*81 Opinion
Don Jose’s Restaurant, Inc.
v.
Truck Ins. Exchange
(1997)
Background
In 1994, New World Entertainment, Ltd. retained Four Point Entertainment, Inc., as executive producer of “The Mark Walberg Show.” The contract included a “pay or play” provision that gave New World the right
not
to use Four Point as executive producer provided that New World continued to pay Four Point’s fee. (See
Trans-World Intern.
v.
Smith-Hemion Productions
(C.D.Cal. 1997)
Four Point, New World and Empire then entеred a stipulation for dismissal of all remaining claims and entry of a “final judgment,” reciting that “most of the issues necessary to a disposition of the rеmaining causes of action have been decided by the trial court, which adjudication [Four Point] seeks to have reviewed by the Court of Appeal,” and expressing their intent “that the filing and the prosecution of an appeal in this action shall not *82 prejudice either pаrty’s future right to prosecute such claims and causes of action which are being voluntarily dismissed by both parties following the conclusion of thе appeal process.” The parties agreed to dismiss all claims remaining in Four Point’s complaint, Empire’s complaint in intervention, and New World’s cross-complaint. The trial court went along with this arrangement, signed a “final judgment” in favor of New World, and dismissed all claims (including Empire’s) that hаd not already been decided in New World’s favor. Four Point purports to appeal from that judgment.
Discussion
The “one final judgment rule”
(Morehart
v.
County of Santa Barbara
(1994)
In
Jackson
v.
Wells Fargo Bank, supra,
We agree wholeheartedly with
Don Jose’s
and Jackson.
4
We see no reason to permit Four Point or any party to get in line for appellate rеview ahead of those who are awaiting entry of appealable orders and final judgments. When there is a legitimate need for interlоcutory review of an order that eviscerates a case without terminating its legal existence or where there are other truly unusual оr extraordinary circumstances, a petition for a writ of mandate is the appropriate means by which to seek appellаte review.
(Morehart
v.
County of Santa Barbara, supra,
Disposition
The appeal is dismissed, and the cause is rеmanded to the trial court with directions to vacate the judgment and the stipulation on which it is based. The parties are to pay their own сosts of appeal.
Ortega, Acting P. J., and Dunn, J., * concurred.
Notes
Our conclusion about the parties’ assumption arises from their failure to discuss this issue in their briefs. Of course, a respondent’s failure to point out a jurisdictional defect is of no consequence, since subject matter jurisdiction can never be created by consent, waiver, or estoppel.
(Norman I. Krug Real Estate Investments, Inc.
v.
Praszker
(1990)
In both cases, some but not all claims were resolved by summary adjudication, the remaining claims were dismissed without prejudice, the pаrties agreed to the post-appeal reinstatement of dismissed claims, the parties agreed that all statute of limitations defenses would be tolled, and the trial courts entered judgments based upon the stipulations.
(Don Jose’s Restaurant, Inc.
v.
Truck Ins. Exchange, supra,
In Jackson, the trial court summarily adjudicated all but one of the plaintiff’s causes of action. The parties then stipulated to a dismissal without prejudice of the plaintiff’s remaining claim and to the post-apрeal filing of a new action, which they agreed would not be barred by limitations. Based on this stipulation, a judgment was entered. (Jackson v. Wells Fargo Bank, supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at pp. 242-243.)
At oral argument, New World asked us to find that Don Jose’s and Jackson were wrongly decided and to conclude, instead, that stipulations such as these are nothing more than permissible voluntary dismissals. For reasons that are not clear, counsel says we ought to address the issue in the context of res judicata, not the one judgment rule. The argument misses the point—the court, not the parties, dismissed the unresolved claims based upon a stipulation that is unenforceable because it purports to vest jurisdiction in аn appellate court where none exists.
In
Building Industry Assn.
v.
City of Camarillo
(1986)
Judge of the Municipal Court for the Long Beach Judicial District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
