*1395 Opinion
Avaris Capital, Inc. (Avaris), appeals from an order setting aside its own default and the $342,728.77 default judgment against it obtained by Julius Schifaugh IV Consulting Services, Inc. (Schifaugh). The default judgment was void as beyond the trial court’s jurisdiction because it was in excess of the amount demanded in the complaint. Avaris contends in such situations the exclusive remedy available to the trial court is to reduce the default judgment to the amount pled in the complaint. We disagree and affirm the order.
FACTS
Schifaugh filed a complaint against Avaris for breach of contract and money owed. The complaint alleged Schifaugh and Avaris entered into an agreement whereby Schifaugh would assist Avaris by locating personnel for programming assignments. Schifaugh would be paid 10 percent of the annual salary of each employee it placed with Avaris, not to exceed $6,000 per placement. Avaris failed to pay Schifaugh $6,000 owed for two specific employees placed by Schifaugh. Additionally, Avaris hired other employees introduced to it by Schifaugh, but refused to pay Schifaugh the earned placement fees “in an amount not presently known by [Schifaugh] but which . . . exceeds the jurisdictional minimum of this court . . .” (i.e., $25,000).
After Avaris failed to answer the complaint, its default was entered on November 7, 2006. On June 1, 2007, a default judgment was entered against Avaris for damages of $276,600, plus prejudgment interest, attorney fees, and costs—a total judgment of $342,728.77. Avaris filed a motion for an order reducing the default judgment to $6,000. In the alternative, Avaris requested the default judgment be vacated in its entirety. 1 In its opposition and supplemental reply papers, Avaris argued the court was without jurisdiction to set aside the default judgment in its entirety, and it could only reduce the default judgment to the amount pleaded in the complaint.
The trial court vacated the default judgment in its entirety and vacated the underlying default. It gave Schifaugh leave to amend his complaint to specifically allege the amount of damages he claimed to have suffered, and directed the new complaint be served on Avaris. Avaris appeals from the order setting aside the default and the default judgment.
*1396 DISCUSSION
Code of Civil Procedure section 580, subdivision (a), provides “[t]he relief granted to the plaintiff, if there is no answer, cannot exceed that demanded in the complaint . . . .” “The primary purpose of this section is to insure that defendants in cases which involve a default judgment have adequate notice of the judgments that may be taken against them. [Citation.]”
(Becker
v.
S.P.V. Construction Co.
(1980)
Here, the only specific dollar amount mentioned in Schifaugh’s complaint was $6,000, but the complaint also referred to damages suffered in excess of the court’s jurisdictional minimum. Thus, the original complaint put Avaris on notice that at a minimum Schifaugh claimed damages of $25,000. Accordingly, the amount of damages awarded in excess of the demand was outside of the trial court’s jurisdiction under Code of Civil Procedure section 580, and the original default judgment was void as to any amount over that.
(Greenup v. Rodman
(1986)
When a default judgment in excess of the amount demanded in the complaint has been entered, the defendant generally may challenge the judgment by (1) filing in the trial court a motion to vacate the judgment or a motion for new trial; or (2) appealing from the judgment.
(Ostling
v.
Coring
(1994)
Avaris relies on the following statement in
Ostling, supra,
We do not agree that
Ostling
hobbles the trial court as Avaris suggests.
Ostling
was a case in a different procedural posture. In that case, the trial court vacated the default judgment as excessive and then over the
plaintiffs’ objections
vacated the underlying default as well, putting the entire case back at issue.
(Ostling, supra,
Greenup, supra,
Similarly, in
Electronic Funds Solutions, EEC
v.
Murphy
(2005)
Avaris suggests
Greenup
and
Electronic Funds Solutions
only allowed the plaintiffs to amend their complaints because the cases involved either new or relatively new rules of law about which the plaintiffs or the trial courts might not have been aware. But the fact that in both cases the courts permitted the remedy of allowing the plaintiffs to file an amended complaint, thereby setting aside the default and putting the entire matter back at issue, refutes Avaris’s contention the trial court has no authority to permit such a procedure. Indeed,
Greenup
specifically stated that rather than apply the usual appellate remedy of simply reducing the judgment, it would remand because “both plaintiff and the trial court may have been unaware that the deficiency in her prayer could have been corrected
in the same way as in cases of default for failure to answer, i.e., by giving plaintiff the option of serving and filing an amended complaint. ” (Greenup, supra,
In passing, Avaris also asserts the trial court lacked authority to vacate Avaris’s default because Schifaugh did not file a motion under Code of Civil Procedure section 473. The short answer is that Avaris filed a motion to either reduce or vacate the default judgment. The trial court did the latter. Once it did so, it could permit Schifaugh to file an amended complaint, and such an amendment necessarily opened up the underlying default.
(Ostling, supra,
*1399 DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed. Respondent is awarded its costs on appeal.
Bedsworth, Acting P. J., and Moore, J., concurred.
Notes
In its motion, Avaris attached documents indicating a prior complaint filed by Schifaugh on the same allegations had been dismissed without prejudice and the matter sent to arbitration. The arbitration never took place, Avaris went out of business, and Schifaugh filed the new action.
