Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 2023
DocketA165634
StatusUnpublished

This text of Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5 (Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5) 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
Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 8/24/23 Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

OLIVER ARMSTRONG, Plaintiff and Appellant, A165634 v. SHUMET WUDUE, (City and County of San Francisco Super. Ct. Defendant and Respondent. No. CGC-19-576657)

Plaintiff and appellant Oliver Armstrong (plaintiff) appeals from the trial court’s judgment dismissing defendant and respondent Shumet Wudue (defendant) following the grant of defendant’s motion to strike substitution of defendant’s name for a Doe defendant. We reverse. BACKGROUND According to the allegations in plaintiff’s complaint, he suffered a serious head injury during a robbery in the Mission neighborhood of San Francisco in July 2018. Before the robbery, he was left in a dangerous area at night by a taxi cab driver who demanded money in excess of the regular fare to drive plaintiff home to Berkeley. Shortly thereafter, he was attacked and robbed.

1 Plaintiff reported the incident to the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD). On August 8, 2018, an SFPD sergeant sent plaintiff an e-mail attaching a blurry image of plaintiff and stating, “Can you confirm if this is you?” The SFPD’s investigation log states, “Sent victim an image of him getting [out] of the cab. Victim confirmed it was him.” The photograph displays plaintiff but not the taxi in which plaintiff was a passenger. In June 2019, plaintiff filed the present action against Flywheel Taxi, DeSoto Cab Company, Inc., and Does 1-20. Plaintiff alleged causes of action for negligence, false imprisonment, conversion, and intentional misrepresentation/fraud. Plaintiff later dismissed Flywheel and DeSoto from the case. In March 2020, plaintiff subpoenaed the SFPD, requesting documents and videos related to the investigation of the July 2018 assault and robbery. The SFPD certified no records were available and, in response to subsequent efforts by plaintiff, produced only some photographs. In November 2020, plaintiff filed an amendment substituting Big Dog City Corporation dba Yellow Cab of San Francisco (Yellow Cab) for one of the Doe defendants.1 In August 2021, Yellow Cab responded to a special interrogatory asking it to “identify the drivers of any and all of DEFENDANTS’ cabs that picked up any fares” from specific GPS coordinates on July 18, 2018 between 12:01 a.m. and 2:30 a.m. According to plaintiff, the coordinates are where plaintiff was picked up the night of the robbery. Yellow Cab responded, “None within stated parameters. Within a roughly one block radius: Ramon Lomibao[,] David Nguyen, and Shumet Wudue.” When asked for the name of the person who holds the medallion for the taxi

1 Plaintiff also named an individual as a defendant, but that individual

was subsequently dismissed.

2 that picked up plaintiff, Yellow Cab responded, “Responding party has no information from which it might formulate an answer to this interrogatory.” A dispatch log produced by Yellow Cab in October 2021 provided cab numbers for various drivers, including defendant, whose cab number was identified as number 525. That cab does not appear on the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency’s (SFMTA) spreadsheet of taxi rides the evening of the incident. In a November 2021 deposition of an SFPD officer, the deponent suggested plaintiff might contact the SFPD’s Southern Station to obtain more records. In March 2022, plaintiff again subpoenaed the SFPD, requesting, among other things, all “photographs and video” gathered in investigating the 2018 assault and robbery. On April 12, 2022, plaintiff received a number of videos and records from the SFPD. One video shows plaintiff exiting Yellow Cab number 525. Both plaintiff and his counsel averred that April 2022 was the first time they saw an image of plaintiff exiting that cab. The next day, April 13, 2022, plaintiff submitted to the court an amendment to the complaint substituting defendant Wudue, driver of cab number 525, for one of the Doe defendants (Doe Substitution). The trial court accepted the amendment on April 15 and the court filed it on April 20. On April 21, 2022, plaintiff requested a trial continuance by stipulation with defendant Yellow Cab. The Presiding Judge of the trial court granted continuance of the trial to August 29. The order stated, “No further continuances” and “This is the last continuance.” Defendant was served with the lawsuit on April 27, 2022; his attorney had been provided the Doe Substitution two weeks before. In June 2022, defendant moved to strike the Doe Substitution. Defendant argued plaintiff unreasonably delayed naming him, and that he

3 suffered prejudice from the delay because the Presiding Judge stated there would be no further continuances. The motion asserted appellant received an image showing cab number 525 from the SFPD in August 2018, and included a screenshot from a video showing the cab number. In a declaration that accompanied the motion, defendant’s counsel explained he had created the “screen capture” from a video produced by the SFPD in 2022. The declaration stated, “I do not represent that the screen capture is identical to the one sent to [plaintiff] . . . . However, I have viewed the entire video – also produced by the SFPD – and can represent to the court that the taxi is in a station[a]ry position when [plaintiff] gets out of the vehicle and the unit number would be visible on any possible screen capture from the video which depicted him getting out of the cab.” Plaintiff opposed the motion to strike, arguing he was ignorant of defendant’s involvement until April 2022, and providing evidence the screenshot he received in 2018 did not include an image of cab number 525. Plaintiff specifically averred in his declaration that he did not know the number of the cab that picked him up until he saw the video produced by the SFPD in April 2022. Plaintiff also argued he was diligent in trying to identify defendant and accommodating in arranging discovery with defendant. Plaintiff argued a trial continuance would be appropriate to address any concerns about fairness to defendant. Following receipt of defendant’s reply and a hearing, the trial court granted the motion to strike. The court’s July 2022 order stated, “[Defendant’s] identity has long been available to plaintiff through videos and Yellow Cab records. As early as August 2018, police reported that they ‘[s]ent victim [plaintiff] an image of him getting out of the cab. Victim confirmed it was him.’ Whether [defendant’s] cab number, 525, was visible is disputed. In

4 any event, it is undisputed that, in August 2021, Yellow Cab discovery responses named [defendant] as one of three cab drivers in the relevant area and provided a dispatch log stating [defendant’s] name and cab number. Prejudice to Wudue is obvious. Trial is next month and discovery is closed.” On July 5, 2022, the trial court issued a judgment dismissing defendant. The present appeal followed. The court vacated the August trial date due to the pendency of the present appeal. DISCUSSION Code of Civil Procedure section 4742 “allows a plaintiff who is ignorant of a defendant’s identity to commence suit—before the statute of limitations runs—by using a fictitious name for that defendant and then amending her complaint when the defendant’s true name is discovered. [Citations.] If the statute’s requirements are satisfied, the amendment relates back and the substituted defendant is considered to have been a party from the action’s start.” (Hahn v.

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Bluebook (online)
Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-wudue-ca15-calctapp-2023.