Appeals from an order denying the motions of several defendants that the plaintiffs furnish security in a stockholders’ derivative suit; from an order denying defendants’ motions to reconsider and vacate the order denying the motions for security and from an order denying defendants’ motions for a new trial of the motions for security.
Plaintiffs, as stockholders of Maier Brewing Company, filed a stockholders’ derivative suit against Maier Brewing Company; its board of directors; Paul Kalmanovitz, its majority stockholder, and S & P Company, a corporation wholly owned by Paul Kalmanovitz, to vacate a contract whereby Maier Brewing Company sold all of its assets, except cash and accounts receivable, to S &• P Company; to enjoin the transfer of the Maier Brewing Company’s assets to S & P Company or any assignee thereof; to establish a constructive trust of any Maier Brewing Company assets transferred to any defendant and for an accounting, costs of suit and attorneys fees.
The defendants, in three groups, moved that plaintiffs be required, under Corporations Code, section 834, to furnish security upon the ground specified in said section 834, subdivision (b) (1), that there is no reasonable probability that the prosecution of the action would benefit the corporation or its security holders. Thirteen separate declarations of fact by defendants, their attorneys and others, were filed in support of the motions. Hearings were conducted for eight days by the trial court and evidence, oral and documentary, introduced at such hearings. On March 30, 1959, the court, by minute order, denied each motion. Thereafter, the court made its written “Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order Denying Motions under Corporations Code section 834,” finding that it is not true that there is no probability that the action will benefit the corporation or its security holders; concluding therefrom that the motions for security should be denied and ordering that each of such motions be denied. Motions to reconsider and vacate the aforesaid order and for a new trial and for relief under Code of Civil Procedure, section 473, were made and denied.
The appealability of the order denying defendants’ motions for security under Corporations Code, section 834, was not raised by any of the parties to the appeal, but was suggested *152 by this court when the matter first came on for hearing, which hearing was continued in order to permit counsel, at the court’s request, to prepare and file additional briefs on the question of appealability. Such briefs were prepared and filed and before the court when the matter again came on for hearing and was submitted.
It is of course fundamental that an appellate court has no appellate jurisdiction to entertain and pass upon an appeal from a nonappealable order.
(Rossi
v.
Caire,
We have concluded that an order denying a motion for security under Corporations Code, section 834, in a stockholders’ derivative suit is not an appealable order, and that the defendants’ appeals from such order must be dismissed.
Before discussing our reasons for the foregoing conclusion, we will direct our attention to the defendants’ appeals from the order denying their motions to reconsider and to vacate the order denying their motions for security. It is established that an appeal may not be taken from a nonappealable order by the device of moving to reconsider and vacate the order and then appealing from a ruling denying the motion.
(Litvinuk
v.
Litvinuk,
We turn now to the controlling problem of the appealability of an order denying a motion for security in a stockholders’ derivative suit. Corporations Code, section 834, provides, in relevant part, as follows: “ (a) No action may be instituted or maintained in the right of any domestic or foreign corporation by the holder or holders of shares, ... of such corporation unless both of the following conditions exist: (1) The plaintiff alleges in the complaint that he was a registered shareholder ... at the time of the transaction ... of which he complains. ... (b) In any such action, at any time within thirty days after service of summons upon the corporation or any defendant, the corporation or such defendant may move the court for an order, upon notice and hearing, requiring the plaintiff to furnish security as hereinafter provided. Such motion may be based upon one or more of the following grounds: (1) That there is no reasonable probability 1 that the prosecution of the cause of action alleged in the complaint against the moving party will benefit the corporation or its security holders; (2) That the moving party, if other than the corporation, did not participate in the transaction complained of in any capacity. ... At the hearing upon such motion, the court shall consider such evidence, written or oral, by witnesses or affidavit, as may be material: .... If the court determines, after hearing the evidence adduced by the parties at the hearing, that the moving party has established a probability in support of any of the grounds upon which the motion is based, the court shall fix the nature and amount of security to be furnished by the plaintiff. ... A determination by the court that security either shall or shall not be furnished . . ., shall not be deemed a determination of any one or more issues in the action or the merits thereof. ... If the court, upon any such motion makes a determination that security shall be furnished by the plaintiff as to any one or more defendants, the action shall be dismissed as to such defendant or defendants, unless the security required by the court shall *154 have been furnished within such reasonable time as may be fixed by the court.”
We start with the basic rule that “no appeal can be taken except from an appealable order or judgment, as defined in the statutes and developed by the ease law. ’
’ (Lavine
v.
Jessup,
It has been said of subsection 1 of said section 963, authorizing an appeal from “a final judgment” that “ [t]his provision states the
final judgment rule,
or rule of one final judgment, a fundamental principle of appellate practice in the United States. The theory is that piecemeal disposition and multiple appeals in a single action would be oppressive and costly, and that a review of intermediate rulings should await the final disposition of the case.” (3 Witkin, California Procedure, p. 2151.) The rule is thus stated decisionally: “Under California procedure there is ordinarily only one final judgment in an action.”
(Sjoberg
v.
Hastorf,
However, as stated in 3 Witkin,
supra,
p. 2152, “A necessary exception to the one final judgment rule is recognized where there is a final determination of some
collateral matter
distinct and severable from the general subject of the litigation. If, e.g., this determination requires the aggrieved party immediately
to pay money or perform some other act,
he is entitled to appeal even though litigation of the main issue continues. ” The Supreme Court has clearly and succinctly stated the rule on appealability from orders in a collateral proceeding in
Sjoberg
v.
Hastorf, supra,
Thus the exception to the one final judgment rule depends upon three concomitant conditions: (1) a final order, (2) in a collateral proceeding, (3) which must direct the payment oi: money by the appellant or the performance of an act by or against him.
The essentiality of the third condition that the final order in a collateral proceeding must direct the payment of money by the aggrieved party or the performance of an act by or against him is illustrative in the following cases:
Grant
v.
Los Angeles etc. Ry. Co.,
It is urged by appellants that
Meehan
v.
Hopps,
A careful reading of the Meehan decision convinces us that as to the second ground upon which the court found appealability, it was concerned only with the question of collaterality and finality. The briefs of both parties in Meehan cited Sjoberg v. Hastorf, supra, and there is nothing in the opinion in Meehan indicating an intent to delimit or overrule Sjoberg and its own decisions cited in Sjoberg to the effect that not only must the order of a collateral issue be final to be appealable, but that it must also direct the payment of money by appellant or the performance of an act by or against him.
It is clear that the question of security in a stockholders’ derivative suit bears no relation to the main issues therein, and it is likewise clear that an order denying a motion for such security is final as to that issue. On the other hand, an order denying such security does not “direct the payment of money by appellant [n] or the performance of an act by or against him.”
(Sjoberg
v.
Hastorf, supra,
p. 119.) Thus, as was said in
Grant
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In reaching this conclusion, it is to be observed that the Legislature has provided in Corporations Code, section 834, that in the event an order for security is made and is not furnished, “the action shall be dismissed.” Although
*157
the section does not expressly provide for the entry of judgment of dismissal, it appears to be contemplated and is the established practice. A judgment of dismissal is obviously appealable. Thus, it appears that the Legislature has expressly provided a right of appeal where a motion for security in a stockholders’ derivative suit is granted and the security is not furnished, but, on the other hand, has not expressly provided for an appeal where such motion is denied. "There is no constitutional right to an appeal; the appellate procedure is entirely statutory and subject to complete legislative control.”
Trede
v.
Superior Court,
Appellants contend that an appeal of an order denying security in a stockholders’ suit is deeisionally established by
Wood
v.
Gordon,
It would appear from the quoted excerpt, and other portions of the opinion, that the court was reviewing “an order” granting a motion for security in a stockholders’ derivative suit. However, an examination of the appellate record in that case discloses that the appeal was from two “judgments of dismissal” entered pursuant to orders granting motions to dismiss for failure to deposit security as ordered. Each of said judgments of dismissal was, of course, a “final judgment” under Code of Civil Procedure, section 963, subdivision 1, and clearly appealable as such. Thus, the question of appealability of an “order” denying security was neither presented nor decided. An examination of the briefs on appeal for rehearing and for hearing by the Supreme Court, disclose that the question of appealability was not raised nor discussed at any stage of the appellate review. Reading the language of the Wood opinion in the light of the facts of the case and the issues raised, it is quite clear that any statement therein indicating appealability of an order denying security under Corporations Code, section 834, was unrelated to the facts and was entirely unnecessary to the decision and is therefore without force as a precedent. The learned Justice who wrote the opinion in
Wood,
a year earlier in
Achen
v.
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.,
Melancon
v.
Walt Disney Productions, supra,
In
Bailey
v.
Fosca Oil Co., supra,
In
Cohen
v.
Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., supra,
The order denying the motions for new trial is affirmed, and the appeals from the order denying the motions that plaintiff furnish security and from the order denying reconsideration and vacation of the order denying the motions for security are dismissed.
Fox, P. J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 1, 1960, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 30, 1960. Schauer, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
