186 P. 1049 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
This action was brought to obtain a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the defendant Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railway Company to the plaintiff to secure an issue of bonds of said Railway Company.
The defendant Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railway Company was the only defendant designated in the complaint by its true name, and was the only defendant ever served with summons. Several persons were designated in the caption of the complaint and also in the body thereof as First Doe, Second Doe, and so forth, and as to these it was alleged that their true names were unknown to the plaintiff, and it prayed that when their names were ascertained the complaint might be amended by inserting their true names in lieu of said fictitious names.
Before the trial of the action, and without any service of summons on him as one of the defendants whose true name was unknown and who was sued by a fictitious name, and without any service at all of process upon him, one J. A. Nesbitt filed a demurrer to the complaint in the words and figures as follows, to wit: (After the title of the court and cause:) "Comes now J. A. Nesbitt, one of the stockholders of the defendant Stockton Terminal and Eastern Railway Company, and, as the defendant First Doe mentioned and *560 referred to in the plaintiff's complaint in this action, and demurs to the plaintiff's said complaint on file herein on the ground that the facts therein stated are not sufficient to constitute a cause of action or to entitle plaintiff to any relief whatever, wherefore said defendant prays judgment on this, his demurrer."
Thereafter the plaintiff moved the court to strike said demurrer from the files, which motion was granted.
Mr. Nesbitt appeals from the judgment of foreclosure rendered in this action, and claims that the court erred in striking his demurrer from the files. The only point raised in his appeal is the correctness of the court's ruling in this matter.
Section
"When the plaintiff is ignorant of the name of a defendant, he must state that fact in the complaint, and such defendant may be designated in any pleading or proceeding by any name, and when his true name is discovered, the pleading or proceeding must be amended accordingly."
The purpose of this section is obvious from the reading. Cases may arise and do arise where the plaintiff has in mind a person he deems a proper or necessary party defendant, but of whose true name he is ignorant. In such case he may bring his suit, alleging the fact of his ignorance of the true name of the party, and designating him by any name, and when his true name is ascertained amend his pleading by inserting it therein, but it must be a genuine case of ignorance of the true name of the party.
[1] The plaintiff's ignorance of the true name of the defendant must be real and not feigned. It must not be willful ignorance, or such as might be removed by some inquiry or resort to information easily accessible. (Rosencrantz v.Rogers,
[2] It is true, as stated by counsel for respondent, that a litigant has a right to select the persons whom he desires be made defendants in the action.
It must be apparent that if the plaintiff has not in some way made Mr. Nesbitt a party to the action he had no right to appear therein by demurrer. He was not by name a party to the suit, and he was not served as one of those sued by a fictitious name. It was for the plaintiff to make known in some way the real persons whom he desired as defendants *561 and whom he sued by fictitious names. This he can do by a service of summons on the person, stating that he was the person sued as John Doe, or by recognizing such person as a proper party litigant if he appeared without service of summons.
The plaintiff did neither of these things in this case. That the plaintiff did not sue Mr. Nesbitt under a fictitious name is apparent from the record in the case. His name, as stated, nowhere appears in the complaint. That he was not intended to be made a party to the action sued by the fictitious name of First Doe finds support in the fact that he did not have any summons served upon him, and by the affirmative act of the plaintiff in that, after he had appeared in the action, the plaintiff made his motion to have his demurrer stricken from the files. If he were the person intended to be designated in the complaint as First Doe, and if the plaintiff had selected him as one of the persons he was suing, he would not have moved to have him dismissed from the action. His voluntary appearance would have been to the benefit of the plaintiff if he desired him as a defendant, in that by so doing it saved him the trouble and expense of getting service upon him.
It would be a novel proposition that in an action wherein certain fictitious names are stated, with the further allegation that their true names are unknown, any person in the county could, without service upon him, decide for himself that he was the person intended to be sued and make his appearance in the case against the wishes of the plaintiff.
[3] Mr. Nesbitt had no more right to assume that he had been sued as First Doe than any other stockholder of the company, or any other resident of San Joaquin county. In other words, it was for the plaintiff to designate by the service of summons whom he intended to sue under the fictitious name of First Doe, and not for any and every person in the county to decide for himself whether he was the person intended.
The case of Dietrich v. Steam Dredge Co.,
The argument above quoted leaves nothing to be added.
If it were true that Mr. Nesbitt, as a stockholder of the defendant corporation, had an interest which he felt it was his duty to protect by becoming a party to the suit, the law pointed out the method for him to pursue. He could have asked leave of the court to file a petition in intervention, and then, as stated above, the court and not Mr. Nesbitt would have passed upon the question of whether he had such an interest in the suit and in the litigation as made it proper for him to become a party thereto.
In Waymire v. San Francisco Ry. Co.,
As to Mr. Nesbitt's point that, "It is irregular to enter judgment against a defendant in whose behalf a demurrer has been filed without disposing of the demurrer and a judgment so entered will be reversed on appeal," it may be said that in all the cases cited by him bearing thereon it appears the defendants who had filed demurrers were defendants, parties tothe suit, and properly before the court. Mr. Nesbitt was not a defendant, was not a party to the suit, and was not properly before the court. It is a defendant's demurrer that must be disposed of before a judgment can properly be entered, but not a paper filed by a stranger to the litigation. It may be added that the so-called demurrer was properly disposed of in this case before the entry of judgment.
[4] The court committed no error in striking the demurrer of Mr. Nesbitt from the files. This disposes of the case upon its merits, and an order will be entered affirming the judgment.
A motion has also been made by the respondent to dismiss the appeal, but, as the case has been disposed of upon other grounds, it is not necessary to pass upon the motion.
Hart, J., and Burnett, J., concurred.