Opinion
The right to appeal in California is generally governed by the “one final judgment” rule, under which most interlocutory orders are not appealable. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1.)
1
In
Daar v. Yellow Cab Co.
(1967)
We conclude the preservation of individual claims is an essential prerequisite to application of the death knell doctrine: the doctrine renders appealable only those orders that effectively terminate class claims but permit individual claims to continue. When instead an order terminates both class and individual claims, there is no need to apply any special exception to the usual one final judgment rule to ensure appellate review of class claims. Instead, routine application of that rule suffices to ensure review while also avoiding a multiplicity of appeals. Because the Court of Appeal misapplied these principles in dismissing an appeal from the sustaining of a demurrer to class claims here, we reverse.
Factual and Procedural Background
In 1997, defendant Bayer Corporation (Bayer) gained United States Food and Drug Administration approval for, and shortly thereafter began marketing, the drug Baycol.
(In re Baycol Products Litigation
(D.Minn. 2003)
*755
Following Bayer’s withdrawal of Baycol from the market, thousands of plaintiffs filed suit against Bayer.
(In re Baycol Products Litigation, supra,
In 2007, after consolidation with other actions in a Judicial Council coordination proceeding, Shaw filed a first amended complaint, adding to the UCL and unjust enrichment claims a claim under the Consumers Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et seq.). The amended complaint sought to certify a class of “[a]ll persons or entities who purchased or paid for the drug Baycol between February 18, 1998 and August 8, 2001 . . . , to be used by California Consumers, and not for resale.”
Bayer demurred to both the class allegations and each substantive claim. On April 27, 2007, the trial court sustained the demurrer in its entirety without leave to amend. It thereafter denied Shaw’s motion for reconsideration on both class and individual claims and entered a judgment of dismissal. Bayer served a notice of entry of judgment on October 29, 2007, and Shaw filed his notice of appeal on December 20, 2007.
The Court of Appeal reversed dismissal of Shaw’s individual UCL claim, concluding he should have been granted leave to amend. However, it declined to consider on the merits the appeal of the class claims dismissal and instead dismissed that portion of the appeal. Relying on cases that have held death knell orders terminating class claims are immediately appealable, the Court of Appeal reasoned that, upon entry of the April 27, 2007, order sustaining Bayer’s demurrer, the class claims dismissal, unlike the individual claims dismissal, was appealable. Consequently, the December 20, 2007, notice of appeal was, as to the class claims, untimely. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.104, 8.108(e).)
We granted review to resolve uncertainty over the timing of appeals in cases involving class claims.
*756 Discussion
Under the one final judgment rule, “ ‘an appeal may be taken only from the final judgment in an entire action.’ ”
(Molien v. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1980) 27 Cal.Sd 916, 921 [
The one final judgment rule is “a fundamental principle of appellate practice”
(Walker
v.
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
(2005)
*757
Given the one final judgment rule’s deep common law and statutory roots and the substantial policy considerations underlying it, we are reluctant to depart from its principles and endorse broad exceptions that might entail multiple appeals absent compelling justification. “[Ejvery exception to the final judgment rule not only forges another weapon for the obstructive litigant but also requires a genuinely aggrieved party to choose between immediate appeal and the permanent loss of possibly meritorious objections.”
(Kinoshita v. Horio, supra,
We found compelling justifications for one such exception in
Daar, supra, 61
Cal.2d 695, embracing what is known in this and other jurisdictions as the “death knell” doctrine.
4
In
Daar,
the plaintiff filed a putative class action. The trial court sustained a demurrer, concluding the plaintiff could neither maintain a class action nor satisfy the jurisdictional minimum amount in controversy for superior court actions, and transferred the action to the municipal court. On appeal, we considered as a threshold issue whether such an order, determining the plaintiff could not maintain his claims as a class action but could seek individual relief, was appealable, and we concluded it was. What mattered was not the form of the order or judgment but its impact.
{Daar,
at pp. 698-699.) Because the order effectively rang the death knell for the class claims, we treated it as in essence a final judgment on those claims, which was appealable immediately.
(Id.
at p. 699; see also
Linder v. Thrifty Oil Co.
(2000)
Two procedural circumstances were critical to our decision in
Daar, supra, 61
Cal.2d 695: first, that the appealed-from order was the practical equivalent of a final judgment for some parties, and second, that in the absence of our treating the order as a de facto final judgment, any appeal likely would be foreclosed. On the first point, the order “virtually demolished the action as a class action”
{id.
at p. 699) and was in “ ‘legal effect’ . . . tantamount to a dismissal of the action as to all members of the class other than plaintiff” {ibid., citation omitted). In cases decided since
Daar,
we and the Courts of Appeal have emphasized that orders that only limit the scope of a class or the number of claims available to it are not similarly tantamount to dismissal and do not qualify for immediate appeal under the death knell
*758
doctrine; only an order that entirely terminates class claims is appealable. (See
Green v. Obledo
(1981)
Equally important in
Daar
was the circumstance that the order appealed from was essentially a dismissal of everyone
“other
than plaintiff.”
(Daar, supra, 61
Cal.2d at p. 699, italics added.) We emphasized that permitting an appeal was necessary because “[i]f the propriety of [a disposition terminating class claims] could not now be reviewed, it can never be reviewed”
(ibid.),
and we were understandably reluctant to recognize a category of orders effectively immunized by circumstance from appellate review. This risk of immunity from review arose precisely, and only, because the individual claims lived while the class claims died. As the United States Supreme Court has explained, “[t]he ‘death knell’ doctrine assumes that without the incentive of a possible group recovery the individual plaintiff may find it economically imprudent to pursue his lawsuit to a final judgment and then seek appellate review of an adverse class determination.”
(Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay
(1978)
*759
Thus understood as requiring an order that (1) amounts to a de facto final judgment for absent plaintiffs, under circumstances where (2) the persistence of viable but perhaps de minimis individual plaintiff claims creates a risk no
formal
final judgment will ever be entered, the death knell doctrine fits comfortably within the existing statutory framework.
5
In
Daar
itself, we described the class certification denial order as “in legal effect a final judgment”
{Daar, supra,
Underlying this original settled rule was the recognition that “to hold the person [whose rights have been finally disposed of] bound to wait until the final judgment against the other party before taking an appeal from the judgment against the first party already rendered is wholly unreasonable and finds no warrant in any provision of the [Code of Civil Procedure].”
(Rocca
v.
Steinmetz
(1922)
Embracing this understanding of
Daar, supra,
Here, a single order was entered dismissing both individual and class claims. No divergence between individual and class interests was thereby created. (Cf.
Farwell v. Sunset Mesa Property Owners Assn., Inc., supra,
The Court of Appeal below recognized that at least one other Court of Appeal had concluded, as we do, that where an order sustains a demurrer as to both class and individual claims, appeal lies from the subsequent entry of
*761
final judgment, not the order. (See
Los Altos Golf & Country Club v. County of Santa Clara
(2008)
We readily agree that bright lines are essential in this area, to avoid both inadvertent forfeiture of the right to appeal and excessive protective appeals by parties afraid they might suffer such a forfeiture. 7 Properly understood, however, the principle that appeal lies only from the final judgment when an order terminates both class and individual claims is not an ill-defined, ad hoc exception to the death knell doctrine, but an appropriate recognition of the doctrine’s limits. As Daar itself expressed, and as we have explained above, the doctrine comes into play for class claims only when an order “is tantamount to a dismissal of the action as to all members of the class other than plaintiff,(Daar, supra, 61 Cal.2d at p. 699, italics added.) The rule that the death knell doctrine applies to render an order foreclosing class claims appealable when, and only when, individual claims survive is, we trust, sufficiently bright to guide future courts and litigants.
Bayer’s additional arguments on appeal do not persuade us otherwise. Bayer urges on us a wealth of cases applying the death knell doctrine to render orders dismissing class claims appealable.
8
But none of them addressed the appealability of an order that also terminated individual claims. In the aftermath of
Daar,
we have repeatedly reaffirmed that an order that denies class certification or otherwise extinguishes class claims in their entirety is
*762
appealable, but only in cases in which individual claims survived. (See, e.g.,
In re Tobacco II Cases
(2009)
As well, Bayer contends
Daar, supra,
Finally, Bayer expresses concern that departing from the “rule” that orders terminating class claims are always appealable, no matter the disposition of individual claims, would create uncertainty and confusion, requiring courts on a case-by-case basis to assess the degree of “divergence” between the interests of would-be class members and individual named plaintiffs. But as Daar did not declare any such rule, no departure is involved here. In any event, no case-by-case assessment of divergence is needed. If an order terminates class claims, but individual claims persist, the order terminating class claims is immediately appealable under Daar’s death knell doctrine. If an order terminates class claims and individual claims as well, it is not. Because the order here fell in the latter category, it was nonappealable, and it was error to treat the subsequent appeal from a final judgment as untimely.
*763 Disposition
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Court of Appeal’s judgment and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Cantil-Sakauye, C. J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Chin, J., Moreno, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Notes
All further unlabeled statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
In the United States, the one final judgment rule was adopted as part of the Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. 73, ch. 20, §§ 21, 22, 25), and its true origins date to “the dim and remote history of the appellate procedure of the English common law.” (Crick,
The Final Judgment as a Basis for Appeal
(1932) 41 Yale L.J. 539, 544; see also
id.
at pp. 541-548 [discussing common law roots in depth];
McLish v. Roff(1891)
Section 904.1 directs that an appeal may be taken “[f]rom a judgment” (§904.1, subd. (a)(1)) and in its remaining subdivisions lists various specific additional appealable orders that stand as exceptions to the general rule. None are relevant here.
The name is traceable to
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin
(2d Cir. 1966)
As it must. Though the rules governing appealability have common law roots, they are now creatures of statute.
(Griset
v.
Fair Political Practices Com., supra,
We have previously said, in refusing to parse a single order into separate pieces each triggering its own deadline for appeal: “[A]n absurd situation would result if we were to hold that the portion of the ruling sustaining the demurrers is nonappealable and must be followed by a judgment of dismissal but that the portion of the ruling granting the motions [to dismiss] is final and immediately appealable.”
(Lavine v. Jessup
(1957)
See
Dickinson
v.
Petroleum Corp.
(1950)
California follows a “one shot” rule under which, if an order is appealable, appeal must be taken or the right to appellate review is forfeited. (See § 906 [the powers of a reviewing court do not include the power to “review any decision or order from which an appeal might have been taken” but was not];
Alch v. Superior Court
(2004)
