Hughes v. Alsip
Before: McFarland
Synopsis
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County. A. P. Gatlin,. Judge.
The action was brought to foreclose six several liens for street improvements in the city of Sacramento. The work was done under a resolution of intention, passed April 3, 1893, by the board of trustees of the city, to order that “Twenty-first street, from the south line of P street to the center line of T street in said city, except such portion thereof as is required by law to be kept in order or repair by any person or company having railroad tracks thereon, be, where not already done, improved by grading and graveling to the official grades, constructing redwood curbing, and filling in behind the same to a distance not to exceed eight feet? constructing Oregon pine plank crosswalks at street and alley intersections, redwood culverts, round corners, and an ironstone culvert at ‘X’ street.” The contract attached to the complaint as “Exhibit A” provided' that the proposed work should be paid for at the following prices: “Per cubic yard of earth, excavating, 20 cents; per cubic yard of earth, scraper work, 25 cents; per cubic yard of earth, hauling from block to block, 40 cents; per cubic yard gravel, $1.70; per lineal foot of redwood curbing, 13 cents; per round corner, $3; per ‘M’ board measure, lumber in crosswalks and aprons, $30; per ‘M’ board measure, lumber in culverts, $30; per ‘M’ board measure, resetting old crosswalks and culverts, $10; per lineal foot, resetting old curb, 8 cents.’' Further facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
McFarland, J. Action to foreclose several liens for street assessments in Sacramento City. Judgment went for plaintiffs, and defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The motion for a new trial cannot be considered, «though that question is not of much consequence here, because nearly all of appellant’s points are made on the alleged insufficiency of the complaint. The notice of motion for a new trial does not state what it will be based on; that is, it does not state whether it would be made upon affidavits, minutes of the court, bill of exceptions, or statement, as required by section 659 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Respondents are not estopped from making this point because they presented amendments to a certain bill of exceptions proposed by appellant and took part in the settlement of said bill. Appellant had the right to a bill of exceptions to be used on his appeal from the judgment; and an objection by respondents that his notice of motion for a new trial was defective would not have affected his right to have the bill settled. He could have waived his'motion for a new trial and still have been entitled to his bill of exceptions. If this contention of appellant were about a statement on motion for a new trial it would present a different aspect. The respondents moved in the court below that the motion for a new trial be dismissed for the defect in the notice above stated.
The only questions in the case arise upon the judgment-roll—that is, whether the complaint, to which no demurrer was interposed, is sufficient, after trial on the merits, to sustain the judgment, and whether the judgment grants any unauthorized relief.
Where there has been no demurrer, and the case has been tried on its merits, an appellate court will not reverse a judgment for plaintiff on account of alleged deficiencies of the complaint, unless it entirely fails to ■ state material facts necessary to constitute a cause of action. Merely defective or imperfect statements of [591]such facts will not warrant a reversal; they will be considered as cured by the verdict. (Treanor v. Houghton, 103 Cal. 53; Schluter v. Harvey, 65 Cal. 158; Hallock v. Jaudin, 34 Cal. 167; 1 Chitty on Pleading, 673.) In the case at bar appellant makes many objections to the sufficiency of the complaint which we do not deem called upon to notice in detail; it is enough to say that the complaint as a whole states a cause of action upon which respondents were entitled to the judgment rendered. Indeed, it is not clear that any of the necessary averments can be considered as defectively or imperfectly stated. In answer to appellant’s leading points, we may say that the complaint shows that the city council or board of trustees did sufficiently determine the work to be done so as to acquire jurisdiction; that the work was sufficiently described in the resolutions of intention; that it was not left to the discretion of the superintendent of streets to determine how much work was to be done, but that it was to be done in accordance with specifications prepared by the city surveyor and filed with the board, upon which the bids were made; that the posting of notice “at or near the office door of the said board of trustees” is a sufficient averment of a compliance with the provision of the law requiring the notice to be posted “ on or near the council chamber door of said council”; and that the substance of the warrants and the returns thereon are sufficiently averred—at least, in the absence of a demurrer and after trial, at which, it is presumed, all essential facts were proven.
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