Machado v. Myers, No. D073824 (D4d1 Sept. 10, 2019)
This somewhat ugly boundary dispute between neighbors involves, among other things, encroaching tree roots and the placement of an air conditioning unit. It got resolved in a settlement, which was orally read into the record. The parties agreed the trial court would retain authority to enforce it under Code of Civil Procedure § 664.6. It seems, however, that the parties didn’t have the settlement entered as a formal judgment at that time.
A year later, a dispute broke out. Plaintiff moved under § 664.6 to enforce the settlement, including a proposed judgment that tracked the oral settlement. The court granted the motion, but still did not enter judgment. And then another dispute broke out. In connection with that motion, the Plaintiff again submitted a proposed judgment. But this judgment wasn’t the same as what the parties put on the record. The trial court signed it anyway.
That was error. Section 664.6 permits a court “enter judgment pursuant to the terms of [a] settlement.” The settlement needs to be either stated orally on the record or in a written agreement signed by the parties. Whatever judgment is entered needs to be identical to what was put on the record. A court has no power under § 664.6 to add or subtract from a settlement’s terms. Although a court has some leeway under § 664.6 to interpret a settlement, that’s not what happened here.
The Court explains, however, that Defendant was not entitled to relief under § 473(d), which permits a court to vacate void judgments and those entered as a result of clerical error. The judgment here was legally erroneous. That doesn’t make it void. Or a clerical error.
Instead, Defendant should have been afforded relief under § 663, which permits a court to vacate a judgment that has been entered as a result of legal error. In so finding, the Court of Appeal rejects two of Plaintiff’s procedural arguments against relief under § 663.
First, like a new trial motion, a § 663 motion has a special briefing and hearing procedure, codified in § 663a. Generally the motion is initiated by filing a “notice of intention” within a prescribed window of time, then the opening brief is due ten days later. See§ 663(a), (d). But the Court of Appeal finds that filing a notice of motion with a brief attached is sufficient to satisfy the notice of intention requirement, so long as the filing is timely. And second, although the point of the motion is to have the court enter a different judgment, the Court of Appeal holds that there’s no per se requirement that a moving party submit a proposed judgment along with its motion.
Thus, on remand, the trial court should vacate the judgment and enter a new one that conforms with the settlement that had been stated on the record.
Reversed.
This somewhat ugly boundary dispute between neighbors involves, among other things, encroaching tree roots and the placement of an air conditioning unit. It got resolved in a settlement, which was orally read into the record. The parties agreed the trial court would retain authority to enforce it under Code of Civil Procedure § 664.6. It seems, however, that the parties didn’t have the settlement entered as a formal judgment at that time.
A year later, a dispute broke out. Plaintiff moved under § 664.6 to enforce the settlement, including a proposed judgment that tracked the oral settlement. The court granted the motion, but still did not enter judgment. And then another dispute broke out. In connection with that motion, the Plaintiff again submitted a proposed judgment. But this judgment wasn’t the same as what the parties put on the record. The trial court signed it anyway.
That was error. Section 664.6 permits a court “enter judgment pursuant to the terms of [a] settlement.” The settlement needs to be either stated orally on the record or in a written agreement signed by the parties. Whatever judgment is entered needs to be identical to what was put on the record. A court has no power under § 664.6 to add or subtract from a settlement’s terms. Although a court has some leeway under § 664.6 to interpret a settlement, that’s not what happened here.
The Court explains, however, that Defendant was not entitled to relief under § 473(d), which permits a court to vacate void judgments and those entered as a result of clerical error. The judgment here was legally erroneous. That doesn’t make it void. Or a clerical error.
Instead, Defendant should have been afforded relief under § 663, which permits a court to vacate a judgment that has been entered as a result of legal error. In so finding, the Court of Appeal rejects two of Plaintiff’s procedural arguments against relief under § 663.
First, like a new trial motion, a § 663 motion has a special briefing and hearing procedure, codified in § 663a. Generally the motion is initiated by filing a “notice of intention” within a prescribed window of time, then the opening brief is due ten days later. See§ 663(a), (d). But the Court of Appeal finds that filing a notice of motion with a brief attached is sufficient to satisfy the notice of intention requirement, so long as the filing is timely. And second, although the point of the motion is to have the court enter a different judgment, the Court of Appeal holds that there’s no per se requirement that a moving party submit a proposed judgment along with its motion.
Thus, on remand, the trial court should vacate the judgment and enter a new one that conforms with the settlement that had been stated on the record.
Reversed.