36 Cal. 132 | Cal. | 1868
This is an action to recover land. The answer alleges that all the title held by the plaintiff at the time of the commencement of the suit, or at any time since, was derived from one Eri H. Comstock; that one Hestres, who was then the administrator of said Comtock, deceased, before the commencement of this action, and before said plaintiff acquired any title, or interest in, the said land, commenced an action as such administrator to recover the same land against the same defendants; that pending said action the said plaintiff in this suit has succeeded to the interest of said Comstock; that he has since employed counsel to assist in the prosecution of said former suit brought by the said administrator, and that any judgment therein will inure to his benefit; and that said suit is still pending and undetermined. He thereupon prays judgment that this suit be abated.
The Court upon a trial of the issue presented by the answer in abatement, the cause having been submitted on an
If it be conceded that the plaintiff stands in the same position that the administrator of Comstock would have occupied had he brought the second suit, neither the answer nor the facts agreed upon show sufficient to constitute a good answer in abatement, for it does not appear that the same title, or the same injury, or the same subject matter is in controversy in both actions. The cases of Vance v. Olinger, 27 Cal. 358, and Mann v. Rogers, 35 Cal. 315, are in point, and govern this case. It is unnecessary to go over the reasoning 'again now. Besides, it affirmatively appears in the agreed statement of facts, that a new title by patent from the State, had been acquired by the successors of Comstock, subsequent to the commencement of the first suit, and this title could not properly have been in issue in that action. It is true, the agreed statement of facts says it was introduced in evidence by plaintiff, but under objection and exception on .the part of the defendants, on the ground that it had been issued since the commencement of the action. This fact cannot, however, affect the question in this case. The new title was not in issue. Precisely the same matters do not appear to be in controversy or in issue in the two actions. As in Vance v. Olinger, supra, both the answer and the facts agreed upon are «insufficient to entitle defendants to an abatement of the action. Answers in abatement are strictly construed. (Thompson v. Lyon, 14 Cal. 42.) Besides, the judgment should only have been that the suit abate.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings, with directions that the remittitur issue forthwith.