Gutierrez v. Superior Court of San Francisco
Gutierrez v. Superior Court of San Francisco
Opinion of the Court
Application for a writ of mandate.
By the final decree in Emeric v. Alvarado, certain lands in the possession of persons claiming to be the successors in interest of the petitioner were awarded to the plaintiff, and, after its entry, a writ of possession was issued under the order of the court, by virtue of which the plaintiff was placed in possession of these lands. Subsequently an appeal from the judgment was taken on behalf of the petitioner herein, and after the appeal had been perfected a motion was made before the superior court, the respondent herein, on behalf of said evicted persons, to be restored to the possession of said lands. The court denied the motion, and the peti
The application must be denied. The writ of possession was issued under an order of the court, and, if the court committed an error therein or in its subsequent order refusing to set aside the execution of the writ, the petitioner could appeal therefrom and have the error corrected. (Green v. Hebbard, 95 Cal. 40.) Whether the facts shown at the hearing of the application to vacate the execution of the writ were sufficient to authorize the granting of the motion called for the exercise of judicial action, and if error was committed in such action it cannot be corrected by mandamus.
By the terms of the decree the plaintiff was awarded the possession of the premises held by the petitioner’s successors, and the act of placing him in such possession was in exécution of the judgment. The petitioner could have stayed the execution of the judgment if she had appealed therefrom before it was executed; but, by failing to appeal until after it had been executed, she is not entitled to have its execution set aside by reason of such subsequent appeal, any more than a defendant against whom a money judgment has been satisfied by an execution against his property is entitled to be restored to his property upon afterwards taking an appeal from the judgment. If the judgment appealed from shall be reversed, the appellant will be entitled, under the provisions of section 957 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to full restitution of all that he may have lost by virtue of its execution.
The application is denied.
Garoutte, J., McFarland, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LEOTA K. T. GUTIERREZ v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Writ or Possession—Review or Order—Mandamus.—Where a writ of possession was issued under order of the court, any error committed therein, or in a subsequent order refusing to set aside the execution of the writ, can only be corrected upon appeal from the order, and cannot be corrected by mandamus. Id.—Award or Possession—Execution or Judgment—Subsequent Appeal—Restitution.—Where the possession of premises is awarded to the plaintiff by the decree, and he has been placed in possession in pursuance of a writ of possession, the taking of an appeal from the judgment after the writ has been executed does not entitle the defendant to be restored to the possession; but, if the judgment appealed from shall be reversed, the defendant will be entitled to restitution to what he has lost by virtue of its execution.