296 P. 303 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
This is an appeal by defendants Estrin and Garbus from an order made by the lower court vacating its previous order dismissing the action and also from the order granting plaintiff permission to file an amended complaint. The appeal on the ground last mentioned has been dismissed (
Plaintiff filed her complaint in the court below claiming damages for alleged personal injuries against the Southland Produce Company and the Liberty Produce Company, corporations. An answer was filed by Liberty Produce Company, "a partnership", and "Nick Estrin and Phillip Garbus, doing business under the firm name and style of Liberty Produce Company", in which among other denials was one denying the alleged corporate existence of the Liberty Produce Company. At the trial plaintiff dismissed as to the Southland Produce Company, and, calling the court's attention to the answer of defendants, asked leave to amend by striking out the word "corporation" and inserting instead the word "partnership". This was objected to by counsel for the answering defendants, and after some argument and introduction of evidence on the question of ownership of the truck alleged to have collided with plaintiff, the following occurred: "The Court: You are not prepared to prove that this is a corporation? Mr. Graves: We take their denial that this is a corporation and rest on their statement that it is a partnership, and ask to amend, without going into the details. We took their statement and asked to amend by inserting the word `partnership' in the place of `corporation', and we hold that that is not an amendment which does the defendants any injustice, and therefore it is within the allowance of our code. The Court: I will have to deny the motion. Mr. Claassen: Your Honor, I move for a dismissal. The Court: I will have to grant the motion." A minute order was then made pursuant thereto dismissing the action. About twelve days thereafter plaintiff's attorney filed a notice of motion to set aside said order of dismissal on the grounds of "inadvertence and by reason of an oversight on the part of said court" and that the granting of the motion "was in excess of the jurisdiction of the court", as well as other grounds *108 not material here, and at the same time filed a notice of motion for permission to file an amended complaint. The motions came on for hearing December 26, 1928, and both were granted, whereupon defendants appealed.
Appellants contend that the court acted beyond its jurisdiction in vacating the order of dismissal. Respondent urges that the court may of its own motion modify or set aside an erroneous order, and apparently also urges that the action of the court in dismissing the action was mistakenly and inadvertently taken — that the court lacked jurisdiction and also abused its discretion. As authority for her first contention respondent cites the cases of Ex parte Hartman,
[1] The rule in California since the adoption of the codes is well stated in the case of Holtum v. Greif,
Order reversed.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on March 21, 1931.