285 P. 1071 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
The petitioner seeks the writ of mandate to compel the respondent court to receive testimony. Simply stated, the proposition presented to us is this: The petitioner here sued her husband in the respondent court for divorce and incidentally for a division of the community property. She joined the defendant's brother, Oscar Gubin and his wife, Bertha Gubin, as defendants alleging that the two latter held the record title to property, which in truth and in fact belonged to herself and her husband as community property. After Bertha Gubin was called to the stand under section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure, her counsel objected to plaintiff's counsel interrogating her with respect to the sources from which the money was secured with which the property was purchased on the ground that by subdivision 1 of section
We are fully aware of the confident reliance placed by petitioner on the cases of Johnston v. St. Sure,
[2] It is asserted that because Oscar Gubin applied for and was denied a writ of prohibition by another division of this court at a time when testimony was being taken by a court commissioner, to prevent him from receiving the same character of evidence which it is now sought, by this proceeding to compel the respondent court to admit, we are bound by that refusal although the denial was ex parte. Our attention is directed to Reilly
v. Police Court,
A writ of mandate is denied.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred. *334