87 P. 231 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1906
This is an action upon a promissory note and to foreclose a mortgage given to secure said note. The mortgage and note were executed by Charles E. Benedict and his wife, Martha S. Benedict, to the plaintiff. Summons was duly served upon some thirteen defendants, and the defendants so served seem to have defaulted, except the defendant Gertrude Stull, who answered the complaint; and judgment having gone against her, she appeals from said judgment.
The plaintiffs moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that no proper service of the notice of appeal was made upon the Benedicts. The Benedicts are interested in the result of the appeal herein, for the reason that if the judgment should be reversed, and the contention of the appellant that the mortgage is null and void be sustained on a new trial of the case, the Benedicts might be left personally liable on the note, with nothing to be derived from a foreclosure sale to satisfy any part of that liability. They were, therefore, adverse parties, and it was necessary that the Benedicts should have been duly served with the notice of appeal. Pending the hearing of the motion to dismiss the appeal, appellant obtained leave of this court to file affidavits showing said service. These affidavits were subsequently filed and show that service of the notice was attempted to be made by mailing the same in Los Angeles, addressed to the Benedicts in Los Angeles, "at the corner of 20th and Barnard Park, . . . their said place of residence." It appears from this that the residence of the Benedicts was known to the parties making the *50 service; therefore, the service could not be made by mail, but should have been made "by leaving the notice or other paper at his residence, between the hours of eight in the morning and six in the evening, with some person of suitable age and discretion." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1011, subsec. 2.)
The affidavits fail to show that the parties "reside or have their offices in different places," so as to bring the case under section
The affidavit of W. J. Ford, as we understand it, relates to a former attempted appeal which was not perfected and is not before us.
The appeal is dismissed.
Smith, J., and Allen, J., concurred.