Motion to dismiss appeal from judgment. Plaintiffs sued defendant Goldberg and five other defendants in a four-count complaint upon causes of action growing out of alleged wrongful eviction of plaintiffs from certain premises which they held as lessees. By the time the jury’s verdict was rendered the cause had been narrowed, by orders not challenged herein, to the first two counts of the complaint, to proceed against defendant Goldberg only.
The first count sought recovery of a $40,000 deposit made by plaintiffs’ predecessor as security for the rents, and the second prayed for damages for wrongful eviction. The trial judge directed a verdict for plaintiffs upon the first count and the jury rendered verdict thereon in said sum of $40,000. Upon the second count the jury found for plaintiffs and awarded actual damages of $95,000 and exemplary damages in the sum of $5,000. The clerk entered judgment in the same form.
Upon motion for new trial the judge conditionally denied same as to the first count, the condition was duly performed by plaintiffs and counsel agree that the denial of new trial as to that count thereupon became effective (36 Cal.Jur.2d, § 175, p. 392.) As to the second сount the court granted the *545 motion for new trial upon the sole issue of damages, expressly declaring the evidence to be insufficient to sustain the verdict.
Thereupon the defendant aрpealed from the judgment. No attempt was made to appeal from the order granting a partial new trial. The case has not been retried. Respondents move to dismiss upon the grоund that there is no final judgment from which an appeal will lie.
Preliminarily it is to be noted that both counts of the complaint seek relief based upon wrongful eviction of the tenant, and to that extent there was a splitting of a single cause of action. The trial judge has found in effect that defendant is liable upon both counts and the only issue thrown open for retrial is that of the amount of damages.
In this aspect of the case, considering the two counts as stating a single cause of action, the case is governed by
Universal Film Mfg. Co.
v.
Kerrigan,
“It is true that certain findings of fact have been left undisturbed. When the issue selected for retrial has been tried, and findings thereon have been made, and a new judgment entered, the appeal, if аny be taken, will come as an appeal from that judgment, and may include a review of the entire record. ’ ’
In dismissing an appeal taken under circumstances similar to those at bar the Supreme Court said, in
Mather
v.
Mather,
The Universal Film rule, supra, applies equally to a complaint which states several different causes of action in as many separate counts. The basic principle is that there can be but one judgment between the same parties in a single action.
Bank of America
v.
Superior Court,
Greenfield
v.
Mather,
“The fact thаt the judgment of March 14th was the second judgment to be entered did not cloak it with finality because it did not purport to embrace a final disposition of the entire cause. By express terms it was сonfined to only counts one and two, and erroneously failed to include a recital with respect to the disposition of count three. It did not affect count three. The appeal from the purported judgment on that *547 count was pending; that purported judgment, being void, was in effect no judgment. Therefore, if count three in fact stated a cause of action, that causе remained pending in the trial court after the entry of the judgment on counts one and two.”
Murphy
v.
Fong Shuck,
The cited authorities require a holding that there is no appealable judgment in the case at bar.
Appellant requests that in case of dismissal óf the ap
*548
peal same be made without prejudice pursuant to section 955, Code of Civil Procedure,
1
“so that Appellant will not be prejudiced and will be permitted to file an appeal at the appropriate time.” The section is not applicable; it is designed to preserve the right to a new appeal from the judgment or order subjected to dismissal,—in this ease a judgment which is not final. It follows as а matter of course that the rulings sought to be canvassed upon this abortive appeal may be reviewed upon appeal from the judgment entered after final determination of the cause.
(Schlyen
v.
Schlyen,
Appellant also asks that this court, in еvent of dismissal, order an exoneration of his $42,000 stay bond on appeal. That is a matter for the superior court. We have no such bond here. We assume it was given pursuant to section 942, Code of Civil Procedure, and covers costs incident to the dismissal of the appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
Notes
Code Civ. Proc., $ 955: “The dismissal of an appeal is in effect an affirmance of the judgment or order appealed from, unless the dismissal is expressly made without prejudice to another appeal.”
