247 P. 224 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
E.C. Jaquith was originally the petitioner in this proceeding. After the present appeal was prosecuted he departed this life and Elmer M. Jaquith, executor of the last will and testament of E.C. Jaquith, deceased, was substituted in his place as appellant and petitioner.
This is a proceeding for the writ of prohibition. Petitioner appeals from an order or judgment of the trial court refusing to issue a peremptory writ.
Upon the filing of the petition the trial court issued its alternative writ of prohibition and the writ was served upon the respondents. After some sort of hearing, the nature of which is not clearly confided to us, the court made its order refusing to issue the peremptory writ. The record comes to us by bill of exceptions. The bill recites: "No answer or pleading of any kind was filed by the defendants, or either of them, in said matter above entitled." Following a copy of the petition for the writ and copies of other papers which were served with it, the bill of exceptions next contains the recital that it appearing that the defendants had been duly and regularly served with the writ and other necessary papers, "the matters mentioned in said Petition were argued" by the respective attorneys, whereupon the court "made its order denying said Petition." A copy of the order is then set forth in the bill. It shows: "This matter coming on regularly to be heard," the parties on each side being "represented" by *544 counsel, who are named, and "after hearing the arguments of counsel for both parties and after listening to the authorities cited in support of said arguments, the court being fully advised in the premises, denies the plaintiff's application to make the Writ permanent." This constitutes the total material showing of the bill of exceptions.
[1] Unless we are able to determine from this unsatisfactory record that the court's refusal to issue a peremptory writ did not spring from a failure of appellant to support the allegations of his petition by proof, the court's order must be affirmed without going further. If the record allows the assumption that evidence was introduced and considered, we must also assume that the decision turned upon a question of fact and that the evidence supported the order which was made. We are bound to resolve all possible intendments in favor of the ruling of the court. Section
It now appears that Jackson School District v. Culbert,supra, stands alone, unimpeached by any utterance of the supreme court in any other decision. When the court says in that case, "If the trial court cannot grant the relief upon the pleadings," we think, upon a consideration of what immediately follows the expression, that it meant to decide that a trial court cannot grant the writ upon the petition, where no demurrer or answer is filed. When the *547
court says further, in that case, "As the allegations of the petition are not taken as true because of the default," we understand, considering what follows those words, that the court decides that the allegations of a petition for the writ are not taken as true because of a default. The district court of appeal of the third district was evidently inclined to the same view inFerguson v. Board of Education, supra, although the court found it unnecessary to decide the point, for it was said in the opinion there rendered: "Respondents contend that under section
When we come to apply the Culbert case to the present controversy the situation becomes plain. The trial court could not have issued the writ upon the allegations of the petition. The hearing of evidence to support the pleading must have preceded such a result. This is equivalent to saying that the court could not have tried the facts of the case except upon the consideration of evidence introduced to prove the allegations of the petition, whether the decision were to be rendered on the facts either in favor of or against the petitioner. Of course, the reception of such evidence was not strictly necessary to a denial of the petition, for the court might have refused the writ under the issue of law arising upon the face of the pleading itself. There is, however, no showing by the bill of exceptions that the issuance of the writ was denied on that ground. No demurrer was filed — the bill of exceptions affirmatively shows that. There was no "appearance" in opposition to the petition, but the court permitted "attorneys" of respondent to present argument in his behalf at the hearing of the case which was had. The bill of exceptions is barren of a showing that any objection was made by these attorneys to the legal sufficiency of the petition. Again, the *548 bill does not show that the court entertained or expressed the view that it was insufficient. The bill also fails to show whether or not evidence was heard in support of the petition. In short, we are left altogether in the dark upon the question whether the petition was denied under an issue of fact or under an issue of law. [2] It is a settled rule that the burden is upon one who appeals from a judgment of a superior court to convince the appellate court that it was rendered through error. Under this rule it was incumbent upon appellant to bring to us a bill of exceptions showing, if such was the case, that the denial of the writ for which he prayed did not result from a failure on his part to support his petition by proof. In the absence of such a showing we are bound to assume that the writ was denied for that reason, and not only so, but that the evidence which was heard justified the finding of the trial court that it was not sufficient to warrant the issuance of the writ. These views find ample support, among many cases, in Jackson School Dist. v.Culbert, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
Finlayson, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred.