Judgment was rendered determining that defendant is the natural father of plaintiff’s child and ordering him to pay plaintiff $40 a month for the support of the child.
This judgment was supported hy the findings of fact first filed hut those findings were silent on two of the issues framed by the pleadings: whether plaintiff during the period of eon *82 ception of the child was married to one Lawrence Waters and whether Lawrence had access to plaintiff during that period.
Defendant moved to set the judgment aside and enter a different judgment upon the ground that the conclusions of law were incorrect and not supported by the findings. Lie predicated his motion upon section 663 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Plaintiff moved to amend the findings by adding one to the effect that plaintiff was married to Lawrence but that Lawrence did not have access during the period of conception. She predicated her motion upon section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The court denied both motions and ordered the nunc pro tunc filing of substituted findings which were the same as those first filed plus findings that Lawrence was married to plaintiff but did not have access to plaintiff at the time of conception.
The order for substitution contained these statements, among others: “. . . the Court, after hearing and considering said evidence, resolved the issue aforesaid in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, in that the said Lawrence Waters did not have access to plaintiff at the time aforesaid. That it was the intention of the Court that his findings on the issue of access, as aforesaid, be included in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, filed and entered in this action; that said court was under the impression that a finding on the issue of access was contained in said Findings of Fact heretofore signed and entered, but that through mistake and inadvertence said finding was not included in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, heretofore filed and entered herein.”
Defendant has appealed from the judgment, from the order denying his motion to vacate that judgment and enter a different judgment, and from the order which directed the mine pro tunc filing of the substituted findings.
(1) The substituted findings determine all material facts in issue and are supported by the evidence. They, in turn, support the conclusions of law and the judgment.
Defendant questions the sufficiency of the evidence solely in relation to the finding that the husband did not have access during the period of conception, which period was during August and September of 1954.
Plaintiff testified that she did not have sexual relations with her husband after August 1953, at which time she separated *83 from him. She denied that he called upon her during August or September, 1954, testifying that he was out of town at the time, in Las Vegas. The first time she saw him after their separation was in May of 1955, while she was pregnant. She later said she was about three or four months pregnant at the time she saw him, which would put the date back to about December of 1954, but she was positive she was pregnant when he returned from out of town.
Waters, the husband, testified that he separated from plaintiff in August of 1954, stayed in Las Vegas for about a year and a half, and when he next saw her, plaintiff was pregnant. He denied seeing her in September, 1954. He was apparently confusing August of 1953 with August of 1954, because, after his recollection was refreshed with the date of his marriage (March 9, 1953) he stated they were separated six or seven months thereafter, and that he did not see her in August or in September, 1954. This would be consistent with his testimony that he was away about a year and a half or almost two years, and that plaintiff was pregnant upon his return.
Plaintiff’s mother testified that plaintiff and her husband separated in August of 1953, whereupon plaintiff came back home to live with her, and plaintiff’s mother did not see Waters again until plaintiff was about five months pregnant.
Charles J. Wright, a deputy district attorney, testified that he discussed the paternity of the child with plaintiff in February, 1955, and she then told him she had seen her husband in September of 1954.
Dorothy Atkins testified that plaintiff’s husband had visited plaintiff at her house in August or September of 1954. On rebuttal, plaintiff’s mother denied this, as did her father.
The only testimony of access is that of Dorothy Atkins, and the prior statement plaintiff herself made to Mr. Wright, the deputy district attorney. Defendant relies principally on Mr. Wright’s testimony, and the fact that plaintiff did not deny making this statement. (Her testimony was that she could not remember making this statement.) From the latter circumstances, defendant concludes that Mr. Wright’s testimony was uncontradicted. The fact of making the statement was not directly denied, but the fact that the admission would tend to prove access was contradicted not only by plaintiff’s testimony, but by her husband’s and that of her mother and father, with whom she was living at the time.
Evidence of an admission is not conclusive of the facts stated in the admission or of the inferences to be drawn from
*84
them.
(Gradwohl
v.
Harris,
Defendant mistakenly relies upon language in
Williams
v.
Moon,
Here, there was directly conflicting testimony on the question whether or not the plaintiff’s husband was out of town *85 during the possible period of conception. In these circumstances, the court was not obliged as a matter of law to find access. Its finding of nonaccess was sufficiently supported by the evidence.
(2) The trial court, for the purpose of correcting a clerical error, had authority, upon its own motion after judgment, to make corrected findings and order them filed nunc pro tunc as of the date of the original finding.
“The court may,
upon motion of the injured party, or
its own motion, correct clerical mistakes
in its judgment or orders as entered, so as to conform to the judgment or order directed ...” (Code Civ. Proc., § 473, emphasis added.) In
Bastajian
v.
Brown,
. The reviewing court found it unnecessary to consider any ground for the trial court’s action except “its inherent power ... to vacate and correct its judgments, which because of clerical error are improvidently or inadvertently made” (
*86
Here, defendant’s sole argument appears to be that the error was judicial and not clerical.
Morgan
v.
State Board of Equalization,
Applying these criteria here, the trial court was including omitted matter that clearly should have been included. The omitted findings pertained to issues which were extensively explored at the trial, and the trial judge could hardly have failed to realize that they pertained to material issues on which findings should have been made. Inserting these findings did not substantially change the rights of the parties, insofar as these rights were expressed in the judgment. The defendant, in the then state of the record, would have been entitled to a reversal on appeal because of the absence of these findings, but unless a litigant can be said to be entitled to two trials the amendment cannot be said to affect his substantial rights. On the contrary, the very fact that the judgment could only have been predicated upon the substituted findings lends support to the trial judge’s declaration that it was his intention to find on the issues covered by the substituted findings.
(3) Defendant’s motion for relief under section 663 of the Code of Civil Procedure was properly denied.
That section deals with the correction of ‘ ‘ [i] neorrect or erroneous conclusions of law not consistent with or not supported by the findings of fact.”
*87 Here, the conclusions of law were " consistent with” and “supported by the findings of fact” first filed. *
Defendant mistook his remedy when he sought relief under section 663. In
Jones
v.
Clover,
The judgment and the orders appealed from are affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Bray, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 4, 1959.
Notes
Those findings were that plaintiff was the child’s mother, defendant was its father, the parties were not married to each other, defendant had not contributed to the child’s support, and that $50 a month is a reasonable amount for such support and is within defendant’s ability to pay.
