Reclamation District No. 124 v. Coghill
Before: McKinstry
Synopsis
Appeal from a judgment, and from an order denying a motion to vacate a judgment, in the Tenth District Court, County of Colusa. Keyser, J.
The defendants appealed. The facts are stated in the opinion.
McKinstry, J.: A judgment by default, providing for the sale of certain lands, as portions of a swamp land district, to satisfy an alleged assessment levied upon them by competent authority, was entered on the 6th day of October, 1879.
Section 3456 of the Political Code expressly provides, that, where the service, as in the case before us, has been made by posting and publication, the defendant, “ or any person claiming any interest in the land,” may appear and answer the complaint within forty days after the expiration of the four weeks of posting and publication. The same section provides : “ Such posting and publication is equivalent to personal service on all persons having or claiming any right, title, or interest in the land assessed, whether named as a party in said action or not.” And further: “ In such action, the Court may decree and adjudge a lien against the tracts assessed, and order them to be sold on execution or decree,” etc. The evident design of [608]the statute is to foreclose all right or claim in and to the land, whether asserted by those named as defendants or not; and that the purchaser' at the sale under the decree shall acquire, not only the title of the particular defendants named as such, but that of all other persons claiming any right, title, or interest in the property.
We do not deem it necessary to pass upon the question so elaborately argued by counsel as to the validity (under the Constitutions of the State and the Dnited States) of § 3466 of the Political Code. That question can be fully presented at the trial in the Court below. Assuming the validity of § 3466, it makes “ all persons having or claiming any right, title, or interest in the land assessed ” defendants, who may appear as such, and against whom judgment may be rendered. It follows, that every such person may (under circumstances otherwise proper) move to vacate a default and judgment taken against him.
Here a motion was made to set aside the default and decree by the defendant named in the complaint, A. J. Coghill, and by A. Montgomery, W. H. De Jarnett, and Matthew Sparks— the three last claiming to be the owners of the land assessed.
The affidavits of Montgomery, De Jarnett, and Sparks set forth, that they knew nothing of the commencement of the action, or of its pendency, or of the judgment therein, until the judgment was rendered and<entered. The notice of motion to vacate was served November 3rd, 1879, within a month after the judgment was entered. We think the ignorance of the affiants rendered their neglect in not appearing “ excusable,” and that, considering the time .necessary to secure counsel, and for the latter to inform themselves of the facts, the brief delay in making the motion was sufficiently accounted for. The statement in the counter-affidavits of the plaintiff, that defendants have been for several years residents of Colusa County, and “ constant readers ” of the Weekly Colusa Sun—the newspaper in which the summons was published—neither overcomes nor constitutes a serious conflict with the averment, that defendants were ignorant of the posting and publication.
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