66 P. 856 | Cal. | 1901
This action is between two corporations, each of which has its principal place of business at San Francisco, to recover damages for alleged injury to real property in Kern County. At the proper time the defendant demanded a change of the place of trial to Kern County, showing, to obtain the order, only the fact that the property alleged to have been injured is in that county. This appeal is from an adverse ruling.
Appellant bases its contention on section
This section is of the nature of a code provision in regard to procedure, and is obviously self-executing, and differs from a statutory code provision only in that it cannot be repealed, nor can its scope and operation be limited by a statute. So far as it conflicts with a statute, the statute must give way.
Apparently, section 16 of article XII of the constitution does provide, as to actions against corporations, that suit may be brought, at the option of the plaintiff, in counties which may not be the county in which the land alleged to have been injured is situated. The section applies to actions of *588
tort, as well as to those founded upon contract. It was expressly so held in Lewis v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.,
Great reliance seems to be placed by appellant upon the case ofFresno National Bank v. Superior Court,
That the constitutional provision is a privilege, given to a plaintiff in actions against corporations, which he may waive, and that in case of such waiver the statutory provision will control, was held in Griffin S. Co. v. Magnolia etc. Co.,
A change of venue could, of course, have been granted, although the plaintiff had brought his suit in a county designated by the constitutional rule of procedure. It is so provided. But this change cannot be made merely on the ground that the legislature has provided that some other county is the proper county in which the case should be tried. This would amount pro tanto to a legislative repeal of a constitutional provision. This is a logical conclusion from Lewis v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.,
The citation of the constitutional debates is not fortunate. Section 16 of article XII of the constitution, though broad enough to include actions arising upon contract, was, I think, undoubtedly mainly designed to apply to actions against railroad corporations for damages. That such actions were removed to a distant county, where the corporation had its principal place of business, was the grievance to be redressed, and this is why it was made a constitutional rule of procedure with which the legislature could not tamper.
The order is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Garoutte, J., Harrison, J., Van Dyke, J., Henshaw, J., and Beatty C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.