San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Co. v. Stevinson

The San Joaquin Kings River Canal Irrigation Company was plaintiff in a condemnation suit in which petitioner James J. Stevinson and others were defendants. The superior court, at the conclusion of the testimony offered by plaintiff granted a motion for nonsuit by defendants, and gave judgment accordingly. On appeal, the judgment was reversed, the opinion which was filed concluding with the words "The judgment is reversed." In preparing the remittitur, the clerk of this court, following our rule XXIII, [160 Cal. liii, 119 Pac. xiii], added to the quoted words, "Appellant to recover costs on appeal." This is a motion by James J. Stevinson (a corporation) to recall the remittitur and strike therefrom the words with reference to the imposition of costs, upon the ground that rule XXIII has no application to a case like this and that plaintiff in a condemnation suit who is successful on an appeal to this court is not thereby given costs against his losing opponent as in other cases.

Plaintiff concedes the general rule that a defendant in such a suit is not subject to costs, as is well established by such cases as San Diego Land Town Co. v. Neale, 88 Cal. 67, [11 L.R.A. 604, 25 P. 977]; San Francisco v. Collins, 98 Cal. 263, [33 P. 56], but insists that it is only applicable to cases in which the amount awarded is in issue; that in this case in which costs were allowed against the losing party, petitioner had denied the authority of plaintiff to condemn its property at all, and the same view having been erroneously *Page 542 taken by the lower court, the cost of securing a correct ruling on appeal should not be borne by the plaintiff. In this behalf the plaintiff cites Mathews v. Droud, 114 Ind. 268, [16 N.E. 599]; but in that case the constitutionality of the imposition of costs was neither raised nor discussed. These defendants had a perfect right to question the authority of plaintiff to maintain such an action. Their right in the suit was not limited merely to the production of evidence tending to establish the amount of their damage, nor is their claim to costs sustainable only upon an appeal from a judgment awarding damages. In San Diego Landetc. Co. v. Neale, 88 Cal. 67, [11 L.R.A. 604, 25 P. 977], defendant had appealed from an order granting a new trial after a judgment awarding damages. On appeal plaintiff was successful and the order granting a new trial was affirmed, yet the appealing defendant was awarded costs upon constitutional grounds. We think the rule is equally applicable where the right to maintain the action at all is the matter involved on appeal. It is true that expenditures of a defendant made in bad faith and for purposes of obstruction may be disallowed (San Francisco v.Collins, 98 Cal. 263, [33 P. 56]), but no question of bad faith is here presented.

Plaintiff contends that rule XXIII being general in its terms, the court has no jurisdiction to grant the relief sought; but no rule, however general, may contravene a privilege based upon the constitutional right of the landowner.

The remedy sought is the correct one. James J. Stevinson could not be held limited to the motion for rehearing as a means of calling this matter to the court's attention, for the very good reason that the remittitur had not then been prepared. The striking from the remittitur of the words erroneously added by the clerk is the suitable method of correction (Baker v. SouthernCalifornia Ry. Co., 130 Cal. 114, [62 P. 302].)

The defendants other than James J. Stevinson have not joined in this motion and plaintiff insists that therefore they are entitled to no relief. This motion is made for the purpose of having the remittitur express the judgment actually given; to grant it in part and to refuse it in part would be to make another judgment still different from that which was *Page 543 declared. In such a proceeding as this of course we may not do anything of the sort.

It is ordered that the remittitur heretofore issued be recalled and a correct remittitur issued in its place, omitting the words "Appellant to recover costs of appeal."

Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., and Sloss J., concurred.