133 P. 480 | Cal. | 1913
This action, brought under the McEnerney Act, was commenced in August, 1909. Plaintiffs pleaded their deraignment of title through and under the decree of distribution given in the estate of Solomon Heydenfeldt, deceased, by which decree the land involved in the action was distributed to one Mangels, by him deeded to Thomas M. Osmont, the husband of Augusta C. Osmont, and upon the death of Thomas M. Osmont, intestate, the vestiture of title in them as heirs. Trial was had, findings were signed on September 17, 1909, and filed on September 18, 1909, upon which last named day the judgment was entered. This judgment decreed title in plaintiffs to certain specific interests in the properties. Upon the morning of September 16, 1910, appellants served their notice of motion to set aside the default of all persons who did not appear in the action and to set aside and vacate the judgment and decree and to permit the moving parties to answer. This motion was noticed for 1:45 P.M. of the same day on which the notice was served. At that time the notice and the affidavits annexed thereto were filed and the moving parties asked the court to grant the motion. The hearing was continued by the court to September 23rd. On that day the plaintiffs presented and filed written objections and grounds of opposition. On the 19th day of December, 1910, the court denied the motion in a written opinion, stating: "I am forced to conclude that inasmuch as more than one year has elapsed since the rendition of the judgment, this court has no power to set aside the judgment or to permit an answer to be filed by the moving parties." At the hearing of this motion at 1:45 P.M. of September 16th, not only were the plaintiffs represented, but the city and county of San Francisco and the Southern Pacific Company, both parties in interest, appeared by their attorneys in opposition to the motion. Upon objection by these attorneys that the motion should be denied, since the moving parties had neglected to file an affidavit of merits, and after the hearing had been continued as above stated, the moving parties, without notice to any one, appeared in court at 4 o'clock of the afternoon *590
of the same day, and presented a new motion to the same effect, which new motion was based upon the same grounds and supported by the same affidavits, orders, papers, records, and files, with the addition of affidavits of merit made by Elizabeth A. Heydenfeldt and Elfin O. Heydenfeldt, the moving parties. We will, however, treat these two motions as one, not only because they were so treated by the trial court, but because the second motion was without notice, and was made when the previous noticed motion covering the same subject matter had been continued by the court. The second motion being without notice could not properly have been decided by the court at the time when appellants asked for the court's ruling. (Brownell v. Superior Court,
The motion is founded upon the oft-quoted language of section
The right of a defendant, who has not been served with summons, to have his default opened is not absolute and unconditional. To secure the enjoyment of this right he must first make timely motion within the year, second, establish that he has a meritorious defense, and, third, comply with such reasonable terms as the court may impose in granting his motion. When all this has been satisfactorily shown and done, the right of the moving party does become absolute and is not lost because the court postpones its decision upon the motion until the year has elapsed. The motion under consideration was made and noticed within the year, and the learned judge construed the statute too narrowly in holding *591
that he had lost jurisdiction to act by virtue of the fact that, upon his own initiative, the matter was submitted to him for decision and was in fact decided after the lapse of the year. For it appears that the decision of the motion was sought by the moving parties upon the day when it was made, and that the hearing, over their objection, was by the court continued to a date after the year had expired. The familiar maxim, Actus curiaeneminem gravabit here becomes applicable. There was a period in our judicial history when terms of court were recognized. It was then the established law that a judgment could not be vacated after the adjournment of the term. When, however, a motion for such a vacation was made during the term, and not decided until after the adjournment, the reasoning and the rule were that the jurisdiction was preserved by such motion or other appropriate proceeding, that the decision of the motion could be made after the adjournment of a term, and, when made, operated by relation as of the time when the motion was made. (Carpentier v. Hart,
The conclusion thus reached, that it was within the jurisdiction of the court to have passed upon the merits of the motion and to have decided accordingly, does not however make a final disposition of this appeal. There is still to be considered whether or not cause was shown which should have impelled the court to grant the motion upon its merits. Herein it is conceded that defendants were not personally served, and indeed were not personally named as defendants in the action. It is true that the motion itself seeks not only leave to answer for the moving parties but for all other defaulting persons and defendants and asks also that the judgment be vacated. But the fact that the moving parties asked for greater relief than the law entitles them to is of course no ground for denying them any relief to which they are entitled. The court could not, upon the motion of these two persons, asserting an interest in the property, open the default of all others nor vacate the whole judgment.(McKinley v. Tuttle,
We come thus to the defense of these moving parties, which it is said is valid, meritorious, and sufficient to demand that the court should have permitted them to answer in accordance with it. That defense, as shown by the affidavits, the decree of distribution in the estate of Solomon Heydenfeldt and the other papers filed with and made a part of the motion, is this: Of the moving parties, one, Elizabeth A. Heydenfeldt, is the widow, and the other, Elfin O. Heydenfeldt, is a daughter, of Solomon O. Heydenfeldt, deceased. Solomon O. Heydenfeldt died testate, leaving a widow and many children. Those children were Sunshine O. Heydenfeldt (now Sunshine O. Love), Thor O. Heydenfeldt, Oxen O. Heydenfeldt, Elfin O. Heydenfeldt, Moody O. Heydenfeldt, Solomon Heydenfeldt, Jr., Thomas O. Heydenfeldt, Frederick O. Heydenfeldt, Zeila O. Hellings, and Ine O. Heydenfeldt. Litigation arose within the estate between certain of the heirs and devisees, and there was further litigation instituted by others asserting rights against the estate. In particular, Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings, after a partial decree of distribution had been made to others interested in the estate, secured a judgment against the estate. This judgment was embarrassing for the others heirs and devisees to meet, as they were called upon to do, out of the property which they had received under partial distribution. These difficulties and all this litigation resulted in a compromise adjustment and settlement, joined in by all of the parties in interest and adopted, acted upon and embodied in the decree of final distribution which the court entered. As a part of this settlement it was necessary to pay the attorneys employed in the litigation. Thomas M. Osmont had been one of those attorneys. At the hearing all the parties in interest appeared or were represented, G.H. Mangels appearing by his attorney T.M. Osmont. To Mangels was distributed the residuum of the estate "real, personal and mixed, of whatever kind or nature, and wherever situated, now known or hereafter known or discovered," saving and excepting certain specified property, and it was further declared in the decree that "the properties hereinabove distributed to G.H. Mangels and particularly the residuary *594 interest distributed to him, are out of the interests of Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings, and in payment of the indebtedness of said Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings to the said G.H. Mangels." Mangels was a clerk in the law office of Thomas M. Osmont, and it is alleged that the decree of distribution was made in his favor at the instance and request of Osmont. Mangels in turn conveyed all of the property which he received from the decree to Osmont. Osmont, it is asserted, was at the time and previously had been "an attorney for some of the parties interested in said estate." The names of these parties are not given, though from the fact above appearing, that the property distributed to Mangels is declared to be taken "out of the interests of Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings, in payment of the indebtedness of Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings to the said G.H. Mangels," it would appear that Thomas O. Heydenfeldt and Zeila O. Hellings were the parties interested in the estate whom Osmont represented. It is then asserted that the property here in controversy was not inventoried, nor by description distributed as a part of the estate; that the parties entitled to the residuum of the estate did not know that it was a part of the estate, and (so proceeds the affidavit): "The parties entitled to the residue of said estate would not have consented to the arrangement if they knew it included the property described in said complaint and none of the parties asking to have said order set aside would have consented to such arrangement if they knew said property was an asset of said estate or that it passed by said decree." It is then declared: "that it was not agreed or even contemplated, that the property described in said complaint in this action was to be distributed to him or to said Mangels for him, as no one, other than said Osmont, knew of its existence as an asset of this estate or otherwise, and this knowledge was never communicated by him to this affiant or to his clients, or to the parties to the annexed motion, and the knowledge which he has concerning it, although it should have been imparted to the parties, was fraudulently suppressed by him." Then follow averments to the effect that the affiants have fairly stated the facts constituting their defense to their attorneys at law and are by them advised that they have a good and sufficient defense to the action upon the merits thereof. *595
We think it clear that these allegations do not establish the meritorious defense which alone justifies the court in opening the default. It is true that it has been held not essential that the affidavit of merits should disclose the facts constituting the defense, if the affidavit, as here, declares that the facts constituting it have been submitted to the moving party's attorney at law and that the moving party is by such attorney advised that he has a good and meritorious defense. (Francis v.Cox,
Thus, coming to a consideration of the sufficiency of the defense, it is at once apparent that the defense is attempted to be founded upon the fraud of plaintiffs' ancestor in his dealings with the Heydenfeldt estate, and with the interest of these moving parties therein, and that it seeks to establish against the plaintiffs and in favor of the moving parties some sort of resultant trust to all or some part of the real property growing out of such fraud. But even a brief analysis of the affidavits will disclose their insufficiency for this purpose. Thus, it is not made to appear that Osmont was the attorney for either of the moving parties, and thus it is not shown that he owed them any duty of disclosure either in law or in equity. It is asserted that the moving parties did not know that the property was a part of the estate, but it is not even alleged that Osmont himself knew this fact, the allegation herein being inferential and evasive to the effect that "no one other than said Osmont knew of its existence as an asset of the estate." It is true that it is asserted that Osmont did not communicate this knowledge to the affiants or to his clients, but so far as his clients are concerned — and they are the only ones who would have a right to complain — they are not complaining. It is alleged that the knowledge, which only by *596
inference can it be said it is asserted that Osmont possessed, "should have been imparted to all the parties and was fraudulently suppressed by him." But this is manifestly the mere conclusion of the affiant and is a conclusion which is not warranted by the facts stated. And, finally, it is to be remembered that the decree of distribution was entered in 1901. The cause of action to set this aside for fraud then immediately arose, and was barred in three years from that date. The right of action upon the fraud of Osmont in procuring the decree, to the end that he might be charged as trustee, is itself barred in three years after the discovery of the fraud. The right of a party to invoke the aid of a court of equity for relief against fraud after the expiration of three years from the time when the fraud was committed is an exception to the general statute and cannot be asserted unless the plaintiff brings himself within the terms of the exception. This can only be done by a showing that he did not discover the facts constituting the fraud until within the three years immediately prior to the commencement of his action. This showing is an essential element of the right of action and must be affirmatively pleaded in order to authorize the court to entertain the action. (Sublette v. Tinney,
It follows herefrom that the court's order refusing to vacate appellants' default was proper and it is therefore affirmed.
Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied. *597