110 Cal. 27 | Cal. | 1895
The plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a mortgage executed by the defendant Alfred Clarke to secure payment of his promissory note for $10,200, dated January 11, 1889, and payable to plaintiff, or order, one year after date, with interest.
Johanna F. Clarke and several other persons were made parties defendant, upon the ground that they had or claimed interests in, or liens upon, the mortgaged premises, which interests or liens were alleged to be subsequent and subject to the lien of said mortgage. The defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke did not appear, and their defaults were entered.
The defendant Samuel G. Murphy answered and filed a cross-complaint, setting up that he held a deed of a part of the said mortgaged premises, and of other land? which was executed to him in June, 1891, by the defendants Clarke, and which was absolute in form, but was intended as a mortgage to secure payment of two promissory notes, made by defendant Alfred Clarke, for $3,000 each, with interest, and praying that the said
The defendant the Gray Brothers Artificial Stone Paving Company answered, setting up that it had recovered a judgment in the superior court, in and for the city and county of San Francisco, against the defendant Alfred Clarke, for the sum of $986, and $93.30 costs of suit, which judgment was still in full force and effect, and was a lien on the mortgaged premises superior to the plaintiff’s mortgage and the claim of defendant Murphy.
The defendant E. J. Wilson answered, setting up that he held a grant, bargain, and sale deed of a part of the said mortgaged premises, and of other lands, which was executed to him in September, 1891, by defendant Alfred Clarke, in trust to secure payment of a promissory note for $12,000 and interest, made by said Clarke, on which there was still due and unpaid the sum of $10,450, with a prayer for proper relief.
The cause came on regularly for trial on August 29, 1894, upon the pleadings of the respective parties, and a decree .of foreclosure was entered on November 17, 1894.
The decree recites that “ findings having been duly waived herein, and the court having heard the proofs of the respective parties and the evidence produced in support thereof, and having considered the same, and it appearing to the satisfaction of the court”: 1. That the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke were duly served with summons, together with a copy of the complaint, and that the defaults of said defendants for not appearing and answering were duly entered on August 11, 1894; 2. That the separate answer and cross-complaint of the defendant Samuel G. Murphy was duly and personally served upon the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke; 3. That there is due and owing to the plaintiff from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke, upon the note and mortgage mentioned and set forth in the complaint, the
It is then adjudged that the plaintiff recover from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke the sum of $11,426, with legal interest and counsel fees as aforesaid; that the defendant Murphy recover from the defendant Alfred Clarke the sum of $7,280 with interest; that the defendant the Gray Brothers Artificial Stone iPaving Company recover from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke the sum of $1,106.75, with interest, and $13 costs; that the defendant E. J. Wilson is entitled to recover, as trustee, from the defendant Alfred Clarke, under the note and trust deed set forth in his answer, the amount due, etc.; and that all of the real property described in the complaint of plaintiff, and in the answer and cross-complaint of defendant Murphy, be sold as by law provided, and the proceeds of the sales applied in a manner specified.
In January, 1895, in pursuance of previous notice, the defendants Clarke moved the court to vacate and set aside the judgment and decree entered in the action,
The motion was made upon the judgment-roll, and the affidavits served and filed with the notice. The court denied the motion, and the defendants Clarke appeal from the order denying the same, and from the judgment and decree of foreclosure.
1. The affidavit of service shows a sufficient service of the summons, if such service could be made by a person other than the sheriff, as provided by section 410 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is objected, however, that under the general law declared in section 4176 of the Political Code, and in the County Government act, “ the sheriff must .... serve all process and notices in the manner prescribed by law,” and that service can be made by no other person; that section 410 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in so far as it authorizes service by a person other than the sheriff, is a special law, in conflict with the general law, and the passage of which was inhibited by section 25 of article IV of the constitution, and hence the attempted service thereiin-' der on appellants was insufficient to give the court jurisdiction of their persons.
Without following the very elaborate argument of counsel on this point, it is enough to say that the same point was made in reference to the service of an injunction, and held untenable, in Golden Gate etc. Co. v. Superior Court, 65 Cal. 190. In that case the court, referring to the language above quoted from the Political
Section 410 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not repealed by the County Government Act, as claimed, but was amended and re-enacted in 1893. (Stats. 1893, p. 207.)
It is further objected that the affidavit of service was never filed, and that it was improperly included in the judgment-roll. But the statute did not require the affidavit to be filed. It required only that the summons be returned to the office of the clerk from which it issued, with an affidavit of its service. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 410.) The summons was returned and filed, and the affidavit, as it states, was “ annexed ” thereto. This was sufficient.
2. The objection that no findings were filed and that findings were not waived by appellants is clearly untenable. When they suffered their defaults to be entered and failed to appear at the trial they waived findings. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 634.) Besides, the recitals in the decree constitute sufficient findings, if findings were required.
3. The objection to the judgment and decree, in so far as it is in favor of the Gray Brothers Artificial Stone Paving Company and of E. J. Wilson, must be sustained. The court found that the answer and cross-complaint of Murphy was served on appellants, but there is no finding, and nothing in the record to show, that the pleadings of the paving company and Wilson were ever so served. And the uncontradicted affidavits of appellants, which were filed and used on the hearing of their motion, state positively that the said pleadings were not served on either of them. But without such service the court had no power or authority to grant the
4. The note and mortgage which were the basis of plaintiff’s action were executed only by Alfred Clarke. It was clearly error, therefore, for the court to find that there was due and owing to the plaintiff “ from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke,” upon the said note and mortgage, the sum stated, and to adjudge that plaintiff “ recover from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke” the said sum.
So the judgment pleaded by the Gray Brothers Artificial Stone Paving Company was against Alfred Clarke only, and it was error, therefore, for the court to adjudge that that company “ recover from the defendants Alfred Clarke and Johanna F. Clarke ” the amount of said judgment.
For the errors above noted the judgment and decree should be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Haynes, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and decree are reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J.