Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from an order granting defendant’s motion to vacate a default and set aside a default judgment subsequently entered against it in the sum of $102,962 (damages for personal injuries), the grounds of which were inadvertence, mistake and excusable neglect (Code Civ. Proc., § 473). He claims the supporting declarations are devoid of any showing which warranted the relief sought, hence it was an abuse of discretion for the court to grant such relief.
From the complaint and the default hearing, it appears that plaintiff’s injuries were sustained on October 18, 1968, when an automobile, in which he was a passenger, was overturned by a blast from the jet engine of an airplane owned by defendant; at that time plaintiff, an engineer employed by the Federal Aviation Administration, was lawfully on defendant’s premises to make an inspection of the cabin interior installation of the aircraft involved. Service of summons and complaint was had on May 22, 1969; defendant’s default was entered on June 18, 1969. At the default hearing, in answer to the court’s inquiry with respect thereto, counsel for plaintiff stated: “They failed to answer the Complaint. It was validly served on them. I have had no contact by their office. Default has been entered. I’m sure in this case there may be a motion under 473 to sét it aside, but under the circumstances, settlement discussion might be more realistically engaged in after the hearing this morning. And that probably is the practical effect of the proceeding here.”
Defendant’s motion to vacate having been filed on September 10, 1969, at the hearing of said motion the foregoing statement of plaintiff’s counsel was recalled by the trial court (although in error as to the amount of the award): “There was an implied understanding between you and me that *616 you were going to merely use tnis judgment to force them to negotiate with you and get a good settlement... I wouldn’t have given you $108,000 if I thought for one moment you would oppose a motion to set aside, because I brought the question up, they will be in here shortly to set it aside.” Earlier the trial court made this further observation: “Well, we are not dealing with child’s play here. We are dealing with $108,000. We have a situation where it’s not an individual. If an individual is served with a Complaint and then he turns it over to his attorney and the attorney does nothing about it, leaves it on the top of his desk, and just neglects to take care of it, or is lackadaisical about it, that could be one thing. But here you have a big corporation. They have procedures. They have to turn it over to insurance carriers.”
We make mention of the above colloquy between court and counsel for two reasons. As to the first quoted excerpt, it has been several times declared that the law “looks with disfavor upon a party, who, regardless of the merits of the case, attempts to take advantage of the mistake, surprise, inadvertence, or neglect of his adversary. [Citations.]”
(Weitz
v.
Yankosky,
Three declarations were filed in support of defendant’s motion, to none of which were any counterdeclarations presented. One Gierok, a claim representative for Aetna Casualty Company, stated that his company received notice of the accident from its insured, defendant corporation; that as of February 24, 1969, no claim having been presented by plaintiff, he put his file relating to the accident in a “six month diary” to be closed at the expiration of that period if no action had been taken. On August 20, 1969, upon checking superior court records, he first learned that an action had been filed; he then contacted plaintiff’s counsel who told him that the matter was in default as of July 7, 1969, and that the declarant could obtain further particulars from the court records; according to the declarant, plaintiff’s counsel requested that the insurance company make a settlement offer, but declarant replied that his investigation indicated that “it was a no Hability case and we would pursue any procedures to set aside default.” According to Gierok, two conversations were had that same day with plaintiff’s counsel, in one of which plaintiff’s counsel stated that “he *617 had been hoping that no one would discover the default until six months were up.” Mark Moore, an assistant secretary of defendant corporation, stated that he oversees and supervises the department which initially handles any summons and complaints served on his employer; when he received the summons and complaint in the instant matter, he gave the documents to one of the girls on his clerical staff—he could not recall her identity. His declaration then outlined the procedures followed in such cases: Before transmittal thereof to the company’s insurance department, a Xerox copy of the papers is prepared; this, together with a transmittal slip, is then forwarded to the insurance department. (Copies of both the summons and complaint as well as the transmittal slip customarily remained in declarant’s department.) Upon discovery that a default had been taken in the instant matter, he checked his files and found that while the summons and complaint had been filed, there was no evidence that a transmittal slip had been prepared—-the insurance department had no indication that the pertinent papers had ever been forwarded to them. Finally, a declaration by one of defendant’s present counsel (Mr. de Coster) stated that he talked by telephone with plaintiff’s attorney on or about August 21, 1969; that he requested a stipulation to set aside the default for the reason that the matter had just gotten into the hands of an attorney; that plaintiff’s counsel refused to enter into the stipulation requested but did say that he would discuss a settlement of the case.
Citing such cases as
Ray Kizer Constr. Co.
v.
Young,
The facts in these last two cases are not wholly dissimilar to the situation *618 at bar, although plaintiff asserts that they are distinguishable. It will suffice to summarize the circumstances in Benjamin. Therein the president of defendant company, upon receipt of the copies of summons and complaint, directed his private secretary to forward the papers to the company’s attorney; according to the secretary, she “misunderstood” the directions thus given to her, laboring under the impression that she was to file the papers in the office files; “as a result of such misunderstanding” she “failed to forward” the papers to defendant’s attorney until advised by the latter that a judgment had been taken against the company. It was held that “the president’s delinquency stemmed from his reliance upon his secretary to follow his forwarding instructions and his failure to anticipate her misunderstanding them, with the result that the process papers were placed in the office files . . . whether or not [the secretary’s delinquency] was ‘excusable’ was primarily a question for the trial court’s discretion [citation], particuarly as related to her employee status. Factual situations generally similar to the present case in that they involved an erroneous filing in the office ... of the defendant corporation [citing the Gorman case, supra] have been deemed sufficient explanation for failure to make a seasonable appearance in defense of an action. The inadvertence of defendant’s officers rested not on mere forgetfulness [citation] but on a misunderstanding in the execution of properly given instructions, a mistake ‘which might be easily made . . . without any culpable carelessness’ on the part of the parties concerned. [Citation.]” (P. 527.)
In the case at bar the company’s officer (Moore) turned the pertinent papers over to a member of his clerical staff for processing and transmittal to the insurance department. Thus, there was not a “mislaying of process” due to “mere forgetfulness” within the meaning of the decisions relied on by plaintiff; indeed, one such decision
(Yarbrough
v.
Yarbrough, supra)
points out that “the trial court may find ‘excusable neglect’ where an employee or associate ... of the defendant erroneously files the papers so that defendant’s attention is not called to them [citations].” (
Another factor favoring the relief sought below, which presumably the trial court properly considered, was the absence of any prejudice to plaintiff as the result of its order.
(Nilsson
v.
City of Los Angeles,
This brings us to the final circumstance bearing upon the exercise of judicial discretion by the court below. While there is no requirement that advance notice be given of an application for the entry of an adversary’s default
(Turners. Allen,
Under all the circumstances, and for the reasons above discussed, we find no clear abuse of discretion warranting appellate intervention.
The order is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Gustafson, J., concurred.
