The sole question on this appeal by plaintiff from an order striking certain portions of the amended complaint is whether that order is appealable.
Record
The allegations of the amended complaint pertinent here follow: Defendant Los Gatos Associates owned certain real property in Los Gatos on which they had erected a super market and were remodeling an old warehouse building into five stores. As the result of certain representations alleged to have been made to Pherne and Everett Shrewsbury by Associates and the other defendants, by their agent and servant *825 Thomas Malatesta, the Shrewsburys entered into a five-year lease with Associates of one of said stores. These representations were knowingly false and made without any intention to perform them, and they have not been performed. The Shrewsburys operated a Stauffer reducing salon in the leased premises from August 1, 1956, to May 1, 1957, when they sold the business to plaintiff and her partner Price. The Shrewsburys also executed to plaintiff and Price a sublease at the same rental provided in the lease from Associates to Shrewsburys. As a result of the failure of Associates to perform as represented, so few customers came to the area that plaintiff and Price were forced to close their store. As assignee of Shrewsburys, plaintiff seeks $2,272.50 as being the difference in the rental value of the premises and the rental paid by the Shrewsburys under the terms of the lease, and plaintiff seeks in her own right and as assignee of her partner Price, $6,312.50, the difference between the rental paid and the fair rental value, and $35,478.50, being loss on fixtures, stock and franchise, cash put into the business, and time, labor and services of plaintiff and Price.
Defendants moved to strike all of the items of damage alleged except the $2,272.50 alleged excess rental payments by the Shrewsburys. The court, according to its memorandum of decision, held that the only cause of action alleged was that based on the Shrewsburys’ assignment of alleged rents, and ordered all of the other items of damage, being those alleged to have been incurred by plaintiff and Price, stricken. (Defendants’ general demurrer to the amended complaint was overruled.)
The order is nonappealable. The order is not one of those expressly mentioned in section 963, Code of Civil Procedure. Plaintiff concedes that usually such an order is not appealable. One of the latest cases so holding is
Hill
v.
Wrather
(1958),
Plaintiff contends that the partnership damages are separate and distinct from those suffered by the Shrewsburys and *826 that therefore the striking of the partnership damages from the amended complaint is to that extent a final judgment against her claims on behalf of the partnership, and therefore she contends the order is appealable under section 963 as a final judgment.
While, in a sense, there is finality to the order, as plaintiff may not at the trial of the assigned claim proceed further with her personal claim, such finality is not of the type considered by the courts to constitute a final judgment. In
South
v.
Wishard
(1956),
Howe
v.
Key System Transit Co.
(1926),
In Aetna, the plaintiff on the fourth count sought recovery, not for itself, but for another, while in the third count it was seeking to recover for itself alone. In our case plaintiff is the real party in interest under both claims. Once the Shrewsburys assigned their claim to plaintiff, they had no further interest in the action.
In
Crofoot
v.
Crofoot
(1955),
In
Kennedy
v.
Kennedy
(1955),
*828
In
Henry
v.
Law Firm of Hillyer, Crake & Irwin
(1960),
In our ease not only are the parties the same and separate judgment could not be rendered on the claims made by plaintiff, but the claims are based upon the same alleged fraud, so that if the items of plaintiff’s personal claim had not been stricken and if at the trial the court were to find that there was no fraud perpetrated by defendants, plaintiff could not recover on either the assigned claim or her personal claim.
As we said in
Mason
v.
Day
(1960),
The appeal is dismissed.
Tobriner, J., and Duniway, J., concurred.
