This is a proceeding in mandamus to compel the superior court of Imperial County to order the clerk of said court to enter the default of each of two corporations, namely, Franco-American Vineyard and Wine Company and El Progresso Inter-California Canning Company, defendants in an action in said court wherein Don Davenport is the plaintiff.
The claim of the plaintiff is that each of said defendants has been duly served with the summons issued in said action, r and has also entered a general appearance therein; that the time for answering or demurring has expired; that no answer or demurrer has been filed, and that notwithstanding these facts the court refuses to direct the clerk to enter either default.
1. The complaint in the action was filed and the summons was issued on February 19, 1919. On February 20, 1919, an attempted service .of said summons was made on one Peter Barnes, as president of said Franco-American Vineyard and Wine Company and as secretary of said El Progresso Inter-California Canning Company, at Calexico, in Imperial County near the Mexican line, by delivering to him there the proper papers for that purpose. At that time the.said Peter Barnes held said offices in said respective corporations. No other service was ever made or attempted upon either defendant. Both of said corporations were foreign corporations, the first named being an Arizona corporation, and the second a corporation organ *508 ized under the laws of Mexico. Neither of them has ever at any timé done business within this state, or anywhere else except Mexico, and neither of them was at that time doing any business in this state.
2. The proposition that said defendant corporations had entered a general appearance in said action so as to waive the service of summons upon them is not sustained by the record. On March 1, 1919, after the attempted service aforesaid, Messrs, Conkling and Brown obtained from the judge of the said court an order that the defendants have twenty days’ additional time in which to plead to the plaintiff’s complaint. Notice of this order was served on the plaintiff’s attorneys on March 2, 1919. Thereafter, on March 11, 1919, the said attorneys for defendants served upon plaintiff’s attorneys a notice that on March 14; 1919, the time being shortened to two days for that purpose, the defendants would move the court for an order to quash and set aside the pretended service of summons theretofore made in the action as aforesaid and that said motion would be made upon the "grounds above stated, that both defendants were foreign corporations, and that neither of them had ever done any business within this state. Thereafter, on March 22, 1919, the motion was regularly heard *509 and the court thereupon made an order setting aside and quashing the said service of summons upon said defendants.
Thereafter the plaintiff filed with the clerk an order from plaintiff to him to enter the default of said defendants upon the ground that their time for answering the complaint had expired and in pursuance of said order the clerk, on March 31, 1919, made an entry of the default of said two corporation defendants. Thereafter, on April 25, 1919, the said attorneys for said defendants, upon notice duly given, moved the court to set aside the said default so entered by the clerk, upon the ground that the said defaults were entered by inadvertence and mistake of the clerk; that no summons had ever been served upon defendants, and that there was no authority or warrant for entering such defaults. The court sustained the motion and made an order setting aside said defaults. Afterward, on October 17, 1919, pursuant to notice to the defendants’ attorneys, plaintiff moved the court to enter the defaults of said defendants, based upon the claim that defendants had entered a general appearance in the action, which motion the court denied. Upon this order the present proceeding for a mandamus is based.
The cases cited to the contrary are
Roth
v.
Superior Court,
Under all these circumstances we are of the opinion that the defendants did not enter an appearance to the action and that the application for an entry of the default based on the supposed appearance was properly denied by the court below.
The application, for a writ of mandamus is denied.
Olney, J., Lennon, J., Wilbur, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred.
