Filed 9/18/13
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
TODD MACALUSO, D063325
Petitioner, (San Diego County
Super. Ct. No. GIC877446)
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN
DIEGO COUNTY,
Respondent;
LENNAR LAND PARTNERS II, LLC et
al.,
Real Parties in Interest.
Petition for Writ of Mandate, William R. Nevitt, Judge. Petition granted.
Pumilia Patel & Adamec, Jayesh Patel and Paul Rosenberger for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
O'Melveny & Myers, Daniel M. Petrocelli and Jeffrey A. Barker for Real Parties
in Interest.
Real party in interest Lennar Homes of California, Inc., (Lennar) is a judgment
creditor pursuing collection proceedings against its judgment debtor, Mr. Marsch.
Lennar served a subpoena duces tecum on petitioner Todd Macaluso (Macaluso) that
required Macaluso to produce documents and testify at a judgment debtor examination in
connection with Lennar's judgment collection proceedings. Although Macaluso appeared
at the judgment debtor examination, he declined to answer most of the questions,
objected to the document production and refused to produce the documents.
Lennar then moved to compel further responses and documents. After the trial
court entered an order granting Lennar's motion (the order), Macaluso filed a notice of
appeal from the order. However, because the trial court agreed with Lennar that the order
was not appealable under Code of Civil Procedure1 section 904.1, and Macaluso did not
comply with the order, the trial court entered an order to show cause re contempt (the
OSC). Macaluso's current writ petition contends the trial court was without jurisdiction
to issue the OSC because the order was appealable and therefore the Notice of Appeal
deprived the court of further jurisdiction to act until Macaluso's appeal from the order is
resolved.
We are presented with the narrow issue of whether the order was an appealable
order within the meaning of section 904.1, subdivision (a)(2).
1 Statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.
2
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Parties
In early 2011, a lawsuit (the Briarwood litigation) that pitted Marsch and his
related entities against Lennar was resolved in favor of Lennar; it obtained a judgment
against Marsch individually for more than $50 million. Although Marsch allegedly
testified (at a judgment debtor's examination in early 2012) he was insolvent, Lennar has
submitted evidence that Marsch was an untruthful person who had been actively engaged
in efforts to hide assets Lennar might have levied upon to satisfy its judgment.
Macaluso is an attorney and was a principal in an entity known as American
Lawyers Funding (ALF). Macaluso has been involved with Marsch for several years,
and in many capacities: ALF loaned money to provide funding to Marsch to pursue the
Briarwood litigation; Macaluso's law firm provided substantial loans to pay attorneys
representing Marsch in the Briarwood litigation and other lawsuits; Macaluso's law firm
gave Marsch extensive funds to defray his personal living expenses; and Macaluso
represented Marsch in pursuing various lawsuits.
B. The Collection Proceedings
Lennar issued three subpoena duces tecums requiring Macaluso (in his individual
capacity as well as in his capacity as President of his law firm and as a manager of ALF)
to personally appear and to produce documents at a July 2012 deposition. Macaluso
attended but produced no documents. The attorneys representing Macaluso and the other
subpoenaed entities interposed numerous objections to the document requests, including
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that the requests invaded privacy rights and included privileged documents. Similar
objections were interposed to questions posed to Macaluso. His counsel ultimately
suggested it was necessary to "see the judge" to set a hearing date to "sort out our
disagreement over the scope and nature of this examination," and the deposition ended.
The court ultimately ordered Macaluso to appear at a resumed examination to be
conducted before the judge. However, the judge reserved ruling on any substantive
objections to the document requests or to questions that might be posed at the resumed
examination, and set a hearing date to allow Lennar to move to compel Macaluso to
produce documents at the resumed judgment debtor's examination. Lennar's motion to
compel the document production argued a judgment creditor is given wide latitude under
section 708.130 to inquire about the judgment debtor's property and business affairs, and
argued (1) the documents sought by the subpoena duces tecum were not protected by any
attorney-client or attorney work product privilege, and (2) the privacy objections raised
by Macaluso and his entities were meritless. Macaluso opposed the motion to compel,
arguing the document request was beyond the proper scope of an examination under
sections 708.110 and 708.130, and constituted an improper effort to conduct a wide-
ranging exploration of the financial affairs of Macaluso, ALF and other third parties. He
also argued the document request was improper because Macaluso (as well as ALF and a
variety of third parties) had substantial privacy interests in the materials sought by
Lennar, and also requested materials protected by both the attorney-client and work
product privileges.
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C. The Order and Notice of Appeal
The court entered an order overruling all of the objections lodged by Macaluso, his
law firm, and ALF to the subpoenaed documents, and granted Lennar's motion to compel
Macaluso to search for and produce documents responsive to Lennar's subpoena by
January 4, 2013. Macaluso filed a notice of appeal within the time required by law.
D. The Subsequent Proceedings and Writ Petition
Macaluso did not produce any documents by the January 4 deadline. Instead, he
informed Lennar that, although the notice of appeal may stay the order, he was gathering
documents responsive to the subpoenas and suggested, if Lennar examined the
documents Macaluso intended to provide and was sufficiently satisfied by the production
to permit the parties to reach an accord, the appeal might be dismissed. Lennar
contended the order was not stayed because it was a nonappealable discovery order, and
intended to seek appropriate relief in the trial court if Macaluso did not fully comply with
the order.
Lennar, asserting the order was nonappealable, moved to enforce the order. The
court, agreeing that the notice of appeal did not deprive it of jurisdiction to proceed to
enforce the order, scheduled a hearing to consider issuing an order to show cause re
contempt for Macaluso's refusal to comply with the order. Macaluso then filed the
instant writ petition, and this court issued an order to show cause and stayed further
proceedings.
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II
ANALYSIS
There is no dispute that, if the order is an appealable order within the ambit of
section 904.1, Macaluso's notice of appeal stays further proceedings, divesting the trial
court of subject matter jurisdiction over matters embraced by the order (Varian Medical
Systems, Inc. v. Delfino (2005) 35 Cal.4th 180, 189), and bars a contempt proceeding
premised on noncompliance with the order from which the appeal is taken. (Dow v.
Superior Court (1956) 140 Cal.App.2d 399, 410-411.) We therefore examine whether an
order that overrules a third party witness's objections to a subpoena duces tecum and
compels the third party witness to produce documents at a judgment debtor examination
held pursuant to section 708.110 is an appealable order within the meaning of section
904.1, subdivision (a)(2), which provides that "[a]n appeal . . . may be taken from . . .
[¶] . . . [¶] . . . an order made after a judgment . . . ."
Although the language of section 904.1, subdivision (a)(2), is broad, our Supreme
Court in Lakin v. Watkins Associated Industries (1993) 6 Cal.4th 644, 651 (Lakin) has
cautioned that "not every postjudgment order that follows a final appealable judgment is
appealable. To be appealable, a postjudgment order must satisfy two additional
requirements." (Fn. omitted.) The first requirement, not at issue here, is "that the issues
raised by the appeal from the order must be different from those arising from an appeal
from the judgment." (Id. at p. 651.) The second is that " 'the order must either affect the
judgment or relate to it by enforcing it or staying its execution.' " (Id. at pp. 651-652.)
Lennar, relying on Roden v. AmerisourceBergen Corp. (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 211
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(Roden), contends the second requirement is not met in this case. Macaluso, relying
principally on Dana Point Safe Harbor Collective v. Superior Court (2010) 51 Cal.4th 1
(Dana Point), asserts that a proper application of the principles outlined in Lakin to the
context of this case demonstrates the order is appealable.
In Lakin, the court explained that "postjudgment orders making a final
determination of rights or obligations of parties" (Lakin, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 653) have
been held appealable "even though they did not necessarily add to or subtract from the
judgment." (Ibid.)
Lakin noted one formulation of the test for whether an order affects the judgment
or relates to its enforcement is whether the order left the judgment intact " 'and neither
add[ed] to it nor subtract[ed] from it.' " (Lakin, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 652.) However,
Lakin cautioned against a talismanic employment of this verbal formulation, stating that
"[f]or some time, courts—including this one—have used the 'neither adds nor subtracts'
standard here employed by the Court of Appeal as a yardstick to measure whether a
postjudgment order affects the preceding judgment or relates to its enforcement.
[Citation.] This standard, however, has never been an exclusive statement of the
necessary relationship between a judgment and an appealable postjudgment order.
Although the standard can be useful in some circumstances, the effect on, or relationship
to, the judgment required to make a postjudgment order appealable is not limited to a
simple mathematical calculation." (Id. at p. 653.) Lakin noted the postjudgment orders it
previously held to be nonappealable fell into two main categories: (1) "orders that,
although following an earlier judgment, are more accurately understood as being
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preliminary to a later judgment, at which time they will become ripe for appeal" (id. at
p. 652); and (2) "orders [that pertain] to the preparation of a record for use in a future
appeal." (Ibid.) On the other hand, a postjudgment order "making a final determination
of rights or obligations of parties" is appealable even though it did not necessarily add to
or subtract from the judgment. (Id. at p. 653.)
We conclude, by reference to analogous cases, the order is appealable. In Dana
Point, supra, 51 Cal.4th 1, the issue was whether a trial court's order compelling
compliance with a legislative subpoena was appealable. The Supreme Court explained
that a final judgment is appealable and a "judgment is the final determination of the rights
of the parties [citation] ' " 'when it terminates the litigation between the parties on the
merits of the case and leaves nothing to be done but to enforce by execution what has
been determined.' " ' [Citations.] ' "It is not the form of the decree but the substance and
effect of the adjudication which is determinative. As a general test, which must be
adapted to the particular circumstances of the individual case, it may be said that where
no issue is left for future consideration except the fact of compliance or noncompliance
with the terms of the first decree, that decree is final, but where anything further in the
nature of judicial action on the part of the court is essential to a final determination of the
rights of the parties, the decree is interlocutory." ' [Quoting Griset v. Fair Political
Practices Com. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 688, 698, italics added by Dana Point.]" (Id. at p. 5.)
The Dana Point court concluded a trial court's order compelling compliance with a
legislative subpoena was appealable, because there was no issue left for future
consideration except the fact of compliance or noncompliance with the terms of the order.
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We perceive no meaningful distinction between the compliance order the Dana
Point court concluded was appealable and the order from which Macaluso appealed: both
orders represented a final determination that overruled the subpoenaed party's objections
to the document request and mandated that the materials described in the subpoena be
produced, and both orders left no issue for future consideration except the subpoenaed
party's compliance or noncompliance with the terms of the order.
We conclude the order was a final order from which an appeal may be taken. In
Smith v. Smith (2012) 208 Cal.App.4th 1074, the court characterized an analogous order
as a "collateral order" that was appealable. In Smith, the issue was whether an order
concerning the redaction of confidential juvenile court reports was an appealable order.
The court concluded that " '[w]here the trial court's ruling on a collateral issue "is
substantially the same as a final judgment in an independent proceeding" [citation], in
that it leaves the court no further action to take on "a matter which . . . is severable from
the general subject of the litigation" [citation], an appeal will lie from that collateral order
even though other matters in the case remain to be determined. [Citation.] . . .'
[Citation.] [¶] Orders allowing or disallowing access to confidential court records have
regularly been held appealable." (Id. at p. 1084.) The court ultimately ruled that,
because the order there "directs the performance of an act . . . that is final and not subject
to further resolution in future [proceedings] [citation] . . . the order is appealable as a
collateral order." (Ibid.) Here, the order similarly directing Macaluso to perform an act--
to produce records claimed to be confidential or privileged--is final and not subject to
further resolution in future proceedings. Accordingly, even without the guidance of
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Dana Point, it appears the order would be appealable under the rationale of the so-called
collateral order exception.
Lennar asserts Dana Point is distinguishable because the present order is a
discovery order, which is ordinarily not separately appealable (see, e.g., Oak Grove
School Dist. v. City Title Ins. Co. (1963) 217 Cal.App.2d 678, 709), and the Dana Point
court allegedly expressly distinguished a legislative subpoena from a nonappealable
discovery order because the latter " 'already involves the court and will continue to do
so.' " (Dana Point, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 10.) However, the Dana Point court observed
that "discovery meant 'a formal exchange of evidentiary information between parties to a
pending action, and that meaning does not include a subpoena issued, as here, by an
administrative agency for purely investigative purposes.' " (Id. at p. 11, italics added.)
Because the subpoena here did not seek to compel a party to a pending action to make
evidentiary disclosures, but was instead a subpoena issued to a previously uninvolved
third party for purely investigative purposes, we remain convinced the order here was an
appealable order under the rationale of Dana Point. Indeed, because of the nature of the
parties involved and the subject matter of the order, we agree with the Dana Point court
that "[e]ven if this subpoena were akin to a discovery request, the appropriate analogy
would be to discovery orders ancillary to cases pending in other jurisdictions, which have
been held to be final judgments for purposes of appealability." (Id. at p. 13, fn. 8.)
Lennar asserts Roden is controlling and compels the conclusion the order was a
nonappealable discovery order. In Roden, the plaintiff obtained a judgment against his
former employer that entitled the plaintiff to collect cash and employment benefits from
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it. The trial court subsequently entered an order permitting the plaintiff to conduct
postjudgment discovery from the former employer concerning the plaintiff's employment
benefits, because the trial court concluded it had retained jurisdiction to determine the
amount of benefits payable under the judgment it had awarded. (Roden, supra, 130
Cal.App.4th at p. 214.) The appellate court concluded the order permitting the plaintiff to
conduct postjudgment discovery was not an appealable order because, under Lakin, one
test for whether a postjudgment order is nonappealable is when the order, although
following an earlier judgment, is " ' "more accurately understood as being preliminary to
a later judgment, at which time [it] will become ripe for appeal" [quoting Lakin, supra, 6
Cal.4th at p. 652] . . . . On the other hand, postjudgment orders "making a final
determination of rights or obligations of parties" are appealable . . . .' " (Roden, at
p. 216.) Roden concluded the order granting the motion to compel was not appealable
because it "makes no final determination of the rights or obligations of the parties.
Rather, it is preparatory to a later ruling, [reasoning that] neither the judgment nor the
postjudgment order that was the subject of the preceding appeal resolved all of the issues
pertaining to Roden's employment benefits." (Ibid.)
Roden has no application to the instant case for several reasons. First, it appears
Roden considered the order to be a discovery order that resolved disputes between parties
to an ongoing lawsuit preparatory to a later ruling that would become encompassed in a
later final judgment. Here, Macaluso was not a party to an ongoing lawsuit from which
he might later be able to appeal and challenge the merits of the ruling on his objections to
the subpoena, and the order was not preparatory to a later ruling that would be
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encompassed in a final judgment from which Macaluso could have appealed. Instead, the
order was a final determination that Macaluso was obligated to produce certain
documents, and "no issue is left for future consideration except the fact of compliance or
noncompliance with the terms of the [order]." Roden does not undermine our conclusion
that, under Lakin and Dana Point, the order was appealable.
DISPOSITION
Let a writ issue directing the superior court to vacate its order to show cause re
contempt and to proceed in a manner consistent with this opinion. The stay issued by this
court on February 6, 2013, is vacated. Macaluso is entitled to recover costs as prevailing
party in this writ proceeding. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.493(a)(1)(A).)
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
McDONALD, Acting P. J.
WE CONCUR:
McINTYRE, J.
IRION, J.
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