The question for decision is whether a defendant has the right of appeal from the clerk’s entry in his registry of the dismissal of an action on the request of plaintiff, where no counterclaim or other plеading demanding affirmative relief has been filed.
In the court below defendant filed its motion to strike and a demurrer to the amended complaint for damages alleged to have been suffered as a result of a breach of contract to sell specified quantities of beer to plaintiffs. The court allowed plaintiffs to strike certain passages and overruled the demurrer. Two weeks subsequent to the filing of a stipulation for a second amended complaint such pleading was filed. For reasons satisfactory to the court on the motion of defendant the last mentioned pleading was stricken. On the request of plaintiffs the action was dismissed by the clerk on October 9, 1944, and twenty-eight days later defendant filed its notice of appeal from the “order of dismissal entered ... on October 9, 1944, from the dismissal made pursuant to the direction of the plaintiffs on or about the 9th day of October, 1944, and from the implied judgment of dismissal made pursuant to the said direction.” Respondents have presented thеir motion to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that appellant is not aggrieved; that the dismissal was in its favor; that it had demanded no affirmative relief.
Appellant conceives "that the voluntary dismissal оf an action under section 581, Code of Civil Procedure, following adverse rulings is analogous to a final judgment against a defendant after he has suffered prejudicial rulings. It argues : Although the judgment may be in corrеct form, the review sought on appeal is that of the rulings precedent to the entry of judgment. Such analogy would be persuasive if a voluntary dismissal held the same rank as a final judgment after a trial of controverted issues of law or of fact. But there is no kinship of a voluntary dismissal to a final judgment. A wilful dismissal terminates the action for all time and af
A plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal of his action has the effect of an absolute withdrawal of his claim and leaves the defendant as though he had never been a рarty.
(Holt Mfg. Co.
v.
Collins,
Appellant contends that the court had erred in overruling its demurrer to the complaint and that upon this appeal from the dismissal it is entitled to this court’s judgment upon thе
But even though the clerk’s dismissal be considered a judicial act, defendant has no right of appeal therefrom for the reason that the dismissal leaves it exactly where it desired to be at all times both before and after the filing of the action. The party whose total demands are granted in a judicial proceeding has no right of appeal.
(Widener
v. Hartnett,
But further to extend the supposititiоus status of the clerk’s entry by considering it a judicial order, we could not review the ruling upon defendant’s demurrer. There is no appeal from such an order.
(Schwalen
v.
Retail Food Clerks Union,
In support of its contention that it hаs the right to appeal from the dismissal entered in the clerk’s registry, appellant cites two authorities from other jurisdictions:
Klinge
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
Huntington Park Imp. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(
It is therefore ordered that respondеnts’ motion be and is hereby granted and that the appeal herein be and the same is hereby dismissed.
McComb, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 14, 1945. Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., voted for a hearing.
