Court Opinion

ID: 1037419
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-08-12 16:07:03.129804+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:46:35.141936
License: Public Domain

Filed 5/15/13
                          CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

            IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                            SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE                      H038784
LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR                           (Santa Clara County
UNIVERSITY,                                       Super. Ct. No. 110CV171121)

       Plaintiff and Respondent,

       v.

CHRISTINE MARIE HAM,

       Defendant and Appellant.

       This case comes to us from the appellate division of the superior court, which
granted the request of appellant Christine Ham to transfer the matter under California
Rules of Court, rule 8.1005. The issue before us is whether Code of Civil Procedure
section 415.45,1 which governs service of summons in unlawful detainer actions, permits
service by posting and mailing after multiple attempts to effect personal service have
been unsuccessful. The appellate division, reversing the superior court, ruled that such
efforts are not sufficient to comply with the "reasonable diligence" requirement of section
415.45. We agree with the superior court, however, that in the particular circumstances
presented, the landlord, the Board of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University
(Stanford), exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to serve appellant. We will

1 All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
therefore affirm the superior court's order denying the motion of appellant Christine Ham
to vacate the default judgment entered against her.
                                        Background
       Neither party's brief on appeal offers a complete and accurate summary of the
procedural history of this case accompanied by correct citations to the record. The record
indicates, however, that appellant rented an apartment from Stanford on Durand Way
from May 2003 through May 2010, when Stanford filed its unlawful detainer action.
Until June 2008, appellant paid rent at the market rate while on the waiting list for a
below-market-rate (BMR) apartment. In June 2008, however, the parties signed a one-
year lease at $870 per month, the BMR rent for that unit.
       Before the lease term expired, Stanford notified appellant that her rent would
increase to $883 a month for the following year. After the July 2009 payment, however,
Stanford informed appellant that she no longer qualified for the BMR program and that
her rate would increase to $2,525 per month beginning February 1, 2010. Nevertheless,
beginning in July 2009 and continuing to September 2010, appellant paid $883 per month
by money order or cashier's check, accompanied by letters of unspecified content.2 On
each occasion she listed the subject property as her return address. From the end of 2009
through approximately July 31, 2010, however, appellant was on the East Coast, staying
in different states and cities. Her mail was not being forwarded between February or
March and August of 2010.
       Stanford attempted to return the September 2009 and February 2010 checks, but
appellant again submitted them to Stanford, suggesting that they had been returned to her
in error. On February 17, 2010, Stanford served appellant with a three-day "Notice to

2 Stanford improperly describes one of these letters as "intemperate" without indicating
anything in the record to support that representation.

                                              2
Pay Rent or Quit" pursuant to section 1161, subdivision (2). The notice expired on
February 22, and on May 5, 2010, Stanford filed its complaint for unlawful detainer.
      A process server attempted to personally serve appellant with the summons at the
residence on May 6, May 7, May 9, May 10, and May 11, 2010, at various times.
Appellant, however, was on the East Coast during this period. According to the business
manager for the apartments, Stanford repeatedly attempted to contact appellant in writing
between January and July of 2010 at the only address it had, the Durand Way apartment.
Although Stanford received some mail from appellant between January and October
2010, she did not provide any alternative addresses other than the Durand Way
apartment, and in July 2010 Stanford learned that the postal service had been unable to
forward her incoming mail.
      Meanwhile, on May 18, 2010, having been unsuccessful at personal service,
Stanford obtained an order from the Honorable James P. Kleinberg permitting it to serve
appellant by posting a copy of the summons and complaint on the premises of the Durand
Way apartment and by mailing a copy to her "last known address." Service was deemed
complete on the 10th day after the posting and mailing, pursuant to section 415.45.
Appellant, however, did not receive the summons and complaint,3 and the unlawful
detainer action proceeded to a default judgment on June 7, 2010. Stanford took
possession of the property on June 17, 2010, and in August it rented the apartment to a
new tenant.
      Appellant learned of the judgment in late July of 2010. On December 7, 2010,
citing sections 473 and 473.5, she moved to vacate the default and default judgment and
restore her to possession of her apartment. Appellant asserted that the judgment was void

3 At the hearing on appellant's motion to vacate, her counsel submitted an offer of proof
that Stanford sent the summons and complaint by certified mail, but it was not forwarded
to her from the post office.

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because the summons and complaint had not been properly served. Stanford, she argued,
had failed to use reasonable diligence to locate her, even though it had her cell phone
number, the number for her employment supervisor, and the number and address of her
sister. Yet it failed to take any of those steps, thus indicating no true effort to comply
with its "obligation" to ascertain her whereabouts. At the ensuing hearing appellant's
counsel acknowledged that five attempts at personal service was "more than enough"; but
personal service at that address, he pointed out, was "just one way to serve her." Stanford
could have called her; she would have explained that she was out of state, and service
could then have been made by certified mail or by personal service where she was.
       Appellant urged the superior court to impose a standard of "reasonable diligence"
as defined in Watts v. Crawford (1995) 10 Cal.4th 743. The Honorable Socrates P.
Manoukian aptly pointed out, however, that this definition applied to service by
publication under section 415.50, not service by posting and mailing under section
415.45. Judge Manoukian found Stanford's five attempts at personal service to have been
sufficient to constitute reasonable diligence under section 415.45 and denied appellant's
motion to vacate the judgment.
       The appellate division of the superior court reversed. The three-judge panel
acknowledged (as had appellant) that cases interpreting the term "reasonable diligence"
pertained to service by publication under section 415.50, not section 415.45.
Nevertheless, the court reasoned, "the fact that identical 'reasonable diligence' language is
used in the two statutes strongly supports Appellant's position. Both statutes also require
a court's approval prior to resorting to service by publication or posting and mailing as
these are the least preferred methods of service." The appellate division rejected
Stanford's reliance on section 415.20, because that statute permits substituted service
after reasonable diligence in attempting personal service, whereas section 415.45 requires
an effort to serve the defendant in any manner specified in sections 415.10 through
415.95. Here Stanford's attorney had recited five attempts at personal service at the

                                              4
apartment but no facts indicating that Stanford was unable to serve her at a different
location or by mail, pursuant to section 415.30 or section 415.40, nor any effort to
determine her whereabouts or business address. The court thus concluded that Stanford
had failed to comply with the "reasonable diligence" requirement, rendering the
subsequent default judgment void on its face.
       Appellant had already filed a petition to certify the matter to this court. The
appellate division noted that there was no case law addressing the meaning of "reasonable
diligence" under section 415.45. It therefore granted appellant's petition, reasoning that
proper service in an unlawful detainer action is important, since "a defendant in an
unlawful detainer action stands to lose his or her right to stay in the home." This court
thereafter ordered the case transferred here for hearing and decision, pursuant to section
911 and California Rules of Court, rule 8.1002.
                                         Discussion
       Unlawful detainer is a unique proceeding that calls for special procedures for
service of summons. Accordingly, section 415.45 provides that summons may be served
on an unlawful detainer defendant by posting it on the premises, along with notice sent by
certified mail to that address, if the court determines that "the party to be served cannot
with reasonable diligence be served in any manner specified in this article [i.e., Article 3]
other than publication . . . ." Article 3 comprises sections 415.10-415.95. The dispute in
this case involves the lengths to which a plaintiff must go in exercising "reasonable
diligence" under this provision.
       The parties continue to debate the applicability of companion statutes governing
service by other methods. Stanford maintains that the most analogous statute is section
415.20, which allows substituted service when the summons and complaint "cannot with
reasonable diligence be personally delivered to the person to be served." Appellant,
however, insists that the most comparable service provisions are expressed in section

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415.50, which permits service by publication if the court determines that the defendant
"cannot with reasonable diligence be served in another manner specified in this article."
       The preferred way to serve a defendant, of course, is by personal delivery, as
prescribed in section 415.10, as this is the most likely to ensure actual notice to the
defendant. (Evartt v. Superior Court (1979) 89 Cal.App.3d 795, 799.) Service is deemed
complete at the time of delivery. If personal delivery to the defendant "cannot with
reasonable diligence be personally delivered," section 415.20 authorizes substituted
service by leaving a copy with a competent adult at the defendant's residence or
workplace, followed by sending the documents by first class mail addressed to defendant
at the residence or workplace where the documents were delivered.4 Service is complete
upon the 10th day after the requisite copy is mailed to the defendant. Substituted service
is permissible, however, "only after a good faith effort at personal service has first been
made: the burden is on the plaintiff to show that the summons and complaint 'cannot with
reasonable diligence be personally delivered' to the individual defendant." (American
Exp. Centurion Bank v. Zara (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 383, 389.)
       Finally, service by mail is a permissible alternative if the statutory criteria are met:
the plaintiff must send the summons and complaint together with a form notice and
acknowledgment of receipt. Service is complete on the date the recipient signs the

4 Section 415.20, subdivision (b), provides: "If a copy of the summons and complaint
cannot with reasonable diligence be personally delivered to the person to be served . . . a
summons may be served by leaving a copy of the summons and complaint at the person's
dwelling house, usual place of abode, usual place of business, or usual mailing address
other than a United States Postal Service post office box, in the presence of a competent
member of the household or a person apparently in charge of his or her office, place of
business, or usual mailing address other than a United States Postal Service post office
box, at least 18 years of age, who shall be informed of the contents thereof, and by
thereafter mailing a copy of the summons and of the complaint by first-class mail,
postage prepaid to the person to be served at the place where a copy of the summons and
complaint were left. Service of a summons in this manner is deemed complete on the
10th day after the mailing."

                                              6
acknowledgment of receipt.5 (§ 415.30, subd. (c).) If no acknowledgment is returned
within 20 days of the mailing of the summons and complaint, the recipient will be liable
for reasonable expenses the plaintiff incurs in serving him or her in another manner.
(§ 415.30, subd. (d).)
       Neither service by mail nor substituted service requires the plaintiff to obtain
permission of the court before using the alternative to personal service. The Legislature
evidently was confident that these methods are acceptable as a means of giving notice to
a defendant as long as the procedural criteria are met. Indeed, in order to avail oneself of
substituted service under section 415.20, "[t]wo or three attempts to personally serve a
defendant at a proper place ordinarily qualifies as ' "reasonable diligence." ' [Citation.]"
(American Exp. Centurion Bank v. Zara, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 389.) By contrast,
the least likely to succeed in notifying the defendant of an action against him is service by
publication. For this reason, a court must first be convinced that the party to be served
"cannot with reasonable diligence be served in another manner specified in [Article 3]."
(§ 415.50.) "If a defendant's address is ascertainable, a method of service superior to
publication must be employed, because constitutional principles of due process of law, as
well as the authorizing statute, require that service by publication be utilized only as a last
resort." (Watts v. Crawford, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 749, fn. 5.) In this context, " '[t]he
term "reasonable diligence" . . . denotes a thorough, systematic investigation and inquiry
conducted in good faith by the party or his agent or attorney. [Citations.] A number of
honest attempts to learn defendant's whereabouts or his address by inquiry of relatives,
. . . and by investigation of appropriate city and telephone directories [voters' registries

5 If the person to be served is out of state, proof of service "shall include evidence
satisfactory to the court establishing actual delivery to the person to be served, by a
signed return receipt or other evidence." (§ 417.20 see, e.g., Bolkiah v. Superior Court
(1999) 74 Cal.App.4th 984, 1001 [sufficient "other evidence" existed to assure court that
petitioners had received actual delivery of summons].)

                                               7
and the assessor's office property indices situated near the defendant's last known
location] generally are sufficient.' " (Ibid., quoting Judicial Council com., § 415.50.)
       Neither party's comparison of section 415.45 to the selected service statutes is
appropriate. Section 415.20, as we have noted, permits substituted service when personal
service cannot be accomplished with reasonable diligence; section 415.45 allows posting
only if the person cannot be served in any other manner (excluding publication)
notwithstanding the application of reasonable diligence. Furthermore, unlike substituted
service, the alternative of posting requires the plaintiff to make this showing to the
superior court. These safeguards clearly reflect the Legislature's concern for notice in
accordance with due process. (See Greene v. Lindsey (1982) 456 U.S. 444, 456 [102
S.Ct. 1874] [one attempt at personal service before posting insufficient notice, thereby
violating due process].)
       Yet the extraordinary measures required before publication is permitted should not
be imported into section 415.45. Publication is the last resort because it is so unlikely to
give notice to the defendant that he or she is being sued. Accordingly, it can require
exhaustive attempts to locate the defendant before this method may be employed. The
unlawful detainer defendant, however, has a residence that is known to the plaintiff; it is
therefore reasonable for the plaintiff to assume, at least initially, that personal service will
eventually be successful. While section 415.45 does not allow the plaintiff to rely on this
assumption, we cannot agree with appellant that reasonable diligence under section
415.45 requires a landlord to conduct an extensive investigation of all the possible
whereabouts of its tenant before seeking the posting alternative. "The purpose of the
unlawful detainer statutes is to provide the landlord with a summary, expeditious way of
getting back his property when a tenant fails to pay the rent or refuses to vacate the
premises at the end of his tenancy." (Nork v. Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises, Inc.
(1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 410, 413; see also Larson v. City and County of San Francisco
(2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 1263, 1297 [statutory scheme of unlawful detainer "is intended

                                               8
and designed to provide an expeditious remedy for the recovery of possession of real
property"].) This purpose is not served by a protracted inquiry into all sources of
information regarding the tenant's location before posting and mailing at the one address
of which the landlord is certain.
       As summary proceedings, unlawful detainer actions do not afford defendants all
the procedural advantages of ordinary disputes. "The tenant is, by definition, in
possession of the property of the landlord; unless a judicially supervised mechanism is
provided for what would otherwise be swift repossession by the landlord himself, the
tenant would be able to deny the landlord the rights of income incident to ownership by
refusing to pay rent and by preventing sale or rental to someone else. Many expenses of
the landlord, continue to accrue whether a tenant pays his rent or not. Speedy
adjudication is desirable to prevent subjecting the landlord to undeserved economic loss
and the tenant to unmerited harassment and dispossession when his lease or rental
agreement gives him the right to peaceful and undisturbed possession of the property.
Holding over by the tenant beyond the term of his agreement or holding without payment
of rent has proved a virulent source of friction and dispute." (Lindsey v. Normet (1972)
405 U.S. 56, 72-73 [92 S.Ct. 862]; see also Vasey v. California Dance Co. (1977) 70
Cal.App.3d 742, 747 [noting that certain procedural rights must be denied to prevent
frustration of the summary nature of the unlawful detainer proceeding].)
       Indisputably, each case must be evaluated on its own facts. "No single formula
[or] mode of search can be said to constitute due diligence in every case." (Donel, Inc. v.
Badalian (1978) 87 Cal.App.3d 327, 333; accord, Kott v. Superior Court (1996) 45
Cal.App.4th 1126, 1137-1138.) In the circumstances presented here, we cannot say that
Judge Kleinberg erred in granting Stanford's request to serve the summons and complaint
by posting and mailing at appellant's residence address. Substituted service was not a
viable alternative; there was no indication that any other adult might be found at the
premises, and at that time, according to a declaration by Stanford's attorney in May 2010,

                                             9
appellant apparently was not represented by counsel. Counsel also stated that Stanford
did not know appellant's business address. While the declaration does not indicate that
Stanford tried to discover whether she was currently employed and where, the business
manager for Allied Residential Company (Allied), Stanford's property management
company, provided clarification of the situation. The only employment information
Allied had for appellant was her postdoctoral position at Stanford. Allied regularly
verified appellant's status there because her rental rate depended on her continued status
as a postdoctoral scholar. On December 14, 2009, Allied learned that appellant's
postdoctoral status had been terminated as of January 5 of that year, as she had not been
in "good standing" at Stanford.
       Judge Manoukian was entitled to conclude that appellant could not have been
personally served at a business address in any event, as she was on the East Coast during
the unlawful detainer proceedings. Between January and July 2010 Allied repeatedly
attempted to contact appellant in writing, and it received mail from her between January
and October of 2010, but she provided no address other than the Durand Way apartment.
Judge Manoukian could also have found that because the post office had not processed
appellant's request to forward her mail,6 an attempt to serve appellant by mail would have
been ineffectual.7

6 On August 9, 2010, a declaration from a district manager at the United States Postal
Service indicated that due to post office error, mail addressed to appellant was returned to
sender beginning in March of 2010.
7 Indeed, as amicus, the California Apartment Association, points out, service by mail
can impede the efficiency of the proceedings, as it extends the response time afforded to
the person being served. Amicus suggests that posting itself should be regarded as a last
resort for landlords, because it gives the defendant more time to respond, thereby
delaying the eviction process beyond the time that could be achieved through personal
service.

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       Greene v. Lindsey, supra, 456 U.S. 444, does not direct us to a different result.
The United States Supreme Court noted the particular circumstances that made posting
an inadequate method of affording the defendant notice in that case. There, only one
attempt at personal service was made before posting, and process servers were "well
aware" that at that location notices posted on apartment doors were " 'not infrequently' "
removed by children or other tenants before being seen by the intended recipients. (Id. at
p. 453-454.) The court acknowledged that the failure of notice in that case was not
typical: "The empirical basis of the presumption that notice posted upon property is
adequate to alert the owner or occupant of property of the pendency of legal proceedings
would appear to make the presumption particularly well founded where notice is posted
at a residence. With respect to claims affecting the continued possession of that
residence, the application of this presumption seems particularly apt: If the tenant has a
continuing interest in maintaining possession of the property for his use and occupancy,
he might reasonably be expected to frequent the premises; if he no longer occupies the
premises, then the injury that might result from his not having received actual notice as a
consequence of the posted notice is reduced. Short of providing personal service, then,
posting notice on the door of a person's home would, in many or perhaps most instances,
constitute not only a constitutionally acceptable means of service, but indeed a singularly
appropriate and effective way of ensuring that a person who cannot conveniently be
served personally is actually apprised of proceedings against him." (Id. at pp. 452-453.)
       We thus conclude that in the circumstances presented here, Stanford was justified
in seeking service by posting and mailing under section 415.45. The court therefore
properly denied appellant's motion to vacate the default and default judgment and restore
her to possession.

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                              Disposition
     The order is affirmed.

                                  ________________________________
                                  ELIA, J.

WE CONCUR:

_______________________________
RUSHING, P. J.

_______________________________
PREMO, J.

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Trial Court:                  Santa Clara County Superior Court
                              Appellate Division

Trial Judges:                 Hon. Kurt Kumli,
                              Hon. Erica Yew and
                              Hon. Carrie Zepeda and
                              Hon. Socrates P. Manoukian

Attorneys for Appellant:      Damian R. Fernandez

Attorneys for Respondent:     Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman and
                              Marcia L. Pope and
                              Jessica R. Bogo

Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
 In Support of Respondent:    Pahl & McCay and
                              Karen K. McCay

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