Plaintiff-appellant, Elinor Simmons, appeals from an adverse judgment following a court trial in her action for breach of contract in which she sought accidental death benefits of $54,900 under a double-indemnity life insurance policy on the life of her deceased husband, Dale M. Simmons, who died on January 9, 1975.
Appellant assigns various errors to the court’s findings of fact on the cause of Mr. Simmons’ death and asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in denying her the right to trial by a jury. Since the jury trial issue is dispositive of the case, we dó not reach the merits of the other issues.
Procedural Background
On April 5, 1978, appellant filed an at-issue memorandum in which she stated that she was not requesting a jury trial. A few days later, respondent filed its at-issue memorandum requesting a jury trial. In her trial setting conference statement dated August 16, 1978. appellant again waived a jury by answering “No” to the question, “Is a jury demanded and by whom?” The trial setting conference order dated August 21, 1978, recited that a jury had been demanded by respondent.
On October 23, 1978, the day set for trial, respondent filed its written waiver of trial by jury. In the department assigned for trial, appellant’s counsel requested a jury and argued that there were no grounds for denial of such relief. He pointed out that the matter had been calendared as a jury trial, that he had deposited jury fees two weeks previously, and that respondent would not be prejudiced. He explained that a young associate had been directed to request a jury at the trial setting conference but had failed to do so in reliance on respondent’s request and that he had omitted filing a motion for relief from waiver because of a prior order against motions 20 days before trial.
Respondent, citing
March
v.
Pettis
(1977)
Discussion
“Trial by jury is an inviolate right and shall be secured to all .... In a civil cause a jury may be waived by the consent of the parties expressed as prescribed by statute.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 16.) The methods by which a party may waive a trial by jury are set out in Code of Civil Procedure section 631. 2 We are concerned here with the application of subdivisions 2 and 4 of that section.
Subdivision 2 provides that a jury trial may be waived by “written consent filed with the clerk or judge.” A negative response in an at-issue memorandum to the question of whether a jury trial was demanded constitutes “an express waiver of the right” under this subdivision.
(Bishop
v.
Anderson
(1980)
Nevertheless, appellant’s waivers were not irrevocable. (See
Taylor
v.
Union Pac. R.R. Corp.
(1976)
Subdivision 4 of section 631 allows for reinstatement of the right to a jury and is designed as a safeguard against a party’s inadvertent waiver in reliance on an opposing party’s demand. It states in pertinent part: “.. . provided further, that in any superior court action if a jury is demanded by either party in the memorandum to set cause for trial and such party thereafter by announcement or by operation of law waives a trial by jury, then in said event any and all adverse party or parties shall be given 10 days’ written notice by the clerk of the court of such waiver, whereupon, notwithstanding any rule of the court to the contrary, such adverse party or parties shall have not exceeding five days immediately following the receipt of such notice of such waiver, within which to file and serve a demand for a trial by jury and deposit advance jury fees for the first day’s trial whenever such deposit is required by rule of court, and if it is impossible for the clerk of the court to give such 10 days’ notice by reason of the trial date, or if for any cause said notice is not given, the trial of said action shall be continued by the court for a sufficient length of time to enable the giving of such notice by the clerk of the court to such adverse party.”
We can infer from the skimpy record in the case before us that respondent failed to deposit jury fees 14 days before trial, which operated as a waiver under subdivision 5 of section 631. We can also infer that the court clerk failed to send to appellant (the adverse party) the 10 days’ notice required by subdivision 4 when a party originally demanding a jury subsequently waives the right “by announcement or by operation of law.” If appellant had been given the required notice, she would then have had the statutory right within five days after receipt “to file and serve a demand for a trial by jury and deposit advance jury fees.” The court clerk understandably missed the signals. Although respondent “indicated” to appellant about two weeks before trial that it might be waiving a jury, it made no such “announcement” to the court until the morning of trial. Appellant, informally notified of the possible waiver and not waiting for the clerk’s notice of the waiver by operation of law, deposited the jury fees with no accompanying demand for jury. The clerk either did not note the source of the fees or incorrectly concluded that the notice was not required when fees were paid-—irrespective of the paying party.
The judgment must be reversed for lack of compliance with the statutory mandate under the reasoning of
Heim
v.
Houston
(1976)
Reversal of the judgment is also dictated under cases which focus on the trial court’s exercise of discretion rather than on the statutory requirements.
On the morning of trial, appellant’s counsel failed to assert, or even to mention, the right to a five-day continuance under subdivision 4. Instead, appellant’s counsel acknowledged that relief from the previous waivers was within the discretion of the trial court and made the arguments previously mentioned. The court, without consideration of the statutory scheme for reinstatement of the right to a jury, “exercised its discretion” and denied appellant’s request for a jury. On appeal, appellant’s counsel argues only that the trial court abused its discretion. We agree that it did.
The facts of this case fall squarely within the holding of
Bishop
v.
Anderson, supra,
Respondent relies on
March
v.
Pettis, supra,
In the case before us, appellant had deposited the jury fees and was ready to proceed, the respondent expressed no disadvantage, and the court did not articulate any inconvenience to it or find that appellant was “trifling with justice.” The trial court abused its discretion in denying appellant a jury trial. .
The judgment is reversed.
Scott, Acting P. J., and Feinberg, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 23, 1981, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 18, 1981.
Notes
From its questions, the court’s skepticism about appellant’s good faith reliance on respondent’s jury request is apparent. Appellant, not relying on respondent’s prior request, initially waived a jury. The representation by appellant’s counsel that a young
Unless otherwise indicated, ail statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
