Opinion
In this case we disapprove of nonstatutory speaking motions to enforce alleged settlement agreements, overruling our former
*178
opinion in
Ford
v.
State of California
(1981)
Joseph Duran and others (plaintiffs) filed a suit to establish a trust and for an accounting involving a parcel of real property held in the name of defendant Clotilde Duran.
On February 26, 1982, the attorneys for the respective parties discussed a possible compromise settlement by telephone. The dispute in this case revolved around whether or not the parties reached an agreement or a tentative agreement on February 26. On March 1, 1982, the day before trial, defendant informed her attorney that she had changed her mind and did not want to settle the case. Defendant’s attorney immediately notified plaintiffs’ attorney. The trial was continued.
Plaintiffs filed a “speaking” motion to enforce the alleged settlement. Declarations in support of and in opposition to the motion to enforce the settlement were filed by the respective attorneys. The judge granted the motion to enforce settlement. Defendant appeals.
In
Ford
v.
State of California, supra,
The dissent was of the opinion that
Hastings
controlled, stating:
“[Hastings]
held the proper procedure is by way of a motion for summary judgment, by separate suit in equity or, in the event the defendant is attempting to enforce settlement, by way of affirmative defense. (See
Hastings
v.
Matlock
(1980)
Gregory
now stands starkly alone. All other courts which have addressed this subject have held that a motion for summary judgment is the proper method to enforce a pretrial settlement.
1
(Mancina
v.
Hoar
(1982)
We now disapprove of Ford and adopt the latter view.
Treating plaintiffs’ motion as a motion for summary judgment, an examination of the declarations convinces us there is a disputed issue of fact requiring a reversal of the judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c;
Hastings
v.
Matlock, supra,
According to the declaration filed by defendant’s attorney in opposition to the motion to enforce the settlement, after discussing a possible settlement with plaintiffs’ attorney by telephone, he “then called [his] client and reviewed the matter with her and told her what had been proposed and she was in agreement in substance that they could receive a one-third interest and that [defendant and her attorney] would have to approve the terms of the proposed written trust agreement, [f] [He] then called back [plaintiffs’ attorney] and advised him that [his] client had agreed in substance to the foregoing proposal, subject to [their] working out a written trust agreement, and suggested that [they] could take the matter off calendar pending [their] working out a mutually agreeable written trust agreement to record . . . .” Before the settlement was reduced to writing, defendant notified her attorney that she did not want to go through with the settlement. In addition to the failure to secure defendant’s approval of the written agreement, defendant claims that a successor trustee was never selected although the parties agreed that one needed to be named.
Plaintiffs argue that they are willing to accept anyone as a successor trustee, and the reduction of the agreement to writing and defendant’s approval *180 of the writing was only a formality, yet to be completed, and not a condition of settlement.
Defendant contends, however, that a final settlement was never reached because (1) a successor trustee was never selected and (2) a condition of the tentative settlement, which was never obtained, was defendant’s approval of a written trust agreement containing the terms of the oral agreement. 2
Plaintiffs argue that because they are willing to accept anyone as successor trustee, it should not prevent the court from enforcing the agreement by summary proceedings. We need not answer that question because we believe there exists an issue of fact as to whether defendant’s obligation under the agreement was conditioned upon approval of a written agreement.
“It is a general rule to which this case presents no exception that, when it is a part of the understanding between the parties that the terms of their contract are to be reduced to writing and signed by the parties, the assent to its terms must be evidenced in the manner agreed upon or it does not become a binding or completed contract.”
(Spinney
v.
Downing
(1895)
In
Mancina
v.
Hoar, supra,
In the instant case the declaration filed by defendant’s attorney in opposition to the motion below states in part that: “I then called my client and reviewed the matter with her and told her what had been proposed and she was in agreement in substance that they could receive a one-third interest and that we would have to approve the terms of the proposed written trust agreement.
“I then called back Mr. Logan and advised him that my client had agreed in substance to the foregoing proposal, subject to our working out a written trust agreement . . . .”
Thus, it appears to us that whether or not there was an agreement before it was reduced to writing and signed by the parties was an issue that remained to be decided by a trier of fact upon conflicting factual contentions. Accordingly, we conclude the motion for summary judgment should have been denied.
The judgment is reversed.
Andreen, J., and Hamlin, J., concurred.
Notes
The court which decided
Greyhound Lines, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
On appeal, appellant also contends that other terms of the trust still needed to be worked out before the settlement was finalized. However, at the hearing on the motion it was agreed that these other terms had previously been agreed to as part of the tentative settlement agreement.
