Court Opinion

ID: 3281687
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:55:37.37022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:24:59.254729
License: Public Domain

There is now pending in the Superior Court of the county of Los Angeles and in the department *Page 695 
thereof presided over by the respondent judge, an action in which one J. E. Youtz is plaintiff and the petitioner is one of the defendants. Petitioner and other defendants in that action, having been duly served with summons, filed a demurrer to the complaint. After the filing of his complaint, the plaintiff Youtz was imprisoned in the state penitentiary pursuant to his conviction of a felony, and is now undergoing a three years' term of imprisonment. On account of such imprisonment of the plaintiff, the respondent judge has ordered said demurrer stricken from the calendar and refuses to hear and determine the same or proceed further in said cause. The petitioner seeks a peremptory writ of mandamus, commanding that said cause be restored to the calendar of said court and that the court proceed to hear and determine the same.
To this petition a general demurrer is filed, alleging that the petition does not state facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to the relief sought by him. It is understood by the parties that our determination of this demurrer is to dispose of the case without further hearing. Permission was granted respondents' counsel to file a brief in support of the demurrer, but no brief has been presented.
"A sentence of imprisonment in a state prison for any term less than for life suspends all the civil rights of the person so sentenced and forfeits all public offices and all private trusts, authority, or power during such imprisonment." (Pen. Code, sec. 673.) We are not aware of any decision covering the precise question involved in this matter. It is stated that even where conviction of a felony results in civil death (as it does in this state upon a sentence of imprisonment for life), the weight of authority is apparently in harmony with the English doctrine to the effect that the convict still remains subject to be sued. (8 Ruling Case Law, p. 707, and citations there found.) This doctrine is specifically recognized in this state in the statutory provisions allowing a divorce to be granted upon proof that defendant has been convicted of a felony.
To say that a defendant in a civil action is obliged to submit to the continued pendency of an action against him under these circumstances, because the plaintiff is undergoing a sentence of the kind herein described, would be to impose upon the defendant a punishment for the plaintiff's crime. The sentence might be for a long term of years and all of defendant's *Page 696 
property might be subject to an attachment in the action, and yet the defendant would be without relief, no matter how groundless in fact the action might be. This cannot be the law. The interests of the plaintiff in such an action will ordinarily be sufficiently protected by the vigilance of the attorneys who have charge of his case; but if in any case he is not so protected, the loss should fall upon him rather than upon those unconnected with his offense.
Let the peremptory writ issue as demanded.
James, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.