Filed 1/12/16 Pack v. Hoge Fenton Jones & Appel, Inc. CA1/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
ROBERT PACK,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
A139558
v.
HOGE FENTON JONES & APPEL, INC., (Alameda County
et al., Super. Ct. No. RG 11 556084)
Defendants and Respondents.
On the eve of trial, plaintiff Robert Pack was under a court order to produce his
expert witnesses for deposition. Expert testimony was crucial to plaintiff’s case, a legal
malpractice action against his former attorneys. Plaintiff cancelled the depositions, in
violation of the court’s order, and removed the case to federal district court in an act
characterized by the district court as “a paradigmatic example of objectively
unreasonable removal” that “squandered valuable resources—[the federal] Court’s, the
state court’s, and Defendants’.” Upon remand, the trial court issued evidentiary sanctions
against the plaintiff for discovery abuse, precluding plaintiff from introducing testimony
from his designated experts.
The case eventually went to trial. After plaintiff made his opening statement, and
conceded that he had no experts to testify as to the standard of care for federal securities
litigation, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for nonsuit, ruling that plaintiff could
not prove required elements of his case, including breach of the standard of care.
1
After the nonsuit was granted, plaintiff obtained new counsel and moved for a new
trial. He submitted evidence of trial counsel’s misconduct and argued that the
misconduct constituted an irregularity in the proceedings that justified a new trial. The
trial court denied the motion, ruling that the conduct of which plaintiff complained was
“indistinguishable from professional negligence” and that “[e]vidence of incompetence
by Plaintiff’s own counsel in a civil proceeding is not a basis to grant a new trial based on
irregularity in the proceedings.”
In this appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’
motion for evidentiary sanctions and in denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
Finding no error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 2011, plaintiff Robert Pack (Pack), represented by two attorneys including
Russell A. Robinson (Robinson), filed an action for legal malpractice and breach of
fiduciary duty against his former attorneys: Hoge Fenton Jones and Appel, Inc., Sblend
Sblendorio, and Paul Breen (collectively Hoge Fenton).1 The underlying action that
formed the basis for Pack’s malpractice claim was a federal securities case entitled Pack
v. McCausland (underlying action). As we will see, attorney Robinson is at the center of
this appeal.2
1. Hoge Fenton Attempts to Schedule Expert Depositions
With a September 4, 2012, trial date fast approaching, Pack and Hoge Fenton
exchanged expert witness disclosures on July 16. Pack disclosed five experts, including
retained expert Carol Langford (Langford), who was designated to testify on topics
including “the standard of care.” Hoge Fenton noticed the depositions of Pack’s experts
for late July and early August. Pack did not object to the notice.
1
Pack also named Samuel Goldstein as a defendant. Pack subsequently settled
with Goldstein, who is not a party here.
2
Robinson is listed as one of the attorneys of record on the original complaint,
although he apparently did not take over full responsibility for the case until about March
2012.
2
The depositions never took place. Five days before the first deposition, Robinson
left a voicemail and sent an email to Hoge Fenton’s counsel cancelling the depositions
“in view of the [trial court’s tentative] ruling [denying Hoge Fenton’s motion for
summary judgment] and other factors.” Hoge Fenton sought to reschedule the
depositions but Pack refused.
Hoge Fenton then filed a motion to compel Pack to produce his experts for
deposition during the last week in August. In his response to the motion, Pack relented
and agreed to produce his experts: “Plaintiff, after further reflection and review, does not
oppose the motion provided the depositions take place the week of August 27, 2012
(except August 28, 2012), at mutually convenient dates and times.” Notwithstanding
Pack’s apparent change of heart, the trial court granted the motion on Friday, August 24,
and directed the parties to meet and confer to schedule the depositions as Pack had
offered. Robinson sent an email about a proposed schedule that afternoon, and Hoge
Fenton’s counsel replied within two hours with a proposal for depositions to be taken on
August 29, 30 and 31. On Monday, August 27, Hoge Fenton’s counsel emailed Robinson
seeking to confirm the proposed deposition schedule. Two days later, on August 29, just
hours before the first deposition was to begin, Robinson sent a terse email to Hoge
Fenton’s counsel: “Please note that there will be no depositions this week. Thank you.”
2. Pack Removes the Case to Federal Court on the Eve of Trial
Meanwhile, and apparently without any advance warning to Hoge Fenton, Pack
filed a notice of removal in the federal district court on August 28, the day before the first
deposition of Pack’s expert was scheduled and just four court days before trial. On
August 29, Pack filed a separate notice of removal in the superior court. This, of course,
was the same day that Pack cancelled the expert depositions. Not only did the
cancellation violate the trial court’s August 24 order to produce the experts for
deposition; in his notice of removal, Pack acknowledged that “[a]ll existing orders,
including rulings on discovery . . . remain in effect until modified by the federal court.”
In a written order filed December 10, 2012, the federal district court criticized
Pack’s attempt to remove the case and remanded the case to the superior court. The
3
district judge wrote that “a desultory consultation of the applicable statutes would have
revealed to Mr. Pack and his counsel that, as a plaintiff, he was not permitted to remove.”
The removal was “objectively unreasonable,” and “squandered valuable resources—this
Court’s, the state court’s, and Defendants’.” The district court subsequently ordered Pack
to pay $5,000 for Hoge Fenton’s attorney’s fees.3
3. The Trial Court Issues Evidentiary Sanctions Against Pack
On January 30, 2013, after remand to the superior court, the trial judge told the
parties at trial setting that the case was to “pick up right where we left off with where the
discovery was—there was already a discovery cut off, so neither side, you know, should
be in a better or worse position than where you were on August whatever—28th.”
Hoge Fenton then filed a motion under Code of Civil Procedure sections
2023.010, 2023.030, 2025.420 and 2025.450,4 seeking evidentiary sanctions to exclude
testimony from Pack’s retained and non-retained experts, on the theory that preclusion
was necessary to prevent Pack from benefiting from cancelling the court-ordered and
scheduled depositions on the eve of trial. Pack opposed the motion, contending that
excluding his experts would have him “sanctioned twice for the same conduct,” because
the district court had already required Pack to pay $5,000 in defendants’ attorney fees for
improperly removing the case to federal court.
The trial court granted Defendants’ motion after a hearing, finding that Hoge
Fenton had “made a persuasive showing that [Pack] removed this case to federal court
solely for tactical reasons, and that [Pack] was not prepared to produce his experts for
deposition the week of August 27, 2012, as [he] agreed, and as ordered by the court.”
3
At the same time he removed this case, Pack had also filed a new case in federal
court, which, as the district court noted, “involves many of the claims previously asserted
in the state court action.” Although Pack voluntarily dismissed the new federal
complaint, the district court imposed rule 11 sanctions (Fed. Rules Civ. Proc., rule 11, 28
U.S.C.) against Pack and Robinson, finding that the new complaint “was filed for an
improper purpose,” specifically to “avoid[] the state court’s adverse rulings through
forum shopping,” and that the claims asserted in the new complaint were frivolous.
4
All further statutory references are the Code of Civil Procedure.
4
The trial court wrote: “The federal court found that [Pack’s] removal of the case to
federal district court was frivolous. . . . Further, the removal did not affect the court’s
previously issued orders, or excuse [Pack’s] failure to produce his experts for
deposition. . . . [¶] The court concludes that [Pack] intentionally violated the court’s order
and breached his agreement to provide his experts for deposition, and that Hoge Fenton
was substantially prejudiced by the expense of preparing for those depositions and
responding to [Pack]’s frivolous removal to federal court. . . . For that reason, the
evidentiary sanctions sought by Hoge Fenton are justified C.C.P. sec. 2025.450(h)[5] . . . .
[¶] To the extent the court has discretion, that discretion will not be exercised to allow
[Pack] to benefit from his improper removal of this case to federal court. [Pack’s]
gamesmanship caused a significant waste of the resources of Hoge Fenton, which was
prepared to take the depositions and proceed to trial, and also caused an unjustified waste
of the court’s public resources.”
The trial court emphasized at the hearing that its order precluding Pack’s experts
was not a sanction for the improper removal to federal court, but was rather a response to
Pack’s failure to comply with the court’s prior order setting a deadline for expert
depositions. As the trial court explained, “I am sanctioning the Plaintiff, Mr. Robinson.
Evidentiary sanctions. But not directly because of the removal. That—what the federal
court did is different. [¶] I’m sanctioning evidentiary—I’m imposing evidentiary
sanctions for the failure to comply with my order on completing the depositions within a
specific amount of time.”
4. The Trial Court Grants Hoge Fenton’s Motion for Nonsuit
The bench trial began. After Pack’s opening statement, Hoge Fenton moved for
nonsuit under section 581c, arguing that Pack would not be able to prove his claims
because he had no expert to testify as to the standard of care for handling a federal
5
Section 2025.450, subdivision (h) provides that if a “party . . . fails to obey an
order compelling attendance, testimony, and production [at deposition], the court may
make those orders that are just, including the imposition of an issue sanction, an evidence
sanction, or a terminating sanction . . . .”
5
securities action, nor could he prove that he would have won the underlying case absent
Hoge Fenton’s alleged malpractice. Pack acknowledged that he had no such experts, and
the trial court allowed him to augment his opening statement. The trial court then granted
Defendants’ nonsuit motion, ruling that Pack could not prove his case because he could
not prove “the essential element of standard of care and breach of standard of care and
causation.”
5. The Trial Court Denies Pack’s Motion for a New Trial
Shortly thereafter, Pack, represented by new counsel, David H. Schwartz
(Schwartz), moved for a new trial under section 657 on several grounds, only one of
which is raised on appeal. Pack argued that a pattern of “fraud and deceit” by his former
attorney Robinson constituted an irregularity in the proceedings that justified a new trial
under section 657, subdivision (1). In support of this argument, Pack offered evidence
that Robinson failed to obtain an expert to testify as to the standard of care for handling a
federal securities action; misled Pack about that failure; and gave Pack incorrect advice
about the effects of removing the case to federal court.6
6
The evidence included a declaration from Langford, who Pack had designated to
testify as to the standard of care. Langford stated that her role was to testify only as an
expert regarding Hoge Fenton’s failure to adhere to the California Rules of Professional
Responsibility, and not the standard of care. In July 2012 she discussed with Pack and
Robinson “the need for an expert as to the standard of care for handling a federal
securities action and issues of proximate cause,” asked Robinson who that expert would
be, and Robinson responded “that he had not yet located an expert for those subjects.”
Pack also submitted his own declaration, stating that after the discussion with
Langford, Robinson reported that he had identified Steven P. Gordon (Gordon) as an
expert to testify about the standard of care and proximate cause. Pack saw Gordon’s
name on the witness list that was served and filed in mid-August 2012, and assumed that
Gordon was his expert for the standard of care and proximate cause. It was not until
spring 2013 that Pack saw the July 16, 2012 expert disclosure, which identified Langford
as an expert on the standard of care and which made no mention of Gordon.
Pack said that by mid-September 2012, he had became suspicious as to whether
Gordon existed. Gordon’s email address was a hotmail account and, despite being asked,
Robinson never gave him Gordon’s CV or a copy of the agreement between Gordon and
Robinson. Nor would Robinson tell Pack the name or location of Gordon’s firm, beyond
6
The trial court denied the new trial motion after a hearing. As to whether there
was any “irregularity in the proceedings” within the meaning of section 657, subdivision
(1), the court wrote: “[Pack’s] evidence shows that his attorney failed to secure an expert
witness to testify about the duty of care in securities litigation, that [Pack] relied on him
to do so, and that counsel then convinced [Pack] to remove the case to federal court in an
attempt to avoid the effect of his failure to secure an expert witness. Such conduct is
indistinguishable from professional negligence. [Pack’s] reliance on his attorney to
obtain expert witnesses, and the resulting failure to discover his attorney’s alleged
omissions until it was too late, does not distinguish this case from other cases involving
alleged attorney malpractice.” The court concluded, “Evidence of incompetence by
[Pack’s] own counsel in a civil proceeding is not a basis to grant a new trial based on
irregularity in the proceedings.” Pack is “bound by the actions of his counsel.”
This appeal timely followed, challenging the order precluding expert testimony
and the denial of the motion for new trial.
DISCUSSION
A. The Trial Court’s Order Granting Defendants’ Motion for Evidentiary Sanctions
1. Applicable Law
The Civil Discovery Act provides that if a party “fails to obey an order compelling
attendance, testimony and production [at deposition], the court may make those orders
that are just, including the imposition of an issue sanction, an evidence sanction, or a
terminating sanction.” (§ 2025.450, subd. (h).) An evidence sanction, as its name
suggests, is “an order prohibiting any party engaging in the misuse of the discovery
saying that he thought Gordon’s offices were in San Mateo. At one point, Pack accused
Robinson of “creating a fake expert.” Robinson denied the accusation.
Pack also submitted a declaration from his current attorney, Schwartz, who stated
that the State Bar of California Attorney Search page showed no attorney with the name
“Stephen Gordon” or “Steven Gordon,” and he had been unable to locate any
communications with Gordon in the case files that he received from Robinson. Robinson
promised Schwartz he would provide a disk with correspondence and files related to
expert witnesses, but he never did.
7
process from introducing designated matters in evidence.” (§ 2023.030, subd. (c).) In
contrast, a terminating sanction is an order “striking out the pleadings or parts of the
pleadings of any party engaging in the misuse of the discovery process” or “staying
further proceedings by that party until an order for discovery is obeyed,” or “dismissing
the action or any part of the action, of that party,” or “rendering a judgment by default
against that party.” (§ 2023.030, subd. (d).)
The trial court has broad discretion to impose sanctions “properly tailored to
respond to” the conduct at issue. (McArthur v. Bockman (1989) 208 Cal.App.3d 1076,
1081 (McArthur).) “Discovery sanctions must be tailored in order to remedy the
offending party’s discovery abuse, should not give the aggrieved party more than what it
is entitled to, and should not be used to punish the offending party.” (Karlsson v. Ford
Motor Co. (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 1202, 1217.) We review an order of sanctions for
abuse of discretion: “[t]he power to impose discovery sanctions is a broad discretion
subject to reversal only for arbitrary, capricious, or whimsical action.” (Calvert Fire Ins.
Co. v. Cropper (1983) 141 Cal.App.3d 901, 904.)
2. Analysis
Pack does not dispute that the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes a trial court to
issue sanctions for failure to obey an order compelling a witness’s attendance at
deposition (§ 2025.450, subd. (h)), or that he intentionally disobeyed the trial court’s
discovery order that required him to produce his experts for deposition, or that his
removal of the case to federal court was frivolous, wasteful and a delaying tactic. Rather,
he contends that the trial court abused its discretion imposing the sanction in this case of
excluding testimony from his experts. Pack advances three arguments. First, the
sanctions issued by the trial court were duplicative of the removal sanctions issued by the
federal district court and therefore punitive. Second, because he needed expert testimony
to prove his case, the sanctions here were effectively terminating sanctions, and therefore
disproportionate as a response to “conduct that merely caused delay of the case.” Third,
the trial court’s order imposing sanctions cited authorities that do not support the
sanctions that were issued. We address the arguments in turn.
8
a. “Duplicative” Sanctions
Pack contends that the trial court sanctioned him for removing the case to federal
court; from that, he concludes that the trial court’s sanctions were “duplicative” of the
federal court’s sanctions and therefore “punitive.” Pack’s premise is incorrect, and we
reject his conclusion.
The federal court ordered Pack to pay Hoge Fenton “$5,000 in attorneys’ fees in
connection with Mr. Pack’s improper removal,” pursuant to a federal statute permitting
the imposition of “just costs and . . . expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a
result of the removal.” (28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).)
The trial court, in contrast, was explicit that it was not sanctioning Pack for the
removal, but rather for his intentional violation of the trial court’s August 24, 2012,
discovery order to produce his experts for deposition during the week of August 27, an
order that Pack himself concedes remained in effect even after removal. The notice of
removal that Pack’s counsel filed in the trial court went so far as to include the following
language: “The federal court takes the action as it stood in the state court when removed.
All existing orders, including rulings on discovery and extensions of time to plead,
remain in effect until modified by the federal court.”7
This is not to deny that the trial court considered the impact of the removal in
determining what sanctions would be appropriate. How could it not? Removal was part
of what the trial court characterized as “gamesmanship,” because Robinson was not
7
In support of this proposition, Pack cited Jenkins v. Commonwealth Land Title
Insurance Co. (9th Cir. 1996) 95 F.3d 791, 795 (Jenkins). Jenkins relied on Granny
Goose Foods, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Teamsters and Auto Truck Drivers (1974) 415 U.S.
423, 436 (Granny Goose), which discussed 28 United States Code section 1450—part of
the statutory scheme that governs the removal of cases from state court. Section 1450
states, in part, “All injunctions, orders, and other proceedings had in such action prior to
its removal shall remain in full force and effect until dissolved or modified by the district
court.” (28 U.S.C. § 1450.) The Supreme Court in Granny Goose explained that “the
statute [§ 1450] ensures that interlocutory orders entered by the state court to protect
various rights of the parties will not lapse upon removal.” (Granny Goose, supra, 415
U.S. at p. 436.) “Congress clearly intended to preserve the effectiveness of state court
orders after removal.” (Ibid.)
9
prepared to produce his experts for deposition during the week of August 27, as the court
had ordered. By filing the notice of removal on August 28, Pack was able to postpone
the trial that had been set for September 3, and then convert the postponement of the trial
into an opportunity to belatedly produce his experts for deposition. As we discuss below,
the sanctions imposed by the trial court were tailored to prevent Pack from reaping the
benefit of his failure to timely produce his experts. They were not “duplicative” of the
attorney fee award ordered by the federal district court.
b. “Disproportionate” Sanctions
Pack seeks to characterize the trial court’s sanctions as “terminating” rather than
“evidentiary” in an effort to argue that the trial court imposed too harsh a sanction in
view of the facts. As part of this argument, he maintains that the trial court issued
sanctions because of the removal, when in fact the trial court issued sanctions because
Pack violated the trial court’s order to produce his experts for deposition, as we discussed
above. He also claims that the sanctioned conduct “caused only delay,” when the trial
court found that Pack’s conduct “substantially prejudiced” Hoge Fenton.
To support his characterization of the sanctions as “terminating,” Pack contends
that the sanctions barred him from introducing testimony to prove essential elements of
his claim, specifically, the standard of care, and Hoge Fenton’s breach of that standard.
But the record indicates that the sanctions order did not itself preclude Pack from proving
his case. Even if the trial court had allowed Pack to introduce testimony from his experts,
he could not have used their testimony to prove the standard of care for handling federal
securities litigation: in connection with its ruling on Pack’s motion for a new trial, the
court found that it was “undisputed that Plaintiff did not have an expert to testify about
the duty of care for federal securities litigation at the time of the September 4, 2012
trial.”8
8
Although Pack had previously designated expert Langford to testify on that
topic, in support of his motion for a new trial, he submitted a declaration from Langford
in which she states that she would not have testified as to the standard of care.
10
In any event, the cases that Pack cites to support his position that the trial court
issued “terminating” sanctions and that the sanctions were disproportionate to his conduct
are not helpful to Pack, as we discuss below.
McGinty v. Superior Court (1994) 26 Cal.App.4th 204, in which the Court of
Appeal vacated a sanctions order, does not support Pack’s argument, despite his claims to
the contrary. In McGinty, the trial court precluded testimony from plaintiff’s expert
because the expert had forwarded documents to plaintiff’s attorney which related to
defendant and were subject to a protective order in another case in which the expert had
been retained. (Id. at p. 207.) The Court of Appeal, however, characterized the facts as a
plaintiff’s attorney’s “inadvertent receipt of documents due to someone else’s violation of
a court order” (id. at p. 213), without prejudice to the defendant, because the documents
at issue were discoverable “through normal discovery channels,” and in fact the trial
court had ordered defendant to produce them long before plaintiff received them. (Id. at
pp. 213-214.) Here, in contrast, the trial court issued sanctions in response to Pack’s
willful violation of the trial court’s discovery order, a violation that the trial court found
substantially prejudiced the defendants, who incurred the “expense of preparing for [the
improperly-cancelled expert] depositions and responding to [Pack’s] frivolous removal to
federal court.
Pack’s reliance on Sherman v. Kinetic Concepts, Inc. (1998) 67 Cal.App.4th 1152
(Sherman) is misplaced. Sherman was a product liability/negligence action in which
plaintiffs appealed a judgment after a jury returned a unanimous defense verdict. (Id. at
p. 1158.) Just after the verdict, plaintiffs learned that defendant “failed to produce and
concealed the existence of crucial documents,” and compounded that misconduct by
conduct at trial in which defendant “created the false impression its product rarely
malfunctioned and then with only . . . inconsequential effects.” (Id. at p. 1155.) The trial
court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, and did not reach the merits of plaintiffs’
motion for sanctions, concluding that it could not award them discovery sanctions so late
in the proceedings. (Id. at p. 1163.) In discussing appropriate sanctions in Sherman, the
Court of Appeal raised the hypothetical possibility of the trial court sanctioning
11
defendants by entering a default judgment, rather than ordering a new trial. (Ibid.) The
court rejected that possibility because it would have provided an unfair benefit to the
plaintiffs: they would have been “in a better position than if discovery had been obtained
in the first place.” (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal remanded for a new trial, ordered the trial
court to impose monetary sanctions to at least cover the costs incurred by plaintiffs in the
initial trial, and left it to the trial court’s discretion to determine whether additional
sanctions should be imposed. (Id. at pp. 1163-1164.)
Here, Pack argues that the evidentiary sanctions imposed by the trial court “gave
[Hoge Fenton] more than they were entitled to,” and cites Sherman for the proposition
that terminating sanctions are inappropriate remedies for willful discovery misconduct
because they would put the aggrieved party in a better position than if discovery had been
obtained in the first place. But the facts and procedural posture of Sherman differ
dramatically from the facts and posture here. The trial court’s evidentiary sanctions order
here is not analogous to the hypothetical default judgment discussed by the Court of
Appeal in Sherman. Moreover, the sanctions order here did not provide a benefit to Hoge
Fenton: it merely preserved the state of affairs that existed before the removal, thus
preventing Pack from receiving an unfair benefit and preventing Hoge Fenton from being
further prejudiced. As the trial court explained in denying Pack’s motion for a new trial,
Pack “would have unfairly benefitted by the bad faith removal of the case to federal court
. . . if he had been allowed to provide experts after the case was remanded.”
Similarly, Duggan v. Moss (1979) 98 Cal.App.3d 735, cited by Pack, is
inapplicable. There the court issued an order compelling plaintiff to respond to
interrogatories and pay sanctions, and stated that the complaint would be dismissed if
plaintiff failed to comply with the order. The Court of Appeal reversed because the Code
of Civil Procedure does not authorize a trial court to impose conditional sanctions. (Id. at
p. 742.) No such conditional order was issued here.
Pack cites Parker v. Wolters Kluwer United States, Inc. (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th
285, 296, for the proposition that terminating sanctions may be an abuse of discretion
when a party has failed to comply with discovery requests if the party seeking sanctions
12
does not show that it was prejudiced. This case does not help Pack for two reasons.
First, the cited portion of the case stands for the proposition that discovery sanctions
cannot be awarded ex parte, which is not the issue here. (Ibid.) Second, the portion of
Parker to which Pack apparently intends to refer involved a terminating sanction in favor
of parties who did not themselves propound discovery or show how they were prejudiced
by the conduct at issue. (Id. at pp. 297-298.) Here, Hoge Fenton propounded the
discovery in question, and the trial court found that Hoge Fenton established it had been
“substantially prejudiced.”
Pack also cites several cases to support his contention that the trial court erred in
not issuing some unspecified “lesser sanctions” or “less severe sanctions,” As an initial
matter, the question before us “is not whether ‘less drastic alternatives’ existed” to the
sanctions issued by the trial court, but “whether the trial court abused its discretion by
imposing the sanction it chose.” (Do It Urself Moving & Storage, Inc. v. Brown, Leifer,
Slatkin & Berns (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 27, 37 [affirming evidentiary sanctions that
precluded expert testimony], superseded by statute on another issue as stated in Union
Bank v. Superior Court (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 573, 583.) In any event, the cases on
which Pack relies do not support his argument.
Pack relies heavily on McArthur, supra, 208 Cal.App.3d 1076, a case that is
instructive and actually supports the trial court’s ruling. In McArthur, the Court of
Appeal reversed an order for terminating sanctions, stating that the trial court should have
issued evidence sanctions instead. (Id. at p. 1081.) In McArthur, defendants violated a
court order to appear at a continuation of their depositions to answer questions about their
financial condition in connection with plaintiffs’ claim for punitive damages. (Id. at p.
1079.) The trial court then issued terminating sanctions, struck defendants’ pleadings,
permitted the entry of a default, and awarded plaintiffs even more general and
compensatory damages than plaintiffs had sought in the complaint. (Id. at p. 1080.) The
Court of Appeal reversed, writing that “a sanction which directs the entry of a default
judgment is ‘ordinarily a drastic measure which should be employed with caution.’ ”
(Ibid., quoting Deyo v. Kilbourne (1978) 84 Cal.App.3d 771, 793.) In the absence of
13
other abusive litigation conduct, and in view of the limited purpose of the discovery at
issue and the “relatively minimal potential prejudice” to the plaintiffs, the Court of
Appeal held that the sanctions were not “properly tailored to respond to the defendants’
conduct.” (McArthur, supra, 208 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1080-1081.) The trial court “should
have tied the sanction to the limited purpose of the deposition,” which it might have done
by precluding defendants “from introducing evidence of their wealth at trial,” or by
“instructing the jury to assume that the defendants’ financial condition would support an
award of punitive damages up to the $3 million figure suggested by the [plaintiffs].” (Id.
at p. 1081.)
Here, unlike in McArthur, Pack’s litigation misconduct went far beyond the failure
of witnesses to appear for continuation of their depositions for limited questioning.
(McArthur, supra, 208 Cal.App.3d at p. 1079.) Pack failed to produce any of his experts
for deposition in violation of his agreement to produce those experts (an agreement made
only after Defendants had filed a motion to compel) and in violation of the trial court’s
order, the continuing validity of which Pack had explicitly recognized in his notice of
removal. The depositions of those experts would not have been limited, but would have
covered essential elements of Pack’s case. Furthermore, the trial court found that Pack
improperly removed the case to federal court on the eve of trial “solely for tactical
reasons,” including that he “was not prepared to produce his experts.” In light of those
findings, the trial court issued an evidence sanction that was tailored to address Pack’s
misconduct: because Pack refused to present his experts for deposition, he was precluded
from introducing testimony from those experts.
Pack also relies on Trail v. Cornwell (1984) 161 Cal.App.3d 477, which is
inapposite. In Trail, the Court of Appeal remanded the case “for reconsideration of a
proper sanction for appellant’s wilful refusal to attend a single deposition,” after the trial
court issued terminating sanctions. (Id. at p. 489.) In Trail, the trial court’s error was
issuing discovery sanctions under the Code of Civil Procedure when the statutory
prerequisites for the sanctions order had not been met. (Id. at pp. 485-486.) Here, there
14
is no question that the trial court complied with the statutory requirements before issuing
the order.
In summary, the trial court’s sanctions order here excluded testimony from Pack’s
experts after Pack had willfully violated the trial court’s order to produce them for
deposition; the order did not strike any pleadings, dismiss the action, or render a default,
and it did not prevent Pack from proceeding to trial on his claims. Accordingly, the order
imposed an evidence sanction, as authorized by section 2023.030, subdivision (c), and
not a terminating sanction as authorized by subdivision (d). The sanctions were tailored
to address Pack’s discovery misuse: as the trial court noted, if Pack had been permitted to
belatedly produce the experts he had refused to produce in August 2012, despite his own
agreement and a court order, he would have unfairly benefitted from his misconduct.
c. Cases Cited by the Trial Court
Pack contends that the cases cited by the trial court in its sanctions order “do not
support the sanctions issued.”
Pack argues that Haber Oil Co., Inc. v. Stanley Swabbing and Well Service, Inc.,
(Tex.Ct.App. 1987) 741 S.W.2d 611, is inapposite because the sanctions in that case were
issued in response to violation of an order to produce documents at a deposition, rather
than in response to failure to produce a witness at deposition. Pack also notes that the
case does not bind a California court. But the trial court cited Haber Oil for the
uncontroversial proposition, admitted by Pack in his notice of removal, that the removal
of a case to federal court does not affect the state court’s previously issued orders,
including discovery orders. Pack himself made that point in his separate notice of
removal, citing Jenkins, a Ninth Circuit case, to support it. (Jenkins, supra, 95 F.3d at p.
795.) Pack’s argument regarding Haber Oil thus lacks merit.
Pack also objects to the trial court’s citation of Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt
Disney Co. (2007) 155 Cal.App.4th 736, 758 (Slesinger), which the trial court referenced
as citing Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. v. Superior Court (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 272
(Peat). Pack claims that the two cases “applied terminating sanctions for far more
15
egregious conduct that substantially impaired the opposing party’s ability to present its
case (as opposed to the mere delay of discovery presented here).”
We reject Pack’s argument regarding these cases for two reasons. First, the cases
were not material to the trial court’s ruling: the minutes reflect that the trial court granted
Hoge Fenton’s motion for sanctions without reference to these cases. The case references
were added to the proposed order submitted by Hoge Fenton, who had received
permission from the court to add evidentiary and case citations to the tentative order.
Second, the cited portion of Slesinger simply stands for the uncontroversial proposition
that “California courts have inherent authority to impose evidentiary sanctions as a
remedy for litigation misconduct,” and cites Peat as supporting authority. (Slesinger,
supra, 155 Cal.App.4th at p. 758, citing Peat, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d at pp. 286-291.)
In sum, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in issuing its
sanctions order.
B. The Trial Court’s Order Denying Pack’s Motion for a New Trial
1. Applicable Law
A motion for a new trial must be based on statutory grounds. (Fomco, Inc. v. Joe
Maggio, Inc. (1961) 55 Cal.2d 162, 166.) The principal grounds for new trial are set
forth in section 657; at issue here is section 657, subdivision (1), which provides that a
new trial may be granted when there has been “[i]rregularity in the proceedings of the
court, jury or adverse party, or any order of the court or abuse of discretion by which
either party was prevented from having a fair trial.”
We review a trial court’s denial of a motion for new trial for abuse of discretion.
(City of Los Angeles v. Decker (1977) 18 Cal.3d 860, 871-872.) In reviewing an order
denying a new trial, “we must fulfill our obligation of reviewing the entire record,
including the evidence, so as to make an independent determination as to whether the
error was prejudicial.” (Id. at p. 872.)
2. Analysis
Pack appeals the denial of his new trial motion on just one ground: he is entitled
to a new trial because the “positive misconduct” of his trial counsel, Robinson,
16
“obliterate[d] the attorney-client-relationship” and prevented him from having a fair trial.
He concludes that because Robinson’s conduct prevented him from having a fair trial, the
trial was “irregular” under section 657, subdivision (1).
Hoge Fenton argues that Pack’s argument is waived because it was not raised in
the trial court. (See Estate of Westerman (1968) 68 Cal.2d 267, 279 [“issues not raised in
the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal”].) Hoge Fenton may be
correct. On appeal, Pack argues that there was essentially no attorney-client relationship
at all between him and Robinson. In the trial court, however, Pack argued that Robinson
was “incompeten[t] and negligen[t],” and that Robinson had deceived Pack and the trial
court. In the trial court, Pack did not argue that the attorney-client relationship had been
“obliterated,” nor did he cite the cases on which he now primarily relies for this theory.
This is not surprising given that these cases, which we will discuss below, were not even
decided in the context of motions for new trial under section 657.
Even if we consider Pack’s argument here, it lacks merit. We start, however, with
the argument Pack made below. Pack contended that Robinson was incompetent and
negligent. The trial court agreed, finding that Robinson’s misconduct constituted
“professional negligence,” and that Pack’s grievances against Robinson are
indistinguishable from circumstances giving rise to allegations of attorney malpractice. It
is well established that the incompetence of a party’s own counsel in a civil case is not a
basis for granting the party a new trial based on irregularity in the proceedings. (In re
Marriage of Liu (1987) 197 Cal.App.3d 143, 154-155 [discussing cases and concluding it
is “clear that the negligence of trial counsel is not a ground upon which a new trial may
be granted”]; Chevalier v. Dubin (1980) 104 Cal.App.3d 975, 978 [no authority permits
“a . . . court to grant a retrial to an unsuccessful litigant in a civil case . . . on the grounds
of incompetency of counsel”].) On this basis, the trial court correctly denied the motion
for a new trial to the extent plaintiff sought relief for Robinson’s conduct.
Pack’s new argument on appeal, that the trial court erred in denying the new trial
motion because his attorney-client relationship with Robinson was “obliterated,” rests on
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inapplicable cases and on a factual predicate—the abandonment of a client by his
counsel—that is not supported by the record.
Pack cites Freedman v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (1987) 196 Cal.App.3d 696,
705 (Freedman) for the principle that if attorney conduct “obliterates” the attorney-client
relationship, there is an exception to the general rule that an attorney’s inexcusable
neglect is chargeable to the client. In Freedman, however, the issue was not a motion for
new trial under section 657: rather, the trial court had dismissed plaintiffs’ case under
section 583.410 for inexcusable delay in moving the case to trial. (Id. at p. 702.)
Moreover, Freedman recognized that the exception to the general rule was narrow and
required a finding that the attorney “fail[ed] to represent [the client] and thus de facto
substitute[d] out of the case.” (Id. at p. 706.) The Court of Appeal affirmed the
dismissal, concluding that the plaintiffs “should be charged with [their counsel’s] delay in
moving the case to trial.” (Id. at pp. 704, 708.) The attorney in Freedman procrastinated
and delayed, but continued to represent his clients. (Id. at p. 707.)
In deciding Freedman, the Court of Appeal looked for guidance to the law
governing relief from default under section 473 (Freedman, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp.
704-705), and analyzed our Supreme Court’s decision in Carroll v. Abbott Laboratories,
Inc. (1982) 32 Cal.3d 892 (Carroll), superseded by statute as stated in Beeman v. Burling
(1990) 216 Cal.App.3d 1586, 1604.9
In Carroll, plaintiff’s case had been dismissed because plaintiff’s counsel did not
comply with orders to produce documents and failed to appear at hearings. (Carroll,
supra, 32 Cal.3d at pp. 895-896.) Subsequently, the trial court vacated the judgment of
dismissal pursuant to section 473. It found that plaintiff’s counsel had been “ ‘grossly
negligent’ ” and set aside the dismissal “because it felt that [the] penalty had been
inappropriately harsh.” (Id. at p. 897.) The Supreme Court reversed, relying on the
“general rule [that] an attorney’s inexcusable neglect is chargeable to the client” (id. at p.
9
When Freedman was decided, the grounds for relief from default under section
473 were generally applicable in dismissal-for-delay cases, under section 583.410.
(Tustin Plaza Partnership v. Wehage (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1557, 1564.)
18
895) and noting that “[t]he client’s redress for inexcusable neglect by counsel is, of
course, an action for malpractice.” (Id. at p. 898.) The Supreme Court acknowledged
that a narrow exception to the general rule had developed, limited to instances “where the
attorney’s neglect is of that extreme degree amounting to positive misconduct, and the
person seeking relief is relatively free from negligence.” (Ibid.) An attorney’s conduct
amounts to positive misconduct when the party is “ ‘effectually and unknowingly
deprived of representation’ ” (id. at p. 899), which occurs when an attorney “de facto
substitute[s] himself out of the case” resulting in “abandonment of the client” which
“ ‘obliterate[s] the existence of the attorney-client relationship.’ ” (Id. at p. 900.) In
Carroll, the exception did not apply because plaintiff’s attorney continued to represent
the client throughout the proceeding, and there was no abandonment, even though the
attorney “grossly mishandled” a discovery matter. (Ibid.)
Freedman and Carroll, like other cases cited by Pack, were not about new trial
motions. Pack cites no authority to support an argument that standards for relief from
dismissal for delay or relief under section 473 should apply to a motion for a new trial
under section 657, subdivision (1).
In any event, just as the facts in Freedman and Carroll did not support a finding of
abandonment, the facts here do not support such a finding. Clearly Robinson did not
abandon Pack: he filed papers in Pack’s case and made court appearances. He
communicated with Pack about experts and about removal to federal court; he opposed
Hoge Fenton’s motion to compel; he removed the case to federal court; he opposed Hoge
Fenton’s motion for evidence sanctions; he represented Pack at trial, gave an opening
statement at trial, and argued against the motion for nonsuit. Because Robinson’s alleged
conduct did not “obliterate[] the existence of the attorney-client relationship,” we need
not consider whether Pack himself “is relatively free from negligence.” (Carroll, supra,
32 Cal.3d at p. 898.)
Pack cites just one case that was decided under section 657, subdivision (1),
Russell v. Dopp (1995) 36 Cal.App.4th 765. In Russell, defense counsel “committed a
fraud on the court, the plaintiffs and the defendants” by representing defendants through
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trial when he was not licensed to practice law. (Id. at p. 780.) The trial court did not
learn that defendants were represented by an unlicensed attorney until jury deliberations.
(Id. at pp. 769-771.) After the jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs, defendants moved for
a new trial. (Id. at p. 772.) The court in Russell focused on the issue of unlicensed
representation, relying on the rule “that an unlicensed person cannot appear in court for
another person, and that the resulting judgment is a nullity.” (Id. at p. 775.) Russell held
there was an irregularity in the proceedings under section 657, subdivision 1, because
representation by unlicensed counsel prevented defendants from having a fair trial. (Id.
at p. 780.) On the facts of Russell, the grant of a new trial “would protect defendants
from representation by unlicensed persons” and “uphold the integrity of the judicial
process, an integrity which was clearly compromised by the unlicensed representation.”
(Ibid.) There are no such considerations here, where Robinson was licensed to practice
law. As the trial court correctly concluded in denying Pack’s motion for a new trial, “a
trial in which counsel is not licensed to practice law is not analogous to [a] trial in which
counsel fails to obtain expert testimony to support his client’s case.”
Because we find that there was no irregularity in the proceedings to justify a new
trial under section 657, subdivision 1, we do not reach the question whether any
irregularity was prejudicial.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Defendants shall recover their costs on appeal.
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_________________________
Miller, J.
We concur:
_________________________
Richman, Acting P.J.
_________________________
Stewart, J.
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