Opinion
Manson, Iver & York (Manson), assignee of the original plaintiff (plaintiff), appeals from the order granting the motion of defendant, Paula J. Black, to set aside the default and default judgment against her in this case. Manson contends the trial court abused its discretion because Black’s 1 motion was untimely, Black failed to show she was diligent in seeking relief, and Black was properly served with summons and complaint, so there was no violation of due process. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In March 1999, plaintiff Robert Flint filed a personal injury action against Douglas Shinn and “Pamela Black,” alleging he was injured in an automobile accident in which Shinn was operating a motor vehicle owned by Pamela Black. Summons and complaint were personally served on Paula Black on April 16, 1999. Black failed to file a response and the default of Pamela Black was entered on June 4, 1999. Judgment was entered against Pamela Black in the amount of $15,000 on August 4, 1999.
On May 6, 2005, plaintiff assigned his interest in the judgment to Manson. On July 11, 2005, plaintiff filed an ex parte application to amend the judgment to correct defendant’s name, asserting he had discovered her name was not Pamela Black, but Paula Black. The court granted the application and entered the order the same day. The record does not reflect that any notice of this application was given to Paula Black. On October 5, 2005, plaintiff filed applications for a judgment debtor examination of Paula Black and Shinn. On November 3, 2005, both defendants appeared and were examined by Manson’s counsel.
*41 On April 5, 2006, plaintiff filed with the court an assignment of judgment, showing that plaintiff had assigned his interest in the judgment to Manson. Two years later, Manson obtained an ex parte order that all documents in the case should be corrected to reflect defendant’s name as Paula J. Black, also known as Paula J. Whittier. Then, on July 6, 2008, Manson filed an ex parte application for an order of sale of a residence owned by Paula Whittier.
On September 17, 2008, Black filed a motion to set aside the default and default judgment against her. She asserted the following facts. In December 1997, her son’s van, which was registered in her name, broke down and her ex-husband took it to San Joaquin Automotive, which was owned by Shinn, for repairs. Months later, her ex-husband asked for the van back, but Shinn said it was tom apart and would never be safe to drive again; he wanted $1,900 to put it back together. Black met with the owner of San Joaquin Automotive, whom she did not know by name, signed the van over to him, and sent a release of liability to the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). Unknown to her, Shinn had already been in the accident that was the subject of this lawsuit. Black was served with the summons and complaint in 1999, but they did not have her name on them. She assumed she was served in error, and called plaintiff’s attorney and told him he had the wrong person. She said she had not been in an accident and did not know Shinn. She thought that ended the matter. When she received the default judgment addressed to Pamela Black, she still assumed plaintiff had the wrong person. In 2005, she was served with the order for judgment debtor examination which correctly named her as Paula Black. She called Manson’s attorney and said she did not know anything about Shinn’s finances; the attorney told her the examination was of her, and Manson had a default judgment against her. She consulted two attorneys who told her there was nothing she could do. She planned to tell the judge at the judgment debtor examination that the judgment had been in the name of Pamela Black for six years, but she did not get the opportunity.
Manson opposed Black’s motion to set aside the judgment, arguing it was untimely and Black did not demonstrate that she acted with reasonable diligence in responding to service of process. On October 21, 2008, the court heard and granted Black’s motion, finding that Black’s default and the default judgment were “caused by her mistake, surprise, & excusable neglect; and due process requiring the setting aside of the judgment as Ms. Black was never properly served.” Manson timely filed this appeal.
*42 DISCUSSION
A default and default judgment may be set aside pursuant to the provisions of Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b),
2
but the motion must be made within six months after entry of the default. After the time for requesting statutory relief under section 473 has passed, the court may set aside the default and judgment on equitable grounds.
(Rappleyea v. Campbell
(1994)
An order vacating a default and default judgment is appealable as an order after final judgment.
(County of Stanislaus v. Johnson
(1996)
I. Motion Under Section 473, Subdivision (b)
“The court may, upon any terms as may be just, relieve a party or his or her legal representative from a judgment, dismissal, order, or other proceeding taken against him or her through his or her mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect. Application for this relief shall be accompanied by a copy of the answer or other pleading proposed to be filed therein, otherwise the application shall not be granted, and shall be made within a reasonable time, in no case exceeding six months, after the judgment, dismissal, order, or proceeding was taken.” (§ 473, subd. (b).)
The six-month time limit for granting statutory relief is jurisdictional and the court may not consider a motion for relief made after that period has elapsed.
(Stevenson v. Turner
(1979)
*43 II. Equitable Relief
A. Void judgment
“The court. . . may, on motion of either party after notice to the other party, set aside any void judgment or order.” (§ 473, subd. (d).) “ ‘A judgment void on its face may be set aside on motion without any time limitation. [Citations.]’ [Citations.]”
(Plaza Hollister Ltd. Partnership v. County of San Benito
(1999)
A trial court lacks jurisdiction to amend a judgment ex parte in a manner not prescribed by statute. In
Rochin v. Pat Johnson Manufacturing Co.
(1998)
The court stated: “ ‘The general rule is that once a judgment has been entered, the trial court loses its unrestricted power to change that judgment. The court does retain power to correct clerical errors in a judgment which has been entered. However, it may not amend such a judgment to substantially modify it or materially alter the rights of the parties under its. authority to correct clerical error. [Citations.]’ ” (Rochin, supra, Cl Cal.App.4th at p. 1237.) For a limited time after judgment is entered, the court retains jurisdiction to alter the judgment pursuant to various statutes, including section 473. But “[defendants and the trial court relied on none of the prescribed statutory means to arrive at the amended judgment. [The p]laintiff did not even have the opportunity to appear and argue against the amendment of the judgment.” (Rochin, at p. 1238, fn. omitted.) The amended judgment was entered outside of the statutorily prescribed means, was not entered to correct a clerical error, and was void and subject to attack at any time. (Id. at pp. 1238-1239.)
*44
In
Estate of Huitin
(1947)
Thus, unless the amendment merely corrects a clerical error appearing on the face of the record, amendment of a judgment requires notice to all parties whose rights would be substantially affected, a hearing, and presentation of evidence sufficient to make the necessary factual determinations. Where the judgment is amended without notice to a party whose rights are substantially affected by the amendment, the judgment may be set aside. In
McNally v. Mott
(1853)
“The defendant was sued and served by the name of George N. Mott, and making no appearance, judgment was entered against him by the same name. Afterwards, and without notice to the defendant, the plaintiff, on his own motion, obtains an order from the Court to amend the judgment by altering the name of George to Gordon, in which state the judgment now stands.
“It is very evident that the amendment is not sustained by the previous proceedings. The action is against one person and the judgment against another. We have no power to determine, on the application of the plaintiff alone, that George and Gordon are one and the same person. There is no legal proof of that fact in the record, and prima facie, two different names must be held to signify two different persons.
*45 “The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.” (McNally, supra, 3 Cal. at pp. 235-236.)
In
Sakaguchi v. Sakaguchi
(2009)
The judgment was originally entered against Pamela Black. Prima facie, Pamela Black was a different person from Paula Black. The difference in the names was not simply a minor misspelling of Paula’s name, as was the case in Sakaguchi. As in McNally, where the entire first name was different, the court could not, on the application of plaintiff and without notice to defendant, simply change the name of defendant in the judgment from Pamela Black to Paula Black. The two names were presumed to signify two different persons, and Manson offered no proof that they were the same person.
Cases addressing amendment of a judgment to change or add the name of a judgment debtor demonstrate the need for notice to the affected defendant and a hearing regarding the propriety of the amendment. In
Mirabito v. San Francisco Dairy Co.
(1935)
*46
California that where the facts warrant, courts may amend pleadings to correctly designate the parties actually involved, even though the statute of limitations has run in favor of the party substituted. [Citations.] The basis of the rule is, of course, that the court having acquired jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and of the subject of the action, it necessarily possessed the power to correct a misnomer. In the cases last mentioned, it is true, no judgment had been rendered at the time of the amendment. Where, however, as here, the Supreme Court has stated the evidence is sufficient to warrant the conclusion that in effect the two corporations are identical; where, as here, the action was fully and fairly tried with at least the direct financial assistance of appellant; and where, as here, nothing appears in the record to show that Dairy Delivery Company could have produced a scintilla of evidence that would have in any way affected the results of the trial, there is no basis for a different rule. The trial court having acquired jurisdiction of San Francisco Dairy Company must likewise be held to have acquired jurisdiction of its
alter ego,
the appellant herein. To hold otherwise upon the facts herein would be to deny respondent the fruits of fairly contested litigation, place a premium upon acts and conduct which have misled a litigant, and frustrate the very purpose of our jurisprudence.”
(Mirabito, supra,
In
Thomson
v.
L. C. Roney & Co.
(1952)
On appeal, the court concluded the case was like
Mirabito,
although proof that the two companies were alter egos was not made at trial, but after entry of judgment. The court stated: “Where a court may with propriety amend a judgment, evidence dehors the record is admissible, upon proper notice to the adversary party, in order to make the judgment speak the truth. [Citations.] Since the court had jurisdiction over the defendant, it had jurisdiction to make its judgment reflect the defendant’s true name. [Citations.] A question having arisen as to the identity and character of the defendant upon whom the judgment was binding the court possessed the power to adopt a suitable procedure for the purpose of determining that question. [Citation.] Under the authority of this section the court properly exercised its power by taking evidence, after proper notice, in order to determine the true name of defendant.”
(Thomson, supra,
*47 Plaintiff sued Pamela Black. The proof of service indicates he served Pamela Black. The original judgment was entered against Pamela Black. Prima facie, Pamela Black was a different person from Paula Black. There is no evidence Paula Black knew she was the person plaintiff intended to name as a defendant in his complaint. Plaintiff did not amend the complaint to correct Black’s name prior to entry of default and judgment; rather, he proceeded to obtain a judgment against Pamela Black. Almost six years after that judgment was entered, Manson obtained an ex parte order amending the judgment to substitute Paula Black as a judgment debtor in lieu of Pamela Black. The amendment was not the correction of a clerical error. It affected Paula’s substantial rights. The amendment was made without any notice to Paula or any opportunity for her to present evidence or argument against it. It was made without any evidentiary showing that Pamela and Paula were the same person. Consequently, the judgment against Paula was void on the face of the record and could be set aside at any time.
B. Extrinsic fraud or mistake
Alternatively, relief from default and default judgment was properly granted on the ground of extrinsic fraud or mistake. After the six-month period for statutory relief has passed, the court may still grant relief on equitable grounds, including extrinsic fraud or mistake.
(Rappleyea, supra,
Extrinsic mistake occurs “when circumstances extrinsic to the litigation have unfairly cost a party a hearing on the merits.”
(Rappleyea, supra,
*48 Black was served with the complaint, but it did not name her as a party; it named Pamela Black and Douglas Shinn as defendants. Black did not at that time know who Shinn was. The complaint did not identify the automobile involved in the accident, and Black was not aware of any accident in which an automobile owned by her was involved. She did not ignore the complaint, but contacted plaintiff’s attorney and advised him of her belief he had served the wrong person. The attorney did not identify the vehicle involved in the accident or confirm that she was the intended defendant.
Plaintiff did not subsequently amend the complaint to name Paula Black as the proper defendant, and then pursue the litigation against her. Knowing that there was a possible error in the names and that Black believed the complaint had been served on the wrong person, plaintiff’s attorney nonetheless proceeded to take the default of Pamela Black and to obtain a judgment against her. Four years later, plaintiff apparently tried to amend the judgment to name Paula Black as the defendant and judgment debtor, by asserting there was a clerical error in the judgment. 3 The trial court denied the request, on the ground the error was not a clerical error. Six years after judgment was entered, and without any notice to Black at all, plaintiff obtained an order amending the judgment to replace Pamela Black with Paula Black as the judgment debtor.
On these unique facts, we believe the trial court correctly concluded Black acted reasonably and not negligently in response to service of the complaint on her. She notified plaintiff’s counsel of the perceived error in service and believed when she received a request for default judgment, again directed to Pamela Black, that she was not the intended defendant. The circumstances amounted to either extrinsic fraud, in that plaintiff continued to proceed against Pamela Black, even after knowing he had either named the wrong defendant in the complaint or served the wrong person with the complaint, or extrinsic mistake, in that Paula Black was misled to mistakenly believe that she was not the intended defendant by plaintiff’s inaction after being informed that she was not Pamela Black, the named defendant. In either case, the uncorrected error in the name of defendant prevented Black from appearing and defending; that error, combined with the subsequent amendment of the judgment without notice, resulted in an unjust judgment against Black.
*49
To qualify for equitable relief on the ground of extrinsic fraud or mistake, the moving party must demonstrate diligence in seeking to set aside the default once it was discovered.
(Rappleyea, supra,
We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s grant of equitable relief.
III. Bona Fide Purchaser
Manson asserts that a motion to set aside a default or default judgment will not be granted against a bona fide purchaser, citing
Marlenee
v.
Brown
(1943)
An assignment transfers the interest of the assignor to the assignee. Thereafter, “ ‘[t]he assignee “stands in the shoes” of the assignor, taking his rights and remedies, subject to
any defenses
which the
obligor
has against the assignor prior to notice of the assignment.’ ”
(Johnson
v.
County of Fresno
(2003)
Manson contends the prejudice to it as an innocent purchaser or assignee must be considered. It asserts it “had every right when it purchased the *50 judgment in 2005 to believe the judgment was valid because the judgment had been entered in 1999 and respondent had taken no action to set aside the default or vacate the judgment.” The judgment was assigned to Manson on May 6, 2005. At that time, the judgment was against Pamela Black. Plaintiff’s attorney had been notified prior to entry of judgment of a possible error in defendant’s name. Plaintiff’s attorney also had in his possession, at least as of September 15, 2003, DMV documents indicating the owner of the vehicle at the time of plaintiff’s accident was Paula Black, not Pamela Black. Two months after the assignment, plaintiff requested and obtained an ex parte amendment of the judgment to name Paula as the judgment debtor, without giving notice to her. Consequently, Manson was assigned an apparently valid judgment against Pamela Black. It has not shown it had any reason to believe plaintiff had a valid judgment against Paula Black at the time the judgment was assigned. Any error in amending the judgment without notice to Black was attributable to plaintiff and Manson. We find no error in the trial court’s grant of equitable relief.
DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed. Defendant Black is awarded her costs on appeal.
Vartabedian, Acting P. J., and Kane, J., concurred.
Notes
References to Black without a first name are to Paula Black.
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.
The record is not clear. The docket entries indicate a motion to correct a clerical error in the judgment, supported by a memorandum of points and authorities and request for judicial notice, was filed on September 15, 2003, and denied on October 22, 2003, because “[t]his was not a clerical error.” The only portion of the motion appearing in the clerk’s transcript, however, is the request for judicial notice, which does not indicate the nature of the correction requested, but includes a printout of DMV records showing the registered owners of a vehicle, one of whom was Paula Black.
