12 Cal. App. 2d 565 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1936
Petitioner seeks the annulment of an order of the respondent coyrt adjudging petitioner in contempt for failure to comply with an order of said court permitting the inspection of certain documents and records.
Said orders were made in an action entitled Kent v. Transbay Construction Co., being action number 260969 in the files of the respondent court. In said action plaintiff sued to recover wages alleged to have become due from defendant to plaintiff’s assignors while working for defendant in the City and County of San Francisco on the substructure of the Bay Bridge. On September 17, 1935, and after notice duly served upon defendant, the respondent court made its order granting plaintiff’s motion for such inspection and ordered defendant to permit such inspection in the City and County of San Francisco within thirty days. Defendant failed to comply with said order and an order to show cause was issued. Defendant appeared in response to said order to show cause and urged that the order for inspection was in excess of the jurisdiction of the court in that it ordered defendant to permit such inspection in the City and County of San Francisco while the documents and records referred to in said order were then kept at Hetch Hetchy, where defendant was engaged in work upon the O’Shaughnessy dam. The respondent court took the position that the order for inspection was not in excess of its jurisdiction and therefore made an order on January 20, 1936, adjudging defendant in contempt of court. Said order recites the willingness of defendant to permit said inspection at Hetch Hetchy but further recites defendant’s failure and refusal to permit said inspection in the City and County of San Francisco as ordered by the court. A fine of $500 was imposed upon defendant but a stay of fifteen days was given and it was provided that the trial court would entertain a motion to set aside the order of contempt in the event that defendant complied with the previous order within that time. Defendant then filed its petition in this court seeking a writ of review.
In this proceeding petitioner’s main contention is that the original order of September 17, 1925, was in excess of the jurisdiction of the respondent court as it indirectly required the transportation by petitioner of certain documents and records from the place where they were kept in one part
Petitioner cites and relies upon Richards v. Bunte, 33 Ohio C. C. 37, but that case is not in point in this proceeding. It may be distinguished upon several grounds but the main ground of distinction is that said decision was rendered upon an appeal from a judgment of dismissal following refusal to comply with the trial court’s order. The court there passed upon the question of alleged error in the exercise of jurisdiction rather than upon the question of alleged exbess of jurisdiction.
But even if it be assumed that error such as abuse of discretion by the trial court might properly be reviewed in this proceeding, we are still of the opinion that therfe is no showing of an abuse of its discretion in the present case. Petitioner, a Delaware corporation, had designated San Francisco as its principal place of business in California apd had appointed a resident agent in said city. San Francisco was the place where petitioner previously maintained an office in which it kept the documents and records in questipn, the place where the alleged work was performed by the assignors of plaintiff in the above-mentioned action, the place of trial
Petitioner also contends that it was not in contempt as the order permitting the inspection had never been served upon it. It will be noted that petitioner does not claim that it did not have actual notice of the order and the record shows that both petitioner and counsel had such notice. The record further discloses that in resisting the order to show cause, petitioner raised no point regarding the alleged lack of personal service but raised only the question of the jurisdiction of the trial court to make the previous order fixing the place of inspection at San Francisco. Under these circumstances, we are of the opinion that petitioner may not attack the order adjudging it guilty of contempt upon the ground that no service of the original order had been made upon it. (Shibley v. Superior Court, 202 Cal. 738 [262 Pac. 332]; Foley v. Foley, 120 Cal. 33 [52 Pac. 122, 65 Am. St. Rep. 147]; Golden Gate etc. M. Co. v. Superior Court, 65 Cal. 187 [3 Pac. 628]; 5 Cal. Jur. 915, sec. 21.)
The order is affirmed.
Sturtevant, J., concurred.
An application by petitioner to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court "of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 18, 1936.