Plaintiff, as assignee, sued to recover $10,000, alleged to be the reasonable value of attorney's services, and $905.10 assertedly expended as costs in connection with certain litigation. The matter was tried without a jury, and plaintiff was awarded judgment for $1,500. He then appealed, claiming that the trial court abused its discretion in not awarding a larger amount.
After the judgment was affirmed by the District Court of Appeal, and before a hearing was granted by this court, defendant gave plaintiff a check for $1,655, and plaintiff executed and delivered a satisfaction of judgment which acknowledged payment of the judgment and authorized the clerk to enter full satisfaction of record. Defendant urges that the appeal is moot and should be dismissed by reason of this satisfaction.
It is the general rule that the voluntary acceptance of the benefit of a judgment or order is a bar to the prosecution of an appeal, since the right to accept the fruits of the judgment and the right to appeal therefrom are wholly inconsistent, and an election to take one is a renunciation of the other.
(Schubert
v.
Reich,
Plaintiff asserts that he comes within this exception and argues that defendant, by failing to appeal, has agreed that plaintiff is entitled to the amount of $1,500 awarded by the judgment, and hence the sole question presented by the appeal
*366
is whether plaintiff is entitled to a greater recovery. The controversy, however, concerned the value of services and the amount of payments made, and in case of a reversal and retrial the judgment could conceivably be smaller.
(Cf. Schubert
v.
Reich,
There is no merit in plaintiff’s claim that the satisfaction should be held to be inoperative on the theory that plaintiff’s prior recordation of an abstract of judgment placed it within the power of defendant to compel a satisfaction. His recordation of the abstract was voluntary, there was no court order directing satisfaction (see Code Civ. Proc., § 675), and the tender of the money and demand for satisfaction did not involve legal or economic compulsion.
(Cf. Alamitos Land Co.
v.
Shell Oil Co.,
The appeal is dismissed.
Shenk, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied April 18, 1956.
