108 Cal. 446 | Cal. | 1895
Petition for a writ of prohibition commanding the superior court of the chy and county of San Francisco, and the judge thereof, to desist and refrain from any further proceedings on a motion in said court for an order requiring the petitioner to pay certain money into said court. The application for the writ was submitted here upon an objection by respondents, in the nature of a demurrer, to the sufficiency of the petition; and for the purposes of the decision the averments of the petition must be taken as true.
The petitioner in May, 1889, commenced an action in the nature of an interpleader in said superior courtf entitled “Kaufman v. Shain et al.” The complaint in the said action was subsequently amended, and its averments were substantially these: That plaintiff (Kaufman, petitioner herein), as assignee of one Mackenzie, an insolvent, was in possession of five thousand seven hundred and sixty-nine dollars and fifty-two cents, assets of said insolvent, which was claimed by various persons in hostility to each other, who are made parties defendant; that litigation was pending in which the rights of some of the defendants to said money was involved; that plaintiff claimed no interest in said money,
“ Wherefore, by virtue of the law, and by reason of the premises aforesaid, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that C. H. Kaufman, plaintiff, do take nothing by this his action as against Joseph E. Shain et al., defendants, but that a judgment of dismissal be, and the same hereby is, entered herein that said defendants have and receive their costs incurred herein, amounting to the sum of $-. Judgment recorded March 14, 1894, B. 19, p. 433.”
Afterward, on May 1, 1894, defendant Davis filed and served a notice of motion to amend the said order of October 10, 1890, by striking therefrom the words:
“It is further ordered by the court that this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed”; and also, on said May 1, 1894, served a notice of motion to amend the said judgment of dismissal entered March 14, 1894, so as to make it affect only Herrlich and Hanlon alone, and not Joseph E. Shain et al. These motions were afterward heard and submitted, and on August 20, 1894, the court made the following order: “The minute order of October 10,1890, is amended by striking out the words, ‘ it is further ordered by the court that*449 this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed/ and' the judgment entered in the clerk’s office, and recorded, there on the 14th day of March, 1894, is set aside. August 20, 1894.
[signed.] “ William T. Wallace, Judge. ’:v
From this order of August 20,1894, the said Kaufman,, plaintiff in said action and petitioner in this proceeding, duly appealed to this court, and his appeal is now here pending.
After the said order of October 10, 1890, dismissing said action, viz; on August 18, 1891, the judge of said court made an order authorizing Kaufman to withdraw from the county treasury, where it had been deposited, the said sum of money, less a small amount levied against it for taxes, and, in pursuance of said order, Kaufman withdrew said money. Before said appeal had been taken, as aforesaid, the said Davis gave notice of a motion for an order requiring said Kaufman to pay said mopey into court with interest; and said motion came up for hearing after said appeal had been taken, when the judge of said court, respondent herein, announced that as an appeal had been taken from the order of August. 20, 1894, he would not proceed with the hearing of said motion, adding that he would not proceed unless compelled to do so by the supreme court of this state. Thereupon the said Davis, on September 21, 1894, petitioned the supreme court for a writ of mandate to compel the said judge to proceed with the hearing of said motion; and this court, on January 5, 1895, after a hearing, denied said writ and dismissed the proceeding. Nevertheless, the said Davis, on February 1, 1895, again called up said motion to compel said payment of said money into court; and, after argument, the judge (respondent herein) announced from, the bench that he would entertain said motion, would consider it as submitted, and would grant the order for-the said payment of said money into court; but that he-would give petitioner sufficient time, before entering-said order, to petition this court for a writ of prohibí»
There can be no doubt that the writ should issue. The case is clearly within the rule of Livermore v. Campbell, 52 Cal. 75, and that case furnishes an answer to the positions taken by counsel for respondents. The order of August 20, 1894, setting aside the former judgment of dismissal, was undoubtedly an appealable order, as expressly held in Livermore v. Campbell, supra; and, as was said in that case, “ until such appeal is heard, this court will not inquire whether the court or clerk had or had not jurisdiction to enter the judgment. The case being in this court by appeal, the court below cannot proceed in it until the appeal is heard and determined. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 946.)” As we said when the petition for a writ of mandate to compel the respondents to proceed with the motion was before us, “ whether the appellant was really a ‘ party aggrieved’ ” is a question which we cannot determine on this proceeding. (9 Cal. Dec. 944.)
Let a peremptory writ issue as prayed for.
Van Fleet, J., Henshaw, J., Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., and Beatty, O. J., concurred.