Opinion
In this case we must determine whether a counteroffer precludes acceptance of a statutory settlement offer under Code of Civil Procedure section 998, 1 and whether when a section 998 offer is served by mail, section 1013, subdivision (a) applies to extend the time to respond by five days.
Facts
The facts underlying this settlement controversy are not disputed. On March 17, 1984, plaintiff, Gregory Poster, was a passenger on a Southern California Rapid Transit District (SCRTD) bus when he was attacked by other passengers. He sustained serious injuries when he was thrown from and run over by the bus. On May 1, 1984, plaintiff filed a personal injury action against defendants, SCRTD and the bus driver.
On December 11, 1987, acting pursuant to section 998 and Civil Code section 3291, plaintiff served defendants with an offer to compromise the action for $150,000. The offer was served by mail with proof of service, and provided that if it was accepted and notice of acceptance was given within 30 days or prior to the commencement of trial, the offer could be filed with proof of acceptance and the clerk of the court would be authorized to enter judgment in accordance therewith.
Defendants received the offer on December 14, 1987, and engaged in further settlement negotiations with plaintiff. On December 16, 1987, defendants made a counteroffer to plaintiff in the amount of $75,000, which plaintiff refused to accept. On January 6, 1988, defendants offered $120,000 in settlement to plaintiff, to which plaintiff made no response.
On January 12, 1988, defendants advised plaintiff’s attorney that they would accept the offer to compromise in the full amount of $150,000 and *269 sent a letter formally accepting the offer. Plaintiff acknowledged the acceptance and agreed that the matter would be removed from the calendar since a settlement had been reached. Notice of acceptance, in the form of a pleading instructing the clerk of the court to enter judgment pursuant to the terms of the offer, was mailed to plaintiff on January 14, 1988.
Plaintiff’s attorney, however, subsequently informed defendants that plaintiff refused to honor the settlement agreement; thereafter, defendants noticed a motion to enforce the agreement and the matter was set for hearing. The motion to enforce settlement contained a declaration from defendants’ counsel that plaintiff had never revoked the offer to compromise and that plaintiff had continually led defendants to believe that the offer to compromise was open for acceptance through the time that it was accepted.
At the hearing, plaintiff’s counsel did not argue that plaintiff had revoked the offer to compromise, nor did he assert that he had ever informed defendants, during the course of the settlement negotiations, that he considered the offer to compromise to have been terminated by any discussions with defendants’ counsel. Instead, counsel stated that after serving the offer to compromise he had consulted with an expert who advised that the extent and seriousness of plaintiff’s injuries might be greater than at first thought; based on this new information, plaintiff had changed his mind about settling for $150,000. He argued that the settlement negotiations which had occurred after service of the offer to compromise operated as a counteroffer and as such effectively terminated the original offer, revoking defendants’ power of acceptance.
The trial court found that the offer was properly accepted as required by statute and by the offer itself. It found the discussions between the parties during the time that the offer was open were simply settlement negotiations. To hold otherwise, the court determined, would serve to undermine the policy underlying section 998. The trial court ordered judgment in plaintiff’s favor in the amount of $150,000.
Plaintiff appealed the judgment. The Court of Appeal concluded that section 998 offers to compromise, while revocable by the offeror, are not automatically revoked by a counteroffer since such a consequence would undermine the legislative intent of that section.
The Court of Appeal, however, went on to find that the acceptance of the statutory offer in this case was not timely, and accordingly reversed the judgment. In reaching this conclusion, the Court of Appeal held that section 1013, subdivision (a), which generally extends the time to respond by *270 five days when service is made by mail, does not apply to section 998 offers, and therefore did not serve to extend the time for acceptance.
Discussion
1. Does a counteroffer preclude acceptance of a statutory settlement offer under section 998?
The Court of Appeal held that a statutory settlement offer made pursuant to section 998 is not revoked by a counteroffer and may be accepted until expressly withdrawn by the offeror or deemed withdrawn under the terms of section 998. In reaching this conclusion, the Court of Appeal rejected the reasoning of an earlier Court of Appeal decision in
Glende Motor Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Section 998, subdivision (b) provides in part: “Not less than 10 days prior to commencement of trial, any party may serve an offer in writing upon any other party to the action to allow judgment to be taken in accordance with the terms and conditions stated at that time. [If] (1) If the offer is accepted, the offer with proof of acceptance shall be filed and the clerk or the judge shall enter judgment accordingly. []f] (2) If the offer is not accepted prior to trial or within 30 days after it is made, whichever occurs first, it shall be deemed withdrawn . . . .”
Section 998 clearly reflects this state’s policy of encouraging settlements. (See, e.g.,
T. M. Cobb Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Although the procedure established by section 998 is clearly intended to encourage settlements, the statutory language is silent on a number of issues *271 relevant to the application of the provision, including what conduct constitutes an acceptance, whether a statutory offer may be revoked by the offerer prior to the expiration of the statutorily designated period, and the effect of counteroffers on the viability of outstanding statutory settlement offers.
In
T. M. Cobb Co., Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In asserting that defendants’ counteroffer in the present case operated to revoke the section 998 offer, plaintiff relies on
Glende Motor Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The Court of Appeal in this case, however, declined to follow
Glende Motor, supra,
In our view, the rule adopted in
Glende Motor, supra,
The legislative purpose of section 998 is better served by the bright line rule adopted by the Court of Appeal in this case, under which a section 998 offer is not revoked by a counteroffer and may be accepted by the offeree during the statutory period unless the offer has been revoked by the offeror.
2
Accordingly, we now adopt that rule and disapprove the Court of Appeal decision in
Glende Motor, supra,
2. Is the time for acceptance extended under section 1013?
The record discloses that plaintiff mailed the statutory offer to compromise on December 11, 1987. In computing the time permitted by the statute, and not counting December 11 (see § 12), the offer was open for 20 *273 days in December, but was not accepted by defendants until January 12, 1988, the 32d day. As noted, the Court of Appeal held that on these facts defendants’ acceptance of the offer was not timely, concluding that the provisions of section 1013 affording a five-day extension for statutory deadlines when service is made by mail do not apply in the section 998 context. Defendants challenge the Court of Appeal’s conclusion on the timeliness issue, and, as we shall explain, we agree with defendants that the Court of Appeal erred in finding their acceptance untimely. 3
Section 1013, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part: “In the case of service by mail, . . . [t]he service is complete at the time of the deposit, but any prescribed period of notice and any right or duty to do any act or make any response within any prescribed period or on a date certain after the service of such document served by mail shall be extended five days if the place of address is within the State of California . . . .”
Section 1013, subdivision (a) has been described as “a procedural statute of general application”
(Simpson
v.
Williams
(1987)
By its terms, section 1013 appears clearly to apply to the time period prescribed by section 998 for accepting statutory offers of compromise. Section 1013 applies to the service by mail of a “notice or other paper” which would certainly include a section 998 settlement offer. And by specifically extending for five days “any prescribed period . . . to do any act or make any response” to any paper served by mail, section 1013 appears clearly to apply to the time period for accepting a statutory settlement offer. 4 In light of the language of section 1013, and the general applicability of its provisions, there appears to be no sound reason not to apply the statute in this context.
In concluding that section 1013 should not apply to section 998 offers that are served by mail, the Court of Appeal first noted that section 1013 specifically exempts from its provisions notices of intention to move for new trial, notice of intentions to move to vacate judgment, and notices of appeal. (§ 1013, subd. (a).) Consistent with the Legislature’s exemption of notices of appeal, section 1013 has been held to be inapplicable to other statutes that set forth jurisdictional deadlines.
(County of Los Angeles
v.
Surety Ins. Co.
(1984)
In our view, there is no basis to conclude that the 30-day limit of section 998 is jurisdictional. “A typical misuse of the term ‘jurisdictional’ is to treat it as synonymous with ‘mandatory.’ There are many time provisions, e.g., in procedural rules, which are not directory but mandatory; these are binding, and parties must comply with them to avoid default or other penalty. But failure to comply does not render the proceeding void . . . .” (2 Witkin, *275 Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Jurisdiction, § 3, p. 368.) There is nothing in section 998 to support the conclusion that the 30-day limit was intended to be “jurisdictional” in the fundamental sense.
The Court of Appeal also relied on the general proposition that where there are two conflicting statutes, one a general procedural statute and the other a statute dealing with more specific rights and procedures, the specific statute is regarded as an exception to the general statute.
(Simpson
v.
Williams, supra,
Accordingly, we conclude that when a statutory settlement offer pursuant to section 998 is served by mail, the provisions of section 1013 apply and extend the 30-day period for acceptance of the offer by 5 days.
Disposition
The Court of Appeal decision is affirmed insofar as it concludes that defendants’ counteroffer did not operate to revoke plaintiff’s section 998 offer, but the decision is reversed insofar as it concludes that section 1013 is inapplicable to statutory settlement offers made pursuant to section 998. The matter is remanded to the Court of Appeal with directions to affirm the trial court’s order enforcing the settlement agreement.
Defendants shall recover their costs on appeal.
Lucas, C. J., Mosk, J., Panelli, J., Eagleson, J., Kennard, J., and Arabian, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
The
Glende Motor
court expressed its apprehension that a rule preserving the viability of a section 998 offer in the face of numerous counteroffers might deter a potential offeror from making a section 998 offer in the first place because the offer could expose him to a “bombardment” of counteroffers from the opposing party shortly before trial.
(Glende Motor, supra,
Indeed, the
Glende Motor
court itself recognized that “[s]ection 998 clearly contemplates that both plaintiffs and defendants may make statutory offers to each other, often simultaneously . . . ,” and expressly disclaimed any intent to suggest “that a 998 offer terminates or loses its capacity for acceptance when another party to the action makes another 998 offer.”
(Glende Motor, supra,
Defendants also raise a procedural objection, contending that the Court of Appeal should not have reached the timeliness issue because plaintiff did not object to the timeliness of their acceptance in the trial court. The Court of Appeal raised the timeliness issue sua sponte, concluding that it was appropriate for it to reach the question despite plaintiff’s failure to raise the issue below because the issue of whether section 1013’s five-day extension applies to a section 998 settlement offer presented purely a legal question as to which the facts were undisputed. (Cf., e.g.,
Sea & Sage Audubon Society, Inc.
v.
Planning Commission
(1983)
With respect to at least some procedural deadlines, however—for example, the expiration of the statute of limitations—it is clear that when a party fails to raise the issue in a timely fashion at the trial level, such a waiver cannot be overcome on appeal even if the undisputed facts demonstrate that a timely challenge would have been meritorious as a matter of law. (See, e.g.,
Getz
v.
Wallace
(1965)
In the present case, however, we need not decide whether similar considerations should invariably preclude the timeliness issue from being considered on appeal when a party has failed to challenge the timeliness of a section 998 acceptance at the trial court level. Because the Court of Appeal’s decision in this matter has thrown into doubt the question whether section 1013’s five-day extension applies in the section 998 context, we believe that it is appropriate to decide the issue on the merits in any event, in order to avoid confusion on a question that arises frequently in litigation. And because we conclude on the merits that defendants’ acceptance was timely, there is no need to decide here whether plaintiff’s failure to raise the issue at trial would preclude him from prevailing on appeal even if the acceptance had been untimely.
Under section 998, the 30-day period runs from the time the offer is “made.” Because an offeror “makes” the offer by serving it in writing, when a section 998 offer is served by mail it is clear that the statutory period for response runs from the service by mail.
