Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 2025
DocketD082380
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1 (Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/1/25 Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

CHRISTOPHER M. ALEXANDER, D082380

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2014-00016257-CU-MM-CTL) SCRIPPS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL LA JOLLA,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment and postjudgment orders of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Keri G. Katz, Judge. Motion for appellate sanctions denied. Affirmed. Christopher M. Alexander, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant. Higgs Fletcher & Mack, John Morris, William A. Low and Steven M. Brunolli for Defendant and Respondent. In postjudgment discovery proceedings in 2020 to collect on a civil money judgment, the trial court ordered plaintiff and appellant Christopher M. Alexander, a self-represented attorney, to produce various financial documents to the judgment creditor defendant Scripps Memorial Hospital

La Jolla (Scripps).1 A month later, Alexander filed a motion for a protective order. After the court granted his motion, but only in part, Alexander filed a motion for reconsideration. Several years later, finding Alexander’s reconsideration motion legally frivolous and objectively unreasonable, the court ordered him to pay Scripps $5,472 in Code of Civil Procedure section

128.72 sanctions. Alexander appeals from the “final judgment in this matter and all orders that are separately appealable,” including the sanctions order. He contends the trial court abused its discretion in awarding sanctions; he also seeks to challenge the court’s earlier orders granting Scripps’s motion to compel production of his records and denying in part his motion for a protective order. Scripps responds that Alexander’s appeal is timely only with respect to the sanctions order. It also requests appellate sanctions, arguing that Alexander’s appeal is substantively frivolous and taken solely to cause delay. We agree with Scripps that we are limited on appeal to considering Alexander’s challenge to the trial court’s order granting section 128.7 sanctions. We affirm that order, but we deny Scripps’s motion for sanctions on appeal.

1 Defendant and respondent is Scripps Health doing business as Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla. 2 Undesigned statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Alexander filed suit against Scripps arising out of his mother’s medical care. (Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla (2018) 23

Cal.App.5th 206, 213 (Alexander).)3 In 2017, Scripps obtained summary judgment in its favor, leading to entry of an amended judgment in the sum of $43,302.51, reflecting its costs of suit. We affirmed the judgment on appeal but remanded to the trial court to determine expert fees. (Id. at pp. 214, 243.) Scripps then embarked on postjudgment discovery to collect on the judgment, which included serving interrogatories (§ 708.020) as well as an inspection demand (§ 708.030) for Alexander’s investment and account information, employment income, and tax returns for 2016, 2017, and 2018. Alexander responded with identical objections to each of the 24

interrogatories and 30 document requests.4 Scripps moved to compel Alexander’s further responses to those requests, which the trial court (Judge Randa Trapp) granted in August 2020, ruling that Scripps was “entitled to code compliant substantive responses” and directing Alexander to provide verified supplemental responses by the end of September 2020. Alexander

3 Our prior opinion set out the detailed underlying facts, so we need not repeat them here. 4 Alexander responded to each of the interrogatories and inspection demands as follows: “Objection. This request is vague, ambiguous, overbroad, and unduly burdensome. Additionally, plaintiff has only recently begun investigating the information requested. In further objecting, this request seeks information protected from disclosure by the right to privacy under Article 1, Section 1, of the California Constitution.” Days before the hearing on Scripps’s motion to compel, he served supplemental responses, but Alexander has included in the record only the first page and verification page of those responses. 3 sought to challenge that ruling by filing a petition for writ of mandate in this court, which we summarily denied on September 30. Days before the September deadline for Alexander to comply, he moved for a protective order relating to his responses and production. Acknowledging that Scripps’s counsel had agreed to meet and confer about such an order during the hearing on Scripps’s motion to compel and attaching the reporter’s transcript of the August 2020 hearing, Alexander stated the parties had not agreed on its terms, and asked the court to review in camera the requested information to “conclusively find that it is privileged and private.” He also requested costs for filing the motion ($191). In November 2020, Scripps filed a limited opposition, explaining it had provided a proposed protective order to Alexander and revised it in response to his complaints.

Despite those efforts, Alexander had not yet responded to the discovery.5 Although finding that Alexander had not promptly sought a protective order, a different superior court judge (Judge Carolyn Caietti) granted his request for such an order “in part.” The court’s November 2020 order modified Scripps’s proposed protective order and made it operative; it further ordered Alexander to provide code compliant verified discovery responses by December 4, 2020.

5 The court set a September 30, 2020 deadline for Alexander’s further responses. In its limited opposition to Alexander’s request for a protective order, Scripps’s counsel explained that Scripps had provided a proposed protective order on August 10, 2020, in anticipation of an informal discovery conference with the court; that on September 22, 2020, it received Alexander’s “grievances” with the proposed order; and two days later Scripps mailed a revised order. Alexander filed his motion for a protective order on September 28, 2020. Because Alexander assertedly refused to submit to electronic service, Scripps mailed its correspondence to him, which is likely why Alexander stated in his protective order motion that he had not heard back from Scripps about his objections by the time he filed his motion. 4 On December 4, however, Alexander moved for reconsideration of the court’s protective order ruling, asserting that his financial and tax records were privileged and private. He argued “that new and different facts, law, and circumstances exist in the form of the court’s August 20, 2020 transcript.” In his view, the transcript reflected the court’s “implicit[] finding without any dispute that the discovery is privileged and private . . . .” A few days later, Alexander filed a peremptory challenge to Judge Caietti. In the midst of the pandemic, the case was not reassigned until October 2021. Within days of the reassignment to Judge Keri G. Katz, Scripps moved for an order striking Alexander’s reconsideration motion and an award of $5,472 in section 128.7 sanctions on grounds that the motion was filed by Alexander primarily for the improper purpose of avoiding his discovery obligations. (§ 128.7, subd. (b)(1).) Scripps also asserted that Alexander made contentions unwarranted by existing law (id., subd. (b)(2)) and/or without evidentiary support (id., subd. (b)(3)).

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Alexander v. Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-scripps-memorial-hospital-la-jolla-ca41-calctapp-2025.