Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from an order granting a motion to dismiss an action for personal injuries against the State of Cailifornia and denying a motion to set aside an order fixing the amount of an undertaking pursuant to Government Code, section 947.
The order denying the motion is nonappealable under Code of Civil Procedure, section 904.1 and is dismissed. The sole issue of this appeal has to do with the dismissal of the cause of action against the state for the failure of plaintiff to file a cost bond demanded by said defendant.
Plaintiff filed an action in Los Angeles County on January 4, 1967, against the State of California and others not parties to this appeal for personal injuries which allegedly rendered her a quadraplegic. The complaint is not a part of the record, but, according to plaintiff’s brief, it alleges negligence of the state in its maintaining of a state highway in Imperial County, to which county the action had been transferred prior to December 1967.
On December 8, 1967, defendant filed a demand for undertaking
Since the undertaking was not filed within 20 days after service of the demand therefor, defendant, on February 21, 1968, filed a motion to dismiss the action as to the state. On February 29, 1968, plaintiff filed an affidavit in opposition in which she stated: “I do not have any funds to care for myself or to prosecute this action. That I have retained the firm of Mestad & Sanborn on a contingency basis. That I am receiving aid from the County of San Diego and medical attention from the County of Los Angeles. That to my knowledge, I am receiving nothing from Imperial County.”
On March 8, 1968, the trial court took under submission defendant’s motion to dismiss and allowed plaintiff 10 days to answer defendant’s points and authorities; and on March 19, 1968 granted the motion to dismiss.
On April 2, 1968, an appealable order to that effect was signed by the trial court.
The Issue
The sole issue is whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to dismiss the action as to the state for plaintiff’s failure to file an undertaking for costs in the face of her claim of indigency.
The question is not whether the plaintiff made a sufficient showing to entitle her to proceed without the prepayment of court fees and jury fees, but whether she made a showing of inability to furnish an undertaking “with at least two sufficient sureties.”
The distinction between inability to pay court fees and inability to obtain sureties on one’s undertaking is clear and was given recognition in
County
It may often be the case that a plaintiff who is unable to pay his own fees or costs as they accrue will also be unable to find sureties to sign his undertaking. We doubt that it can be said as a matter of law that it is always so.
By the very nature of the undertaking with two sufficient sureties its furnishing is not directly related to the plaintiff’s financial condition, although such direct relation might exist if only a corporate surety might qualify. 2
A plaintiff financially unable to post a cash bond or to pay the premium on a surety bond may, nevertheless, have friends or relatives willing and able to qualify as sureties. Such persons might well believe in the justice of a plaintiff’s claim, and be willing by their undertaking to see that the claim is prosecuted.
The learned author of the decision in
County of Sutter,
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The distinction between personal inability to pay costs and inability to obtain sureties on an undertaking is emphasized in a statute that was interpreted to give the court discretion to require a suitor to furnish sureties
It seems, accordingly, that an impecunious plaintiff, to avoid the necessity of furnishing an undertaking, should make a prima facie showing that he has unsuccessfully sought to obtain such an undertaking, or that he is unable to furnish an undertaking.
The sufficiency of an affidavit to show such inability has been passed upon in a' number of jurisdictions, some of which have statutes expressly providing for a waiver of the undertaking. In general, an affidavit that states the plaintiff is unable to give security for costs is sufficient. (See 28 U.S.C.A. § 1915 (a) [“unable to pay such costs or give security therefor”];
Kerr
v.
State
(1871)
One New York decision,
Berkman
v.
Wolf,
In
County of Sutter
v.
Superior Court, supra,
So far as appears from the published decision, a like action was taken by the trial court in
Bank of America
v.
Superior Court,
However, in
Roberts
v.
Superior Court,
In supplemental memoranda, which we requested at the time of oral argument, counsel dealt with the subject of the sufficiency of a specific showing of inability to furnish security as distinguished from a showing of inability to pay accruing fees of the plaintiff.
Plaintiff’s counsel cites several decisions of the federal courts including
Adkins
v.
E. I. Du Pont De Nemours,
In the Adkins case, the court said, at pages 88-89: “The statute allowing in forma pauperis appeals provides language appropriate for incorporation in an affidavit. One who makes this affidavit exposes himself ‘to the pains of perjury in a case of bad faith.’ . . .
“[W]here the affidavits are written in the language of the statute it would seem that they should ordinarily be accepted, for trial purposes, particularly where unquestioned and where the judge does not perceive a flagrant misrepresentation.
“Here, the affidavits were not couched in the language of the statute. They went outside that language. Estimating that the costs would be $4,000, each affidavit stated that the affiant could not pay or secure $4,000.”
In
Sejeck
v.
Singer Mfg. Co., supra,
Plaintiff’s counsel also argues that in order to proceed in forma pauperis a litigant need not be wholly destitute and need not make a showing of complete destitution, and cites authorities in support of that proposition, which is a correct statement of the law. It does not cover the specific question involved, which is the sufficiency of a showing of inability to obtain sureties for the costs that may be awarded the other party.
Plaintiff also argues that as to her, section 947, Government Code, is unconstitutional if it bars her from pursuing her action. It is not interpreted by us as barring her provided she had made a showing of inability to obtain the statutory undertaking. The statute has been held not to be unconstitutional.
(Vinnicombe
v.
State of California,
Many of the cases cited by defendánt expound the theory that in order to be excused from paying accruing court fees, an indigent plaintiff must show that there is no person from whom he could beg or borrow money to pay such fees. That theory has not been accepted in California.
,Defendant seems also to defend a position that has already been lost, that is that there cannot under, any circumstances be a judicial waiver of the statutory undertaking.
While in the cited cases of
County of Sutter
v.
Superior Court, supra,
It might have been argued that the plaintiff, who was affected with paralysis in all four limbs, as alleged in the complaint, was ill-equipped physically to attempt to obtain sureties. However, her declaration in support of the claim to exemption from giving the undertaking showed her to have traveled from Los Angeles, to San Diego, to Las Vegas, Nevada, staying with her sisters in the two latter cities, traveling to El Centro to visit her parents, and intending to return to Los Angeles to occupy her own apartment there.
Her affidavit showed her to be dependent on public assistance for her support. While that condition is one that ultimately would pass on to the state and the United States government the burden of paying any disbursements made by her for the prosecution of her action, it does not automatically give rise to inability to obtain sureties or eliminate the necessity of making a prima facie showing of such inability.
It may be inconsistent to say that a plaintiff who is dependent upon public assistance for means of support should, nevertheless, be expected to furnish security for the payment of any judgment for costs that might be awarded against her in favor of the state which ultimately furnishes a large part of her means of livelihood.
Yet she may be held chargeable for the costs of the defendant should she be unsuccessful in her action. There are states whose statutes exempt from liability for costs of the opposing party one who is allowed to proceed in forma pauperis. California is among those states that do not exempt the unsuccessful indigent party from a judgment for costs, and there is no special exemption when the successful party is the state.
We are of opinion that the court had discretion to deny plaintiff’s motion upon the sole ground that while the support for the motion showed
The Amount of the Undertaking
Defendant requested an undertaking in the sum of $500 and supported the request by a declaration under penalty of perjury that in the event of trial the state would be awarded costs in excess of $500; that several depositions had been taken and others would be taken; that a jury trial would last at least eight days; another document stated that already the state had incurred taxable costs of $290.63.
It cannot be said the court abused its discretion in fixing the amount of the undertaking at $500. Had the plaintiff made claim to be able to furnish an undertaking in a lesser amount, there might be a different question; but the situation is one in which plaintiff has made no allegations either of ability or inability to furnish an undertaking in any amount.
The order is affirmed.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Coughlin, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 8, 1970. Peters, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
(a) “At any time after the filing of the complaint in any action against a public entity, the public entity may file and serve a demand for a written undertaking on the part of each plaintiff as security for the allowable costs which may be awarded against such plaintiff. The undertaking shall be in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each plaintiff or in the case of multiple plaintiffs in the amount of two hundred dollars ($200) or such greater sum as the court shall fix upon good cause shown, with at least two sufficient sureties, to be approved by the court. Unless the plaintiff files such undertaking within 20 days after service of a demand therefor, his action shall be dismissed."
In a declaration filed March 8, 1968, defendant’s attorney stated that a premium on the $500 bond set by the court would have been only $10 per year.
