Opinion
This case arises from a wrongful death action, which involved several decedents, and raises a single question about apportionment of the proceeds of the settlement of such an action; whether the heirs of those decedents (plaintiffs in the wrongful death action) are entitled to have a jury apportion the settlement proceeds, or whether the matter may be decided by the court, sitting without a jury. We agree with the trial court that there is no right to a jury in such cases.
The facts may be briefly stated; In February of 2003, a car driven by Elliot Park collided with a car driven by Soowan Lee. Lee was killed, as were Park’s passenger, Andy Kim, and Lee’s passenger, Richard Yi. Park was at fault in the accident. He was later convicted of vehicular manslaughter.
Andy Kim’s parents, Kwang Hoon Kim and Yong Ae Kim (the Kim parties); Soowan Lee’s mother, Kum Soon Park; and Richard Yi’s wife and children, Song Yi, Karen Yi, and Jason Yi (the Yi parties) jointly sued Elliot Park and the restaurant where he had been drinking that evening. Those claims were resolved with a payment of $1 million from the restaurant and $30,000 from Elliot Park’s mother, who owned the car he was driving.
The Kim parties then filed an amended complaint under the case number of the wrongful death case. It was titled “complaint for distribution of wrongful *546 death recovery,” and sought a judicial determination of the distribution of the settlement proceeds. Kum Soon Park and the Yi parties were named as defendants, and the original defendants, the restaurant and Elliot Park’s mother, were omitted. In their answers, Kum Soon Park and the Yi parties raised Andy Kim’s comparative negligence (that he willingly chose to be the passenger of an intoxicated driver) as a defense.
A trial date was set. Prior to trial, the Yi parties moved in limine to have the matter heard by the court without a jury, contending that there was no right to a jury trial. The Kim parties opposed the motion, as did Kum Soon Park. The trial court granted the Yi parties’ motion, held a court trial, and awarded $721,296 to the Yi parties, $45,023 to Kum Soon Park, and $263,680 to the Kim parties.
1
In its statement of decision, the trial court explained each award with reference to the evidence concerning the relationship, economic and otherwise, between each decedent and his heirs. (See
Krouse
v.
Graham
(1977)
Kum Soon Park and the Kim parties have appealed, contending that they were entitled to a jury trial. We hold that there is no right to a jury in these circumstances.
The right to sue for wrongful death damages is a creature of statute, and exists only so far and in favor of such persons as the Legislature has provided.
(Justus v. Atchison
(1977)
*547
Thus, in
Smith
v.
Premier Alliance Ins. Co., supra,
Of course, neither
Smith, Estate of Kuebler
nor
Watkins
was presented with the issue before us here. Instead, each case considered issues arising from the rule that there can be but one joint indivisible action for wrongful death.
(Smith v. Premier Alliance Ins. Co., supra,
Canavin v. Pacific Southwest Airlines, supra,
Canavin
found that the judicial apportionment provision (then in section 377) did not improperly infringe on the heirs’ right to jury trial.* **
4
The court wrote that “[t]he 1949 statutory amendment to provide for judicial apportionment appears based upon legislative acknowledgment of the respective heirs’ competing interests in the lump-sum award. The amendment reflects a belief it was more desirable not to add to the jury’s burden the task of apportioning the damages (see [Killion,]
Wrongful Death Actions [In California, Some Needed Amendments
(1937) 25 Cal. L.Rev. 170], at p. 184), and the practical consideration the trial judge had already heard the evidence of the pecuniary loss as to each heir and thus was the most desirable party to apportion the damages. (Ibid.; see also,
Changaris
v.
Marvel
[(1964)]
Canavin supported its conclusion with an analysis of the effect of judicial apportionment on the heirs of a single decedent. The court noted the legislative intent that a wrongful death action would be a means for providing for the decedent’s family, and reasoned that apportionment by the court did not unconstitutionally deprive an heir of a right to a jury because the lump-sum award reflected the fact that the family unit suffered as a whole and that the award would ensure the continuation of the family as a whole. (Canavin v. Pacific Southwest Airlines, supra, 148 Cal.App.3d at pp. 533-534.)
That consideration does not apply here, where more than one family is concerned, and that is the reason appellants advance for distinguishing Canavin. 5 But even if Canavin is distinguishable on that ground, we are left with section 377.61, which provides that the court must apportion the award.
Appellants seek to avoid section 377.61 by arguing that it is an “intrafamily” statute which only applies when the competing claims are between the heirs of a single decedent. The problem with the argument is that the statute contains no such limit, and appellants cite nothing in, or outside, the statute which would allow us to import such a limit. We are bound by the statute. As
Canavin
observed, “Because the cause of action for wrongful death is wholly statutory in origin, we are accordingly bound unless there exists a constitutional basis for departing from the clear expression of legislative intent.”
(Canavin v. Pacific Southwest Airlines, supra,
Appellants do raise a constitutional argument. They point out that in apportioning damages the trial court decided issues of fact, and contend that they have a constitutional right to a jury trial on issues of fact. In legal support, they cite
Grafton Partners v. Superior Court
(2005)
*549
The term “trier of fact” “is used interchangeably to refer to a judge or jury.”
(Cornette
v.
Department of Transportation
(2001)
Appellants cite this statute, in particular that portion which concerns actions for injuries. They contend that this is such an action. It is not. The complaint does not allege that the Kim parties suffered injury due to the wrongdoing of the Yi parties or Kum Soon Park, or even that there was any wrongdoing by those parties, only that the wrongful death plaintiffs were unable to agree on the distribution of the settlement proceeds, and needed a determination by the court.
Nor are we persuaded by appellants’ attempt to phrase this case as one for damages, not for apportionment. Appellants argue that they are entitled to a jury, which would not be asked to divide the settlement amount between the decedents’ heirs—who would not even know the settlement amount—but would instead be asked to decide the amount of damages each family suffered, according to the rules applicable to wrongful death damages. Then, appellants argue, the portion of the settlement that each heir would actually receive would be decided through a mathematical calculation, based on the jury award.
This is an action for apportionment. The amount of damages was determined by the settlement, and no jury can now decide, as if in the first instance, the amount each plaintiff might have been entitled to recover from the alleged tortfeasors. Appellants argue that “the fact that the monies are available for disbursement does not negate [their] right to have a jury decide their damages.” They are wrong. They gave up their right to have a jury decide their damages when they settled the wrongful death case. The only issue remaining is, indeed, apportionment. The fact that the apportionment will be made according to the law on wrongful death damages does not change that.
The right to a jury trial is guaranteed by the California Constitution (art. I, § 16), but the right so guaranteed is the right as it existed at common law in 1850, when the Constitution was first adopted. Thus, there is no right to a jury trial in an action in equity (C
& K Engineering Contractors
v.
Amber Steel Co.
(1978)
*550
The issue raised by appellants’ complaint is equitable, and is a special proceeding.
Canavin
examined the issue, and “[fjinding no California case precedent in point, we look elsewhere and find, although Lord Campbell’s Act provided the apportionment be made by the jury
(McLaughlin
v.
United Railroads
(1915)
Nor have appellants challenged Canavin’s alternative holding, that the apportionment is a special proceeding for which there is no right to jury trial.
Canavin
found that “[mjoreover, this statutory apportionment proceeding is at least analogous to partition, a special statutory proceeding (Code Civ. Proc., § 872.010 et seq.), consistently characterized as equitable in nature.
(Elbert, Ltd.
v.
Clare
(1953)
We agree. “Judicial remedies are either actions or special proceedings. (Code Civ. Proc., § 21.) An action ‘is 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.’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 22.) ‘Every other remedy is a special proceeding.’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 23.)”
(Cornette
v.
Department of Transportation, supra,
This cannot be construed as a proceeding in which anyone is being prosecuted for anything. Indeed, at oral argument on the Yi parties’ motion in limine, all counsel and the court spent some time puzzling over the proper *551 arrangement of parties in the courtroom if there was a jury, trying to determine who would sit at plaintiffs’ table, with the “plaintiffs” sign, given that in any real sense, all parties were plaintiffs, and none were defendants.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents to recover costs on appeal.
Turner, R J., and Kriegler, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellants Kum Soon Park and the Kim parties have appended the judgment and statement of decision to their opening brief. We deem this a request to augment the record with those documents, and grant the request.
All further statutory references are to that code.
Until 1993, this rule was found in section 377
(Smith v. Premier Alliance Ins. Co.
(1995)
Canavin
also found that “we find no reason why, when all properly represented plaintiffs request, the trial court in a wrongful death action should not instruct the jury to return special findings regarding damages as to each heir where the evidence presented permits such findings.”
(Canavin v. Pacific Southwest Airlines, supra,
But both Smith and Watkins concerned more than one “family unit;” that is, the heirs with competing claims were on one hand the widow, and on the other the children of a previous marriage.
