On December 6, 1966, the Municipal Court of the Santa Monica Judicial District entered a default judgment for $1,715 in favor of plaintiff. On September 14, 1967, defendant filed a notice of motion to vacate the judgment and the entry of default upon which it was based on the ground that they “were procured by extrinsic fraud and/or extrinsic mistake.’’ This motion was denied on September 26, 1967. Defendant appeals.
Although plaintiff resisted the motion on the merits, he also urged that a municipal court does not have jurisdiction to entertain a motion to vacate a judgment obtained by extrinsic
The appellate department of the superior court affirmed the order on the ground that the municipal court lacked jurisdiction. That department also held that the municipal court had no authority to transfer the cause to the superior court under Code of Civil Procedure section 396. Under the authority of rules 62 and 63 of the California Rules of Court, however, the appellate department certified the cause to the Court of Appeal for the Second District to consider both the jurisdictional question and the question of transferability of the cause under section 396.
The Court of Appeal held that the municipal court had jurisdiction and reversed the order and remanded the cause to the municipal court for a hearing and determination on the merits. Because of a direct conflict between this holding and that of the Court of Appeal for the Fifth District in Strachan v. American Ins. Co. (1968)
Six months having passed since the entry of the default, the defendant’s motion was not directed to the municipal court’s statutory power to grant relief under Code of Civil Procedure section 473. (Weitz v. Yankosky (1966)
A court of general jurisdiction has inherent equity power, aside from statutory authorization, to vacate and set aside default judgments obtained through extrinsic fraud or mistake. (Weitz v. Yankosky, supra,
Defendant contends that the power of the municipal court to hear and decide the motion in question derives from an inherent power of every court in any action in which it otherwise has jurisdiction “ [t]o amend and control its process and orders so as to make them conformable to law and justice” (Code Civ. Proc., § 128, subd. 8); in other words a grant of jurisdiction, no matter how limited, carries with it an implied or inherent power to set aside judgments of the court obtained through extrinsic fraud or mistake. This interpretation of the law misapprehends the nature of equity jurisdiction and the scope of section 128.
A distinction has long been made between the equity powers that inhere in courts of general jurisdiction and powers, primarily of an administrative nature, that inhere in all courts of record. The power to set aside judgments obtained through extrinsic fraud and mistake is within the equity jurisdiction of a court. (5 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (Equitable Remedies (2d ed.)) pp. 4671, 4672.) Unless limited by statute, this power is a necessary incident of the constitutional grant of general jurisdiction. (See Tulare Irr. Dist. v. Superior Court (1925)
The power to amend and control process and orders reflected in section 128, subdivision 8, is limited to such exercise as the correction of clerical errors (see Drinkhouse v. Van Ness (1927)
The question remains whether the municipal court should have transferred the cause to the superior court under
The nature of an action and the issues involved are to be determined, not from the appellation given the pleading, but from the facts alleged and the relief that they support. (Buxbom v. Smith (1944)
We venture no opinion as to the sufficiency of the pleadings to support the cause of action. That matter is for the superior court to decide subsequent to transfer.
The judgment is reversed, and the municipal court is directed to transfer the cause to the superior court.
McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
Section 396 provides: "If an action or proceeding is commenced in a court which lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter thereof ... if there is a court of this State which has such jurisdiction, the action or proceeding shall not be dismissed . . . but shall ... be transferred to a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter. ...”
