This is аn appeal purportedly taken from a judgment of dismissal entered in favor of respondent following the failure оf appellant to amend his complaint within the time allowed after respondent’s general and special dеmurrers had been sustained. The record before us does not indicate that any formal judgment was in fact entered, but doеs contain a duly entered minute order granting respondent’s motion to dismiss the action. We shall therefore treat the appeal as having been taken from this order.
(Herrscher
v.
Herrscher,
The complaint is captioned “Complaint—Malpracticе; Damages and Conspiracy” and contains nine pages consisting entirely of conclusions and vituperative personal attacks upon the several named defendants. It was filed by appellant in propria persona in his capacity as purported guardian ad litem of his three minor children. The namеd defendants are two attorneys, one of whom successfully represented appellant’s wife in her divorce action against appellant, two are friends of appellant’s wife, one of whom is the respondent herein, and appellant’s ex-wife whom he has joined as a party defendant only for the alleged reason that she refused to join as a party plaintiff.
No useful purpose would be served in discussing appellant’s complaint in detail, for it is inconceivable that a pleading so completely lacking in factual allegations or specifications could provide any guidance as a standard of reference in future cases. It is sufficient to say that the comрlaint sounds in self-pity and resentment, but states no facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action under any theory оf law. As nearly as can be determined from this unfortunate man’s
Respondent herein is not alleged to be an attorney and therefore could not be guilty of “malpractice.”
Haldane
v.
Freedman,
The sole reference to respondent found in appellant’s complaint is contаined in the following paragraph: "That defendant Daisy [Mrs. Vernon C.] Bogy during June, 1960, wrongfully harbored, housed and concealed the [minor children] from their father, without any warrant in law, against his will, over his vigorous protest and demand that they be returned to the family home in Reseda, California. She advanced costs in the amount of approximately $50 in her zeal to acсomplish the wrongful filing of the divorce complaint NWD 724. She joined with the other defendants in a venomous effort to wilfully and maliciously injure [the minor children’s] father by actively encouraging [the minor children’s] mother to file a divorce suit—in conspiracy, concert and confederation with the other defendants—all to the injury and damage to" these [minor children].”
In
Rudley
v.
Tobias,
Respondent filed general аnd special demurrers which were very properly sustained on July 31, 1961, with 20 days’ leave to amend. Appellant having eleсted not to amend, respondent’s motion to dismiss was properly granted and entered on September 7, 1961. (Code Civ. Proс., § 581, subd. 3;
Stowe
v.
Fritzie Hotels, Inc.,
Appellant’s brief is in large measure only a repetition of his feelings of persecution and contains no aсtual assignment of error. His only explanation of his failure to amend his complaint is his statement that one of the grounds for the demurrer was “uncertainty” and that he “could have amended and alleged the respondent’s address to be 3279 Laurel Canyon Blvd., etc., declined to do so since it is inconceivable that respondent does not know her own address or what went on inside her own house. ’ ’
The judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
