Demyer v. Costa Mesa Mobile Home Estates

36 Cal. App. 4th 393, 42 Cal. Rptr. 2d 260, 95 Daily Journal DAR 8703, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5188, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 611
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1995
DocketG013481
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 36 Cal. App. 4th 393 (Demyer v. Costa Mesa Mobile Home Estates) 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
Demyer v. Costa Mesa Mobile Home Estates, 36 Cal. App. 4th 393, 42 Cal. Rptr. 2d 260, 95 Daily Journal DAR 8703, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5188, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 611 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

Introduction

The law governing the consequences for failing to respond to requests for admission may be the most unforgiving in civil procedure.1 There is no relief under section 473. The defaulting party is limited to the remedies available [395]*395in the statute specifically governing requests for admission, section 2033,2 and within section 2033 there is no general provision for relief. The closest analog to section 473 in section 2033 is subdivision (m), which allows withdrawal or amendment of an admission upon a showing of mistake, inadvertence or excusable neglect. Subdivision (m), however, has been held inapplicable to missing the deadline for responding to admissions requests.3 A party who has failed to file responses must look to subdivision (k) for relief, and subdivision (k) operates in a completely nondiscretionary manner. The propounding party need give no warning (at least according to one well-respected authority4)—it simply files a motion to deem the matters covered by the requests admitted. The nonresponding party then has until the “hearing on the motion” to serve responses to the admissions request.5 If the party manages to serve its responses before the hearing, the court has no discretion but to deny the motion.6 But woe betide the party who fails to serve responses before the hearing. In that instance the court has no discretion but to grant the admission motion,7 usually with fatal consequences for [396]*396the defaulting party.8 One might call it “two strikes and you’re out” as applied to civil procedure.

Everything, in short, depends on submitting responses prior to the hearing. There are no general grounds for relief, no provision for attorneys to “fall on their sword,” pay sanctions and pick up where they left off. If responses are not submitted by the hearing date there is only the certain fearful looking for of a malpractice judgment.9

The instant appeal arises out of a situation even more draconian than just described. What happens when time is shortened for the “hearing” on the motion to deem matters admitted? If the statute is read to require submission of responses before a hearing on shortened notice, the effective time to respond is also shortened. A litigant may find itself with an unreasonably short time—and possibly in extreme situations, no time at all—in which to redeem itself. The practical effect would be something like “one strike and a foul ball and you’re out.”

As harsh as the basic scheme governing nonresponses to requests for admission is, it is not quite that harsh. As we will now explain, the “hearing” contemplated in section 2033, subdivision (k) necessarily does not entail a hearing on shortened time. Rather, the statute contemplates at least the standard notice a litigant would receive for a hearing. Because the appellants here managed to submit responses within the time that they normally would [397]*397have had, the trial court had no choice but to deny the motion to deem matters admitted, and therefore the ensuing summary judgment should not have been granted.

Facts

The plaintiffs and appellants are about 30 residents of a mobilehome park who are suing the park’s owners for various things irrelevant to this appeal. All but one or two of the thirty were represented by a single lawyer (who substituted out during the pendency of this appeal). After discovery commenced the trial judge appointed a former superior court commissioner to act as a discovery referee.

On January 29, 1992, three of the defendants personally served on the plaintiffs’ attorney a set of requests for admissions directed at each plaintiff. While none of the 3 sets of requests exceeded 35 (2 sets consisted of 35 requests and the third of 5 requests), because of the large number of plaintiffs the total number of requests requiring a response exceeded 2,200.10

Plaintiffs’ counsel missed the deadline, apparently because of the mistaken belief that there was no need to prepare responses.11 Defendants’ attorneys did nothing to disabuse him until March 31, 1992, when, at a meeting to discuss stipulated facts for the trial, one of the defendants’ attorneys informed plaintiffs’ counsel that he had not responded to the requests for admissions; defendants’ counsel also told him she intended to seek an order establishing admissions. Two days later, on April 2, 1992, defendants filed with the discovery referee a motion to deem certain matters admitted. Plaintiffs’ counsel was served by mail. Also on April 2, the discovery referee ordered any opposition to the motion to be filed by April 9. The referee further ordered that a “conference call” (she would also refer to [398]*398it as a “hearing”) on the motion be held on April 13, which, in effect, shortened time for notice of the hearing. The moving papers had been served by mail. Thus had there been no shortening of time the hearing would have been scheduled no earlier than April 22.

The reason, if any, for the shortened time is not readily apparent from the record. We do note, however, that a declaration later filed by one of the defendants’ attorneys indicated that plaintiffs’ counsel was not available for a conference call with the discovery referee on either April 1 or April 2 when (presumably) defendants’ counsel wanted to set up a hearing and briefing schedule.

It was not until the morning of the April 13 conference call that plaintiffs’ attorney filed his opposition, which was a one-page document incorporating a separate motion filed in the superior court the same day, requesting an extension of time to respond to the requests for admission. The conference call went forward that afternoon, by which time no responses to the requests for admission had been served. During the call plaintiffs’ counsel requested a continuance of the “hearing,” which prompted a discussion of whether responses could be validly served per section 2033, subdivision (k), prior to the continued hearing. The referee ordered that another hearing would be conducted on the afternoon of April 21, which would focus on whether plaintiffs had already forfeited any opportunity to serve their responses.

On the evening of April 20, 1992, plaintiffs served by mail proposed responses to the requests for the admissions. Copies were delivered to the discovery referee the next day. The discovery referee heard argument during the conference call that afternoon. About a week later she filed a report setting forth her findings and recommendations. She reasoned, based on the decisions of the Court of Appeal in the Courtesy Claims and St. Paul Fire & Marine cases,12 that a court has no discretion to relieve a defaulting party “where the proposed responses are not submitted by the time of the hearing on the propounding party’s Motion for Order Establishing Admissions.” The failure to serve responses by April 13 was thus dispositive, and the motion to deem the matters admitted had to be granted. The discovery referee wrote that she recognized the “harsh result,” but felt “compelled to follow the precedent set by the applicable decisions of the Courts of Appeal.”

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Demyer v. Costa Mesa Mobile Home Estates
36 Cal. App. 4th 393 (California Court of Appeal, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Cal. App. 4th 393, 42 Cal. Rptr. 2d 260, 95 Daily Journal DAR 8703, 95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 5188, 1995 Cal. App. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demyer-v-costa-mesa-mobile-home-estates-calctapp-1995.