Opinion
This legal malpractice case resulting in a judgment of approximately $1.1 million, in favor of the plaintiff, Chester A. Holliday, is the aftermath of the events described in our unpublished opinion in People v. Holliday, reversing Holliday’s conviction of involuntary manslaughter relating to the killing of his wife. (See People v. Holliday (Jan. 12, 1984) 4 Crim. Nos. 13844 & 15645.) We reversed on the ground Holliday’s defense counsel Otis L. Jones was incompetent. (See People v. Holliday, supra.) Represented by different counsel on retrial Holliday ,was *105 acquitted. Holliday then filed this action against Jones, Jones’s law partner, Douglas A. Oden, and the partnership, Jones & Oden, for himself and his minor children, Esther and Chester (C. J.), seeking damages for professional negligence, and negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The ensuing court trial was limited to Holliday’s cause of action for professional negligence and the children’s cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress. Defendants had earlier successfully demurred to Holliday’s causes of action for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress and the children’s cause of action for professional negligence. Holliday voluntarily dismissed the children’s cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Preceding trial the court found Jones was liable to Holliday as a matter of law based on the facts set out in our opinion reversing Holliday’s conviction. The court awarded Holliday $629,173.53 general and special damages, including $400,000 for emotional distress and $150,000 for each Holliday child for negligently inflicted emotional distress. The defendants appeal the judgment entered on the court’s statement of decision. Holliday cross-appeals from the order sustaining the defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend to his cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Defendants’ Appeal
The defendants ask us to reduce the judgment by $700,000—$300,000 because Jones’s liability for legal malpractice in representing Holliday does not extend to Holliday’s children, and an additional $400,000 because Holliday’s damages for emotional distress may not be premised on attorney malpractice. As we shall explain, we partially agree, We conclude the scope of an attorney’s duty in representing a client in a criminal case does not include responsibility to the client’s family members, whom the attorney does not represent, for emotional distress damages resulting from the attorney’s failure to perform competently on behalf of the client. Accordingly, we modify the judgment by eliminating the damages awarded to the Holliday children.
We reject the defendants’ argument as to Holliday, however, concluding that there is no reason to deny damages to a client, including damages for emotional distress, proximately caused by the attorney’s negligence in failing to perform as a reasonably competent defense lawyer in a criminal case. We therefore hold that Holliday is entitled to the $400,000 he was awarded for the emotional distress damages he suffered as a direct result of Jones’s professional negligence. As so modified we affirm the judgment.
*106 I
The trial court’s decision to award $150,000 damages for the emotional distress suffered by each Holliday child was based on its conclusion the risk of such harm was foreseeable to Jones in accordance with the California Supreme Court decisions in
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1980)
Initially we wish to emphasize the evidence in this case clearly establishes Jones’s negligence caused the Holliday children to suffer emotional distress. Even Jones acknowledges this fact stating “although not direct victims [of his negligence], [the Holliday children] foreseeably suffered emotional distress from that negligence as well.”
Esther Holliday was 10 years old when her father was convicted. C. J. was a year younger. Jones knew these children were dependent on their father for all aspects of their support—emotional as well as financial. They visited their father in jail about every other week, seeing him in his jail uniform, and speaking to him through a telephone in the presence of others. The visits lasted for about 20 minutes. The children worried about how long they would be separated from their father and how and where they would live during this period. They resided at seven different locations during their father’s incarceration. Their schoolmates asked them embarrassing questions and their schoolwork suffered dramatically.
Thus in the discussion which follows there is no need for us to dwell on either the legitimacy or foreseeability of the children’s emotional distress. The Holliday children are indeed sympathetic victims who have suffered as a foreseeable result of Jones’s negligence. Is anything more required for Jones’s liability? We believe so.
*107
In
Dillon
v.
Legg
(1968)
In
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra,
These cases permitted recovery of emotional distress damages to a “bystander” or a “direct victim” in certain circumstances. Defining those circumstances was at best difficult and the distinction between the cases unclear with one appellate court saying the difference was an “amorphous nether realm.”
(Newton
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospital
(1986)
Two recent California Supreme Court decisions,
Marlene F.
v.
Affiliated Psychiatric Medical Clinic, Inc.
(1989)
Marlene F. holds the mother of a minor child can state a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress against the psychotherapist who, after being consulted to treat both mother and son, sexually molested the boy. (48 Cal.3d at pp. 585, 590-592.) Marlene F. emphasizes, however, “ ‘negligent causing of emotional distress is not an independent tort but the tort of negligence . . . .’ (6 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts, § 838, p. 195.)” (Id. at p. 588.) After reviewing its decisions in Dillon and Molien, Marlene F. explains Molien “did not, however, purport to create a cause of action for the negligent infliction of emotional distress based solely upon the foreseeability that serious emotional distress might *108 result. It is plainly foreseeable, for example, that close family members of a patient would suffer severe emotional distress if told the patient had been diagnosed as suffering from a terminal illness, but without more, the patient’s physician would not be liable for that distress whether or not the diagnosis was erroneous. [Citation.] Damages for severe emotional distress, rather, are recoverable in a negligence action when they result from the breach of a duty owed the plaintiff that is assumed by the defendant or imposed on the defendant as a matter of law, or that arises out of a relationship between the two.” (Id. at pp. 589-590, italics added.)
Thing
v.
La Chusa, supra,
Thing
refers
to Borer
v.
American Airlines, Inc.
(1977)
Perhaps the resolution of this issue would be more difficult if Holliday had been wrongfully convicted of murdering his children, and his wife sought to recover for her emotional distress. (Cf.
Rodriguez
v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
(1974)
The children forcefully urge that despite the implications of
Borer,
the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hedlund
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
Hedlund
is an almost classic illustration of the “zone of danger” limitation doctrine rejected in
Dillon
v.
Legg, supra,
The Holliday children dispute the characterization of
Hedlund
as a
Dillon
case, pointing to parts of the opinion where the court cited
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra,
The two cryptic references to
Molien
in the
Hedlund
opinion do not suggest to us that the Supreme Court viewed
Hedlund
as a “direct victim” case. In footnote 8, the court cited
Molien
for the proposition that Darryl’s allegations of emotional trauma unaccompanied by physical injury were sufficient under
Molien.
It will be recalled that for all its groundbreaking legal analysis,
Dillon
retained the requirement that the emotional shock result in physical injury. (See
Our conclusion is supported by the Supreme Court’s later decision in
Ochoa
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
*111 We are frank to admit that Dillon, Molien and to a lesser extent Hedlund can be read to suggest an expansive new rule in which the only limitation on the recovery of negligently inflicted emotional distress damages is the principle of foreseeability. In such a legal environment, the categories of “direct victims” and “bystanders’ would be unnecessary. They are, in a sense, arbitrary limitations on the recovery of compensation for damages which, to the individual plaintiff involved, are very real. Clearly, however, our emotional distress vistas have been restricted by recent cases such as Ochoa, Marlene F. and Thing. As both Marlene F. (a “direct victim” case) and Thing (a “bystander” case) make clear, foreseeability is not the only consideration. The Supreme Court has made a policy determination that the costs associated with attempting to compensate intangible losses are socially significant and can no longer be ignored. The lines are being drawn; the question is simply one of location.
If the results in these cases can be synthesized, it would appear that in order to recover for negligently inflicted emotional distress damages, a plaintiff must either have a special relationship to the defendant
(Marlene F.),
be the direct object of some aspect of the defendant’s conduct (Molien) or personally witness a negligently caused physical injury to a closely related primary victim
(Dillon; Ochoa; Thing).
Beyond these categories, the only exception seems to be the recovery by spouses of loss of consortium damages.
(Rodriguez
v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp., supra,
Here, the Holliday children had no contractual or other relationship with Jones. Nor can his malpractice in any sense be viewed as being “directed” at them in the same way as the doctor’s conduct in Molien where, as has been emphasized in later cases, the wife’s physician directed that the misdiagnosis be communicated to the plaintiff-husband and instructed that he be physically examined. (See, e.g., Marlene F., supra, 48 Cal.3d at pp. 589, 590; Ochoa, supra, 39 Cal.3d at pp. 172-173.) Finally, the children did not witness a physical injury to their father and have never claimed entitlement to recovery based on Dillon's bystander criteria.
What remains, of course, is the limited exception for loss of consortium damages carved out by Rodriguez and narrowly circumscribed by Borer. We cannot see how a rational standard could exist which would award emotional distress damages to the Holliday children and at the same time deny them to children of parents who are physically injured. While not the determinative consideration, we also note that the availability of such damages is unnecessary to effectively deter legal malpractice. The lawyer’s liability to his client for damages including punitive damages—as well as the prospect of professional discipline—should provide sufficient incentive for him to perform in a professionally responsible manner. It is illogical to *112 think that a lawyer will or should perform “more” professionally depending on how many children the client has.
In light of the foregoing California Supreme Court decisions and the policy considerations outlined above, we hold the Holliday children are not entitled to recover damages for the negligently inflicted emotional distress caused by Jones’s conduct. We modify the judgment accordingly.
II
The trial court based its decision to award Holliday $400,000 for the emotional distress he suffered as a result of Jones’s negligence on
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra,
27 Cal.Sd 916, and
Betts
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.
(1984)
A
In
Quezada,
plaintiffs’ underlying quiet title action to secure the family home was dismissed after the defendant attorneys negligently failed to bring it to trial within five years. In addition to special economic damages, the plaintiffs sought general damages in the form of emotional distress. Denying recovery for the emotional distress damages, the
Quezada
court cited the general rule then applicable in California that “emotional suffering damages [are limited] to cases involving either physical impact and injury to plaintiff or intentional wrongdoing by defendant.” (
In
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra,
Defendants assert that Molien is not a legal malpractice case and therefore does not necessarily overrule Quezada and control the decision in this case. While facially accurate, this assertion ignores the fact that Quezada did not purport to establish a special rule for legal malpractice cases. Instead, it was clearly based on the “physical injury” rule expressly disapproved in Molien.
In any event, this court applied
Molien
to a legal malpractice case in
Betts
v.
Allstate Ins. Co., supra,
Defendants contend that the broad but cryptic statement in Betts was dictum because the facts there are properly characterized as “affirmative misconduct” falling within the holding in Quezada. Assuming arguendo defendants are correct, it is nonetheless difficult to read Betts’s rationale as admitting of such a limitation. Albeit with minimal discussion, the Betts court treats Molien as having dispensed with the need to find exceptions to the general rule that negligently inflicted emotional distress damages are not recoverable absent physical injury.
More importantly, however, acceptance of defendants’ narrow reading of Molien and Betts would create a special rule benefiting only negligent lawyers. If as a result of improper psychiatric diagnosis an individual is mistakenly committed to a mental hospital, Molien plainly allows recovery of emotional distress damages against the negligent psychiatrist. If the same individual is mistakenly committed as a result of the negligence of his lawyer and suffers the same damages, defendants’ argument would require that recovery be denied. In our view, not only is such a special interest rule unfair, but public perceptions regarding it poorly serve the broader interests of the legal profession.
B
It is true that Quezada still typifies the majority rule in American jurisdictions. In lawyer malpractice cases alleging negligence in an earlier civil case involving a property interest, recovery of damages for emotional distress is precluded absent intentional or affirmative wrongdoing by the defendant. (See Mallen & Smith, Legal Malpractice, op cit. supra, § 16.11, pp. 904-905.) That rule derives, of course, from the even more general rule that emotional distress damages absent physical injury are not recoverable. (See Rest.2d Torts, § 313; Prosser & Keeton, Torts (5th ed. 1984) § 54, p. 361.) It is because Molien rejects this more general rule that we question defendants’ continued reliance on Quezada. Even if Quezada were somehow *115 reconcilable with Molien and Betts, however, there is ample basis for concluding that the award of emotional distress damages in this criminal case was nonetheless appropriate. 7
Quezada's
decision limiting recovery for emotional distress damages unless the attorney defendant committed intentional or affirmative misconduct or bad faith emphasizes the conduct of the attorney defendants.
Quezada
requires something other than “mere” negligence for increased damages. (See
Soto
v.
Royal Globe Ins. Co.
(1986)
In most of the out-of-state cases to which defendants refer us (see
ante,
fn. 6), the only interest harmed by the attorney’s malpractice was a property
*116
interest. Recovery of emotional distress damages was disallowed primarily for that reason and not because the attorney’s conduct was insufficiently culpable. For example, in
Hilt
v.
Bernstein, supra,
Conversely in
McEvoy
v.
Helikson
(1977)
Again in
Carroll
v.
Rountree, supra,
If the purpose in prohibiting the award of emotional distress damages absent physical injury or intentional or affirmative misconduct is to screen out fraudulent or speculative claims, the necessity for such screening is simply nonexistent here when loss of liberty and its consequent impact on Holliday is not only a reasonable and foreseeable consequence of Jones’s professional incompetence in defending Holliday in his murder trial, but virtually a guaranteed result. The analysis of this issue is thoughtfully discussed in
Wagenmann
v.
Adams
(1st Cir. 1987)
In
Wagenmann,
the trial court appointed Healy, an experienced criminal lawyer, to represent plaintiff Wagenmann, both sane and innocent, who was charged with various crimes. As a proximate result of Healy’s negligence, the plaintiff was required to spend
one
night in a state mental hospital. (
*118
“The thrust of Healy’s argument is that Massachusetts law limits recovery for emotionally-based injuries in narrowly constrained ways. We agree, to some extent. But, that generality does not capture the flag. The cases which this appellant cites in an effort to blanket this verdict with his reasoning are inapposite. . . . We offer no opinion on the appropriateness of denying recovery of ‘emotional distress’ damages in cases where the claimed malpractice involves merely property rights.
See, e.g., Carroll
v.
Rountree,
“[Tjhere is little room to doubt that the harm [plaintiff] suffered due to Healy’s bungling was real and significant and that the injury was reasonably foreseeable under the circumstances. Any attorney in Healy’s position should readily have anticipated the agonies attendant upon involuntary (and inappropriate) commitment to [the state mental hospital] and the subsequent stigma and fear associated with such a traumatic episode. The damages were therefore recoverable under Massachusetts law.
“Were we to accept the notion that a client’s recovery on the grim facts of a case such as this must be limited to purely economic loss, we would be doubly wrong. The negligent lawyer would receive the benefit of an enormous windfall, and the victimized client would be left without fair recourse in the face of ghastly wrongdoing. Despite having caused his client a substantial loss of liberty and exposed him to a consequent parade of horribles, counsel would effectively be immunized from liability because of the fortuity of the marketplace. That Healy was guilty of malpractice in the defense of commitment proceedings, rather than in the prosecution of a civil claim for damages, is no reason artificially to shield him from the condign consequences of his carelessness. We are not required by the law of the commonwealth, as we read it, to reach such an unjust result.” (829 F.2d at pp. 221-223.)
We think Wagenmann's reasoning is sound. Admittedly there are cases which reach a contrary result. (E.g.,
Hamilton
v.
Powell, Goldstein, Frazier & Murphy, supra,
After surveying the cases decided in other jurisdictions, we are satisfied the recovery of damages for emotional distress in a legal malpractice case— if it is to be limited at all—should turn on the nature of plaintiff’s interest which is harmed and not merely on the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct. Accordingly, in light of Holliday’s liberty interest here, we believe California’s general rule of damages applies and Jones should be liable for emotional distress damages he caused.
C
We reach our conclusion in this case acutely aware that in many if not most criminal prosecutions, the defendant is represented by appointed counsel or a public defender and the result of our holding might add further financial burdens to the public fisc. The resolution of this problem, however, is best left to the Legislature which is in a better position than we to determine whether public lawyers should be immune from such damages. Our holding here involving privately retained counsel is necessarily limited to the facts before us.
We have also pondered the chilling effect, if any, this decision may have on the quality of legal representation of defendants in criminal cases. Lacking evidence on this issue, we are unwilling to say as a matter of law that the elimination of a single element of damages would improve the legal representation of criminal defendants by privately retained counsel or, conversely, that failing to limit damages will decrease the quality of representation defendants in criminal cases can and should expect from their privately retained lawyers.
We have also considered whether we should reach a different result because of the potential effect of our decision on the cost and availability of malpractice insurance. However, no evidence on this issue was presented at trial and we decline to speculate. We do not know the effect of Quezada on malpractice insurers and whether they lowered their rates after that *120 decision. We also have no idea whether Betts caused such rates to be increased. On a silent record, speculative assumptions of this nature are simply inappropriate.
We accordingly reject defendant’s argument that Holliday is not entitled to $400,000 emotional distress damages caused by his defense counsel’s professional negligence.
Plaintiff’s Cross-appeal
Holliday’s cross-appeal challenges the court’s ruling sustaining the defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend to his cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress. 9 Holliday claims the court erred in concluding that his cause of action was barred by the one-year statute of limitations of Code of Civil Procedure section 340, subdivision (3).
The tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress is not complete when the defendant commits his outrageous acts; “[i]t is not complete until the effect of a defendant’s conduct results in plaintiff’s
severe
emotional distress.”
(Kiseskey
v.
Carpenters’ Trust for So. California
(1983)
To convince us that Jones’s malpractice involved more than merely inattention to his professional responsibilities, Holliday has directed us to several instances of what he describes as Jones’s affirmative misconduct, malfeasance, ethical improprieties and bad faith in the context of his backup *121 argument to support his recovery for emotional distress damages had we decided Quezada controlled our decision. Not discussed, but implicit in our opinion in defendants’ appeal, is our rejection of this backup argument. In any event, the same acts which Holliday now says are sufficient to support his separate cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress were included in his case seeking damages for negligent infliction of emotional distress. Not only was such evidence admitted at trial, but was considered by the court in its award of emotional distress damages. Thus here the record establishes the emotional distress caused by Jones’s professional negligence and that resulting from the alleged intentional infliction of emotional distress was based on the same conduct. Because Holliday has already been fully compensated for the emotional distress caused by such conduct he is not entitled to relitigate that issue. To permit him to do so in the circumstances of this case would result in double recovery. We therefore affirm the order sustaining the defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend to Holliday’s cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Disposition
The judgment is reduced by $300,000, eliminating the award in favor of plaintiff as the guardian of his two minor children. As so modified the judgment is affirmed. The parties to bear their respective costs on this appeal.
Work, J., and Nares, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 30, 1989, and the petition of defendants and appellants for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 25, 1990.
Notes
In a prior writ petition to this court following the overruling of his demurrer, Jones argued that the Holliday children had not stated a cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress. We summarily denied the petition with the comment, “[T]here [is] no showing of an abuse of discretion at the pleading stage.” The children now assert that this denial constitutes the law of the case and precludes Jones from raising the issue on appeal. (See, e.g.,
Richer
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
Emphasizing that considerations of
policy
are paramount,
Thing
states: The “ ‘social burden of providing damages [could not be ignored] merely because the money to pay such awards comes initially from the “negligent” defendant or his insurer. Realistically the burden . . . must be borne by the public generally in increased insurance premiums or, otherwise, in the enhanced danger that accrues from the greater number of people who may choose to go without any insurance. We must also take into account the cost of administration of a system to determine and pay [the] awards;. . .’ [Citation]”
(Thing, supra,
“No policy supports extension of the right to recover for [negligent infliction of emotional distress] to a larger class of plaintiffs. Emotional distress is an intangible condition experienced by most persons, even absent negligence, at some time during their lives. Close relatives suffer serious, even debilitating, emotional reactions to the injury, death, serious illness, and evident suffering of loved ones. These reactions occur regardless of the cause of the loved one’s illness, injury, or death. That relatives will have severe emotional distress is an unavoidable aspect of the ‘human condition.’. . . The overwhelming majority of ‘emotional distress’ which we endure, therefore, is not compensable.” (Id. at pp. 666-667.)
It is true the children have alleged a type of injury to their reputation which was not present in Borer. If anything, however, such injury is more speculative than the loss of comfort and society, compensation for which was rejected by the Borer court.
We do not mean to suggest that the Holliday children were awarded damages for distress not attributable to Jones’s negligence. The trial judge made it clear he understood that only postconviction distress was compensable. We only point out that where emotional distress is of a continuing nature, it may be difficult, as a practical matter, to differentiate the compensable distress from that which cannot be compensated.
The concession is well advised. After the jury found Holliday guilty, he was restrained in his seat by two deputies, handcuffed in front of his family, led out of the courtroom and taken to jail. He was degraded, humiliated and ashamed. Jones had not told Holliday he was not facing the death penalty. Holliday’s anxiety on this point was lessened only after he checked the Penal Code in the law library at the county jail. In the “holding tank” he was strip-searched in a room with about 20 other people. Assigned to a cell, his cellmate (nicknamed “Monster” for apparently very good reasons) objected to Holliday, saying he was too old and sick. “Monster” preferred younger men with whom he could have sex.
Holliday’s second cellmate, a paranoid schizophrenic, needed daily medication to avoid becoming violent. Sometimes four inmates were assigned to the cell, requiring that two of the inmates sleep on the floor. Neither the toilet, located on a wall of the cell, nor the shower facilities were private. Holliday was strip-searched on a weekly basis in a room with a number of other naked inmates. When Holliday’s children visited him, he could see them only through an eight-inch-by-eight-inch window.
The defendants make this statement relying on the authority cited in Mallen and Levit, Legal Malpractice (2d ed. 1981) section 310, pages 362-363, referring us to
Garris
v.
Schwartz
(7th Cir. 1977)
The reason we have emphasized this criminal case is that we are convinced it is indeed sui generis. The parties have not directed us to another legal malpractice case in this country comparable to the one before us. Not only was Holliday’s involuntary manslaughter conviction reversed solely because of attorney incompetence, but he was acquitted on retrial. In addition the trial court’s ruling finding malpractice as a matter of law is not challenged in this appeal. Thus this case is unlike the model analyzed in the thoughtful law review article by retired California Supreme Court Justice Otto Kaus and Ronald E. Mallen entitled, The Misguiding Hand of Counsel—Reflections on “Criminal Malpractice” (1974) appearing in 21 UCLA Law Review 1191. This provocative article highlights the difficulties associated with attempting to fit criminal malpractice litigation into substantive and procedural molds designed for other purposes. The situation postulated in the article, however, is that the “plaintiff in the malpractice action was represented in the trial court by the defendant lawyer throughout the criminal proceedings, which resulted in a conviction now final, either after trial or plea.” (Id. at p. 1194.) The hypothetical basis for the article requires that there be a trial in the underlying civil action to establish that had the defendant been competently represented an acquittal would have resulted. Obviously that is not the situation in the case here.
Also touched upon in the article is an issue which has admittedly piqued our intellectual curiosity but which was not raised at trial and is not argued here. That is whether there should be recompense when the criminal defendant’s actual innocence has not been established. It is conceptually possible for both an innocent person to be convicted and a guilty person to be acquitted. Kaus and Mallen are well aware of this possibility and take pains to explain that “actual guilt” does not mean actual guilt, stating that “no system of procedure and proof can infallibly determine the client’s guilt or innocence.” (Id. at p. 1200, fn. 25.) Nonetheless, as the article suggests, the notion of paying damages to a plaintiff who actually committed the criminal offense solely because a lawyer negligently failed to secure an acquittal is of questionable public policy and is contrary to the intuitive response that damages should only be awarded to a person who is truly free from any criminal involvement. In the present case the defendants have not even hinted that Holliday’s “true guilt" should preclude an award of damages to him. Accordingly, our analytical approach in this case has not been constrained by the legitimate concerns prompted by the hypothetical model used by Kaus and Mallen in their discussion of the problems of criminal malpractice litigation following a final judgment of conviction.
Interestingly, respected commentators Mallen and Smith acknowledge this distinction in their legal malpractice treatise, referring to “an exception [in] an Oregon decision which permitted recovery where the attorney’s conduct interfered with a personal rather than an economic interest, for example, the plaintiff’s right to child custody.” (Mallen & Smith, op. cit. supra, at p. 905.)
The parties spend considerable energy discussing whether Holliday’s appeal improperly labeled as a “cross-appeal” was timely filed. (The clerk of this court inadvertently labeled Holliday’s appeal as a “cross-appeal.”) Our decision to reach the merits of his appeal reflects our rejection of defendants’jurisdictional arguments. The court’s judgment entered following its statement of decision failed to refer to the cause of action to which demurrers were sustained without leave to amend. Holliday’s counsel’s later meticulously crafted letter with copies to opposing counsel explained this significant omission. Instead of amending the judgment a separate order of dismissal filed December 14, 1987, was entered. Accordingly we are satisfied that Holliday’s timely appeal from that order is properly before us.
