Plаintiff commenced this action to quiet title against defendant Peoples Lumber Company, a corporation, and certain individual defendants. The corporation failed to answer and its default was entered February 14, 1933. The individual defendants filed an answer and cross-complaint and upon the trial plaintiff recovered judgment. The court, appаrently through inadvertence, rendered judgment against all the defendants for costs in the sum of $189.05. These matters appear in the judgment roll. More than six months after entering of the judgment the defendant corporation filed a motion to be relieved from the purported judgment for costs. This motion was granted on October 17, 1934, and plaintiff appeals from this order.
It is рrovided in section 739 of the Code of Civil Procedure : “If the defendant in such action (quiet title) disclaim in his answer any interest or estate in the property, or suffer judgment to be taken against him without answer, the plaintiff cannot recover costs.” It is conceded that the court should not have rendered judgment for costs against the defendant corporation but plaintiff contends that after the expiration of six months from the time of entering the judgment the court was without jurisdiction to modify the judgment by relieving the corporation from the payment of costs. It is claimed that the judgment was erroneous but not vоid.
The position of plaintiff is not an enviable one. The order relieving defendant corporation from the effеcts of an unfair and illegal judgment should be sustained unless its reversal is made mandatory by clear provisions of the law. “A judgment whiсh is void upon its face, and which requires only an inspection of the judgment roll to demonstrate its want of vitality is a dead limb uрon the judicial tree, which should be lopped off, if the power so to do exists.”
(People
v.
Greene,
*200
In
Grannis
v.
Superior Court,
In a proceeding in which the cоurt is permitted to render judgment for costs an award of an excessive amount doubtless would be erroneous and not vоid and therefore could not be modified after the expiration of the six months’ period. An award of costs against а party defaulting in a quiet title action is a “grant of relief to one of the parties which the law declares shall nоt be granted” and is therefore void. The court was without authority to enter a judgment for costs against the defendant cоrporation and the order relieving the corporation from this part of the judgment was proper. The plaintiff рoints out that in the order of October 17, 1934, the court vacated as against all defendants the part of the judgment prоviding for costs. The order should have been made applicable to the defendant corporation only.
It is оrdered that the order of the superior court entered on October 17, 1934, be affirmed in so far as it relieves the defendant Peoples Lumber Company from the payment of costs. The said order is reversed in so far as it relieves other defendants from the payment of costs.
Crail, P. J., and McComb, J., pro tem., concurred.
