94 Cal. 146 | Cal. | 1892
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing an action, a demurrer to the complaint having been sustained, and the plaintiff declining to amend. In September, 1886, some of the defendants, and the grantors of others, claiming title to the land involved in this suit, brought an action against the grantors of plaintiff to establish by judicial decree the true boundary line between the lands of the respective parties to that suit. The judgment therein rendered determined the boundary line, and adjudged the plaintiffs to be the owners of the tract of land involved in the present action. Plaintiff, as grantee of the defendants in that action, now files his complaint to set aside that judgment, upon the ground that it was procured through certain frauds practiced upon the defendants therein, the plaintiff’s grantors. The complaint further alleges that “ said lot was duly conveyed to plaintiff for value before the commencement of this action, and that he is now the owner and entitled to the possession thereof,” and further adding that the defendants herein have no title thereto other than that obtained by said j udgment.
This is an action to set aside a judgment upon the ground of fraud, brought by a plaintiff who was not a party to the suit in which the judgment was rendered, but is a grantee of the defendants in said action. It is insisted that, as such, he has no standing before a court of equity, and if that be true, the judgment must be affirmed. The question here presented is one of importance, and as far as we are advised, one not directly adjudicated upon in this state. Owing to the fact that there is not an entire uniformity in the decisions upon the question, it is enveloped in some doubt, but we believe the better rule and the weight of authority sup
The case of Prosser v. Edmonds, 1 Younge & C. 496, is the leading case, and the principle there involved is practically the same as is involved here. In that case the lord Chief Baron said: “ But in a case where a party assigns his whole estate and afterwards makes an assignment generally of the same estate to another person, and the second assignee claims to set aside the first assignment as fraudulent and void, the assignor himself making no complaint of fraud whatever, it appears to me that the right of the second assignee to make such claim would be a question deserving of great consideration.....In such a case a second assignment is merely that of a right to file a bill in equity for a fraud.
Applying these principles to the facts of the case at bar, what will be the result? It may be conceded that the right to set aside this judgment by the plaintiff, upon the ground of fraud, rests upon the same plane as if it were a conveyance rather than a judgment. In the former case the judgment decreed the defendants herein
Let the judgment be affirmed.
De Haven, J., McFarland, J., Paterson, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment.
The plaintiff cannot maintain an action to set aside the judgment complained of, unless the defendants in that action had such right, and it is incumbent on him to set forth his right of action as fully as it would be for them had they sought such relief. In an action to set aside a judgment for fraud, the plaintiff must not only show by his complaint the facts constituting the fraud which give him his right to the relief, but must also show that he has a defense to the original action upon the merits, and that he is able to present to the court the evidence constituting that defense. It is not sufficient to merely allege these matters as ultimate facts, or to aver them in the form of an affidavit of merits, but the facts themselves •— those constituting the fraud, those constituting his defense, and those constituting his ability to present them to the court—must be incorporated into his complaint, so. that the court may determine that if his allegations are admitted by the other party, the plaintiff would have been entitled to a judgment in his favor in the original action.
“A bill to set aside a decree for fraud must state the decree, and the proceedings which led to it, with the circumstances of fraud on which, it is impeached.” (2 Daniell's Chancery Practice, *1585; Story's Eq. PL, sec. 428.) “ The bill should state particularly the facts to be proved, the names of the witnesses, and show the bearing and relevancy of the proposed proofs. It should also show when and how the facts discovered came to the knowledge of the plaintiffs, and why no motion for a new trial was made in the court trying the case.” (Mulford v. Cohn, 18 Cal. 46.)
If the plaintiff seeks to maintain the action upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, he “ must describe the new evidence very distinctly and specifically, and state when it was discovered, and its bearing on the decree. It is not sufficient that he expects to prove certain facts; he must state the exact evidence to establish
An action of this nature must be brought within the time prescribed for an appeal from the original judgment (Allen v. Currey, 41 Cal. 318; Evans v. Bacon, 99 Mass. 213); and all who were parties to the original judgment must be made parties to the action to set it aside. (Harwood v. Railroad Co., 17 Wall. 78.)
The complaint herein is defective in all of the foregoing requisites. The former judgment and “the proceedings which led to it ” are not set forth, either generally or specifically. There is but a single reference thereto wherein its effect is averred, but the form of the judgment is not presented in the complaint. The complaint also fails to show whether the court had jurisdiction of the defendants; the averment that one of them “ received ” no summons is not inconsistent with the fact that the court may have had jurisdiction over him.
The fraud which is alleged is found in the averments that the complaint was drawn “ with the intent” that the defendant should not suspect the real object of the action, and that the plaintiffs “represented to Lilian Cullen and other defendants” that they were joined as defendants therein as a matter of form only, and that they need not appear or answer therein. Not only is this averment defective in not setting forth the original complaint itself, so that the court can determine whether the “ intent ” with which it was drawn is such as the plaintiff alleges, and in not showing in what manner the plaintiffs therein made the “ representations ” charged, but the entire averment is made upon information and belief, without setting forth the sources of the information or the grounds for the belief Other averments essential to his cause of action are also made upon information and belief.
In an action of this nature, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to make his averments with such definiteness and certainty, particularly those relating to the fraud
It is not a sufficient answer to this rule that the code permits a complaint to be made upon information and belief. The provision of the code that causes in equity, as well as those at law, are to be presented under the same form of pleading, has not changed the principles under which equitable relief shall be granted. When a plaintiff’s right to such relief depends upon facts which are quasi jurisdictional in their nature, — such as his personal status, his freedom from negligence or laches, the fraudulent or inequitable conduct of the party against whom that relief is sought, or matters in respect to which the court may exercise its discretion, or which it must determine have an existence before it can entertain his complaint, — it is as essential under the present system as under any other that those matters should be presented by such positive and verified allegations that the court may determine their sufficiency. The plaintiff cannot substitute his own judgment for that of the court, and a complaint in which these jurisdictional facts are alleged upon the information and belief of the plaintiff does not state facts sufficient to show that he has a right of action.
The plaintiff does not show that he has sought this relief with sufficient promptness. He does not allege when he acquired any interest in the land, or from whom he acquired it, — his averment being, that it was duly conveyed to him for value “ before the commencement of this action.” Such an allegation is consistent
Under thejforegoing principles, the complaint failed to state a cause of action, and the demurrer was properly sustained. Upon the question discussed by Mr. Justice Garoutte, I express no opinion.