280 P. 173 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
So far as concerns a decision on the application herein for a writ of mandate, the essential facts are that in an action pending in the Superior Court judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, R.S. Howland, and against the defendant, Sallie O. Scott. An appeal was taken by defendant from the judgment rendered against her, and an undertaking to stay execution of the judgment was duly filed. The sureties on the undertaking failed to justify. Thereafter a new undertaking was filed. In due course an objection by the plaintiff to the effect that said second undertaking was insufficient in form was sustained by the trial court. Plaintiff refused to stipulate that a third undertaking *463 might be supplied by the defendant in which the defects appearing in the second undertaking would be corrected; and on the ground of lack of jurisdiction in the premises the trial court refused to grant an order by which the defendant would be permitted to make the necessary correction in the undertaking. At the same time the trial court ordered execution to issue on the judgment. Before such order could be executed, defendant appealed therefrom; and also filed a third undertaking to stay execution of the judgment, which undertaking is alleged by respondent herein to be sufficient in form, and which fact is not denied by the petitioner.
[1] The purpose of the petition herein is to secure a writ of mandate to compel the clerk of the lower court to issue execution on the judgment.
Without consideration of the effect on the stay of execution of the appeal by the defendant in the action from the order of the trial court directing execution to issue, from a reading of the opinion in the case of Bradley Co. v. Mulcrevy,
"The Code of Civil Procedure fixes no time within which an undertaking to stay execution must be filed. The undertaking may be given at any time before execution of the judgment. (Hill v.Finnigan,
The writ is discharged.
Conrey, P.J., and York, J., concurred.