*1170 Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment entered pursuant to settlement as authorized by Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6 (herein sometimes referred to as the section). Plaintiff and appellant Datatronic Systems Corporation (Datatronic) contests the validity of a settlement agreement purportedly entered with defendant and respondent Speron Inc., doing business as Addresses Unlimited (Speron), pursuant to litigation arising from a contract between the parties. We reverse the judgment.
Facts
The instant action arises from a 1979 contract between the parties for computer equipment and other goods to be sold or leased by Datatronic to Speron and accounting, computer and related services to be performed by Datatronic for Speron. A dispute developed, and on November 10, 1983, Datatronic sued Speron for breach of pontract; goods sold and delivered; work, labor and services; open book account; account stated; and quantum meruit. Speron answered and cross-complained against Datatronic and its president, Michael Milane (Milane).
On January 19, 1984, Datatronic took the deposition of Speron’s vice-president. After several hours of examination on that date, the deposition was recessed and settlement negotiations commenced between the respective attorneys for Datatronic and Speron. Both attorneys then conferred privately with their clients. Afterward, in the presence of the parties, the attorney for Datatronic made a settlement offer of $3,200, which was accepted by Speron. The oral agreement was recorded by the court reporter present. Both parties stated on the record that they understood the terms of the agreement and agreed to be bound thereby.
The declarations made thereafter by Milane state that he was not informed of the settlement figure prior to his attorney’s offer made in the presence of the other party, but was merely informed that his attorney had arranged what he considered to be the best settlement agreement to be hoped for. Milane has further contended that he “did not understand the terms, nature, scope or effect of the purported settlement agreement,” and was pressured by his attorney who did not fully comprehend his position or the lack of merit of Speron’s cross-complaint.
On February 1, 1984, counsel for Datatronic forwarded to counsel for Speron an unsigned written stipulation he had prepared, which substantially reiterated the terms of the settlement agreement set down by the court reporter at the January 19, 1984, deposition. Counsel for Speron responded *1171 on February 8, 1984, by proposing modifications in the stipulation pertaining to warranties as to delivery of records and as to the payment of costs and attorney’s fees.
By letter dated February 9, 1984, counsel for Datatronic accepted the suggested changes. On March 7, 1984, counsel for Speron enclosed the modified stipulation and a request for dismissal, both of which had been signed by his client, and the settlement check. After several months, when an executed version of the stipulation was not forthcoming, Speron’s attorney made inquiry of counsel for Datatronic and negotiations over the exact terms of the settlement recommenced. Effective October 31, 1984, Datatronic’s attorney withdrew as attorney of record, in part due to the fact that Datatronic’s president, Milane, refused to sign the settlement agreement. Milane never executed any of the various versions of the written settlement agreements, either individually or as president of Datatronic.
On November 1, 1984, Speron filed a motion for judgment pursuant to terms of settlement under the section. After a continuance, judgment was granted on April 1, 1985; the court finding that on January 19, 1984, Speron, Datatronic and Milane had entered into a “settlement” within the meaning of the section. Datatronic filed a timely notice of appeal on May 29, 1985.
Contentions
Datatronic contends: (1) it was an abuse of discretion to enter judgment pursuant to the settlement agreement because it was not a “valid and binding agreement”; (2) that judgment so entered was an abuse of discretion because the settlement was not “before the court”; and (3) that the policy favoring trial on the merits militates in favor of overturning this judgment. We do not consider the final contention, as the judgment must be reversed for failure to comply with the statutory prerequisites.
Discussion
Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6 provides: “If parties to pending litigation stipulate, in writing or orally before the court, for settlement of the case, or part thereof, the court, upon motion, may enter judgment pursuant to the terms of the settlement.”
In
Corkland
v.
Boscoe
(1984)
We hold that the parties in the instant action stipulated neither orally before the court nor in writing within the meaning of the above-quoted code section, and thus, the judgment must be reversed.
It is undisputed that, at the January 19, 1984, deposition, the president of Datatronic, Milane, stated on the record in his deposition that he understood the terms of the settlement agreement and agreed to those terms. However, the agreement so recorded cannot be described as an oral stipulation “before the court.”
Since Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6 is of such recent vintage, having taken effect on January 1, 1982, there is scant precedent to establish what acts would constitute an oral agreement “before the court.” However, in the recent case of
Casa de Valley View Owner’s Assn.
v.
Stevenson
(1985)
In another recent'case
Gorman
v.
Holte
(1985)
In
Corkland
v.
Boscoe, supra,
*1173 former, nonstatutory motion to enforce a settlement agreement must be treated as a motion for summary judgment, to be denied where there is a disputed issue of material fact.
The
Corkland
court noted the reluctance of the earlier courts to grant judgment where the factual settings involved out-of-court negotiations, enforcement by a judge other than the one who presided over the settlement conference, or conditional settlements. It reiterated the language of its earlier decision in
Gopal
v.
Yoshikawa
(1983)
In
Gopal
v.
Yoshikawa, supra,
By contrast, in
Nabi
v.
Laudermill
(1982)
Although these and the other prestatute cases concerned themselves with a scrutiny of the record for any disputed issue of material fact as to the existence and validity of binding final agreements warranting reversal of a summary judgment, we note their reluctance to enforce a judgment in the absence of an oral agreement stated on the record at a settlement conference or some other judicially supervised proceeding.
This theme, which is reinforced by the several cases decided after the effective date of the statute in which oral stipulations made on the record at a judicially supervised settlement conference were upheld, compels us to conclude that an oral stipulation made before the court must be just that: a statement made on the record at a judicially supervised proceeding.
Although we note, as the court did in
Casa de Valley View Owner’s Assn.
v.
Stevenson, supra,
Next, we find that there was no alternate written stipulation within the meaning of the section. In discussing the need for a writing, the court in
Duran
v.
Duran
(1983)
In the
Corkland
case, which in the interests of judicial economy employed the procedure authorized by section 664.6 to a prestatute case, the court upheld the entry of judgment where the parties filed a written stipulation with the court.
(Corkland
v.
Boscoe, supra,
In the instant action, there is no such clear-cut conduct on the part of the parties. They first made oral statements at the deposition. Next, Datatronic’s counsel sent to Speron a written version of the agreement containing substantially the same terms as those contained in the oral statements. This draft agreement contained spaces for the signatures of Milane, as president of Datatronic and as an individual, for Speron, and for their respective attorneys.
Counsel for Speron sent back a slightly modified version of the agreement, enclosing it in a cover letter which termed the stipulation a “proposed stipulation.” This modified version was executed by Speron.
Milane refused to execute this modified version, or indeed, any version of the agreement. In his declaration, he stated his refusal was due to the fact that the documents did not contain the entire understanding of the parties.
Speron contends that the unsigned written stipulation and the exchange of correspondence between the attorneys, culminating in their agreement as to settlement terms, collectively constituted a “written stipulation” within the meaning of the section.
*1175 We reject this argument, finding that the series of renegotiated changes made to the draft of the stipulation, the seemingly continuous objections made as to its content, and the fact that it was at no time signed by Milane, establish that a binding final written stipulation did not exist as an alternative prerequisite to the application of Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed.
McClosky, J., and Luke, J., * concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
