On September 10,1963, appellants filed a complaint for legal malpractice against their former attorney, Henry P. Lopez, respondent in this action. An order for service by publication was obtained on the theory that respondent had been a resident of the State of California at the time the cause of action arose and had left the state. Appellants caused a purported affidavit and certification of personal service upon respondent to be filed. The affidavit and certification is patently and seriously defective in that it recites service in the County of Los Angeles, State of California, at an address in Mexico City, Mexico, and purports to be executed in Los Angeles County before a notary public whose seal affixed to the document carries a Spanish legend, to the effect that it is issued by the Republic of Mexico. No proof of publication appears in the judgment roll.
Respondent did not appear in the action. Appellants caused his default to be entered on November 27, 1963, and took a default judgment in the amount of $25,650 on February 21, 1964. In granting the judgment, the court found that personal jurisdiction of the defendant (respondent) was obtained “pursuant to publication and pursuant to personal service upon said defendant.’’
Appellants now contend that: (1) the motion to set aside the default judgment was not timely made and should have been denied for that reason alone; and (2) the trial court erred in admitting extrinsic evidence which established that in fact respondent was not served with process or otherwise notified of the action pending against him.
Timeliness of Motion
Appellant contends that a motion to- set aside a default judgment not void on its face
2
but void in fact for lack of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant must be made within one year of the date upon which the judgment is entered as provided in Code of Civil Procedure section 473a.
3
That contention however, ignores the reality
A trial court has an inherent equity power under which, apart from statutory authority, it may grant relief from a default judgment obtained through extrinsic fraud or mistake.
(Weitz
v.
Yankosky,
While the grounds for an equitable action to set aside a default judgment are commonly stated as being those of extrinsic fraud or mistake, the terms are given a very broad meaning which tends to encompass all circumstances that deprive an adversary of fair notice of hearing whether or not those circumstances would qualify as fraudulent or mistaken in the strict sense. Thus a false . recital of service although not deliberate is treated as extrinsic fraud or mistake in the context of an equitable action to set aside a default judgment.
(Bennett
v.
Hibernia Bank,
In the ease at bench, respondent filed a motion on the stated ground that he had never been served with process. Inherent in that ground is the statement by implication that the recital of service in the purported affidavit and certificate of service in the judgment roll is false. That falsity is of necessity either mistaken or deliberately fraudulent. The basis of equitable relief as declared by our Supreme Court in
Bennett
v.
Hibernia Bank, supra,
is thus adequately if not artfully alleged, and the trial court properly treated the matter as one governed by a time limitation of a reasonable period
Appellants rely on the often quoted dictum recently reappearing in
Thorson
v.
Western Dev. Corp.,
Extrinsic Evidence
Appellants assert that the trial court was in error in admitting extrinsic evidence that respondent was not in fact served with process in the action. They contend that: (1) the default judgment here is not void on its face; (2) a motion to set aside such a judgment not made within one year of the judgment or upon the basis of extrinsic fraud or mistake is a collateral attack on the judgment which must be determined without regard to evidence extrinsic to the judgment roll; and (3) the trial court by reason of the ground stated in respondent’s notice of motion to set aside the default and judgment was precluded from considering the subject motion as one grounded on extrinsic fraud or mistake. 4
The reasoning which has led us to conclude that the trial court properly treated the motion in the case at bench as one constituting an equitable proceeding to set aside a default judgment and that it was timely filed impels us to reject appellants’ argument that extrinsic evidence was erroneously admitted to prove lack of service on respondent. That argument is bottomed on the proposition that such evidence is not admissible in a collateral attack on a judgment. An equitable action to set aside a default judgment is, however, a direct attack as appellants themselves concede. (See
Bennett
v.
Hibernia Bank,
The order setting aside the default and default judgment is affirmed.
Fourt, Acting P. J., and Lillie, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellants filed a notice of appeal from the order of “May 3, 1968.” There is no order of that date in the file or record.
Becanse we hold that the trial'court’s theory in holding for respondent was correct, we do not consider the possible alternative ground on which its order might be upheld; i.e., that defects in the affidavit and certificate of service render the judgment void on its face.
“When from any cause the summons in an action has not been personally served on the defendant, the court may allow, on such terms as may _ be just, such defendant or his .legal representatives, at any time within one year after the rendition of any judgment in such action, to answer to the merits of the original action; ...” (Code Civ. Proc., I 473a.)
Appellants do not assert as a basis of this appeal that the record in the trial court fails to support a finding of a meritorious defense to the action. (See
Bailey
v.
Roberts, 271
Cal.App.2d 282 [
