Opinion
Stephanie Williams, the plaintiff in a slip-and-fall accident, is petitioning for a writ directing the respondent court to vacate its order transferring the case to the municipal court based on the amount in controversy. 1
The issues are (1) whether the superior court has discretion to transfer a case to the municipal court upon a determination the plaintiff cannot obtain a judgment in excess of $25,000, the jurisdictional minimum of the superior court, and, if so, the permissible scope of such transfer; and (2) whether the superior court abused its discretion in ordering a transfer under the specific circumstances present here.
We hold that the superior court has discretion pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 396 2 to transfer a case to the municipal court. Such a *174 transfer requires a hearing to be conducted. The trial court must be thoroughly familiar with the case and have evaluated the allegations in the pleadings, including the amount in the prayer of the complaint. Also to be considered are any assessments made in any settlement conference and the value of the case as determined through any arbitration proceedings.
We find the transfer to the municipal court in this case was an abuse of discretion and grant the peremptory writ.
Background
The action was originally filed in municipal court but was transferred to superior court following the filing of the first amended complaint, which added an allegation that Williams’s damages exceeded the jurisdictional limits of the municipal court. The matter was submitted to arbitration with an award of $17,000 entered in favor of Williams.
After Williams filed a request for trial de novo, defendant Gemco/Lucky Stores, Inc. (Lucky), requested Williams’s psychiatric records. When Williams refused the request, Lucky filed a motion to compel production. Shortly before the hearing on the discovery motion the parties resolved the discovery dispute.
Counsel for Williams did not appear at the hearing because Lucky’s counsel had agreed to appear to request the motion be taken off calendar. The respondent trial court denied the request to take the matter off calendar and entered an order granting the motion to produce psychiatric records on the ground Williams’s claim for lost wages was based in part upon her psychiatric disability. 3
On its own motion the trial court then transferred the action to municipal court solely because the . amount of the arbitration award was less than the jurisdictional limit of the superior court. On September 27, 1989, Williams’s motion for reconsideration was heard, which motion was not opposed by Lucky. The trial court took the matter under submission.
On December 29, 1989, the trial court issued an order denying the motion to reconsider, holding: “Regardless of the alleged wage loss of $44,000.00, which amount exceeds the jurisdiction of the municipal court, an arbitration award of $17,000.00 constitutes a prior determination of an amount less than the jurisdictional limit of the superior court;
[Campbell
v.
*175
Superior Court
(1989)
This petition followed.
Discussion
A. Authority to Transfer
The power to order transfer is provided in section 396 which, in pertinent part, provides: “If an action or proceeding is commenced in a court which lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter thereof, as determined by the complaint or petition, if there is a court of this state which has such jurisdiction, the action . . . shall, on the application of either party, or on the court’s own motion, be transferred to a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter which may be agreed upon by the parties, or, if they do not agree, to a court having such jurisdiction which is designated by law as a proper court for the trial or determination thereof, and it shall thereupon be entered and prosecuted in the court to which it is transferred as if it had been commenced therein, all prior proceedings being saved. . . . [¶] If an action or proceeding is commenced in or transferred to a court which has jurisdiction of the subject matter thereof as determined by the complaint or petition, and it thereafter appears from the verified pleadings, or at the trial, or hearing, that the determination of the action or proceeding, or of a cross-complaint, will necessarily involve the determination of questions not within the jurisdiction of the court, in which the action or proceeding is pending, the court, whenever such lack of jurisdiction appears, must suspend all further proceedings therein and transfer the action or proceeding and certify the pleadings (or if the pleadings be oral, a transcript of the same), and all papers and proceedings therein to a court having jurisdiction thereof which may be agreed upon by the parties, or, if they do not agree, to a court having such jurisdiction which is designated by law as a proper court for the trial or determination thereof.”
A transfer must be made only when the lack of jurisdiction
4
is clear on the face of the record before the court because the transfer deprives the plaintiff from attempting to prove damages greater
*176
than those available in the municipal court.
(Davis
v.
Superior Court
(1972)
In determining whether transfer to the municipal court should be ordered, the superior court may not “arbitrarily” disregard the prayer of the complaint, but may examine the subject matter of the complaint as a whole.
(Id.
at p. 599.) The statute provides for transfer, even though the parties “do not agree,”
5
whenever an evaluation of the facts of the case based upon the allegations in the complaint, the damages alleged in the prayer, and evidence offered at a hearing reveal that the court is without jurisdiction to hear the matter.
(Stratton
v.
Superior Court
(1935)
B. The Campbell Case
In making the order to transfer this case to municipal court, the trial court herein cited
Campbell
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In
Campbell,
the plaintiff did not request special damages for medical treatment or wage loss, but sought $1 million in general and special damages for “ ‘humiliation, mental anguish [and] emotional and physical distress’ ” arising from an accusation of shoplifting by security guards at a food store. (
In
Campbell,
“the trial court did not order transfer ... by mechanically applying an arbitrator’s award as the exclusive measure of court damages.” (
Based upon an evaluation of these relevant factors, the trial court in
Campbell
determined the action necessarily involved an amount less than the jurisdictional minimum of the superior court and ordered the transfer to
*177
municipal court pursuant to the power vested in that court by section 396. In upholding the transfer, the
Campbell
court referred to the “absence of economic harm and either physical or emotional injury requiring treatment,” holding, that based on such facts, the order transferring the case to the municipal court was not an abuse of discretion. (
C. The Williams Case
Williams
v.
Superior Court
(1989)
Williams
rejected the concept a trial court is without discretion to evaluate the facts of the case and to determine a judgment greater than the jurisdictional minimum can not be obtained. (
Williams
reaffirmed the caution that a noticed motion is preferable to a sua sponte action by the court and that “ ‘transfers should be ordered sparingly and only in the clearest of circumstances, after a thorough review of the facts of the case . . . (
“We assume, however, transfers to municipal court will not be a regular event or an unfettered means of clearing crowded calendars. . . . [¶] [A] responsible exercise of discretion is in some cases warranted to determine
*178
that in light of the properly evaluated status of a particular case, a litigant’s right to attempt to establish a certain level of damages must at some point be found to have been forfeited. Unquestionably, trial courts have the ability to look beyond the face value of a case to evaluate its true worth ....’’ (
D. The Walker Case
Division Seven of this district disagreed with
Campbell
(mentioning
Williams
only in a footnote), describing
Campbell
as “a departure from all authority.”
(Walker
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
Walker
stated that prior to
Campbell,
“it was settled that when jurisdiction depended upon the dollar amount in controversy, the demand was determinative.” (
Walker,
however, recognizes exceptions where a demand is made in bad faith or is not supported by the allegations of the pleading. (
Contrary to the
Walker
description of
Campbell,
nothing in
Campbell
implies the threshold for transfer to the municipal court is “slight” or “superficial.”
Campbell
held a trial court, which is fully informed of the facts and has thoroughly reviewed the case, has discretion to order transfer based upon “a comparative evaluation of the actual facts of the case and the allegations of the complaint and the damages claimed in the prayer.” (
We hold that a trial court, after a comparative evaluation of all relative factors, has power pursuant to section 396 to order transfer to the municipal court whenever the demand in the prayer cannot realistically be supported.
*179 E. Application Here
1. Noticed Motion
Here, the trial court sua sponte ordered the transfer without a noticed motion.
Campbell
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Although the trial court ordered the transfer without notice to Williams, that defect was cured when Williams sought reconsideration. At the noticed hearing on the motion to reconsider, Williams had an opportunity to inform the trial court of all matters relevant to the transfer issue. We therefore find that Williams was not prejudiced by the procedure followed here. However, we emphasize the preference for a noticed motion in the first instance so that the trial court can be fully informed of the facts and thereby make a thorough examination of the case in order to make a proper evaluation of the jurisdictional issue before deciding whether to take the drastic step of transferring the action to the municipal court.
2. Amount in Controversy
The standard of review on an order transferring a case to the municipal court is that for abuse of discretion.
(Campbell
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The amount of the arbitration award does not, standing alone, constitute a prior determination of an amount less than the jurisdictional limits of the superior court.
(Campbell
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The facts here do not fall within the standard set forth in Campbell and Williams. Unlike Campbell, Williams has incurred medical expenses in excess of $6,000, is claiming wage losses over $40,000, and is requesting future medical expenses and wage loss. A medical evaluation, dated June *180 23, 1989, refers to permanent damage to the left knee and includes restrictions on standing, sitting and squatting.
The record includes a declaration that Williams requested trial de novó, believing in good faith that the value of her claim exceeds the $17,000 arbitration award and that she expects recovery in excess of $80,000.
Based upon these uncontradicted assertions, only one inference can reasonably be drawn from the facts.
7
(Shamblin
v.
Brattain
(1988)
Disposition
Let a peremptory writ of mandate be issued directing the respondent court to vacate its order transferring this action to the municipal court and to proceed with the litigation in the superior court.
Notes
Before Klein, P. J., Danielson, J., and Croskey, J.
We notified all parties of our intention to issue a peremptory writ in the first instance, providing all parties with the opportunity to file a response to the petition.
(Palma
v.
U.S. Industrial Fasteners, Inc.
(1984)
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
The order granting the motion to produce is not challenged here.
The test of the superior court’s jurisdiction of an action at law is the amount in controversy. The superior court does not have concurrent jurisdiction with the municipal courts within the same county.
(Norton
v.
Baranov
(1935)
In this respect, section 396 is unlike rule 1106.4.3.2 of the Local Rules of the Los Angeles Superior Court, which provides for the court to consider with counsel a stipulation for an amendment to the complaint and transfer to the municipal court.
We agree with
Campbell
at page 152, footnote 1, and
Williams
at page 385, that
Depretto
v.
Superior Court
(1981)
In the event evidence presented at any future hearing shows the amount in controversy is less than plaintiff presently asserts, nothing in this opinion shall be deemed a bar to a transfer to the municipal court grounded upon a determination based upon new facts.
