and decide a cause, and that mandamus was the proper remedy to compel the court to entertain the case and to proceed with its determination. See, also, Hallon Parker, Petitioner,
"Under the authorities just referred to, it not only appears *479 that under circumstances such as are present here the aggrieved party is entitled to relief, but also that mandamus is the appropriate remedy. However, according to another view, a writ ofcertiorari is the proper remedy. But the pleadings are in such shape here that I think that the petitioner is unembarrassed by the question of remedy. The petition in this proceeding sets forth that the superior court refused to proceed with the trial of the case, and a writ of mandate is prayed for; and if it were not for certain allegations in the answer of respondent, the petitioner would fail or succeed as he is entitled or not to a writ of mandate. But the undenied facts set forth in the petition with the allegations of the answer, and the exhibits attached, show a sufficient application for a writ of review. The two pleadings embrace all the matters and things that would be required in such an application. It is true that the petitioner prays for a writ of mandate, but notwithstanding this, or what he may denominate the proceeding, he may be granted the relief to which the admitted facts show him entitled. Perhaps when respondent drew his answer setting forth the record of the proceedings in the lower court, he was in the same frame of mind as at the time of the oral argument before this court when, in effect, he waived any objection to the remedy.
"With the exception of the case of Buckley v. Superior Court,
"In Hall v. Superior Court,
"In Myrick v. Superior Court,
"In Null v. Superior Court,
"If an inferior court should make a finding in favor of its jurisdiction, basing the finding on conflicting evidence, it must be conceded that such a determination would be conclusive upon this court; but where there is no conflict in the evidence, thus presenting a clear question of law only, and an inferior court holds that it has jurisdiction when under the uncontradicted evidence it has not, then its judgment may be annulled on writ of review. `While a writ of review is not a writ of error, and is not a means by which, as upon appeal, the mere manner of conducting the proceedings, the rulings of the court upon questions of evidence, and other matters within the jurisdiction, involving the merits, however erroneous they may be, can be reviewed, it is, nevertheless, a means by which the power of the court in the premises can be inquired into; and for this purpose the review extends *481
not only to the whole of the record of the court below, but even to the evidence itself where necessary to determine the jurisdictional fact.' (Schwarz v. Superior Court,
"`In many cases jurisdictional facts may not appear of record, either by failure of the inferior court or officer to follow the requirements of the law and make them of record, or because the law does not require it to be done. In such cases this court and all other courts having jurisdiction to review and correct the proceedings of inferior courts, would be powerless, unless it can compel the inferior tribunal to certify to this court not only what is technically denominated the record, but such facts, or the evidence of them, as may be necessary to determine whatever questions as to the jurisdiction of the inferior tribunal may be involved, and the grossest abuses of power, to the great reproach of the law, might be perpetrated with impunity and without the possibility of a remedy.' (Blair v. Hamilton,
"The case of Buckley v. Superior Court,
"The function of the writs of mandamus and review is often much the same; yet under circumstances such as prevail here, and leaving out of consideration the California cases hereinbefore referred to which were reversed by the Buckley case, the writ ofmandamus has been invariably granted, and when not granted it has generally been because there was another remedy by writ of error or by appeal. (Merrill on Mandamus, sec. 205 et seq.) Here the appeal was perfected, and the superior court had jurisdiction, and it should have proceeded to entertain and decide the cause. Entertaining these views, it is my opinion that the writ ofmandamus should issue as prayed for."
We now come to the discussion of the merits of the question whether or not the superior court obtained jurisdiction of the appeal. This involves an examination of sections 974, 978 and 978a of the Code of Civil Procedure. The first named section provides that the aggrieved party may appeal at any time within thirty days after the rendition of judgment, and that "the appeal is taken by filing a notice of appeal with the justice or judge and serving a copy on the adverse party." Section 978 is to the effect that an appeal from a justice's court is ineffectual for any purpose without the filing of the undertaking therein prescribed. Section 978a is as follows: "The undertaking on appeal must be filed within five days after the filing of the notice of appeal and notice of the filing of the undertaking must be given to the respondent. The adverse party may except to the sufficiency of the sureties within five days after the filing of the undertaking, and unless they or other sureties justify before the justice or judge within five days thereafter, upon notice to the adverse party, to the amounts stated in their affidavits, the appeal must be regarded as if no such undertaking had been given."
Respondents contend that under the section last quoted the notice of the filing of the undertaking on appeal must be served at the time of such filing so that the adverse party may have five days after the filing and notice in which to except to the sureties. The statute does not so provide. While the *483 undertaking on appeal must be filed within five days after the filing of notice of appeal, no time is specified during which notice of the filing of the undertaking must be given to the respondent. It is contended, however, that as respondents' five days within which exception to the sureties may be taken runs from the filing of the undertaking and not from the notice of such filing, appellant might deprive his adversary of the right of questioning the sufficiency of the sureties by the simple device of waiting more than five days before giving notice — that the very object of the code section is to save a successful litigant from the trouble of daily inspection of the justice's record to learn whether or not the losing party has filed an undertaking. Perhaps that was the purpose of the legislature in enacting said section 978a, and perhaps in a case where that question was involved, we might determine that the period of five days allowed respondent for exception to the sureties begins to run only after the service of notice upon him. Such construction would be reasonable and would be just as readily reached under the language of the statutes as one requiring almost contemporaneous filing of an appeal-bond and service of notice on the opposite party. But without reading anything into any of these code sections, we find: 1. That appellant has thirty days from the rendition of judgment within which to appeal; 2. That his first step is the filing of a notice of appeal and service thereof on the adverse party (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 974); 3. That to make his appeal effectual he must file the required undertaking (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 978); 4. That said undertaking on appeal must be filed within five days after the filing of the notice of appeal; 5. That respondent must be given notice of the filing of the undertaking (sec. 978a). All of these things were done by appellant within thirty days after rendition of judgment. Respondent is not here complaining that he had no chance to except to the sureties. Practically, he wishes us to add the word "immediately" at the end of the first sentence of section 978a of the Code of Civil Procedure, so that the latter part of that sentence would read, "and notice of the filing of the undertaking must be given to the respondent immediately." He asks us to interpolate a word in this section that the legislature did not put there, and, after doing so, to declare that jurisdiction of the appeal was never obtained *484 by the superior court because appellant did not supply the missing word and act upon its direction. We cannot agree with any such contention. The necessary steps to give the superior court jurisdiction of the appeal were all taken. The said appeal was regularly and properly before that court, and petitioner is therefore entitled to a writ of mandate.
Let the writ issue accordingly.
Henshaw, J., Angellotti, J., Shaw, J., Sloss, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.