Cаthleen Connelly appeals from the trial court’s order setting aside a default judgment entered against respondent Fred Castillo. We reverse.
Appellant filed a complaint for personal injury against respondent on February 25, 1983, as the result of sustaining severe damage to her face by bites from a dog kept on respondent’s real property. Although respondent’s attorney agreed to accept service of the summons and complаint, he did not do so when the necessary documents were mailed to him. Likewise, respondent’s insurance company failed to accept service on respondent’s behalf. Finally, appellant obtained respondеnt’s address by contacting numerous sources. After five attempts to personally serve respondent at that address, substitute service was accomplished by leaving a copy of the summons and complaint with respondent’s mothеr and thereafter mailing the documents to the same location. This service was deemed effective September 2, 1983.
On September 7, appellant personally served respondent with a statement of special аnd general damages. Curiously, appellant did not file proof of this service in superior court.
Appellant subsequently filed her request to enter default on October 4, 1983. Thereafter, on October 12, she filed the damages statemеnt with the trial court together with proof of service of the statement by mail on respondent October 11. Meanwhile, respondent mailed his answer to appellant’s complaint to the superior court on October 4, 32 days аfter September 2, the date of service of the complaint, but the court clerk mailed it back, informing him that appellant’s request for default had already been filed. On October 20, 1983, the matter was heard and default judgment was grantеd against respondent.
During the following two years, respondent appeared at several judgment debtor exams and entered into an agreement with appellant to make installment payments. On December 18, 1985, over two yеars after default judgment, respondent filed a motion to set aside the default, contending that it was void for appellant’s failure to give respondent notice of the nature and amount of her damages pursuant to Code оf Civil Procedure section 425.11. Respondent pointed out that appellant mailed her statement of damages to him on October 11, seven days after filing her request to enter default on October 4.
Appellant responded in hеr opposition motion that respondent had been served with the statement of damages prior to the entry of default, attaching
On February 14, 1986, the trial court “reluctantly” granted respondent’s motion and ordered the default judgment to be set aside, finding the previous judgment was void and citing
Plotitsa
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
Appellant contends on appeal that the default judgment is not void since respondent received sufficient notice of the amount of damages claimed in the suit before she filed her request for default, therefore, the trial court had jurisdiction to grant the judgment pursuant to section 425.11. 1 She further claims that a trial court’s power to render default judgments is authorized only according to statutory terms, and section 425.11 imposes no 30-day waiting period after service of a statement of damages.
Respondent counters that the judgment is clearly void on its face since there was no record at the time default judgment was granted that respondent had been personally served with the statement of damages. Respondent further asserts, in the exhibited belief that the trial court granting default was aware of the personal service of the damages statement upon respondent on September 7, 1983, that the superiоr court clerk should have waited 30 days until October 7, to file appellant’s request for default, and therefore
Respondent’s motion to vacate the default judgment was filed beyond thе time limitation of six months imposed by Code of Civil Procedure section 473; it is thus a collateral, not direct, attack on the judgment.
(National Diversified Services, Inc.
v.
Bernstein
(1985)
A judgment can be void for lack of personal or subject matter jurisdiction or for the granting of relief which the trial court had no power to grant.
(Becker
v.
S.P.V. Construction Co.
(1980)
Section 425.11 provides that, in cases seeking to recover damages for personal injury, a plaintiff shall give notice to the defendant of the amount of special and general damages sought to be recovered prior to default.
2
Section 425.11 operates in conjunction with Code of Civil Procedure section 425.10, subdivision (b), which mandates that a complaint for damages resulting from persоnal injuries shall
not
state the amount of damages sought. The purpose of the latter statute is to protect defendants from adverse publicity resulting from inflated demands.
(Jones
v.
Interstate Recovery Service
(1984)
There is no language in section 425.11 stating or suggesting the exact amount of notice that a plaintiff must give a defendant concerning the amount of damages sought before seeking default. The statute simply provides that notice is required before entry of default. An examina
Respondent cites
Petty
v.
Manpower, Inc.
(1979)
It is established that a default judgment is valid when based on
actual
service of summons on the defendant, although no proof of service is filed prior to entry of the judgment.
(National Diversified Services, Inc.
v.
Bernstein, supra,
We further disagree with the trial court vacating the default judgment that the judgment is void due to appellant’s failure to give respondent 30 days notice of the amount of damages sought prior to filing the request for default. Appellant correctly points out that section 425.11 contains no rale declaring a 30-day notice of the statement of damages in personal injury cases.
A “court’s jurisdiction to render default judgments can
be exercised only in the way authorized by
statute.”
(Burtnett
v.
King
(1949)
Nevertheless, the purpose of section 425.11, to give a defendant notice of the damages claim, signifies that such notice must be reasonable to be
We distinguish this case from
Twine
v.
Compton Supermarket
(1986)
The judgment is reversed and set aside.
Costs on appeal are awarded to appellant.
Gilbert, J., and Abbe, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 24, 1987.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
That section states in pertinent part: “When a comрlaint or cross-complaint is filed in an action in the superior court to recover damages for personal injury or wrongful death, the party against whom the action is brought may at any time request a statement setting forth the nature and amount of damages being sought____[H] If no request is made for such a statement setting forth the nature and amount of damages being sought, the plaintiff shall give notice to the defendant of the amount of special and general damages sought to be recovered (1) before a default may be taken-, ..(Italics added.)
