13 P.2d 387 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
This is a motion to dismiss an appeal upon the ground that the judgment appealed from has been paid and fully satisfied.
In a complaint containing only one count, the plaintiff sought to recover a balance of $10,484.91 for certain work done for the defendant city under a written contract, the further sum of $16,759.82 for extra work alleged to have been done in connection with the work covered by the contract, and an additional $10,193.15 for damages alleged to have been caused by the interference of the defendant's agents with the work in question, making a total demand of $37,437.88. The defendant admitted that it owed a portion of the contract price and tendered into court $10,379.18, which amount the plaintiff refused to accept. At the close of the plaintiff's case, the defendant moved for a directed verdict for the amount previously tendered, and "for the purposes of this motion only" conceded that interest on this amount should be allowed for about one year. While the matter of interest on the amount tendered was in dispute, the defendant, contending that the plaintiff was not entitled to interest thereon, since he had refused to accept the same when it first became due, the inclusion of such interest in the amount of a directed verdict being thus authorized, the court directed a verdict for an amount covering the $10,379.18, plus interest in the sum of $726.54. The jury returned a verdict as directed and judgment was entered for $11,105.72 and costs, on October 28, 1931. *682
On October 31, 1931, the plaintiff was notified that the amount of the judgment would be paid upon the receipt of a duly executed satisfaction of judgment. On November 2, 1931, the plaintiff's attorney sent a satisfaction of the judgment to the attorney for the defendant, authorizing him to file the same when he had forwarded the amount of the judgment and costs, and further stating "we hope you will do all that you can to assist us in obtaining the money at the earliest possible date". The amount of the judgment and costs was paid to and accepted by the plaintiff's attorney and on November 14, 1931, there was filed in the clerk's office an instrument which, omitting the formal heading and the acknowledgment, reads as follows:
"Dated Nov. 2nd, 1931.
"RALPH C. CURREN "WELBURN MAYOCK RALPH C. CURREN "WELBURN MAYOCK "Attorneys for Judgment Creditor."
Subsequently, on December 16, 1931, a notice of appeal was filed by the plaintiff, being the appeal to which this motion is directed.
[1] As a general rule, a party may not accept the fruits of a judgment and at the same time appeal from the same (Estate ofAyers,
In Walnut Irr. Dist. v. Burke, supra, the following rule was quoted with approval:
"If all the provisions of a judgment are connected and dependent, so that a part cannot be reversed without a reversal of the whole, a party cannot proceed to enforce such portions of the judgment as are in his favor, and appeal from the part which is against him. In such case the right to proceed on the judgment and enjoy its fruits, and the right to appeal, are not concurrent, but wholly inconsistent, and an election to assert one right is a waiver and renunciation of the other."
In the case before us, the appellant, in his notice of appeal, states that he appeals from the judgment "and from the whole of said judgment". The judgment was entered upon a directed verdict for a specific amount and the judgment cannot be reversed without reversing it all, and the appeal was taken from the whole thereof. Under the rule thus stated, we are unable to see how the judgment in question *684 can now be separated in the manner contended for by appellant.
A further rule is thus quoted and approved in Storke v.Storke,
"`A party may also waive his right to appeal from a judgment or order by acts which are wholly inconsistent with the assertion of the right. Thus if all the provisions of a judgment are connected and dependent, so that a part cannot be reversed without a reversal of the whole, a party cannot proceed to enforce such portions of the judgment as are in his favor, and appeal from the part which is against him'."
[3] If it be assumed that this appellant had the right to accept the amount paid and thereafter appeal from the judgment, we think he waived his right by accepting such payment upon condition that he satisfy the judgment and by executing and authorizing to be filed, a full and complete satisfaction thereof. As was said in In re Baby,
For the reasons given, the appeal is dismissed.
Marks, J., and Thompson (V.N.), J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on August 5, 1932. *685