Janes v. Bullard

California Supreme Court
Janes v. Bullard, 107 Cal. 130 (Cal. 1895)
40 P. 108; 1895 Cal. LEXIS 721
Fleet

Janes v. Bullard

Opinion of the Court

Van Fleet, J.

This is an appeal from an order made after final judgment refusing to vacate and set aside an order of sale issued upon a decree of foreclosure, directing a sale of real property.

In our judgment the appeal is wholly without merit.

Assuming, as contended by appellant, that the action of the clerk in inserting in the decree the amount of the costs as claimed by plaintiff, before the same had been taxed or ascertained, was erroneous, it was a mere clerical misprision, which did not affect the validity of the decree in other respects. Nor did it make invalid the order of sale issued thereon. The latter was, like the decree, erroneous but not void, and the validity of the-sale thereunder was not thereby affected. (Newmark v. Chapman, 53 Cal. 557.)

Being merely erroneous, both the decree and order of sale were amendable in that regard, and the subsequent action of the court in taxing the costs was, in effect, such amendment and a curing of the error. It was under the decree and order of sale as so modified that the property was sold, and only the amount of costs as taxed by the court was collected by the sheriff, so that appellant was in no way injuriously affected by the error complained of.

The contention of appellant that the order of sale was prematurely issued and therefore void cannot be sustained. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 681; Los Angeles County Bank v. Raynor, 61 Cal. 146.)

The order is affirmed, with fifty dollars damages.

Garoutte, J., Harrison, J., McFarland, J., and Temple, J., concurred.

Rehearing denied.

Reference

Full Case Name
T. I. JANES v. J. A. BULLARD
Cited By
3 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
Foreclosure — Inserting Untaxed Costs in Decree — Clerical Misprision—Validity op Order op Sale.—The action of the clerk in inserting in a decree of foreclosure the amount of coats as claimed by plaintiff, before the same had been taxed or ascertained, is a mere clerical misprision, not affecting the validity of the decree in other respects, nor invalidating the order of sale issued thereon, nor affecting the validity of the sale thereunder. Id.—Amendment op Decree and Order op Sale—Taxation op Costs— Curing op Error.—The decree and order of sale, being'merely erroneous in the insertion of costs before taxation, are amendable in that regard, and the subsequent action of the court in taxing the costs is, in effect, such an amendment, and cures the error, and, where the property is sold under the decree as modified by the taxation of costs, and only the costs taxed are collected, there is no prejudicial error. Id.—Order op Sale not Premature—Frivolous Appeal—Damages.— The issuance of an order of sale before the taxation of costs is not premature, and an appeal taken after the taxation of costs from an order refusing to vacate the order of sale because the costs were inserted in the decree before taxation is without merit; and the order will be affirmed with damages.