Summers v. Superior Court

53 Cal. 2d 295 (1959)

RUSSELL F. SUMMERS, Petitioner,
v.
SUPERIOR COURT OF SANTA CLARA COUNTY, Respondent; OLGA KAYE, Real Party in Interest.

S. F. No. 20259.

Supreme Court of California. In Bank.

Dec. 18, 1959.

Robert L. Mezzetti and Robert E. Hayes for Petitioner.

No appearance for Respondent.

Malovos, Mager & Chasuk and Chalmers Smith for Real Party in Interest.

PETERS, J.

This is a proceeding to review an order of the Superior Court of Santa Clara County denying petitioner relief relative to a charge made by a court reporter for preparing a transcript on appeal. The sole question involved is whether the trial court had jurisdiction of the controversy in question. We have concluded that it did not.

Petitioner, Russell F. Summers, was the plaintiff in an action filed in the Superior Court of Santa Clara County. In due course, the case was tried, resulting in a judgment for the defendants. Summers appealed, serving and filing, properly, all required notices, including a request for the preparation of the clerk's and reporter's transcripts as required by rule 4 of the Rules on Appeal. Respondent Olga Kaye, the court reporter, duly and properly filed with the clerk her estimate of the cost of preparing the reporter's transcript as provided in that rule. The estimate was $625. This amount was deposited by Summers with the clerk. Thereafter, the reporter prepared the transcript and filed the original and one copy with the clerk, properly certifying the document. In due course, the transcript was filed with the proper District Court of Appeal.

When the reporter filed the transcript with the clerk of the superior court she indicated that the total bill was $680.62. *297 The trial court ordered that the $625 on deposit with the clerk be paid to the reporter. It was so paid. The reporter then billed petitioner for the difference between $625 and $680.62.

The petitioner then instituted this proceeding under review. He filed "exceptions" to the reporter's charges. The main contention was that the reporter was seeking to recover for the cost of preparing the original and two copies of the transcript, whereas petitioner had only ordered the preparation of the original and one copy. It was also claimed that the number of folios for which the charge had been made was overestimated by the reporter.

The trial court held a hearing on the exceptions to the reporter's charges, and evidence was introduced by both parties. The trial court purported to pass on the merits of the controversy, holding that, while under the rules but one copy of the transcript is to be prepared, in the instant case, there was an implied contract to pay for the second copy, and that there had been no overcharge. The court then entered its order denying the exceptions. Thereupon, petitioner instituted these proceedings to review the validity of that order.

[1] There can be no doubt that review is the only remedy available to petitioner. The order involved, although a special order made after final judgment, did not affect that judgment or bear any relation to it. The order, therefore, is not appealable as a special order after final judgment. It was so held in Williams v. Superior Court, 14 Cal. 2d 656, at page 666 [96 P.2d 334].

[2a] The trial court had no jurisdiction over the controversy presented by the filing of the exceptions to the reporter's charges. The transcript in this case had been prepared and filed. There is no controversy over the preparation or filing of that transcript. The only controversy that exists is a controversy between Summers and the court reporter over the amount of the fee. The trial court had no jurisdiction to adjudge that controversy in the challenged proceeding. Once the transcript is prepared and filed the trial court has no power to pass upon the contract rights of the litigant and the reporter.

In Williams v. Superior Court, 14 Cal. 2d 656 [96 P.2d 334], the trial court purported to pass on the validity of a contingent contract between the reporter and the appellant. The court stated (p. 664): "Manifestly, however, neither in the *298 kind of proceeding which was then being heard before department 12, nor under the circumstances there present, did the court have jurisdiction of the parties or the subject-matter to hear and adjudicate the question of the validity of said agreement, nor to define the legal rights of the parties thereunder. Such adjudication may be made only through the medium of an action brought for that purpose after the reporter delivers the transcript. (Gjurich v. Fieg, 160 Cal. 331 [116 P. 745]; Harris v. Burt, 47 Cal. App. 480 [190 P. 1058].)"

The Williams case correctly points out that the trial court in the case on appeal has power to determine whether the appellant has complied with all necessary legal requirements to secure a transcript and, if so, to see to it that the reporter complies with the law and prepares and files the transcript. But the court has no jurisdiction in the case on appeal to pass on disputes between the reporter and the appellant over fees. As was said in the Williams case, supra, at page 665: "If after the delivery of the transcript a dispute should arise between the ... [appellant] and the reporter as to the amount the reporter is legally entitled to receive, his recourse would be, as outlined in the Gjurich case, an action in the ordinary course of law to collect the same, which necessarily would involve a determination of the question of the validity of the agreement theretofore entered into between the parties."

[3] Respondent Kaye correctly points out that petitioner started the very proceedings he now seeks to challenge, and contends that for this reason he is estopped from now challenging jurisdiction. While estoppel may operate to confer jurisdiction over the parties to a controversy, jurisdiction over the subject matter cannot be conferred by consent, waiver or estoppel. (See 1 Witkin, California Procedure, p. 278, where many cases are collected.) The present case involves jurisdiction over the subject matter.

[2b] Respondent places her main reliance on Cross v. Superior Court, 104 Cal. App. 2d 594 [232 P.2d 255]. That case involved a dispute between the reporter and an appellant over fees. A writ of mandate issued ordering that that dispute be settled in a particular way. Nothing is said in that opinion about the jurisdiction of the court to settle such a controversy in a proceeding in the main action. If the opinion in that case implies that the trial court in an auxiliary proceeding in the main action has jurisdiction to settle a controversy between *299 the reporter and the appellant over fees, such implication is wrong, and is disapproved.

The order under review is annulled.

Gibson, C. J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and White, J., concurred.

McComb, J., dissented.