Opinion
Are the parties entitled to a statement of decision pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 632 after a trial in a personal injury action where liability is admitted and the only issues concern damages? Yes. Should the court monitor the hours consumed in a trial spread over several days to determine whether it has lasted more than one day for purposes of that section? No.
*165 I
Susan Gordon was injured by an automobile driven by Laura Wolfe, a minor. Gordon sued Wolfe and her father, the owner of the car. The latter settled for the limits of his statutory liability (Veh. Code, § 17151).
Wolfe conceded her own liability, and the parties waived jury and proceeded to trial solely on the question of damages. Gordon testified; but the matter was primarily tried on documentary evidence, reports of medical experts retained by both parties, hospital bills, and the deposition of an economist retained by Gordon to value her loss of future income.
The court issued a notice of tentative decision on February 9, 1984, awarding Gordon damages of $72,660 to be offset by the $15,000 settlement with defendant’s father. Gordon’s request for a statement of decision was denied by the court in a written order: “‘There is no requirement that the trial court set out either its computation or the particular evidence upon which it may have relied in determining the amount of damages.’ [¶]
[Healey
v.
Brewster
(1967)
Gordon contends the damage award was inadequate as a matter of law and the court erred in refusing to issue a statement of decision. We do not reach the adequacy of the award at this time, since the failure to issue a statement of decision both substantially impairs our ability to consider the issue and requires reversal in itself.
II
Code of Civil Procedure section 632 provides, “In superior . . . court[], upon the trial of a question of fact by the court, written findings of fact and conclusions of law shall not be required. Upon the request of any party appearing at the trial, made within 10 days after the court announces a tentative decision, or if the trial has lasted less than one day, made prior to submission of the matter for decision, the court shall issue a statement of decision explaining the factual and legal basis for its decision as to each of the principal controverted issues at trial. ...” Where required, the failure to provide a statement of decision in response to a timely request is reversible per se.
(In re Marriage of McDole
(1985)
Ill
Although conceding testimony, evidence, and argument was received by the court on three separate dates over a two-week period, Wolfe insists fewer than eight hours of the court’s time were consumed. Thus, she argues, the trial lasted less than one day and Gordon’s failure to request a statement of decision before the matter was submitted constitutes a waiver. We cannot agree.
Courts may have to count days, but they are not required to count hours and minutes under Code of Civil Procedure section 632. Regardless of the number of hours counsel actually spent before the court, this trial was conducted over more than one court calendar day. Moreover, defendant forgets the court announced it would have to “take a day . . . and devote it to this case” in order to read the deposition of plaintiff’s economist which was submitted in lieu of live testimony.
Our recent holding in
Mitchell
v.
County of Orange
(1985)
Although the parties gave opening statements the first day in
Mitchell,
the trial did not actually commence until the following day when the presentation of evidence began. In the absence of a statutory exception, a trial to the court begins when the first witness is sworn or evidence is admitted.
(Hartmann
v.
Santamarina
(1982)
*167 IV
Wolfe devotes most of her brief to a challenge of the timeliness of Gordon’s request. The request is file stamped February 21, 1984, even allowing for a court holiday, apparently a day late. We are nevertheless persuaded it was timely.
Gordon invites our attention to a clerk’s handwritten notation on the document, “Rec’d for D-45 5:03 p.m. 2-17-84.” The proof of service confirms it was mailed to opposing counsel on that date. Thus, it appears the request was received in the trial department (as is customarily the case in local practice) on February 17, 1984, but not file stamped until the court prepared its order rejecting the request on February 21, and the papers were then processed in the clerk’s office.
V
Having concluded the request was timely, we next consider whether it was proper in a trial limited only to damages. We believe it was, and Wolfe appears to concede the point. Her brief is silent on the issue. She raises only procedural objections and, somewhat circularly, argues the statement was unnecessary because the award was adequate as a matter of law.
The rule was stated decades ago in
29 Palms Van & Storage
v.
L.A. Met. Transit Authority
(1963)
Gordon sought general damages for pain and suffering and special damages for medical and incidental expenses, lost earnings, and lost earning capacity. The judgment was for a lump sum figure, however. Thus, neither we nor the parties know whether, or in what amount, the award was in
*168
tended to compensate Gordon for each of those discrete categories. Without a statement of decision, the judgment is effectively insulated from review by the substantial evidence rule; and we have no basis to determine whether the award was insufficient as a matter of law, as Gordon contends. (See
People
v.
Landlords Professional Services, Inc.
(1986)
The authority relied upon by the trial court,
Healey
v.
Brewster
(1967)
This analysis, if
still
viable after
Miramar Hotel Corp.
v.
Frank B. Hall & Co., supra,
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and remanded with directions to the trial court to prepare a statement of decision. Appellant is entitled to costs on appeal.
Trotter, P. J., and Sonenshine, J., concurred.
