In an action brought by Anna Perez in the municipal court, she obtained a judgment against Western States Construction Company. When a proposed statement upon appeal was filed by Western States, the trial judge refused to settle it. There is now before this court an appeal from a judgment of the superior court denying a petition for a writ of mandate to compel him to do so.
The proposed statement, Western States alleges in its petition, “was prepared in accordance with the . . . Rules on Appeal from Municipal Courts in Civil Cases . . . , and filed within the time required by law and said Rules.” It “contains all the material evidence, and is fair, and is a condensed statement in narrative form of all portions of the oral proceedings as appellants deem material to the determination of the points on appeal.”
Other facts relied upon by Western States concern the proceeding at the time the proposed statement was presented to Judge Golden for settlement. According to the appellant, Scholars, an attorney of record for Perez, then stated that Crawford, one of his associates, who had taken the principal *148 part in the trial of the action, died shortly thereafter. Because of that situation, said Scholars, he could not propose any amendments to the statement. Upon that representation, the appellant asserts, Judge Golden made an order refusing to settle the statement. He advised the appellant, it declares, that the record on appeal would have to be a complete reporter’s transcript of the proceedings at the time of the trial. The basis of his order, said the judge, was that Mr. Crawford is dead, and there were no proposed amendments to the statement, and “nothing to settle,” and he could not remember all of the proceedings.
When the mandate proceeding was tried, the answer of the respondent municipal court was withdrawn “to expedite argument on the legal issues.” Thereafter, the petition for the writ of mandate was denied.
Western States now contends that the trial judge abused his discretion in refusing to settle the statement, there being no amendments proposed and no objections made to the statement by opposing counsel or the judge. The cost of a reporter’s transcript, it says, is out of all proportion to the amount of the judgment, $725, and Perez is insolvent.
The respondents argue that the reasons given by the judge in refusing to settle the statement show no abuse of discretion. He could not remember all the proceedings and the death of Crawford cast upon him the burden of acting as counsel for Perez and proposing amendments to the statement offered. For these reasons, it is said, his refusal to assume this burden, without a reporter’s transcript of the whole proceedings, was within his sound discretion.
Rule 7a of the Rules on Appeal from Municipal Courts in Civil Cases provides: “If, in lieu of a reporter’s transcript, the appellant desires to set forth the oral proceedings by a settled statement, he shall serve and file a notice so stating. . . . Within 20 days thereafter the appellant shall serve and file a condensed statement in narrative form of all or such portions of the oral proceedings as he deems material to the determination of the points on appeal. ...” The basic purpose of the rule “. . . is to permit the filing of a narrative statement ‘in lieu of a reporter’s transcript,’ thus obviating records on appeal being many times longer than there is any necessity for, and which greatly increases the costs of litigants as well as the labors of the appellate court without any corresponding benefit.”
(Keller
v.
Superior Court,
In the present case, the respondents withdrew their answer to the verified petition for the writ of mandate, thereby conceding the truth of all of the facts stated by the appellant.
(Pereria
v.
Wallace,
The inability of the trial judge to “remember all of the proceedings” was a matter commented upon in
Cripe
v.
Unangst,
In
Keller
v.
Superior Court,
Nor can the death of counsel for Perez deprive Western States of its statutory right to have the trial judge settle a statement on appeal. The effect of counsel’s death, it is argued, is that there were no amendments proposed to the statement offered by Western States. However, as pointed out in
Sansome
v.
Myers,
So in the present case, the absence of proposed amendments, from whatever cause, did not relieve the trial judge of his duty to settle the proposed statement with such corrections and additions as might be necessary. In doing so he does not have to rely solely upon his memory; several of the memory aids suggested in the Keller case are available to him. The purpose of the rule allowing a record upon appeal to be presented by a settled statement is to reduce the cost of litigation as much as possible. Its use is particularly justified where, as here, the cost of a reporter’s transcript is nearly one-half of the amount of the judgment.
The judgment is reversed and the superior court is directed to issue a peremptory writ of mandate requiring the settlement of the statement on appeal.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Sehauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
