81 P. 21 | Cal. | 1905
This is an action to foreclose the lien of a street assessment. The complaint contains all the averments necessary to a complete cause of action on the lien, and, among other things, averments of the making and recording of the assessment, warrant, diagram, certificate of city engineer, demand of payment, non-payment, return of the warrant, etc., which, by the terms of the statute, are "prima facie evidence of the regularity and correctness of the assessment and of the prior proceedings and acts of the superintendent of streets and city council upon which said warrant, assessment, and diagram, are based, and like evidence of the right of the plaintiff to recover in the action." These averments as to the assessment, warrant, diagram, certificate, etc., were not denied in the answer, although the answer does contain denials *722 of preceding averments in the complaint — as, for instance, that the resolution of intention to do the alleged work was duly or at all passed by the board of supervisors, that the clerk printed for the required time a notice of the nature and character of the work to be done, inviting sealed proposals for doing the same, that the board opened the bids or awarded any contracts for the work, that plaintiff was the lowest bidder, that the superintendent entered into any contract with plaintiff to do the work, etc. At the trial plaintiff rested his case without introducing any evidence, upon the theory that as his said averments of the making and recording of the assessment, diagram, etc., and the return and recording of the warrant were not denied in the answer, and must be taken to be true, therefore those averments made a prima facie case for plaintiff. Thereupon the defendants moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that plaintiff had failed to introduce any evidence tending to prove those allegations of the complaint which are denied in the answer. The court granted the motion for a nonsuit, and rendered judgment for defendant. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.
We think that the court erred in granting the nonsuit. It was evidently granted upon the theory that the admission in the answer of alleged facts, which under the statute constituted aprima facie case for plaintiff, was not the equivalent of the proof of these facts, and that the warrant, assessment, diagram, certificate, etc., should have been formally introduced in evidence by plaintiff, notwithstanding their admission by the pleadings. But the case of Oakland Bank v. Sullivan,
"The court did not err in refusing to grant such motion; though the evidence offered may have been insufficient to make out a case for the plaintiffs in that cross-complaint, had it been incumbent upon them to offer any proof at all. The act *723
(Stats, 1885, p. 157) provides that the "warrant, assessment, and diagram, with the affidavit of demand and non-payment, shall be held prima facie evidence of the regularity and correctness of the assessment . . . and of the right of the plaintiff to recover in the action.' Here the cross-complaint of Bannister Lewis averred the delivery to them of such warrant, assessment, and diagram, and exhibited the character of the same with sufficient particularity to show that they were made in conformity with sections 8 and 9 of the act; it also alleged the making and return by their agent of the affidavit of demand and non-payment, as required by the succeeding section 10. None of such averments were denied in appellant's answer; they were material allegations(Himmelman v. Danos,
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred. *724