Petitioner sued Helen M. Patterson and her husband F. J. Patterson as driver and owner respectively of an automobile for personal injuries, the result of an accident in which plaintiff was struck while crossing a street near an intersection. The wife was operating the vehicle with the consent of her husband. A jury rendered verdicts in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in form as follows: “We, the jury in the above entitled cause, find in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant F. J. Patterson and assess damages in the sum of $2,500.” “We, the jury in the above entitled cause, find in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Helen M. Patterson and assess damages in the sum of $2,500.00.” Judgment was entered as follows: “In the above entitled action, in conformity to the verdict of the jury therein, judgment is hereby entered that the plaintiff, Athalie Phipps, do have of and recover from the defendant, F. J. Patterson, the sum of $2,500.00; and that, the plaintiff, Athalie Phipps, do have of and recover from the defendant, Helen M. Patterson, the sum of $2,500.00; together with costs and disbursements herein amounting to the sum of $315.70.” Defendants filed notice of intention to move for a new trial but this motion was evidently abandoned and no appeal taken. Subsequently plaintiff presented a motion “for an order correcting clerical mistakes in the two verdicts . . . to-wit: change the figure ‘$2,500’ in each of said verdicts to read ‘$5,000’.” In the same motion a request was made for an order “correcting clerical mistakes” in the judgment by changing the figures $2,500 to $5,000. This motion was denied and plaintiff appealed. The order of denial to correct the verdicts and judgment was affirmed.
(Phipps
v.
Patterson,
27 Cal. App. (2d) 545 [
If the entry of this judgment was essentially a part of the clerk’s duty, and the mistake not inherently judicial, the interest of justice required a change in the judgment.
(Fox
v.
Hale & Norcross S. M. Co.,
Petitioner’s position is that the judgment had become final; that the order changing the judgment was in respect to a matter of substance, and not clerical error, and it was therefore in excess of the jurisdiction of the court. The court retains control of the jury until it is discharged and has the authority to return the jury to the jury room for further deliberation in an effort to obtain a verdict conforming to statutory provisions. When the court’s attention is called to an improper verdict, it is the court’s duty to further instruct the jury upon the subject of the legal limitation of the verdict under consideration
(Van Damme
v.
McGilvray Stone Co.,
In the absence of a motion by one of the litigants, or a request by the clerk, the trial court is not called upon to construe the verdict immediately with a view to the entry of the judgment. The rendition of the verdict is ineffectual until entered as a judgment. It is the duty of the clerk to enter the judgment in conformity with the verdict within twenty-four hours, unless upon motion a stay of proceedings is granted or an order made reserving the entry for argument or consideration. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 664.) When a clerk enters a verdict as a judgment, he may not enlarge, extend, reduce or decrease the scope of the verdict. In the entry of the judgment the clerk simply performs a ministerial act. (14 Cal. Jur. 917, 920, secs. 34, 35.) The rendition of a general verdict corresponds to the filing of findings of fact, and the provision of section 664 of the Code of Civil Procedure is employed in lieu of a direct order by the court to enter the judgment
(Marshall
v.
Taylor,
If the court had directed the entry of a judgment wrong in law, it could not be corrected summarily
(McKannay
v.
McKannay,
The general rule is that the liability of joint tortfeasors cannot be segregated, and that only one judgment can be entered against both
(Curtis
v.
San Pedro Transp. Co.,
10 Cal. App. (2d) 547 [
When a verdict is returned against the driver, and an amount is also assessed against the driver and owner, the verdict may be termed to be individual and joint.
(Snodgrass
v.
Hand, supra.)
Unlike the Snodgrass case, wherein the two verdicts were joined by the use of the conjunction “and”, the verdicts under consideration in this ease were returned on separate forms. The driver was not named in one verdict, and the owner was not named in the other. The form and language used in the verdict assist in the determination of the scope of the judgment. In
Holland
v.
Kodimer,
11 Cal. (2d) 40, 42 [
Petitioner relies upon
Garrison
v.
Williams,
If this
nunc pro tunc
order, necessitated as the result of an error in the entry of the judgment
(Carter
v.
J. W. Silver Trucking Co.,
4 Cal. (2d) 198 [
From the record presented, and the decision in Phipps v. Patterson, supra, we cannot say that the trial court erred in the construction given the judgment.
The petition is denied.
Tyler, P. J., and Knight, J., concurred.
An application by petitioner to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on June 19, 1939.
