Cavitt v. Raje
Before: Kerrigan
Synopsis
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco denying a motion for a change of place of trial. George E. Crothers, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
[660]
KERRIGAN, J.
This is an appeal from an order denying a motion by defendant for a change of the place of trial.
There is absolutely no merit in the motion to dismiss the appeal, and, contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, the affidavits in the record show that the defendant at the time of the commencement of the action resided in the county of Los Angeles.
In the defendant’s demand for a change of the place of trial, in the notice of motion, and in several of the affidavits which were filed in the proceeding, there were many interlineations and erasures. This is so with reference to the affidavit of merits verified and filed by the defendant; and it is the plaintiff’s principal claim in support of the order of the trial court that the defendant, although requested, refused to say that the alterations therein were made prior to the execution of the instrument, and that upon objection by plaintiff upon that ground the court excluded the same from consideration, and accordingly denied said motion. The record, however, does not show that the defendant was asked to account for the appearance of the alterations, or that he refused to do so; or that plaintiff made any objection to the consideration of the affidavit of merits, or that the court failed to cofisider it. The court, however, in its order denying the motion, significantly says that having “seen and read the affidavits, etc., the motion is denied”; and since the parties have discussed the matter in their briefs as though the motion were denied on the ground stated, it may not be amiss to briefly review the matter.
Upon examining the affidavit in its original form, and ignoring the alterations, it is found to embrace all the essential averments of a sufficient affidavit of mérits
(Walkins
v.
Degener,
63 Cal. 500;
Nolan
v.
McDuffie,
125 Cal. 334, [58 Pac. 4]), and therefore the interlineations and erasures in the affidavit complained of are wholly immaterial, and defendant was entitled to have it read and considered on the hearing of the motion. If the alteration changed “the meaning of the language of the instrument” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1982), or if it remedied a defective affidavit, the change would be regarded as material, and the affidavit could not then have been considered without a satisfactory explanation (Code Civ. Proc., see. 1982). “A material change or alteration of an instrument is one which causes it to speak a language different
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