46 Cal. 332 | Cal. | 1873
This action was commenced in April, 1868, to set aside a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, Jane Leonora
The Court granted the motion and dismissed the action, and the plaintiffs have appealed.
1. The statute provides that Courts, upon affidavits showing good cause therefor, and upon such terms as may be just, may allow an amendment to any pleading or proceeding. Undoubtedly, Courts should be liberal in allowing amendments, to the end that cases may be fully and fairly presented upon their merits, and that equal and exact justice may be done between the parties. Motions to amend are not, however, to be granted as a matter of course, but only when good cause is shown therefor. Upon looking into the complaint, as amended, we fail to see any good cause for the changes made. It spates the cause of action no more fully than it was already stated in the complaint on file. It omits, it is true, certain admissions favorable to the defendants, but assuming those admissions to be true, and there is no suggestion to the contrary, we are unable to see why they should be stricken out on the eve of a trial, after they had stood for nearly two years, and especially when, as claimed by the defendants, new answers would thereby be made necessary, and different and increased evidence on their part be required. Nor do we perceive that the proposed complaint is less obnoxious than the one to be amended to the objection which afterwards prevailed and caused a dismissal of the action.
2. It is alleged in the complaint that the female plaintiffs are the children and heirs at law of one David Hayden, who intermarried with the defendant Jane Leonora Hayden, in July, 1853, and died in April, 1856; that prior to his intermarriage with the defendant Jane Leonora, he purchased the land in controversy, and for certain reasons, which are stated, caused the title to be conveyed to one Dameron,
The complaint concludes with the prayer that the said judgment may be declared void and set aside, and that the plaintiffs’ respective rights, shares, and interests in and to the said land may be ascertained, settled, adjudged, and declared, and that they be admitted into the possession of the same.
In the light of this summary of the complaint, it is not easy to see why it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Beyond doubt it shows that David Hayden died seized of the property as his separate estate, and that an interest therein descended to the plaintiffs, who have never parted with that interest. It also shows that the judgment against the plaintiffs was obtained by fraudulent practices, and that the defendants had notice of those fraudulent practices and of the rights of the plaintiffs when they bought. If all this can be established by proof it seems to us that the plaintiffs should not be remediless in a Court of
3. Our attention has been called to a stipulation signed by the attorneys of the plaintiffs and defendants, dated January 9th, 1871, and filed in the Court below January 11th, 1871, by which it is, among other things, “ stipulated and agreed that the defendants, and each of them who obtained deeds for any portion of said land, or any interest therein, after the entry of the decree in the action of Jane L. Hayden v. Thomas Hayden and others, being number seven thousand nine hundred and sixty-eight in this Court, paid the purchase money mentioned in their respective deeds thereof at the time of obtaining such deeds, and that each and every one of them made such respective payments and secured such deeds of the lands mentioned in their respective answers, bona fide and without notice of any of the alleged acts of fraud or irregularities charged in the complaint herein, unless the judgment roll and papers on file in the said action of Jane L. Hayden v. Thomas Hayden and others, were constructive notice of such alleged acts of fraud, or of such defects,,or irregularities, or of some of them.”
It does not appear from the record that this stipulation was called to the attention of the Court below when the action was dismissed; nor is it made part of the record on this appeal. We cannot, therefore, regard it in the decision, though, being among the files in the case, it seems not im
If we were at liberty to consider the stipulation in connection with the complaint we should doubtless be satisfied that, as against the defendants, who are parties to it, the plaintiffs have no cause of action. It is alleged in the complaint that the judgment does not appear upon the face of the judgment roll to be invalid, and that being so, all who purchased after it was entered, in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, would be protected by it.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Mr. Chief Justice Wallace did not express an opinion.