Opinion
Defendants June Rhodes et al. (Rhodes) appeal the portions of a default judgment favoring plaintiffs Frederick and Joanne Wiley (Wiley) awarding punitive damages and costs. Rhodes attacks the punitive damage award and costs as violating due process. We reverse those portions of the judgment. We affirm the remainder of the judgment.
Facts and Procedural History
In November 1988 Wiley sued Rhodes for damages for breach of oral contract, fraud and misrepresentation, concealment, conversion and breach of fiduciary duty. Wiley’s complaint alleged Rhodes improperly charged and retained a $20,000 fee for arranging a home refinance loan for Wiley. Wiley’s complaint sought $20,000 general damages plus interest, unspecified punitive damages and unspecified costs. Ultimately Wiley took the default of each defendant.
After a default prove-up hearing and memorandum of costs filed by Wiley, the superior court awarded Wiley $28,399.88 general damages including interest, $100,000 punitive damages and $3,808 costs including attorney fees. Rhodes appeals.
II
Discussion
A
Punitive Damages
Rhodes contends the punitive damage award violated due process because before entry of default judgment Rhodes was not given notice of the specific amount of punitive damages Wiley would seek. We agree.
Civil Code
1
section 3295, subdivision (e), provides: “No claim for exemplary damages shall state an amount or amounts.” Thus, a plaintiff may not state the amount of punitive damages sought either in the body of the complaint or in the prayer.
2
The statute does not specify how a plaintiff should notify the defendant of the amount of punitive damages sought. However, “a default judgment greater than the amount specifically demanded is void as beyond the court’s jurisdiction.”
(Greenup
v.
Rodman
(1986)
The Code of Civil Procedure contains several sections intended to ensure defendants who decline to contest lawsuits do not subject themselves to open-ended liability. (See Code Civ. Proc., §§ 580, 585, 586, 425.10, 425.11;
Greenup
v.
Rodman, supra,
In
Greenup
v.
Rodman, supra,
We conclude the superior court should not have awarded Wiley punitive damages against Rhodes.
B
Costs
The superior court awarded Wiley $3,808 attorney fees as costs. Rhodes challenges the cost award as violating due process. Rhodes asserts Wiley’s complaint did not allege any contract authorizing attorney fees and did not demand attorney fees. We agree.
If Wiley was entitled by statute or contract to attorney fees, that fact should have been pleaded in the complaint and a demand included in the prayer. (Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide,
supra,
§6:169.1, rev. #1, 1990.) In
Becker
v.
S.P. V. Construction Co., supra,
The portions of the judgment awarding Wiley punitive damages and attorney fees as costs are reversed. The remainder of the judgment is affirmed. Each side shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Benke, J., and Huffman, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise specified.
The statutory purpose is preventing use of a punitive damage claim as a financial bludgeon. (Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Procedure Before Trial (Rutter 1990) § 6:173.2, rev. #1, 1989.)
An attorney practice manual notes: “No procedure similar to CCP § 425.11 is provided for punitive damage claims. [¶] However, it seems clear that prior to entry of default, some sort of notice to defendant would be required [citation].” (Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide, supra, § 6:173.4, rev. #1, 1989.)
Further, “[a]s mentioned earlier, it is no longer proper to allege in the complaint the
amount or amounts
of punitive damages sought. [Civ.C. § 3295(e) . . . .] [¶] However, the statute does not specify how defendant is to be provided with notice of the amounts claimed where a default judgment is sought. [¶] Comment: Since notice is an essential element of due
We note nothing in section 3295, subdivision (e), prohibits a plaintiff from giving the defendant notice—separate from the complaint—of the amount of punitive damages sought. (Accord Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide, supra, § 5:37.16, rev. # 1> 1990.)
We note Wiley also failed to request attorney fees as costs on the request to enter default. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 870(a).)
