Couldthirst v. Southern Pacific Railroad

The action was brought in a justice court of Lassen County to recover damages for the killing of certain stock belonging to plaintiffs. The claim was based upon the provisions of section 485 of the Civil Code, as amended in 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 1281), requiring railroads to maintain fences on both sides of the railroad track and making them responsible for injury to stock caused by failure to observe said duty. A demurrer was interposed upon various grounds, including the want of jurisdiction of the subject of the action and of the person of the defendant and the failure to state a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained upon the ground of the want of jurisdiction of the justice court, and the action was thereupon dismissed. Plaintiffs then appealed to the superior court "on questions of both law and fact." The superior court affirmed the judgment *Page 527 of the lower court sustaining said demurrer. Among the allegations of the amended complaint is the following: "That plaintiffs for several years last past have been and now are the owners of the following described land, situate, lying and being in Lassen County, State of California and more particularly described as follows to wit" (said property being described therein). [1] The ownership of real property was thus put in issue by the complaint, and, if it was necessarily involved in the determination of the cause, it would follow that the justice court had no jurisdiction to try the action. (Sec. 838, Code Civ. Proc.) [2] Indeed, it has been decided that the action brought under said section 485 of the Civil Code does necessarily involve the ownership or possession of real property and, therefore, a justice court has no jurisdiction to try such action. (Wills v. Southern Pac. Co.,31 Cal.App. 723, [161 P. 501]; Holman v. Taylor, 31 Cal. 338; Boyd v. Southern California Ry. Co., 126 Cal. 571, [58 P. 1046].)

[3] Nor was it necessary for the defendant to raise the question by filing a verified answer as specified in said section 838 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That is required only when the want of jurisdiction does not appear on the face of the complaint. Herein, however, it was expressly alleged by the plaintiffs that they were the owners of said real property, and this being a material allegation in an action brought under said section of the Civil Code, advantage could be taken of it by filing a demurrer. It cannot, of course, be disputed that the defendant could not by failure to file an answer clothe the justice court with the jurisdiction which it is denied by the constitution. (King v. Kutner-Goldstein Co., 135 Cal. 65, [67 P. 10].) Manifestly, the legislature itself could not change the jurisdiction that has been conferred upon the various courts by the constitution, although it may regulate the mode or manner in which the jurisdiction of a court may be invoked or challenged.

It is true, as pointed out by respondent, that the decisions of the appellate courts specifically holding that the justice court has no jurisdiction of actions brought under said section 485 of the Civil Code were rendered before said section was amended in 1915. But there can be no doubt that the title, possession, or right of possession is equally involved under said section as amended. The effect of the law is not *Page 528 changed in that respect, since, in order to recover under the amended section, it is incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show that the loss of or injury to his livestock happened along some portion of the railroad's right of way not running through or upon public lands; that is, in other words, at a place where the adjoining lands were in private ownership or possession.

[4] It appearing that the justice court was without jurisdiction to try the cause, it was entirely proper for the superior court on appeal to affirm said judgment. There could be no trial in the superior court since its jurisdiction is entirely derivative, and the justice of the peace having no jurisdiction, the superior court acquires none by the appeal. (Ballerino v. Bigelow, 90 Cal. 500, [27 P. 372]; Null v.Superior Court, 4 Cal.App. 207, [87 P. 392]; Bates v.Ferrier, 19 Cal.App. 79, [124 P. 889]; Bartnett v. Hull,19 Cal.App. 91, [124 P. 885].)

The case, of course, is distinguishable from such decisions as City of Madera v. Black, 181 Cal. 306, [184 P. 397], where the parties appeared in the superior court and submitted to trial without objecting to jurisdiction or to the irregular manner in which the case may have reached the superior court.[5] Moreover, if we concede that plaintiffs are right in their contention that the case does not involve title to or right of possession of real property, and that it is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the justice court since the amount sued for was less than three hundred dollars, then it would necessarily follow that this court as well as the supreme court has no jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. Neither of said tribunals is given jurisdiction of an appeal in a case such as the appellants claim this one to be. (Const., art. VI, sec. 4;Willow Land Co. v. Goldschmidt, 11 Cal.App. 297, [104 P. 841]; Edsall v. Short, 122 Cal. 533, [55 P. 327].)

In any view of the case, it seems clear that this court cannot grant plaintiffs any relief in this proceeding.

The judgment is affirmed.

Prewett, P. J., pro tem., and Hart, J., concurred. *Page 529