189 Cal. App. 2d 546 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1961
Aram Harootunian and Stella Harootunian have appealed from a judgment in favor of Alben G. Warren and Ann M. Warren which was entered after the Warrens’ demurrer to the Harootunians’ answer was sustained with leave to amend and they failed to amend.
The action was brought by the Warrens to determine the validity of certain building restrictions on property which
Defendants, Aram Harootunian and Stella Harootunian, filed an answer denying the allegations of the complaint and also set up three affirmative defenses which alleged laches and estoppel. The Shutts were served with process but failed to appear.
Plaintiffs filed a general demurrer to the answer, the demurrer stating “ [t]hat the answer does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense or counterclaim.” Plaintiffs’ demurrer was sustained with leave to amend. No amendment was filed by defendants, their default was entered, and judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs, granting them the relief prayed for in their complaint. This appeal followed.
The only question that we must determine upon this appeal
The answer denied all of the material allegations of the complaint, thus creating issues of fact as to the relief sought by plaintiffs. The three affirmative defenses alleged by defendants, Aram Harootunian and Stella Harootunian, were sufficient as against a general demurrer to set up the defenses of laches and estoppel. As hereinbefore stated, the demurrer to the answer was a general demurrer, and a general demurrer admits all facts well pleaded in the answer, including denials. (2 Witkin, California Procedure, p. 1598.)
But even if the general demurrer were good as to the special defenses (which we do not hold), it was error to enter judgment by default because the denials of the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint clearly created issues of fact. A similar situation existed in the case of Herrmann v. Riesenberg, 139 Cal.App. 249 [34 P.2d 163], in which the court said:
“Defendants appeal from a default judgment inadvertently entered prior to disposition of issues raised by their answer, which contained a first and second defense. A demurrer had been interposed to the second defense, and according to the minute order of the court the demurrer 1 to the complaint ’ was sustained and ten days given to amend. No amendment being made in ten days, a default was entered, as well as judgment thereon, although the first defense still stood and in itself constituted an answer, raising issues that could be determined only by a trial. . . .
“Admitting, without deciding, that these nunc pro tunc orders may be considered as effectual for the purpose intended, ‘to make such minute entries speak the truth,’ we still are confronted with a judgment taken against defendants who have never had their day in court, at least as to matters of defense raised by the first portion of their answer. It is apparent then that the judgment must be reversed.” (See also Youdall v. Kaufman, 55 Cal.App. 363, 366 [203 P. 448].)
No other points raised require discussion.
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the answer.
Van Dyke, P. J., and Peek, J., concurred.