Friends of the So. Fork Gualala v. Dept. of Forestry & Fire Prot.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 2024
DocketA168163
StatusPublished

This text of Friends of the So. Fork Gualala v. Dept. of Forestry & Fire Prot. (Friends of the So. Fork Gualala v. Dept. of Forestry & Fire Prot.) 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
Friends of the So. Fork Gualala v. Dept. of Forestry & Fire Prot., (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 9/26/24

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

FRIENDS OF THE SOUTH FORK GUALALA, A168163 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Sonoma County v. Super. Ct. No. SCV-268396) DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY AND FIRE PROTECTION, Defendant and Respondent;

RICHARDSON RANCH, LLC,

Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

I. INTRODUCTION In this California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources Code § 21000 et seq.) proceeding, we consider whether the trial court erred in denying an application for disability accommodation under rule 1.100 of the California Rules of Court (rule 1.100). The rule 1.100 application at issue, made by a lawyer who was serving as counsel of record to Friends of the South Fork Gualala (FSFG), sought extensions of time to meet briefing deadlines and other relief from routine procedural obligations. We see no error and will affirm.

1 We set forth the full procedural setting in greater detail below, but to frame our holding properly at the outset, a quick thumbnail sketch of the relevant background is as follows. In July 2023, the court granted in part and denied in part a petition for a writ of mandate brought by FSFG challenging the approval by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFIRE) of a rancher’s plan to harvest timber (the Plan). Although the court granted the petition on the merits, vacating the approval as deficient in several respects—inadequate consideration of geologic, biologic and cultural resources—it rejected FSFG’s complaint that CalFIRE’s tardy publication of a complete written response to public comments (Official Response) rendered the approval defective. In FSFG’s view, the incomplete and late Official Response should have been an additional ground for vacatur. Unsatisfied with the scope of its victory due to the ruling for CalFire on this one issue, FSFG now appeals on the ground that the trial court denied it a full and fair opportunity to litigate the completeness and validity of the Official Response, which it characterizes as not only tardy but intentionally false. According to FSFG, the trial court erroneously denied a request from its counsel, Daniel Garrett-Steinman, for 1) more time to prepare a supplemental brief addressing defects in the Official Response; 2) leave to file a supplemental brief in support of its request for issue sanctions; 3) an order relieving Garrett-Steinman from the obligation to engage in further meet- and-confer activity; and 4) a continuance of the merits hearing on its mandate petition. All of these requests—for leave to file supplemental briefing, for relief from meet-and-confer obligations, and for a continuance of the merits hearing—were made in the form of an application for disability

2 accommodation under rule 1.100. Citing the broad applicability of rule 1.100 to “any lawyer, party, witness, juror, or other person with an interest in attending any proceeding before any court of this state” (rule 1.100(a)(2)), Garrett-Steinman sought relief based on his bipolar disorder. Because the trial court was presented with an uncontested, qualifying disability (rule 1.100(a)(1)) from a person entitled to invoke the protections of rule 1.100, FSFG contends the court had no choice but to grant the requested accommodation. We decline to endorse such a wooden application of rule 1.100. At issue here is the last in a series of seven requests for scheduling relief over the course of eight months by either FSFG directly or by its counsel Garrett- Steinman, all of which were based on Garrett-Steinman’s bipolar disorder. Six prior requests were actually or in effect granted. The court’s grant of relief on the previous six occasions simply led to more accommodation requests and stalled progress toward final resolution of the case. CEQA actions have statutory calendaring priority and must be “quickly heard and determined.” (Pub. Resources Code, § 21167.1.) Having filed a proceeding subject to calendaring priority, FSFG was obliged to move the case forward with dispatch. We have no trouble concluding that, in the circumstances presented here, the court was within its discretion to deny a seventh request for postponement. II. BACKGROUND In December 2020, real party in interest below and respondent in this appeal Richardson Ranch LLC (Richardson Ranch)1 submitted a timber harvest plan to CalFIRE. The Plan called for the harvesting of 267 acres of

1 We will refer to CalFIRE and Richardson Ranch collectively as

“respondents” in this appeal.

3 redwood forest along the South Fork of the Gualala River. This land is located in the Gualala River Watershed, which comprises 7,904 acres. Richardson Ranch owns 62 percent of the watershed acreage and is the only entity that has conducted timber harvesting in it during the last decade. CalFire made the Plan available for public comment and received 23 letters from the public. On April 13, 2021, CalFIRE approved the Plan and published an Official Response. According to CalFIRE, it intended at that time to publish a complete, 87-page response but instead published an incomplete, 25-page version because of a clerical error; it then realized its mistake, and on May 20, 2021, published a corrected Official Response (the Corrected Official Response). On May 13, 2021, prior to the publication of the Corrected Official Response, FSFG filed in Sonoma County Superior Court a petition for a writ of mandate and a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief and attorney fees against CalFIRE and Richardson Ranch. FSFG challenged CalFIRE’s approval of the Plan under CEQA and alleged the Official Response was inadequate. Over the next two years, the parties litigated their dispute. The litigation included significant disagreements regarding the administrative record, discovery, and CalFIRE’s process of preparing the Official Response and the Corrected Official Response. Many of these disputes arose out of discovery propounded by FSFG regarding CalFIRE’s initial failure to publish a complete response to the public comments. Based on things such as CalFIRE’s failure to produce an original signature page for the Official Response, FSFG took the view that CalFIRE deliberately published an incomplete response to the public comments on April 13, 2021. According to FSFG, CalFIRE lied about whether the 87-page

4 Corrected Official Response existed when it filed the earlier, incomplete version—CalFIRE claimed it inadvertently omitted 63 pages—and, based on that allegation, accused CalFIRE of spoliation of evidence. This led to further disputes between the parties regarding FSFG’s efforts to obtain discovery from CalFIRE on the allegations of procedural irregularity and, ultimately, to an effort by FSFG to obtain evidentiary and issue sanctions for discovery abuse and spoliation of evidence. Between August 2022 and June 2023, while FSFG sought to litigate these sanctions issues, it repeatedly requested continuances of hearings and extensions of various briefing deadlines, each time citing the mental health disability of its counsel, Garrett-Steinman. According to FSFG, respondents’ counsel engaged in a pattern of “mistreating” Garrett-Steinman because of his mental health disability, causing him to suffer manic episodes and making it difficult for him to meet briefing deadlines and attend hearings. Respondents and their counsel deny any such “mistreatment” of Garrett- Steinman. A.

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Friends of the So. Fork Gualala v. Dept. of Forestry & Fire Prot., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-the-so-fork-gualala-v-dept-of-forestry-fire-prot-calctapp-2024.