Defendant Ethicon Suture Laboratories, Inc., * moved to dismiss plaintiff’s appeal from an order quashing service of summons on said defendant.
Question Presented
Was an order quashing service of summons on a foreign corporation for lack of personal jurisdiction in effect a final judgment and therefore appealable, prior to the amendment of section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure?
Facts
Defendant is a foreign corporation. Service of summons was attempted to be made on it by service on the Secretary of State pursuant to Corporations Code sections 6501 and 6502. Defendant moved to quash that service on the ground that defendant neither owned property nor conducted business in California. The order quashing was made September 13, 1951. Approximately nine days later, September 22, the amendment to section 963, Code of Civil Procedure, expressly allowing appeals from orders quashing service of summons, became effective. Prior to the amendment the section did not expressly provide for an appeal from an order quashing service. Defendant contends that the order is not appealable. Plaintiff contends primarily that even prior to the amendment the order was appealable as the order was in effect a final judgment.
Was the Order in Effect a Final Judgment?
The test of whether an order is a final judgment is stated in
Lyon
v.
Goss,
In
Howe
v.
Key System Transit Co.,
The order in question here meets the test. While it is true that, in a sense, the action is not final in that the defendant cannot have the action dismissed as against it until the statutory period for lack of prosecution has passed, it is final as to plaintiff in that it has been determined that defendant neither owned property nor did business in this state and hence cannot be served with summons. While the order is not final in the sense that defendant is now entitled to a dismissal of the case against it of record, it is final in the sense that for practical purposes the court’s order, so far as plaintiff’s right to proceed against defendant is concerned, is tantamount to a dismissal. This is not a case of error in the method of service which can be cured by a new service. It is a determination that, at least under existing conditions, defendant cannot be served. If this adjudication is wrong, as plaintiff contends, he has been denied unfairly an opportunity to have the action of the court reviewed, and in a very real sense the order is final as to him.
There are only two cases in California on the subject of the appealability of this order. In De
Pier
v.
Maddox,
It is doubtful if the Thomas case,
supra,
based as it is on cases which were considering a different kind of order, is as authoritative as the earlier De Pier case,
supra,
which considered the very kind of order in question. Particularly is this so in view of the fact that the Thomas case completely ignored the De Pier case. In any event it is obvious that the law in this state on the subject, at the very least, was conflicting. Thus in determining the effect of the amendment to section 963 which expressly allows appeals from orders quashing service, the decision in
Wennerholm
v.
Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med.,
The motion is denied.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
Notes
Herein referred to as “defendant.”
