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In re Clarke

Supreme Court of California
Jul 17, 1899
125 Cal. 388 (Cal. 1899)

Opinion

         HABEAS CORPUS in the Supreme Court, to review the legality of a commitment for contempt by the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. James M. Troutt, Judge.

         COUNSEL:

         T. M. Osmont, for Petitioner.

         Clarence W. Ashford, Assignee of Alfred Clarke, opposing petition.


         JUDGES: In Bank. Temple, J. Harrison, J., McFarland, J., Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.

         OPINION

          TEMPLE, Judge

         The petition shows that on the second day of October, 1891, six creditors of petitioner filed a petition in the superior court asking to have him adjudged an insolvent. An order to show cause was issued, signed by the judge but not made by the court. The bond given was not signed by the petitioning creditors. October 29th the petition was amended by adding three new creditors, and in other respects. No new bond was given after the amendment, and no new citation was issued. November 7, 1891, petitioner appeared and moved to strike out the petition on various grounds, and also demurred. The motion was denied and the demurrer overruled. He answered, a trial was had and an order was made May 12, 1892, which adjudged that on the fourteenth day of September, 1891, Alfred Clarke was an insolvent debtor, and petitioner was ordered to file schedules as required by law.

         Petitioner represents that he has always challenged the jurisdiction of the court on various grounds, and particularly because no bond was given as required by the statute. It is further charged that the order of adjudication has never been entered, and that petitioner moved in the superior court to have the proceedings dismissed because the judgment was not entered within six months after it was made.

         Petitioner also states that while said ineffective proceedings were pending he made application to be declared an insolvent, and that on his petition and notice an adjudication was made, and such proceedings were afterward had in the matter that on the sixth day of November, 1896, a decree was entered discharging him from all debts. The decree has never been vacated, suspended, or appealed from.

         It further appears from the petition that a citation was issued out of the superior court requiring petitioner to appear on a day named and answer concerning his property. He did appear, and the matter was continued from time to time until at last he failed and refused to appear and make answer to inquiries concerning his property. A citation was then served upon him requiring him to appear on the third day of February, 1899, to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of a contempt of court for failing to appear and answer questions. He appeared by counsel and showed cause by a demurrer and by an answer. The demurrer was overruled and the answer held insufficient, and he was adjudged guilty of a contempt of court and was committed until he would consent to answer touching the insolvent estate. By [58 P. 23] virtue of such order he is now being deprived of his liberty.

         The evidence shows that the petition is incorrect in some of the most material points. The first appearance of Clarke in the insolvency proceeding was by a motion to strike from the files the amended petition for various reasons, among which are: 1. It was wrongly entitled; 2. Did not conform to leave granted to amend; and 3. Certain specified portions were impertinent, irrelevant, and immaterial. No point was made that the court had not obtained jurisdiction of the person of defendant except that it is stated: "This paper is not a general appearance or an appearance to the merits, and respondent reserves his right to demand that he be brought into court by the issue of a regular process."

         On general principles, a statement that a defendant or party makes a special appearance is of no consequence whatever. If he appears and objects only to the consideration of the case, or to any procedure in it, because the court has not acquired jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, the appearance is special, and no statement to that effect in the notice or motion is required or could have any effect if made. On the other hand, if he appears and asks for any relief which could only be given to a party in a pending case, or which itself would be a regular proceeding in the case, it is a general appearance no matter how carefully or expressly it may be stated that the appearance is special. It is the character of the relief asked, and not the intention of the party that it shall or shall not constitute a general appearance, which is material. (See 2 Ency. of Pl. & Pr., 625, notes, and cases cited.)

         As a rule one cannot avail himself of the advantage of being a party and escape the responsibilities. Some early cases in this state (Deidesheimer v. Brown , 8 Cal. 340, and Lyman v. Milton , 44 Cal. 631) seem to hold that a defendant having first objected to the process or service by which he was brought in, may then, if his objections are overruled, answer to the merits, and on appeal from the judgment still avail himself of his objections to the jurisdiction of the court over him. This rule seems unjust and illogical, and I think does not prevail elsewhere. It gives the defendant, whose objections to the jurisdiction of the court have been erroneously overruled, an opportunity to go to trial, and if the judgment is favorable to abide by it, while if it is unfavorable he can procure a reversal. The plaintiff would have no such advantage. And what would be the condition of such a defendant after reversal? If the reversal means that he is not yet in the case, he may move to dismiss under section 581. If it merely gives him a new trial, the procedure seems farcical.

         In this case, by his first appearance, Clarke asked favors which could be demanded only by a party to the record, and, upon his motion being denied, he demurred to the petition upon nearly all the statutory grounds. He also filed an answer, which raised issues of fact, upon which a trial was had and findings were filed. Certainly by these proceedings he submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court.

         Is the proceeding absolutely void because no bond was given? Anderson v. Superior Court , 122 Cal. 216, was a petition for a writ of prohibition, and it was said, in effect, that though the alleged insolvent might have waived the bond, the court should not proceed in the matter against his objection. It would seem, then, if he did not object it might be considered as waived. No specific objection on this ground was made by the petitioner, at least until long after the adjudication of insolvency. In his notice of motion to strike out he stated as one of his grounds "that the court had not acquired jurisdiction to proceed under the amended petition." The same notice discloses that he was urging as an objection that the proceedings were wrongly entitled, and that the petition could not be amended, and no doubt these were the reasons why he thought the court had no jurisdiction. No other reasons are suggested.

         In his demurrer he stated as one ground that "the court has no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant or of the subject of the action." As he also demurred for insufficiency of the statement of facts, the demurrer itself constituted an appearance which gave the court jurisdiction of the person, if it had not already acquired it. There was no objection for lack of a bond. The petition avers that four days after the petition was filed Clarke appeared and objected to the form of the bond and the sufficiency of the sureties. The sureties failed to justify, but his objections were ignored. This is most decidedly a case where the allegations must be taken most strongly against the pleader. This notice may itself be construed into a waiver of all other objections to the bond. Several other instances are recited in the petition, but the particulars are not given, except that on January 5, 1894, he moved the court to vacate the judgment on the ground that no legal process was ever issued and no bond was given under the amended petition; and in October, 1894, he again moved the court to vacate the order because it had never been entered. The adjudication was made May 12, 1892.

         We find, therefore, that Clarke specifically objected to the form of the bond and to the sufficiency of the sureties, and at the same time denied the numerous allegations and charges of wrongdoing contained in the petition, and his insolvency, and caused a trial to be had of such issues, without calling the attention of the court to the fact that a bond had not been given. Doubtless he conceded the power of the court to allow an amendment, and believed that the bond already given under the first petition [58 P. 24] would serve under the new. The objection was in the nature of a plea in abatement, and I think it was waived.

         It is objected that no sufficient adjudication was made and that it has never been entered.

         The adjudication is complete in form and substance. It states that all the allegations in the amended petition are true, and that Clarke was on the fourteenth day of September, 1891, and ever since has been, and still is, insolvent. The adjudication then proceeds unnecessarily to add as a conclusion of law that Clarke was, on the fourteenth day of September, 1891, an insolvent debtor. This is what the petitioner calls the adjudication. The document is one, and whether the court says it "finds" or "adjudges" or "decrees" or "considers" is immaterial. Formal findings were not required, and it is sufficient if the court by order adjudges the respondent in such proceeding insolvent, as required by statute.

         The clerk did, however, make an entry of an order in his minutes. It is too brief -- a trouble not infrequent in clerical work. After the title it is: "This matter having been heretofore submitted to the court for consideration and decision, and now the court having fully considered the same, it is ordered that Alfred Clarke be, and he is adjudged and declared to be, an insolvent debtor." From this order so defectively entered Clarke appealed to this court, and the order was affirmed. Perhaps the court, as in the case of Miller v. Lux , 100 Cal. 609, considered itself justified in looking to the entire record, including the findings. It is there said that, though findings are not required, still if made they constitute a part of the judgment-roll.

         No other entry than the minutes of the court was required. (In re Blythe Estate , 110 Cal. 229.)          The adjudication is but an interlocutory order from which an appeal is specially provided.

         It should have been entered in the minutes, and an informal entry of it was made. Even if it be considered a judgment, and the attempted appeal from it was ineffectual, the fact that it was not entered does not render it invalid. (Estate of Cook , 83 Cal. 415; Marshall v. Taylor , 97 Cal. 422.)

         Petitioner contends that there was not sufficient showing before the superior court to justify the issuance of the citation to him. Upon habeas corpus the burden is upon the petitioner to show that a restraint which is apparently legal is not so. The commitment states facts sufficient to authorize the citation and there is no proof upon the subject.

         The examination was postponed from day to day, and finally Clarke failed to be present at the appointed time. An order was served on him requiring him to appear and show cause why he should not be punished for a contempt in refusing to appear. He showed cause by a written statement challenging the jurisdiction of the court. This was taken under advisement by the court and finally overruled, and the petitioner was adjudged guilty of a contempt and was committed for one day and until, et cetera.

         He now contends that he should have been present in person. His showing in response to the order was heard and considered, and this was his own chosen method. He will not be heard to say he was not present.

         The sentence was objected to because it provides for an imprisonment for a definite term of one day. It is contended that he could only be imprisoned until he would consent to testify. I think this is a mistake, but if not the illegal part is void.

         The portion not inflicting a punishment is not within the rule declared in Ex parte Kelly , 65 Cal. 154. To strike out the direction that he be imprisoned for one day would vacate the entire punitive part of the order. Had he consented during the day to testify, he might then have raised the point.

         I cannot see that the voluntary proceedings by which petitioner claims to have been discharged as an insolvent, if proven here, as they were not, could help the petitioner. Such a discharge might in a proper case be pleaded in bar, but the fact would not deprive the court in which the other proceeding is pending of jurisdiction.

         The prisoner is remanded.


Summaries of

In re Clarke

Supreme Court of California
Jul 17, 1899
125 Cal. 388 (Cal. 1899)
Case details for

In re Clarke

Case Details

Full title:In re ALFRED CLARKE, upon Habeas Corpus

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Jul 17, 1899

Citations

125 Cal. 388 (Cal. 1899)
58 P. 22

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