Bank of South San Francisco v. Pike
Bank of South San Francisco v. Pike
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by Boaz D. Pike, Georgie S. Pike, and Edna Laura Pike from the judgment rendered in the case of the Bank of South San Francisco, a Corporation, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Edna Laura Pike, et al., Defendants, Henry S. Bridge and Carrie E. Bridge, Defendants and Respondents, ante, p. 524, [200 Pac. 752]. *531 By stipulation of the parties the appeal is supported by, and rests on, the same record as in the Bridge case. The defendants Pike appeared and answered the plaintiff’s complaint; a trial on the merits was had; and the trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against these defendants and they have appealed from the judgment, and which judgment will hereinafter be termed the second judgment. The plaintiff alleged, and the trial court found, that on the twenty-third day of May, 1912, this plaintiff, the Bank of South San Francisco, obtained judgment against certain defendants, including the defendants B. D. Pike and Georgie S. Pike, for the sum of $5,714.31, and which judgment will hereinafter be termed the first judgment. The appellants make the claim that the first judgment was void because the summons was never served on the defendant Georgie S. Pike. If this claim can be sustained the judgment should be reversed; otherwise it should be affirmed. We think that the claim of the appellants is without merit for several different reasons, which we shall proceed to state.
(c) Assuming, as appellants contend, that the judgment in the first action was a judgment entered hy the clerk as distinguished from a judgment ordered by the court and that, therefore, the instrument does not have the same verity as the judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, still the appellants have not sustained their appeal. When the plaintiff applied to have the default of the appellants entered the clerk was thereupon called upon to perform a statutory duty in a statutory manner. (Gliddon v. Packard, 28 Cal. 649.) The appellants have shown that certain papers and files were at that time before the clerk. The appellants have not shown that there was not at that time before the clerk a minute entry which purported to authorize the withdrawal of the summons for the purpose of serving it on certain of the defendants. The trial court in this case has made a finding that the judgment in the first case was regular. Again, in support of the second judgment, we must presume that it was shown to the trial court, rendering the second judgment, that the said minute order had been obtained and was before the clerk when he entered the first judgment.
The record shows no error and the judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, P. J., and Nourse, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 12, 1921, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
THE COURT.—The application for a hearing in this court after decision by the district court of appeal of the first appellate district, division two, is denied.
We base our denial of the petition solely upon the fact that the trial court expressly found as one of the facts of the case that the judgment in the former action on the note “was duly given and made,” and that there is nothing in the judgment-roll in this action, upon which alone this appeal is based, necessarily in conflict with this clear and explicit finding of fact.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BANK OF SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO (A Corporation), Respondent, v. EDNA LAURA PIKE Et Al., Defendants and Appellants; HENRY S. BRIDGE Et Al., Defendants
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published