114 Cal. 371 | Cal. | 1896
Application for a writ of prohibition. One Gr. Grianelli commenced an action in the justice’s court against D. J. Hoult, to recover the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, upon a claim for labor performed for the defendant by one Kass, and by him assigned to the plaintiff. Hoult answered the complaint, denying all its allegations.' Before the trial of the action the petitioner herein filed a complaint in intervention in the justice’s court, in which he denied all the allegations in the complaint, and alleged that in another action, brought by him in the justice’s court against Kass, he had attached the indebtedness of Hoult to Kass, and asked judgment that plaintiff take nothing by the action, but that judgment be rendered in his favor for such sum as might be found due from Hoult to Kass. A demurrer by the plaintiff to this complaint was over
Counsel on both sides have assumed the right of a justice’s court to permit a complaint in intervention to be filed therein, and our conclusion herein has been reached without determining whether such right exists. {See, however, Code Civ. Proc., sec. 925.)
“An intervention takes place when a third person is permitted to become a party to an action or proceeding between other persons, either by joining the plaintiff in claiming what is sought by the complaint, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claims of the plaintiff, or by demanding anything adversely to both the plaintiff and the defendant.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 387.) In the present case the intervenor denied all the allegations in the complaint, and thus “united with the defendant in resisting the claim of the plaintiff,” and
The plaintiff had the right to appeal from the judgment rendered by the justice, and in taking the appeal was required to serve his notice of appeal upon the “adverse party,” which in the present case included the defendant and the intervenor, each of them having denied the allegations in his complaint. If it should be conceded that the filing by the plaintiff of an answer in the superior court to the complaint in intervention was unauthorized, yet upon his appeal plaintiff had the right not only to have the superior court pass upon the sufficiency of his demurrer to - the complaint in intervention, -without any statement of the case (Southern Pac. R. R. Co. v. Superior Court, 59 Cal. 471), but also to have all the issues of fact that had been presented in the justice’s court tried anew in the superior court. The effect of the appeal was to vacate the judgment of the justice’s court against the plaintiff (Bullard v. McArdle, 98 Cal. 355; 35 Am. St. Rep. 176), and to require that all the issues of fact between him and the intervenor, as well as those between him and the defendant, be tried anew in the superior court; and if, upon a trial of these issues, the superior court shall determine in favor of the plaintiff, it will be authorized to render a judgment in his favor against, the defendant, notwithstanding the intervention of the petitioner.
The application for the writ is denied.
Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.