Aрpeal by plaintiff from a judgment of dismissal entered pursuant to an order sustaining defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s amended complaint with leave to amend. Plaintiff declined to amend and the judgment followed. The action seeks to quiet title to a parcel of real property. The original complaint wаs filed March 10, 1949.
The amended complaint alleged: On July 22, 1933, a trust deed executed by plaintiff on real *653 property situated on Grape Street, Los Angeles, was foreclosed with a claimed deficiency of $669.28.
October 17, 1933, an action (No. 326563) was filed in the municipal court to recover the deficiency. Januаry 13, 1934, plaintiff’s default was entered and judgment rendered against plaintiff for $669.09. November 28, 1938, on supplementary proceedings, plaintiff testified that on November 26, 1938, a declaration of homestead had been filed on the property here involved.
June 18, 1942, Milstein, defendant in the present action, purchased the judgment for $250 and on November 13, 1942, filed an assignment thereof to himself in the municipal court action. The first notice or knowledge plaintiff had of the assignment was on February 11, 1948.
January 30, 1943, more than five years after entry of the judgment, Milstein filed a notice of motion praying that execution issue on the judgment. The notice of motiоn was not accompanied by any affidavit showing diligence. The motion was heard on March 2, 1943. Neither the motion nor notice of the hearing of the motion was served on plaintiff. The court ordered that execution issue. On April 5, 1943, the clerk issued the writ. Plaintiff had no notice or knowledge of any such proceedings until February 11, 1948.
April 13, 1943, the sheriff made his levy as follows: “So 70 feet of Lot 43 Pardee Tract at Book 5, page 23 of Maps and Records of Los Angeles County and property known as No. 9050 Zamora, by handing to and leaving with Gladys Lockhart, tenant who was in possession of improved real property hereinafter describеd, a true copy of said writ.” On April 13, 1943, plaintiff was, and at all times since has been, the record owner of said “So 70 feet of Lot 43 Pardee Tract.” That property was not known as 9050 Zamora but as 8950 Zamora Street, Los Angeles. Gladys Lockhart was not then, nor has she ever been, a tenant of plaintiff. He does not know her. Plaintiff “did not receive any notice, nor had he any knowledge of said purported levy, or of the issuance of said execution.
“ [N]o notice of said execution or said levy was posted on the premises No. 8950 Zamora Street, or elsewhere in said County. . . . [H]ad said Sheriff made his levy upon the ocсupants of No. 8950 and had the notice of execution or levy been posted on said real property, the plaintiff herein would have received notice of the same, and would have redeemed from said levy.” Plaintiff did not reside on said property *654 on April 13, 1943, but resided in Fontana, San Bernardino County, and had been a resident there since 1938, “as defendant’s attorney, Joe Wapner and defendant well knew at all times since 1938.”
Without notice to, and with intent to conceal from, plaintiff the time and place of the sale of the property, Milstein delivered instructions to the sheriff to sell the property. February 7, 1944, thе sheriff sold the property at private sale. There was no competitive bidding. Milstein and his attorney were the only persons who had notice or knowledge of the sale. Milstein, the sole bidder, bid $300. The sheriff sold the property to Milstein and plaintiff was given a credit of $270 on the judgment. The fair market value of the prоperty at that time was $6,000 and “was clear of all encumbrances except the Declaration of Homestead, all as this defendant and his attorney well knew.” February 11, 1944, the sheriff issued a certificate of sale, and on March 1, 1945, a deed of the property, to Milstein. Plaintiff first learned the sale had taken рlace on February 11, 1948. Milstein purchased the real property “for an insignificant amount grossly disproportionate to the actual value of the said real property, with the express intent and design to deprive plaintiff of his property. ’ ’ Milstein not only claimed title to the real property “of the fаir market value of $6,000” but also claimed that plaintiff “was still indebted to him in the sum of $429.00 . . . being nearly twice what Milstein had originally paid for the judgment. ’ ’
At all times since 1938, all taxes levied on the property and all insurance and expenses therefor have been paid by plaintiff, and none by Milstein. Because of lack of notiсe or knowledge, plaintiff had no opportunity to redeem. He could and would have redeemed before March 1, 1945, had he had either notice or knowledge of the sale.
The failure of defendant to notify plaintiff was intentional and fraudulent, and was designed to deceive and take undue advantage of plaintiff and deprive him of his property. Plaintiff has offered to do equity “to recover his real property” and particularly to pay defendant “the sum paid by him for his purchase of the judgment in case No. 326563, with legal interest thereon, but said Milstein demands the sum of $3,000.00 therefor.”
The prayer is for a decree (1) dеclaring the order of the municipal court for the issuance of execution void; (2) setting aside the issuance of the writ of execution; (3) declaring the *655 sale void; (4) cancelling the sheriff’s certificate; (5) cancelling the sheriff’s deed; (6) requiring plaintiff to pay defendant such sum of money as the court may deem equitable and upon payment of such sum decreeing that plaintiff is the owner of the property and that defendant has no interest therein; (7) general relief.
The demurrer was general and special. The special grounds were: (1) several causes of action are improperly united and not separately stated; (2) it cannot bе determined how or in what manner defendant concealed from plaintiff the time and place of the sale; (3) the action is barred by section 343 of the Code of Civil Procedure; (4) the action is barred by laches.
For the purpose of this opinion we must, of course, assume that all of the facts allegеd in the amended complaint are true. The present suit is a direct attack on the order directing the issuance of execution. An attack on the order on the ground it was procured by fraud is a direct attack since establishment of the fraud shows that no order was made.
(Parsons
v.
Weis,
The facts alleged are almost identical with those in
Young
v.
Barker,
“In Odell v. Cox,151 Cal. 70 [90 P. 194], there was an inadequacy of consideration, which alone is not a sufficient ground for vacating the execution sale; but, said the court, inadequacy of price is a circumstance to be considered in connection with other circumstances which together will be a ground for vacating the sale (pp. 73, 74). In the Odell case as in the instant ease the judgment debtor had no knowlеdge of the issuance of the execution or of the sale and although a writ of execution was levied in the manner authorized by law the method of its levy was such that the owner did not know and could not learn of the levy except from information given him by the opposing party or casually by someone who knew the facts. In view of the defendant’s financial circumstances and of the appeal from the judgment he had no reason to believe that his property would be sold. To the same effect are the cases of Winbigler v. Sherman,175 Cal. 270 [165 P. 943 ], and Hyman v. Stern,61 Cal.App. 656 [215 P. 911 ]. In Graffman v. Burgess,117 U.S. 180 , 192 [6 S.Ct. 686 ,29 L.Ed. 839 , 843], it is said that if the inadequacy is so gross as to shock the conscience (it is so in the instant case), or if, in addition to the gross inadequacy, the purchaser has been unfair or has taken undue advantage, or if the owner of the property has been misled or surprised, the sale will be regarded as fraudulent and void, or the party injured will be permitted to redeem the property from sale. 1 Great inadеquacy requires only slight circumstances of unfairness in the conduct of the party benefited by the sale to raise the presumption of fraud. ’ In Schroeder v. Young,161 U.S. 334 , 338, [16 S.Ct. 512 ,40 L.Ed. 721 , 724], it is said that while mere inadequacy of price may not be sufficient in itself to warrant the setting aside of a judicial sale 1 courts are not slow to seize upon other circumstances impeaching the fairness of the transaction as a cause for vacating it.’ Further that such gross inadequacy as to *657 shock the conscience, irregularities attending the sale, where the sale was conducted in such manner that the full value of the property could not be realized, if bidders hаd been kept away, if undue advantage had been taken to the prejudice of the owner, or if he had been lulled into false security, the sale may be set aside and the owner may be permitted to redeem. In the Schroeder case, as in the instant case, the levy was made under the specific dirеction of plaintiff’s attorney, who was the sole bidder at the sale and the only person present excepting the officer conducting the sale. ’ ’
As the facts alleged in the present suit are so similar to those in
Young
v.
Barker, supra,
Milstein argues that his grounds of special demurrer were well taken and that because plaintiff declined to amend, the judgment must be affirmed.
(Hendricks
v.
Osman,
One of the grounds was that several causes of action are improperly united and not separately stated. One cause of action only was alleged. The suit is in equity. A cause of action is simply the obligation sought to be enforced against the defendant.
(Frost
v.
Witter,
In
Louvall
v.
Gridley,
The only specification of uncertainty was that it could not be determined how, or in what manner, Milstein concealed from plaintiff the time and place of the sale of the real рroperty. The ultimate fact is pleaded. It is an old and elemental rule of pleading that a demurrer for uncertainty does not lie if what is sought is a statement of matter already within the knowledge of the demurring party. Even under the strict rules of common law pleading, one of the canons was that less particularity is required when the facts lie more in the knowledge of the opposite party than of the party pleading. If, in truth, Milstein concealed from plaintiff the fact that the property was to be sold, he knows it and he knows the time and place of concealment, if there was a time and place. It would sеem that concealment is negative and that it would occur without any time or place. Milstein knows the facts.
One of the grounds of the demurrer was that .the action is barred by section 343 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing that ‘‘An action for relief not hereinbefore provided for must be commenced within four years after the cause of action shall have accrued.” Section 343 is not controlling. It applies only to actions not covered in the preceding sections of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Richarson
v.
Michel,
We are of the opinion that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended complaint.
The judgment is reversed with directions to overrule the demurrer and permit defendant to answer.
Shinn, P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
