112 P. 1103 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1910
The defendant Nuevo Land Company appeals from an order of court denying its motion for a change of place of trial from Los Angeles county, wherein the action was commenced, to the county of Riverside.
The motion was made upon the ground that said defendant was a corporation having its principal place of business in the county of Riverside; that its codefendant Union Hardware and Metal Company was not a necessary or proper party in the action, which involves the determination of an interest or estate in real property located in Riverside county. It appears both from the complaint and affidavit filed in support of the motion that the Nuevo Land Company is a resident of Riverside county.
It is alleged in the complaint that the Union Hardware and Metal Company granted plaintiff an option to purchase certain lands in Riverside county; that within the time specified in the option plaintiff elected to purchase the lands, and that said defendant Union Hardware and Metal Company, for the agreed price, made, executed and delivered to him a *702 grant deed (which is fully set out in the complaint and is without limitations) whereby it conveyed the property to plaintiff; that prior to the execution and delivery of this grant deed plaintiff learned that defendant Nuevo Land Company had entered upon and was in possession of said lands, having seeded the same to grain, all of which was done prior to the giving of the option to purchase; that thereupon plaintiff made inquiry of one Scheller, an officer of the hardware company, as to whether the acts of the Nuevo Land Company were had and taken pursuant to a lease of the land, or by virtue of any authority from the grantor, and was informed by Scheller that no lease had been made to the Nuevo Land Company, and that the acts of the latter in occupying and cultivating the land were without knowledge on the part of the hardware company and wholly unauthorized by it; that relying upon such statements plaintiff completed the purchase; that the Nuevo Land Company, without plaintiff's consent, harvested crops of the value of $4,000 and refused to account to plaintiff for the same or any part thereof, claiming that its acts in entering upon the land and the use thereof in growing and harvesting the crops was under and by virtue of authority so to do granted to it by said hardware company. It is then alleged that "by reason of the conflicting claims of the defendants, to wit, the claim by the Nuevo Land Company that it had a lease of said land from the Union Hardware and Metal Company, and the claim of said Union Hardware and Metal Company that it had no such lease, plaintiff is unable to determine the facts with respect thereto, and therefore joins said defendants in this action in order that the court may determine said matter and render such judgment as is meet and proper in the premises." The prayer is for judgment against both defendants in the sum of $4,000, the alleged value of the crops harvested. It does not appear that the hardware company was ever served with process or that it ever appeared in the action.
It is apparent from the allegations of the complaint that the action is brought upon the theory that plaintiff has sustained damages by reason of the wrongful acts of one or the other, but not both, of said defendants, and not knowing which of the two is the guilty party impleads both in a proceeding that fails to state a cause of action against either, and asks the *703
court to fix the liability. We know of no principle authorizing such a procedure. Respondent asserts that such action clearly comes within sections
The rule is that where an action is brought against two defendants, one of whom resides in the county where the action is commenced and the other a nonresident thereof, the latter is entitled to have the place of trial changed to the county of his residence, unless the resident defendant be a necessary party. (Sayward v. Houghton,
As we view the complaint, it fails to state a cause of action against the Nuevo Land Company, for the reason that it contains nothing whereby it is made to appear that its possession and use of the land (as to which plaintiff had notice when he acquired the same) was not authorized by or held under and by virtue of a lease from plaintiff's grantor; hence, as no cause of action is stated against said Nuevo Land Company, it is not a necessary or proper party. On the other hand, it does not appear from the complaint that such possession *705
and use by the Nuevo Land Company was under or by virtue of any lease made or authority granted by the Union Hardware and Metal Company, or that there has been any breach of covenant on its part; hence, no cause of action is stated against it. It thus appears that if necessary parties are to be determined from the complaint alone, and those only are necessary parties against whom a cause of action is stated, the complaint here presents a case where neither the resident nor nonresident defendant is a necessary party. The defendants occupy the same relative position to each other that they would if both were necessary parties, and, hence, respective rights as to a change of place of trial should be controlled by the converse of the rule applicable to such cases, and which denies the right of a change to the nonresident where both the latter and resident defendant are necessary parties. (McKenzie v. Barling,
There is no merit in appellants' contention that the action is for the determination of an estate or interest in real property lying wholly within Riverside county. It does not appear that either defendant, at the time of instituting the action, claimed any interest in the land, or that either was in the possession thereof.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Allen, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 28, 1911. *706