Douglas v. Dakin
Douglas v. Dakin
Opinion of the Court
This appeal being from the judgment, and there being no bill of exceptions or statement on appeal, we cannot consider the motion of plaintiff to strike out portions of the answer, or the motion for judgment, or the rulings or orders made thereon. The case must be determined upon the judgment roll alone.
The demurrer was properly overruled. Prima facie the W. J. Douglas named in the answer was the W. J. Douglas who is plaintiff in this action. The identity of the parties will be presumed from the identity of names.
Whatever may be the value of the fourth subdivision of the answer as a defense to the action, it is not subject to the charge of ambiguity or uncertainty. The averment that at the date of the commencement of the suit by Elizabeth Douglas against the City and County of San Francisco to quiet her title to the land in controversy, she was in the
We discover no error in the judgment roll.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WM. J. DOUGLAS and CHRISTOPHER HUTCHINSON v. E. DAKIN and J. G. LIBBEY
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Appeal fbom a Judgment without a Statement. — On an appeal from a judgment, where there is no bill of exceptions or statement, the Supreme Court will not consider the action of the Court below upon a motion to strikeout part of a pleading, or any other matter not appearing in the judgment roll. Identity of Pabties Pbesumed fbom Identity of Names. — Where William J. Douglas was plaintiff in an action for rent, and the defendant set up a judgment obtained in another Court against William J. Douglas without averring the identity: held, that the identity of the parties is to be presumed from the identity of names. Ambiguity and Uncebtainty in Pleading. — An answer, in an action against a tenant for unlawful detainer, which avers that a person, not a party to a suit, had formerly brought an action to quiet title to the demanded premises, and that such person was at the time in the actual possession of the premises, claiming title in fee thereto, is not ambiguous or uncertain.