On Mаrch 3, 1953, the trial court granted plaintiff a judgment for $5,000 against defendants in a fraud action, together with interest at 7 per cent from June 11, 1947, the date the court found plaintiff had parted with the *464 money as a result of the alleged fraud. On September 30, 1955, the trial court entered its order granting defendants’ motion to mоdify nunc pro tunc as of March 27, 1953, the findings of fact, conclusions and judgment in that action by providing that interest should run only from March 3, 1953, the date of the judgment. Plaintiff appeals.
The basic facts are not substantially in dispute and can be summarized as follows:
June 11, 1947: Plaintiff paid over to defendants $5,000 as a result of what the court found tо be false representations by defendants. Plaintiff, thereafter, filed an action against defendants for fraud and deceit.
March 3, 1953: The trial court filed its judgment granting plaintiff the sum of $5,000 with interest at 7 per cent from June 11, 1947.
March 27, 1953: Defendants’ motion for a new trial, that had been argued and submitted the preceding day, was denied. Onе of the basic disputes involved on this appeal is whether, at the time of arguing the motion for a new trial, the judge expressed an intent to modify the judgment so as to allow interest only from March 3, 1953.
March 31, 1953: An order modifying the findings, conclusions and judgment by eliminating interest prior to March 3, 1953, was filed. No explanation for thе making of these modifying orders was given by the trial judge.
Defendants appealed from the judgment, while the plaintiff appealed from the modifying order of March 31, 1953.
April 19, 1955:
This court affirmed the judgment and reversed the modifying order of March 31, 1953.
(Nathanson
v.
Murphy,
August 5, 1955: The defendant served a notice of motion for an order directing that the order of March 31, 1953, modifying the findings, conclusions and judgment in reference to interest be entered nunc pro tunc as of March 27,1953.
September 30, 1955: A minute order was entered directing “that motion of defendants to enter orders nunc pro tunc and amended judgment as specified in nоtice of motion be granted.”
On the present appeal, the first contention of appellant is that the trial court had no jurisdiction to enter the challenged order, because the order appealed from is the “same” as the order previously reversed. The contention is thаt “the orders
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after reversal had no further existence and could not thereafter be entered nunc pro tunc.” (App.Op.Br. p. 7; citing such cases as
Cowdery
v.
London etc. Bank,
Appellant also argues, for much the same reasons, that the September, 1955, order was invalidly entered nunc pro tunc because it is the law of the ease that the order of March 31, 1953, was not entered to correct a clerical error, and so the order of September, 1955, since it is the “same” order, cannot be so entered. This argument is unsound for the same reasons that the first argument is unsound. The September, 1955, order is new and different from that of March, 1953.
It might be well to point out just what was decided in the prior appeal in reference to the March, 1953, order. In
Nathanson
v.
Murphy,
The doctrine of the law of the ease is that where on appeal the court, “in deciding the appeal, states in its opinion a principle or rule of law necessary to the decision, that principle or rule becomes the law of the case and must be
*466
adhered to throughout its subsequent progress, both in the lower court and upon subsequent appeal.”
(Tally
v.
Ganahl,
Appellant’s counsel next urges that his client was entitled to interest as a matter of right from the date his client parted with her money under section 3287 of the Civil Code. In our former opinion we held that, when sections 3287 and 3288 of the Civil Code are read together, whether interest should be allowed from the date of the deceit or from the date of judgment was a matter to be determined by the trial court in its discretion. The argument, made on the previous appeal, that appellant was entitled to interest from the date of the fraud as а matter of right was rejected. This is so because we reversed the orders of March 31, 1953, not because the court was bound to allow interest from the date of the fraud, but because the orders modifying the interest charge were entered without authority.
This ruling on the prior appeal that in a fraud сase the trial court possesses discretion as to whether or not interest shall be allowed from the date of the fraud or only from the date of judgment was clearly correct. The two pertinent Civil Code sections read as follows:
Section 3287: “Every person who is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to recover which is vested in him upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon from that day, except during such time as the debtor is prevented by law, or by the act of the creditor, from paying the debt.”
Section 3288: “In an action for the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, and in every ease of oppression, *467 fraud, or malice, interest may "be given, in the discretion of the jury.”
Although section 3287 seems to provide that in every case involving “certain” damages interest should be allowed, when that section is read with section 3288 it is clear that in cases “not arising from contract” discretion as to interest is conferred on the trial court. The contrary implication found in
Goodspeed
v.
Great Western Power Co.,
We now come to the basic question involved on this appeal —was the trial court justified in making nunc pro tunc the modifying order of September 30, 1955?
A court has the inherent power to correct a clerical error after entry of judgment, and there is no time limitation in the exercise оf this power.
(Estate of Goldberg,
The affidavit of respondents’ counsel avers that at the argument on the motion for a new trial on March 26, 1953, the attention of the trial judge was called to the fact that the judgment allowed interest from June 11, 1947, the date of the fraud, and that the trial judge, in open court, declared “that it had not been his intention at any time to allow interest from the date the transaction involved took place . . . but intеnded that interest be allowed from the date of judgment, and directed and ordered that the findings and conclusions of law he modified and the judgment amended accordingly; that said order directing such modification and *468 amendment was inadvertently omitted from the minutes of court on said day.”
Counsel for apрellant filed an affidavit averring that the question of interest was not mentioned at the argument on March 26, 1953, and was first mentioned when the court made the abortive orders of March 31, 1953. This conflict was, of course, for the trial court.
The trial judge had no doubts that he had intended to modify the original judgment by deleting thе provision for interest, but was somewhat uncertain as to whether he had expressed that feeling at the hearing on March 26, 1953, or first expressed it at the hearing on March 31, 1953. However, he did state in reference to the March 26, 1953, hearing: “I do recall this, that I had in my mind to allow interest only from the date of judgmеnt.”
The court reporter who was present at the hearing of the motion for a new trial on March 26, 1953, but did not take down the proceedings, testified that it was his best recollection that at the hearing of March 26, 1953, the trial judge expressed the thought “that the fraud was not of such a nature that would justify . . . [him] in dating the interest back to the time of the transaction. Therefore you would . . . correct the finding so that it would read interest from the date of the judgment”; that he was not positive about it and such statement may have been made on March 31, 1953, but his memory was “that on the proceedings on the motion for a new trial you made that statement.” After reviewing the matter in his mind the reporter testified that “I believe you said it on the motion for new trial.” The trial judge then stated that because the case was not a clear-cut one of fraud, he “never had in mind allowing interest from the date of the transaction because I thought that would be a penalty that ought to be assessed only with a definite case of fraud.” After counsel for appellant stated that he believed the trial judge first expressed such thoughts at the hearing on March 31,1953, the trial judge stated: “My recollection is uncertain, but I don’t know just how to put it; I believe ... it was on the motion for a new trial.”
It is apparent from this testimony that the implied finding of the trial court that on March 26, 1953, at the hearing of the motion for a new trial, the trial judge not only had the intent to change the allowance of interest but expressed such intent, is supported by ample evidence. The failure to make such change was therefore a “clerical” mis *469 take, and one that the court had the power to rectify, nunc pro tunc.
In 3 Witkin on California Procedure, page 1894, the test between a clerical and judicial mistake is defined as follows: “The test is simply whether the challenged judgment was made or entered inadvertently (clerical error) or аdvertently (judicial error). ” In
Morgan
v.
State Board of Equalization,
The Bastajian case, cited above, illustrates how broad the powers of the trial judge are in correcting clerical errors. In that case the trial judge ordered judgment for the defendants, but, because of the illness of defendants’ attorney, no findings were submitted. About a year later plaintiff’s counsel prepared findings supporting the judgment but making favorable mention of the losing party. Defendants’ counsel objected by letter to the findings, but they were nevertheless signed. Later they were corrected
“nunc pro tunc.”
It was held on appeal that the “trial court’s finding upon conflicting evidence that a clerical error exists and the nature thereof, is conclusive upon this court.” (
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The Bastajian ease, in holding that the mere declаration of the trial judge that the final judgment did not properly state his intent is alone sufficient, states an extreme rule. It is difficult to reconcile it in that respect with
Estate of Burnett,
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Bray, J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 8, 1957, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied March 5, 1957.
Notes
In that ease interest was not allowed from the date of the fraud, and this was approved by the appellate court.
