75 Cal. 639 | Cal. | 1888
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in an action for partition. It comes here upon ; the judgment roll alone.
The point is made by the appellant that the findings negative certain allegations of the complaint, which are confessed by the failure of some of the parties to the action to answer them.
It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff and all the other parties to the action “hold and are in possession, and are the owners and tenants in common,” of five certain tracts of land described as A, B, C, D, and E. Several of the defendants, although duly served
If the rule is to prevail which obtains with reference to ordinary actions, it is plain that the findings of the court, being in direct contradiction of the admitted allegations of the complaint, are nugatory in so far as they affect the rights of the appellant in the tracts A, D, and E. (Burnett v. Stearns, 33 Cal. 469.) And the finding and judgment to that extent, being contrary to the facts admitted by the pleadings and outside of the issues made or tendered, are erroneous. (Gregory v. Nelson, 41 Cal. 278.)
It was held in Hughes v. Devlin, 23 Cal. 608, which was an action for partition, where a “ fact was averred in the complaint, and not denied in the answer,” that it
This must be so, unless it be held that in such actions no finding or judgment predicated thereon will be sustained unless the finding be sustained by evidence irrespective of the allegations of the complaint, whether denied or not,—that is to say, that all parties to such an action are actors and plaintiffs; that each is expected to set up and prove his own claims, but that in no event is the trial court to. render a judgment in partition, save upon the proof made before it as to the respective rights of the parties, upon which alone it must base its findings, irrespective of any admissions made by default, or failure to answer, or denials of the allegations in the pleadings.
We have not found any case in our reports which militates against the rule laid down in Hughes v. Devlin, supra, and therefore we must conclude that the judgment of the court below, in so far as it affects the rights of the appellant to have partition of tracts A, D, and E, must be reversed, and a new trial awarded, the judgment to stand, however, in all other respects.
Belcher, 0. C., concurred.
The Court.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the court below, in so far as it affects the rights of the appellant to have partition of tracts A, D, and E, must be reversed, and a new trial awarded, the judgment to stand affirmed in all other respects.