11 Cal. App. 2d 370 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1936
Judgment was rendered in favor of defendant upon his pleas that the statute of limitations barred plaintiff’s action and that the matter had been previously adjudicated between the parties.
An amendment to the complaint was filed on July 14, 1933, in which plaintiff set forth the life expectancy of both parties and the income of defendant, together with an allegation that if defendant had performed the contract according to its terms she would have received a maintenance for the balance of her life of the value of $60,000. In said amendment she also alleged: “And the value of the services, rents, board
Defendant by his answer pleaded the statute of limitations as a bar to plaintiff’s action and also pleaded as a defense that the subject-matter of the action had been previously adjudicated.
The action came on for trial before a jury but the trial court excused the jury and entertained defendant’s motion to dispose of the matter by first considering his motion to dismiss upon the two grounds hereinabove set forth. Defendant presented the judgment roll in another action between the parties and also the transcript of the testimony of the two parties given in the other action. Thereupon the court made an order sustaining the contentions of defendant and in the judgment in.defendant’s favor provided as follows: “Now, therefore, by reason of the law it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that defendant Arthur M. Free have judgment in the above entitled action on the grounds that said actions and all the material issues thereof have heretofore been adjudicated in the action entitled ‘In the Superior Court of the
The ruling of the trial court that plaintiff’s action was barred by the statute of limitations cannot be upheld. Although it is true that the amended complaint in its final form, containing complete allegations properly set forth, was not filed until November 24, 1934, more than two years after defendant left the residence of plaintiff, it is also true that in July, 1933, and well within the statutory period, plaintiff amended her complaint by setting forth facts as a basis for demanding judgment for the value "of the services performed, and asked judgment in a sum sufficient to include the value of the services. The allegations were not made in an approved manner and the cause of action was not separately stated, but they clearly served as a basis for the second amendment and prevented the running of the statute.
The trial court erred in ruling that the subject-matter of the action had been litigated in superior court action No. 357301. The record does not disclose the exact date of the filing of action No. 357301, but the verification of the complaint was made on May 16, 1933. It is apparent that the two actions were filed at approximately the same time. In action No. 357301 plaintiff sued defendant for $4,000 “for moneys had and received from the plaintiff to and for her use”. Defendant in his answer in that action denied that he “became indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $4,000 or any other sum or at all, for moneys had and received, or for any other matter, or at all ’ ’. The transcript of the testimony of defendant taken in action No. 357301 reads as follows: “The defendant Arthur M. Free testified in said Action No. 357301, that he had received the sum of $4,000 from said plaintiff on or about the 24th day of September, 1931, and that in consideration thereof he released a deed of trust in the sum of $4,500.00 which he held and owned and which was an encumbrance on the home of said plaintiff Eula B. Lovelace.” The testimony of plaintiff given in action No. 357301, as disclosed by the bill of exceptions in the case now before us, is as follows: “Eula B. Lovelace testified that upon the return of defendant from a trip around the world,
It will be noted that in action No. 357301 plaintiff sued in simple language for money had and received and defendant entered a simple denial to "such allegation. The findings of the trial court in that action went far afield from the pleadings. It is not shown by the pleadings or by the findings that
Our attention has been called in the briefs on file to the case of Lovelace v. Free, 140 Cal. App. 264 [35 Pac. (2d) 342]. The judgment in that case was not pleaded in the present ease and it is not now contended that it is a bar to this action.
The judgment is reversed.
Crail, P. J., and Gould, J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition by respondent to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on March 19, 1936.