Opinion
May parties engaged in private dispute resolution stipulate to the appointment of a judicial referee or judge pro tempore to secure a settlement enforceable by the court under Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6?
This appeal was taken from an order of the Superior Court of San Francisco County purporting to enforce an insurance coverage settlement entered pursuant to section 664.6 and enter partial judgment thereon. We conclude that the superior court lacked jurisdiction and the order was void.
The original filing in the Superior Court of San Francisco County was a stipulated petition for the appointment of a “judge pro tempore” to preside over the entry of a settlement. Although no dispute was pending between the parties in the superior court, the court appointed a “judge pro tempore,” and the parties recorded a settlement at a hearing before him. Thereafter, a dispute arose in which the insured contended the insurer had not fulfilled its obligations under the settlement. The insured filed a motion to enforce the settlement in superior court. The insurer responded on the merits, disputing the insured’s interpretation of the settlement, and also complained the superior court was not the “proper” tribunal for enforcement, since the court had referred the matter to a temporary judge. After the court granted the motion and entered partial judgment, the insurer raised these same arguments on appeal.
Although the parties did not initially address the issue, we called for supplemental briefing on the following question: “In the absence of a preexisting lawsuit or agreement between the parties for appointment of a referee, by what authority did the superior court obtain jurisdiction over the dispute in this case?” We conclude the superior court never obtained subject matter jurisdiction, despite the
Background
In March 1996, The Housing Group (THG) and United National Insurance Company (UNI) were in the midst of negotiating a settlement of their dispute over UNI’s insurance coverage obligations. THG had previously filed a coverage lawsuit against UNI and Scottsdale Insurance Company (Scottsdale) in federal court. In addition, THG had filed claims against UNI in two state court actions filed in Solano County and Contra Costa County Superior Courts.
After many private mediation sessions before Daniel Weinstein, a retired judge of the superior court, on March 27, 1996 the parties filed a petition in San Francisco County Superior Court. This petition set forth several stipulations. Together, the parties asked the court to: (1) take jurisdiction over the pending settlement negotiations and mediation; (2) appoint Judge Weinstein as a judge pro tempore to preside over the entry of a settlement in the form of a stipulated judgment (§ 664.6); and (3) permit Judge Weinstein to retain jurisdiction “until the settlement has been fully documented and all funds required by the settlement have been delivered to Petitioners [THG].” The following day, the court accepted jurisdiction and appointed Judge Wein-stein as a judge pro tempore “to carry out the purpose and intent of the parties to this Stipulation.”
On March 29, 1996, counsel for the parties appeared before Judge Wein-stein and acknowledged on the record their clients’ consent to be bound “pursuant to 664.6 of the Code of Civil Procedure” by the provisions of a settlement agreement. They had prepared a writing, referred to as Exhibit A at the hearing, which laid out in detail the rights and obligations of THG, UNI and subscribing underwriters for the insurance policies in question. The settlement included a “sharing agreement,” which required THG to share with UNI certain recoveries it might obtain from Scottsdale. From the record on appeal, it appears the parties did not immediately file the transcript of the March 29, 1996 hearing, or Exhibit A memorializing the settlement agreement, in the San Francisco Superior Court.
In July 1996, following a mediation before former United States District Court Judge Layn Phillips, THG settled its coverage dispute with Scottsdale. After learning of this settlement, UNI demanded reimbursement from THG pursuant to the sharing agreement. THG initially refused. After a private mediation of the dispute, THG agreed to pay half of the Scottsdale settlement fund to UNI, and UNI promised to “repay” THG “dollar for dollar” when and if THG later withdrew money (i.e., for defense and indemnity payments) from the Scottsdale fund. This provision
THG later sought reimbursement from the Scottsdale fund for defense and indemnity costs in nine cases. UNI objected to disbursement of most of the amounts requested, as was its right under the Stipulation and Order, and the matter proceeded to arbitration before Judge Phillips. On August 18, 1999, Judge Phillips approved reimbursements from the Scottsdale fund totaling $424,964.92, roughly half the amount THG had requested.
On August 30, 1999, THG filed in San Francisco Superior Court a “Motion ... To Enforce Settlement On The Record . . . And For Partial Judgment Thereon.” THG argued that UNI and Generali (as a subscribing underwriter) agreed to be bound by the 1996 settlement—consisting of the record before Judge Weinstein and the attached Exhibit A—and by the amendments set forth in the 1998 Stipulation and Order. Pursuant to the matching agreement in the Stipulation and Order, THG claimed UNI and Generali were obligated to match the Scottsdale fund disbursement dollar for dollar. Citing the fact that the 1996 Settlement was a stipulated judgment pursuant to section 664.6, THG prayed for partial judgment in the amount of $424,964.92, plus interest. UNI and Generali opposed the motion on the merits but also asserted that Judge Weinstein, and not a judge of the superior court, was the proper person to adjudicate the matter. The court ultimately granted THG’s motion, and this appeal followed.
Discussion
We obtained supplemental briefing to clarify the basis of the superior court’s jurisdiction over this matter. Both sides contend their 1996 petition properly invoked the court’s jurisdiction. In this petition, the parties stipulated “that this court take jurisdiction over the pending settlement negotiations and mediation between Petitioners and Respondent currently taking place under the auspices of Jams/Endispute, with the Honorable Daniel Weinstein, Retired Judge of the California Superior Court, presiding.” They also asked the court to appoint Judge Weinstein, “as Judge Pro Tempore, to preside over the current settlement negotiations between Petitioners and Respondent so that a settlement can be entered into on or before March 29, 1996, in the presence of [Judge] Weinstein, ... so that it will be enforceable under California Code of Civil Procedure Section 664.6.”
Neither party filed a complaint to initiate a civil action in the San Francisco County Superior Court, nor was any case pending between the parties in that court. Rather, the petition itself was treated as the first filing of a new case. Yet the petition did not describe the substance or amount of any controversy between THG
“ ‘To invoke the jurisdiction of a court of justice, it is primarily essential that there be involved a genuine and existing controversy, calling for present adjudication as involving present rights.’ ” (Young v. Young (1950)
Although no published case appears to address this precise factual situation, our decision is consistent with Viejo Bancorp, Inc. v. Wood (1989)
By its express terms, section 664.6 only permits an entry of stipulated judgment by parties to “pending litigation.” This phrase was recently held to encompass postjudgment proceedings in the unique context of family law (In re Marriage of Armato (2001)
Nor was the parties’ stipulation to invoke the superior court’s jurisdiction sufficient to create subject matter jurisdiction, which refers to the court’s inherent power to hear a case. (National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Stites Professional Law Corp. (1991)
UNI assumes the parties’ agreement was sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the superior court because it invoked the court’s authority to appoint a general referee pursuant to section 638.
Nor do we agree that section 638 itself authorizes the appointment of a private judge when no action or proceeding is pending in the court. An action is defined as “an ordinary proceeding in a court of justice by which one party prosecutes another for the declaration, enforcement, or protection of a right, the redress or prevention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offense.” (§ 22.) “Every other remedy is a special proceeding.” (§ 23.) Clearly, the parties in this case did not present the San Francisco Superior Court with an “action,” since no complaint was filed (see § 411.10 [“A civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with the court.”]), nor did they seek a remedy in anything recognized as a “special proceeding.” In reviewing cases that discuss section 638, we find no support for UNI’s position, and some statements to the contrary. (See Sy First Family Ltd. Partnership v. Cheung (1999)
Because the parties’ 1996 petition did not properly invoke the superior court’s jurisdiction, their recitation of a settlement before Judge Weinstein did not become a stipulated judgment pursuant to section 664.6.
To sum up, a petition that asks the court to assume jurisdiction over pending settlement negotiations in an undisclosed dispute presents no justi-ciable controversy. Parties may not confer jurisdiction upon a court by stipulation. Additionally, the circumstances allowing reference under section 638 are statutorily defined, and require an action or proceeding over which the court has jurisdiction. Because the superior court never obtained subject matter jurisdiction
Disposition
The partial judgment is reversed, and the trial court is directed to dismiss the action. Each party to bear its own costs.
McGuiness, P. J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 16, 2001, and respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 10, 2001.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
The record does not disclose whether these actions were still pending when the parties petitioned the San Francisco Superior Court for appointment of a judge pro tempore. UNI identifies the federal case as the only coverage lawsuit brought against it by THG. According to UNI, THG agreed to dismiss this lawsuit before the petition was filed. However, THG claims that, in addition to this suit, the Contra Costa and Solano County actions alleged claims against UNI. THG suggests all of these cases were “pending,” albeit elsewhere, when the parties filed their petition. Nowhere does the petition describe or refer to pending litigation in any court.
An order regarding enforcement of a judgment is immediately appealable. (In re Marriage of Adams (1987)
Section 664.6 provides: “If parties to pending litigation stipulate, in a writing signed by the parties outside the presence of the court or orally before the court, for settlement of the case, or part thereof, the court, upon motion, may enter judgment pursuant to the terms of the settlement. If requested by the parties, the court may retain jurisdiction over the parties to enforce the settlement until performance in full of the terms of the settlement.”
The petition also stipulated that the court file was to be sealed immediately; however, the superior court deleted this requirement in the signed order.
Section 638 states, in relevant part:
“A reference may be ordered upon the agreement of the parties filed with the clerk, or judge . . .
“1 To try any or all of the issues in an action or proceeding, whether of fact or of law, and to report a statement of decision thereon;
“2 To ascertain a fact necessary to enable the court to determine an action or proceeding.”
This situation differs in fundamental respects from, for example, petitions to compel arbitration, which call upon the court to enforce a preexisting agreement to arbitrate disputes.
Even if the parties had properly invoked the jurisdiction of the superior court, we doubt whether it could be said, on this record, that Judge Weinstein exercised sufficient adjudicative authority over the proceedings to permit enforcement of the settlement under section 664.6. (See In re Marriage of Assemi (1994)
