Israel v. Superior Court

This is an original application for writ of mandate to compel the superior court of San Diego County to render a judgment for three thousand dollars in favor of petitioner in a certain action wherein she was plaintiff and Solon Bryan was defendant.

The controversy grows out of the following facts: On the eleventh day of February, 1918, petitioner deposited with Solon Bryan, who was a justice of the peace, the sum of three thousand dollars to secure the appearance of F. M. Couden at a preliminary hearing upon a criminal charge. As a result of the hearing, held on February 21, 1918, Couden was discharged from custody and his bail released. On the same day, and after dismissal of the criminal complaint filed against him and prior to the return of said bail money so deposited with said justice of the peace, there was served upon him, the said Solon Bryan, by the sheriff of the county of San Diego, a writ of execution issued out of the superior court upon a judgment theretofore rendered against F. M. Couden in a certain action wherein the First National Bank was plaintiff and the former was defendant. Thereupon Bryan, upon demand made by petitioner for the return of the three thousand dollars so deposited by her as bail for the appearance of said Couden, refused to pay the same to petitioner, who, on April 8, 1918, brought suit against Bryan to recover the money in question. Within due time Bryan answered the complaint; whereupon petitioner, as plaintiff in said *Page 713 action, made a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which was heard on May 20, 1918, and an order made denying the same. Thereupon Solon Bryan, as defendant in said action, applied to the court for permission to withdraw the answer so filed and file another answer to the complaint. This application was granted and Bryan allowed five days to file another answer. Within the five days allowed for filing such answer Bryan filed an affidavit and notice of motion, under section 386 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to substitute the sheriff of San Diego County and the First National Bank in his place and stead as defendants in said action, which motion was heard on May 24, 1918, and an order made granting the same, pursuant to which Bryan deposited in court the three thousand dollars which action was followed by an order releasing him from further liability, and at the same time the sheriff and First National Bank, as substituted defendants, filed their answer. No further proceedings of any kind or character were had in said matter until a year thereafter, to wit, on May 31, 1919, at which time the case was tried upon the complaint and the answer of the substituted defendants, when findings were made upon which judgment was rendered by the court that petitioner, as plaintiff in said action, take nothing and the defendants recover $__________, costs. Thereafter, on June 11, 1919, pursuant to notice served, and in the absence of any order made setting aside or otherwise affecting the judgment so rendered, petitioner moved the court to enter judgment in said action for the plaintiff therein and against Solon Bryan, upon the ground that said Bryan having by leave of court withdrawn the answer filed, was in default, and hence plaintiff was entitled to judgment. The motion was denied. The contention of petitioner is that the order granting Bryan five days from May 20, 1918, to file an answer, was void, as were likewise the orders made releasing him from further liability upon depositing the said three thousand dollars in court and substituting as defendants in said action the sheriff and First National Bank.

That the court in permitting the defendant Bryan to withdraw his answer was acting within its jurisdiction is not and, in our opinion, cannot be, questioned in this proceeding. (Miles et al. v. Danforth, 37 Ill. 157; Rowan v. *Page 714 Kirkpatrick, 14 Ill. 1; Bash v. Evans, 40 Ind. 256.) [1] The orders permitting the withdrawal of the answer and granting leave to file another were made at the same time; hence the answer on file protected defendant from default to a time when the order granting five days within which to file another answer became operative and in effect, prior to the expiration of which time the fund was deposited in court and the order made releasing Bryan from liability. In effect the situation was the same as though defendant, instead of filing the answer so withdrawn, had asked and obtained from the court an extension of time, not exceeding thirty days, within which to answer, as provided in section 1054 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Hence, we are of the opinion that the court, in the exercise of its discretion and acting within its jurisdiction, had power to permit the answer to be withdrawn and to grant defendant time, not exceeding thirty days in addition to that allowed by the code (sec. 1054, supra), within which to file an answer. This being true, it must follow that the proceedings had and taken pursuant to the provisions of section 386 of the Code of Civil Procedure, under which Bryan deposited the fund in controversy in court and the substitution of the parties defendant was made, were within the power of the court.

[2] Conceding, however, the court in making the orders complained of acted in excess of jurisdiction, its action should have been annulled in a proceeding by certiorari, wherein the original status of both parties would have been restored and their rights protected. Upon the facts presented, this status and protection cannot be secured by a writ of mandate. Indeed, its issuance in this proceeding would not only lead to confusion, but work a gross injustice to one of the parties. In Board of Education v. Common Council, 128 Cal. 369, [60 P. 976], it is said: "The writ of mandate will not issue where it will work injustice, or introduce confusion and disorder, or operate harshly, or where it will not promote substantial justice." And in Neto v. Conselho Amor, etc.,18 Cal.App. 234, [122 P. 973], the court, in discussing the right to such writ, says: "It is not issued on mere technical grounds. Its design is to do substantial justice and prevent substantial injustice." In the case at bar it appears that after the expiration of *Page 715 more than a year from the making of the order releasing Bryan from liability and under and pursuant to which he parted with the fund in controversy, and without any action on the part of petitioner to set aside the order under which he acted, and after substitution of defendants, who filed an answer putting in issue the allegations of the complaint in said action, a trial thereof was had, in which trial the court found that plaintiff was not entitled to the fund, and rendered judgment based upon said findings that plaintiff take nothing by her action. In thus rendering judgment the court was acting within its jurisdiction; and, conceding that it may have committed error, the judgment stands as a final determination until set aside in some proper proceeding for its review. Under the circumstances shown, to issue a writ requiring the court to render judgment against Bryan would not only lead to confusion and disorder, but it would operate harshly in that it would work an injustice upon Bryan, who, as stated, has, as required by the order of the court, parted with and surrendered the fund to another depositary. Had petitioner, as plaintiff in said action, the trial of which she entered upon without protest or objection here reviewable, been successful therein, she would have accepted the result.

[3] In this application we are not concerned with the alleged errors of the court in the trial of the case. It may be, as claimed by petitioner, that the findings made by the court are not supported by the evidence, or that the court failed to make findings upon material issues. [4] However this may be, it appears that the court rendered judgment that plaintiff take nothing and, conceding that the court should have determined the right of defendants to said fund, such question is one for the concern of defendants, and not the plaintiff, whom the court adjudged should take nothing in the action.

The alternative writ heretofore issued is discharged and the proceeding dismissed.

Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.

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