This case came before the court on motion to dismiss plaintiff's appeal from the order denying his motion for a new trial. [1] As the purported appeal is not taken from an appealable order, of course it must be dismissed. At the hearing of the motion appellant attempted to show that the notice of appeal was intended to be a notice of appeal from the judgment; and that by inadvertence and excusable neglect, and a resulting clerical error, the notice failed to specify the judgment as the subject of appeal. Thereupon respondent, at said hearing of the motion, waived notice of application for relief from the default resulting from failure to include an appeal from the judgment in said notice of appeal, and consented that the application for relief be heard forthwith. The matter was then submitted on affidavits.
[2] Let it be assumed that upon sufficient showing of facts in excuse of the plaintiff's error, this court could grant relief to plaintiff from the consequences of the stated error in his notice of appeal. (See Yolo Water and Power Co. v. Edmands,45 Cal.App. 410, 414 [187 P. 755].) Plaintiff's application for relief rests upon the affidavit of the secretary of the firm of attorneys who represented plaintiff in the action. She says that Mr. Collings, of said firm, instructed her to prepare "said notice of appeal," and that by her error, inadvertence and mistake she worded said notice to the effect that said appeal was from the order instead of from the judgment of the court. She does not in direct terms assert that Mr. Collings instructed her to prepare a notice of appeal from the judgment. After considering said affidavit, together with the counter-affidavits *Page 564 filed on behalf of defendant, we think that plaintiff is not entitled to the demanded relief.
Plaintiff's application is denied and the appeal is dismissed.
Houser, J., and Curtis, J., concurred.