Opinion
This is аn appeal from a judgment sustaining defendants’ demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition for a writ of mandate and complaint for declaratory relief. Plaintiffs brought suit on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated who are unable to procеed in California courts with their causes of action for dissolution of marriage or declaration of nullity because they lack the funds necessary to pay the costs for service of process on their spouses. The trial court permitted each of the plaintiffs to proceed in forma pauperis in their matrimonial actions, thereby avoiding filing fees. Plaintiffs, however, were unable to pay the costs for service by publication *238 which, they allege, was necessary because their spouses could not be found for personal service. They sought a writ of mandate commanding defendants Board of Supervisors of Alameda County and the Controller of the State of California to pаy the costs of publication, and they prayed for declaratory relief. Demurrer to both causes of actiоn was sustained, and writ of mandate was denied.
Subsequent to the time the parties filed their respective briefs in this case, the United States Supreme Court decided the case of
Boddie
v.
Connecticut,
We assume, for present purposes, the indigency of plaintiffs. As indigents in marital cаses (to which Boddie is expressly limited), they are unquestionably entitled not only to access to the courts by waiver of costs, whiсh they have already received, but also to provision for service of process, under the Boddie holding. But is the remedy а writ commanding state or county officers to pay private agencies the costs of publication? We hold thаt it is not. No provision is made by statute for payments of this sort, wherefore the officers who are defendants have nо precise duty in the matter, and compulsion to perform “a duty resulting from an office, trust, or.station” is the office of the writ of mandate. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085.) We' are mindful, too, of the considerable burden which would be put upon the taxpayers to pay for a service which the Supreme Court has character *239 ized as the “least calculated” method of notifying a potential defendant of the proceedings.
Section 415.50 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, in relevant part, that summons may be served by. publication if upon affidavit it appears to the satisfaction of the court in which the action is pending that the party to be served cannot with reasonable diligence be served in оther specified manner, and that a cause of action exists against the party or he is a necessary or proper party to the action. But this is not the only pertinent statute. Section 413.30 of the same code directs that where no provision is made “in this chapter or other law” for service of summons, the court in which the action is pending may direct that summons be served in a manner which is reasonably calculated to give actual notice to the party to be served. Obviously, such a “manner” is at hand, for the Supreme Court has described it in
Boddie
(
Since neither the superior court nor any of its officers has been made a defendant to the present proceedings, we cannot direct positive action by the court. We affirm the judgment denying to plaintiffs a writ оf mandate against the Board of Supervisors of Alameda County and the State Controller, on the ground that plaintiffs havе an adequate remedy by the alternative method of service by summons under Code of Civil Procedure section 413.30, a rеmedy which they have not yet sought in the superior court.
The judgment denying plaintiffs declaratory relief in the form of an order directing defendants to pay for service by publication is likewise affirmed, because under the conclusions we have reached these defendants had no such obligation.
The judgment is affirmed.
Rattigan, J., and Christian, J., concurred.
