38 Cal. 596 | Cal. | 1869
This is an action upon an undertaking given on an appeal from a District Court. The judgment in the Court below was for the plaintiff. It appears that the undertaking was given in an action in which one Calderwood was plaintiff, and the defendant, Brooks, and others, were defendants. The action was to recover the possession of real estate. Calderwood obtained a judgment, and Brooks, desiring to appeal and to stay proceedings, gave the undertaking in question for costs and damages, and for the value of the use and occupation of the premises, pending the appeal, with his co-defendants as sureties. The judgment in favor of Calderwood for the possession of the premises was affirmed, with costs to the amount of §41. Calderwood thereafter assigned the undertaking to the plaintiff.
The complaint counts upon both promises—the promise to pay costs and damages, and the promise to pay the value of the use and occupation of the premises. The defendants demurred to the complaint as a whole, and not to the counts separately. The objections taken by the demurrer were: First—That the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Second—That the complaint is ambiguous, unintelligible and uncertain. Under the first, a multitude of supposed defects were specified; under the last, none were specified. The demurrer was overruled, and this riding is alleged to be erroneous.
It is insisted, among other grounds, that the demurrer ought to have been sustained: First—Because it did not appear from the complaint that the Court in which the undertaking was filed had jurisdiction to render the judgment from which the appeal was taken, and to receive the undertaking upon which this action is brought. Second— Because it is not averred that the undertaking had the effect to stay proceedings upon the judgment from which the appeal was taken. Third—Because the terms of the undertaking are not sufficiently alleged or set forth. Fourth— Because it does not appear that any execution had been
Some, and perhaps all, of these alleged defects do not affect the entire complaint, and, therefore, as suggested by counsel for the respondent, the ruling of the Court upon the demurrer was probably correct for that reason; but as all of these objections were renewed upon the trial, and again decided against the defendants, we shall consider them without regard to the manner or place of their coming.
First—The objection that the jurisdiction of the Court to receive the undertaking is not shown, is untenable. It appears from the complaint that the action was for the possession of land, and that it was brought in the District Court of the Twelfth Judicial District. We know of no mode in which the jurisdiction of the Court could have been more satisfactorily alleged. Instead of a failure to allege jurisdiction, conceding such an allegation to have been necessary, the facts upon which jurisdiction depended are' fully stated, although a general averment would have been sufficient. (Practice Act, Sec. 59.) But, independent of this consideration, the jurisdiction of the Court, in the case in which the undertaking was given, cannot be questioned by the sureties, for the judgment of the appellate Court is conclusive upon the appellant as to the jurisdiction of the Court, as well as to all other matters involved in the case, and is, therefore, conclusive upon his sureties also. (Hathaway v. Davis, 33 Cal. 161; Riddle v. Baker, 13 Id. 295; Irwin v. Backus, 25 Id. 223.)
Second—The objection that it does not appear that the undertaking had the effect to stay execution is grounded upon
Third—The point that the copy of the undertaking set out in the body of the complaint must be treated as evidence merely, and that without it the complaint is defective, is sufficiently answered by the cases of Stoddard v. Treadwell (26 Cal. 302) and Hallock v. Jaudin (34 Id. 175). A contract may be declared on according to its legal effect, or in haee verba, and where the latter is the case it must be taken and considered as a part of the complaint.
Fourth—The point, that the complaint is bad, because it contains no averment that an execution had been issued and returned unsatisfied, and because no demand for payment
Fifth, Sixth—The point that an assignee of an undertaking on appeal cannot recover, without also alleging and proving an assignment of the judgment, or the claim which has been' secured by the undertaking, is probably well taken. The undertaking is a promise to pay a particular debt or obligation of another person and not to pay money generally, and whoever claims a performance must, doubtless, show that the debt or obligation is due to him, and this he cannot do, if he is not the plaintiff in the judgment, unless he proves an assignment. But the further point, upon which this point is founded, that the assignment from Calderwood to the plaintiff is of the undertaking only, and not of his claim
Seventh—In support of the demurrer it is, lastly, urged that it is not averred that Calderwood was entitled to possession pending the appeal, and is not therefore, as argued, entitled to the rents and profits. Such an averment would have been idle and useless had it been made, for the right to possession as against Brooks, and therefore as against his .sureties pending the appeal, followed conclusively from the judgment against him for the possession, which judgment is alleged.
Our conclusion upon this branch of the case is that the Court below did not err in its ruling upon the demurrer.
Notwithstanding the points made upon the demurrer were numerous, they did not exhaust the law of this case. Other points, scarcely less numerous, arose upon the trial of the issues of fact, some of which are yet to be considered.
The action in which the undertaking in suit was given, was commenced on the 4th of April, 1863; the judgment was entered on the 14th of November, 1864, and the undertaking was filed on the 23d of April, 1865. In answer to the claim for use and occupation pending the appeal, the defendants proposed to prove by proper and competent evidence that in March, 1861, one Edmond Brooks brought an action of ejectment against Calderwood and the defendant, R. C.
The defendants next proposed to prove by competent evidence that in December, 1863, Edmond Brooks commenced an action against Calderwood and R. C. Brooks, with others^ to quiet his title to the premises in question; that. Calder-wood answered on the 20th of January, 1864, and that a judgment quieting the title was entered on the 19th of June, 1865/ the object being to show thereby that R. C. Brooks was not in possession of the premises at the time the undertaking in question was given, or at any time thereafter, pending his appeal; that, on the contrary, the premises were during all that time in the exclusive possession of Edmond Brooks, under title paramount to the pretended title of Calderwood, from which it is argued that neither R. C. Brooks nor his sureties can be held to answer for the value of the use and occupation, which they undertook and promised to pay. This testimony was also excluded, the defendants excepting.
(a)—So far as the foregoing testimony was offered in
(b)—We also think the testimony was properly excluded, so far as it was offered in support of a counter claim. Conceding that the assignment from Edmond Brooks to Shirley was made before Calderwood’s assignment to the plaintiff, or before notice thereof was communicated to Shirley—facts
Judgment and order affirmed.
Mr. Justice Sprague delivered no opinion.