Opinion
Defendant Irving Kovalsky appeals from summary judgment entered against him and in favor of plaintiff Gribin Von Dyl & Associates, Inc. in an action to recover a real estate broker’s commission.
Factual and Procedural Background
The verified complaint alleged: On November 16,1981, the parties entered into a written agreement whereby defendant employed plaintiff, a licensed real estate broker, to sell condominium units owned by defendant. The agreement gave plaintiff the exclusive right to sell all but eight of said units, the excluded units to be designated by defendant, for the period July 14, 1981—July 13, 1982; plaintiff was to receive a commission of one and a half percent of the sales price of each unit subject to the agreement for which plaintiff produced a buyer willing and able to purchase on the terms prescribed by defendant; defendant was to install billboard signs advertising the units. Prior to December 20, 1981, plaintiff made diligent efforts to sell the units and otherwise performed all of its obligations under the agreement. On December 15, 1981, defendant, who controlled the sales prices and financing charges for sale of the units, raised those prices and charges to a level which was unreasonable and in excess of prevailing real estate market conditions. Such action on defendant’s part violated the covenant of good faith and fair dealing implied in the agreement and made sale of the units unfeasible, thereby depriving plaintiff of the ability and opportunity to sell them. Defendant breached the agreement by raising the sales prices and financing charges for the units, by failing to designate those units not subject to the agreement, and by failing to install billboards. On December 17, 1981, plaintiff advised defendant that it was terminating the agreement because of such breaches. Defendant thereafter advertised the units at the lower prices and financing charges at which they had been offered before December 15. Plaintiff sought an accounting of sales of the units for the period December 17, 1981—July 13, 1982, and a judgment for the commissions due plaintiff based on such sales.
Thereafter, on February 15, 1984, plaintiff served on defendant a request that he admit the truth of virtually all of the facts alleged in the complaint within 30 days from the date of service; at the end of the request was the required warning that if defendant failed to comply with the provisions of Code of Civil Procedure section 2033, 1 each of the matters of which an admission was requested would be deemed admitted. Within the 30-day period defendant neither answered the request nor filed objections thereto. Accordingly, on March 22, 1984, plaintiff served on defendant (by certified mail, return receipt requested) notice that the truth of the facts set forth in the request was deemed admitted. (§ 2033.) On April 6, 1984, defendant served a response to the request which consisted of his denial of each of the matters set forth in the request. By letter of April 11, 1984, plaintiff’s counsel informed defendant’s counsel that the purported response was rejected.
In August 1985 plaintiff moved for summary judgment. The motion was supported by declarations, documents produced by defendant in response to plaintiff’s request, the deemed admissions, and a separate statement of undisputed facts. Defendant opposed the motion based on declarations, his verified answer to the complaint, his answers to interrogatories, and his response to request for admissions. Included in defendant’s memorandum of points and authorities in opposition to the motion was a request that the trial court “allow the filing nunc pro tunc, as of April 6, 1984,” of defendant’s response to request for admissions.
Summary judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for $14,295 plus interest thereon of $3,428.39, for a total of $17,723.39, plus costs of $2,958. This appeal followed.
Discussion
I
Denial of Relief from Deemed Admissions
While the trial court did not expressly rule on defendant’s request that the court consider as timely the service of his response to request for admissions, the judgment indicates that the request was denied. 2
Where, as in the present case, matters are deemed to have been admitted pursuant to notice served on a party following his failure timely to respond to a request for admissions, the only avenue of relief is that which is specified in section 2033,
3
viz., a motion under section 473 made within 30 days after the party seeking relief was served with the deemed admitted notice.
(Barnett
v.
American-Cal Medical Services
(1984) 156
The only indication that defendant sought relief from the deemed admissions is found in the declaration of Sanford Perliss, a law clerk for defendant’s attorney, wherein the declarant stated: “I had at all times believed and do now believe that Ms. Marutani, of plaintiff’s attorney’s office, had agreed to disregard her notice that all requested facts were deemed admitted in light of our good faith attempt to answer the voluminous written discovery matters then pending as revealed in the correspondence contained in exhibits hereto and my several telephone conversations with her.” Defendant contends the foregoing excerpt from Perliss’ declaration establishes that plaintiff’s attorney deceived defendant into believing that his late response to request for admissions was accepted. We do not agree. In reply to defendant’s opposition to the motion for summary judgment, plaintiff submitted the declaration of its attorney, Nancy Marutani, stating that while she extended professional courtesies to Mr. Perliss during the course of discovery, she never led him to believe that plaintiff would accept defendant’s late response to request for admissions; in fact, she sent a letter to Perliss expressly rejecting the proposed response as untimely
4
and, in a subsequent telephone conversation, called Perliss’ attention to the fact that time for seeking relief from the deemed admissions was running out. Inasmuch as there was a substantial conflict in the facts stated in the respective declarations, we are bound by the trial court’s implied finding that plaintiff did not lead defendant to believe his belated response was accepted, but on the contrary called defendant’s attention to the necessity of seeking timely relief from the deemed admissions. (See
Griffith Co.
v.
San Diego Col. for Women
(1955)
In support of a contrary conclusion, defendant cites
Elston
v.
City of Turlock
(1985)
Defendant places great reliance on the fact that plaintiff did not claim prejudice as a result of his belated response to the request for admissions. Lack of prejudice, however, does not permit relief from default where the party seeking such relief fails to establish sufficient grounds therefor. (See
Carroll
v.
Abbott Laboratories, Inc., supra, 32
Cal.3d 892, 900.) “If
Defendant’s final contention on this phase of the appeal is that his deemed admissions should not be used to deprive him of the right to defend against plaintiff’s lawsuit. A similar contention was rejected in
Barnett
v.
American-Cal Medical Services, supra,
II
Propriety of Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is proper if the evidence in support of the moving party is sufficient to sustain a judgment in his favor and the opposing party does not present any facts which give rise to a triable issue of material fact.
(Rallen
v.
Delug
(1984)
Defendant does not deny that his deemed admissions establish each of the elements necessary to sustain summary judgment in favor of plaintiff. He contends that the deemed admissions must be disregarded in determining the propriety of the judgment because the request for admissions “mirrored” the allegations of the complaint and consisted of “ultimate conclusions of fact” that “could not possibly have been admitted” by him. Defendant cites no authority which holds that requests for admissions are improper for the reasons set forth. Under section 2033 “requests for admission may be made without first obtaining an order of court. They thus constitute a vehicle of discovery to which the litigant is entitled as a matter of right, unless the opposing party successfully bears the burden of showing that they do not fall within the purview of the statute [citation].”
(Cembrook
v.
Superior Court
(1961)
Defendant further argues that, in any event, the deemed admissions are not a valid basis for summary judgment because his verified answer to the complaint denied the allegations thereof which he subsequently was asked to admit; accordingly, plaintiff knew what defendant’s response to the request
Defendant further contends that, the deemed admissions notwithstanding, his answer raised triable issues of fact thereby precluding summary judgment. The contention lacks merit. Where, as here, the moving party shows that he is entitled to summary judgment, the opposing party cannot rely on his pleadings but must make an independent showing that he has sufficient proof of the matters alleged to raise a question of fact.
(Grant
v.
Avis Rent A Car System, Inc.
(1984)
The judgment is affirmed.
Thompson, J., and Johnson, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
The judgment recites: “After full consideration of moving and responding papers, all supporting papers, and the oral argument of counsel, it appears and the Court finds that Plaintiff Gribin Von Dyl & Associates, Inc. has shown by judicial admissions, judicial notice properly taken, admissible evidence and reasonable inferences from admissible evidence that there is no defense to the act'on, that Defendant Irving Kovalsky, individually and dba Kovalsky Development Co. has presented no triable issue of fact on the Complaint . . . .” (Italics added.)
Section 2033, subdivision (a) provides in part: “Upon failure of a party served with requests for admissions pursuant to this section either to answer or to file objections within the period as designated in the request or as extended by the court, the party making the request may serve upon the other party a notice in writing by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, notifying the party so served that the genuineness of the documents or the truth of the facts has been deemed admitted. Once the notice is served, the party upon whom the notice is served shall not have the right to apply for relief under the provisions of Section 473 unless a motion requesting relief is served and filed within 30 days after service of the notice.”
A copy of the letter, dated April 11,1984, was attached to Attorney Marutani’s declaration and incorporated therein by reference.
In response to a request for admissions, the party to whom the request is directed may serve upon the party requesting the admissions “written objections on the ground that some or all of the requested admissions are privileged or irrelevant or that the request is otherwise improper in whole or in part.” (§ 2033, subd. (a).)
For example, contrary to certain facts he was deemed to have admitted, defendant in his declaration stated: at no time did he set the prices and financing rates for the condominium units above prevailing prices and rates in the Los Angeles area; prior to December 15, 1981, he specified in writing the eight units which were not to be offered for sale; at all times billboards were posted, as requested by plaintiff.
