White v. Ostly

343 P.2d 937, 173 Cal. App. 2d 636, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 14, 1959
DocketCiv. No. 18526
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 343 P.2d 937 (White v. Ostly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Ostly, 343 P.2d 937, 173 Cal. App. 2d 636, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

Appellants’ contention here that the county clerk must enter in the judgment hook a “Judgment of Dismissal” rendered after the court granted a motion to dismiss, with directions to the attorney to prepare the order, cannot be sustained in the face of section 581d of the Code of Civil Procedure, the desirability of simplicity of procedure, the legislative intent, and the practical considerations involved.

Appellants here are defendants in the case of Oppenheimer v. Ashburn, ante, p. 624 [343 P.2d 931] (Los Angeles Superior Court No. 691595) which we have decided on appeal this day (1 Civ. 18508). In that action the Superior Court in and for the County of Los Angeles on February 5, 1958, sustained demurrers of appellants to the amended complaint granting 10 days in which to amend. When plaintiff failed to amend within the designated time appellants moved to dismiss pursuant to section 581, subdivision 3. On March 25, 1958, the court ruled “Motion Granted Attorney To Prep are Order.”

On March 28, 1958, respondents filed a document signed by Judge John F. Aiso of that superior court entitled “Judgment of Dismissal,” in which it was stated: “[T]he Court having sustained . . . demurrers with 10 days leave' to amend, the plaintiff having failed to amend . . . within . . . time allowed, and the said defendants having presented an application for dismissal under Code of Civil Procedure Section 581(3) and affidavit in support thereof;

“Now Therefore, It Is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that plaintiff’s amended complaint be, and the same is hereby dismissed as to . . . [defendants White, Doran and Fourt] said defendants [to] recover their costs of suit against plaintiff taxed herein [at] . . . $4St@0.”

The county clerk refused to enter the “Judgment of Dismissal” in the judgment book, stating that the decision in Sheta v. Grahm (1957), 156 Cal.App.2d 77 [318 P.2d 756], held that an appeal “filed within 60 days after the date of entry in the judgment book” but more than 60 days after the filing date of the formal order of dismissal, “was filed too [638]*638late.” The clerk contended that “if the entry date in the judgment book is disregarded as the date from which the time for appeal starts to run, ... it serves no purpose for the Clerk to make such entry, and . . . such entry might place the Clerk in the position of misleading a prospective appellant as to the time from which an appeal starts to run.” Not convinced of the validity of the clerk’s position, appellants petitioned for a writ of mandate on May 9, 1958, directing the clerk to enter the “Judgment .of Dismissal” in the judgment book. The superior court thereupon issued an alternative writ.

The petition for mandate alleged in paragraph V that petitioners had “no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy in the course of law,” in that the judgment of dismissal would not become effective until entered and that the time for appeal would “not commence to run until the entry of said judgment.” On May 20, 1958, the clerk filed an answer admitting all of petitioner’s allegations except paragraph V which he denied. Oppenheimer, named as the real party in interest, filed a demurrer to the petition, which the court overruled. After taking evidence, the court denied the peremptory writ. The court found that the “Judgment of Dismissal,” was “entered for all purposes at the time it was filed with” (italics added) the clerk, on March 28, 1958; that there ivas “no duty” on his part to enter the “order in the Judgment Book,” and that accordingly petitioner’s allegations in paragraph V were not true. The court thereby accepted the clerk’s contention that the “Motion Granted Attorney To Prepare Order” of March 25, 1958, was merely a direction to prepare a formal order.

Appellants’ appeal from this denial of their petition projects the issue before us. It involves the interpretation of two sections of the Code of Civil Procedure. Respondent successfully contended in the superior court that section 581d of the Code of Civil Procedure applied. That section provides: “All dismissals ordered by the court shall be entered upon the minutes thereof or in the docket in the justice court, as the case may be, and such orders when so entered shall constitute judgments and be effective for all purposes, and the clerk in superior and municipal courts shall note such judgments in his register of actions in the ease.” Appellants urge the applicability of section 668 of the Code of Civil Procedure reading: “The clerk of the superior court must [639]*639keep, with the records of the court, a book called the ‘judgment book,’ in which judgments must be entered.”

Appellants’ contention that the order would not be effective as a judgment until entrance in the judgment book, pursuant to section 668, compelling an additional procedural step to the completion of the order, both complicates the procedural process and, in our judgment, conflicts with the legislative intent. Here appellants moved to dismiss the action pursuant to the Code of Civil Procedure. The court granted the motion and instructed the attorney to prepare the order. That order “when so entered” became under section 581d a judgment “effective for all purposes.” We do not believe that section 668 should be construed to nullify section 581d by the requirement that a second procedural formality be undertaken. The Legislature could not have meant that section 581d compose a dismissal into a judgment, effective for all purposes, and yet require that conformity to section 668 be a condition to the judgment. If the language of the section means that a dismissal constitutes a judgment, the additional entry in the judgment book would compel the performance of an idle and formal act. Neither the language of the sections nor the history of section 581d supports appellants’ position.

The history of section 581d discloses that the Legislature intended by it to provide a specific method for obtaining a judgment after failure to amend a complaint to which a demurrer had been sustained. Section 581 as originally enacted in 1872 carried no provision for dismissal after a demurrer had been sustained and plaintiff failed to amend. In 1933 the provision relating to failure to amend after a demurrer had been sustained was added to subdivision 3. (16 West’s Ann.Cal. Codes, 63.) In 1947 the provisions relating to entry of dismissals in the clerk’s register or judicial docket were deleted from section 581 and incorporated into a new section (581d). The new section also provided that all orders of dismissal by the court, when entered upon the minutes of the court “shall constitute judgments and be effective for all purposes,” the italicized words being newly added. (The Work of the 1947 California Legislature, 21 So.Cal.L.Rev. (1947) 1, 9.) The Legislature thus explicitly provided that the order of dismissal be a judgment.

Many criticisms have been leveled at the legal process for cumbersome and useless procedures inherited from a time when formality rather than expedition characterized the [640]*640process itself. Today courts and Legislature alike have striven to clear away duplication and embellishment. To impute to the Legislature the design that two procedural steps, the entry of the dismissal plus the entry of formal judgment, must be taken when one would suffice is to find it meant to complicate a procedure which it avowedly sought to simplify.

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Bluebook (online)
343 P.2d 937, 173 Cal. App. 2d 636, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 1635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-ostly-calctapp-1959.