107 Cal. 386 | Cal. | 1895
The respondent, the town of Hayward, in Alameda county, is a municipal corporation of the sixth class, and the appellant is the judge of the recorder’s court of said town. That court is provided for in section 882 of the Municipal Corporation Act of 1883. An ordinance of the town imposed a license tax upon persons engaged in certain classes of business. One Freeman carried on business within the purview of the ordinance and refused to pay the tax. Thereupon an action was commenced by the town of Hayward in said recorder’s court against said Freeman for the recovery of the amount of such tax then due, together with cer
Appellant, in response to the complaint or affidavit on which respondent founded its application for a mandamus, filed an answer wherein he set up the circumstances of said motion to quash the writ of execution, and that he had “ fully heard all and singular the evidence and argument offered by the respective parties upon such motion in the said action, and as such recorder, and as such recorder’s court,” after full consideration, determined said motion, and ordered that the writ of execution be quashed. He made no other defense. The superior court sustained a demurrer to the answer, and at the same time rendered judgment directing that the 'writ of mandate issue as prayed for.
The sole ground upon which the appellant justifies
Granting that the complaint was demurrable, and that the judgment founded upon it was for that reason erroneous, it by no means follows that it could be reviewed or its error corrected in the manner attempted by the appellant. The complaint does not by direct averment state a cause of action, but by recitals and necessary inference from them it does. It shows that the town of Hayward had passed an ordinance imposing a license tax; that defendant was liable for the tax, and had failed to pay. These facts, formally stated, would constitute a cause of action. After judgment they are sufficient to sustain the same as against a collateral attack, even though the judgment be that of a court of inferior and limited jurisdiction. “An irregular or erroneous judgment will, as long as it remains in force, support an execution.” (1 Freeman on Executions, sec. 73.) “A motion to quash an execution is not an appropriate or admissible mode of bringing under review the errors or irregularities that may exist in the judgment upon which the execution is issued, unless the judgment be utterly void.” (Schultze v. State, 43 Md. 305.) In this instance the judgment entered by the recorder was not void; being rendered by a court which had jurisdiction of the parties and of the defectively stated cause of action, it was valid and operative until appealed from or reversed. (Aucker v. McCoy, 56 Cal. 526.)
“The writ cannot be granted by default. The case must be heard by the court, whether the adverse party appear or not.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1088.) Appellant contends that in virtue of this provision of the statute the court should have had some other or further hearing before allowing the mandamus against him. But the answer of the defendant stated nothing inconsistent with the allegations of the complaint or affidavit on which respondent prayed the issuance of the writ; it thus raised “ only questions of law”; and therefore the court was required to “ proceed to hear or fix a day for hearing the argument of the case.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1094.) The section last quoted evidently contemplates that there may as well be a hearing and a submission of the cause on the pleadings of the parties in a proceeding for mandamus as in any other. In this case the order sustaining the demurrer to the answer recited that the matter had been previously “ submitted to the court for consideration and decision.” And the judgment recited that the “cause came on regularly for hearing on the twenty-first day of May, 1894, to which day the same had been duly and regularly continued, on the demurrer of said relator to the answer of said respondent.” The demurrer was unnecessary, but was not an inappropriate means of raising an issue on the “questions of law” presented by the answer. And it sufficiently appears from the recitals referred to that there was a hearing and a submission, not merely of
It is true that the judgment further recites that the appellant did not appear on said twenty-first day of May; but, as the hearing of the cause was regularly continued to that day, he could not divest the court of the power to complete the same by absenting himself.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Vanclief, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Temple, J., Henshaw, J.