JAKUBOWSKY v. MCI Telecommunications Corp.

116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 900, 96 Cal. App. 4th 506
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 2002
DocketC035906
StatusPublished

This text of 116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 900 (JAKUBOWSKY v. MCI Telecommunications Corp.) 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
JAKUBOWSKY v. MCI Telecommunications Corp., 116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 900, 96 Cal. App. 4th 506 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

116 Cal.Rptr.2d 900 (2002)
96 Cal.App.4th 506

Andrew JAKUBOWSKY Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
MCI TELECOMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION et al., Defendants and Appellants.

No. C035906.

Court of Appeal, Third District.

February 27, 2002.
Rehearing Granted March 25, 2002.

*901 Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe, Patricia K. Gillette, Tracey K. Merwise, San Francisco, Greg J. Richardson, and Scott A. Berman San Francisco, for Defendants and Appellants.

Thea L. Offenbacher-Costa and John R. Hargreaves for Plaintiff and Respondent.

CALLAHAN, J.

Defendants MCI Telecommunications Corporation and its employee Joe Serrano (collectively MCI) obtained a summary judgment against plaintiff Andrew Jakubowsky in his lawsuit for wrongful discharge and defamation. Plaintiffs counsel failed to oppose or appear at the hearing on summary judgment. More than five months later, plaintiff applied for and was granted relief from the judgment pursuant to the mandatory attorney fault provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 473, *902 subdivision (b) (section 473(b)). (All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.)

We will conclude that order was jurisdictionally defective in light of plaintiffs failure to comply with the mandatory requirement that an application for relief under section 473 be accompanied by a copy of the proposed pleading. We reverse.

BACKGROUND

This case began with a multi-count complaint filed by plaintiff against his former employer MCI and two of his supervisors[1] there. In a first amended complaint plaintiff, who was employed in MCFs Russian telecommunications department, alleged that he was ostensibly discharged for poor performance and sexual harassment of coworkers, but that these reasons were a pretext for age and disability discrimination.

After plaintiff conceded, in response to a demurrer, that many of his claims were time-barred, the remaining litigable causes of action were reduced to: wrongful termination based on alleged age and disability discrimination and defamation.

MCI had difficulty obtaining plaintiffs cooperation on discovery. Following numerous unsuccessful attempts to schedule his deposition, MCI obtained a court order compelling his attendance. Subsequently, MCI served plaintiff with a set of requests for admissions, which essentially asked him to admit that he had no factual basis to support any of his claims of age and disability discrimination or defamation. When the time for responding passed without verified responses on behalf of plaintiff, MCI moved for and obtained an order that the matters contained in its requests for admission be deemed admitted.

Armed with the deemed admissions, its own affidavits, and admissions obtained from plaintiffs own deposition, MCI moved for summary judgment, claiming that plaintiff had no evidentiary basis to support his causes of action for discrimination and defamation.

Plaintiff neither filed written opposition nor did he contest the tentative ruling granting summary judgment. On November 9, 1999, judgment was entered in favor of MCI and Joe Serrano and' against plaintiff.

On April 24, 2000, plaintiff filed an application for mandatory relief under section 473(b). The sole basis for the application was the affidavit of plaintiffs attorney, Thea L. Offenbacher-Costa. Ms. Offenbacher-Costa declared that "[MCI]'s summary judgment motion went unopposed due to my own neglect due to scheduling overload, and not due to any fault on the part of my client, . . ." Specifically, she cited being "overwhelmed" by four summary judgment motions on or around the same time period, a "highly-contested divorce action" which left her emotionally and physically stressed, plus "a quagmire of computer glitches, intervening family law compliance orders and ongoing stress-related colitis attacks," which left her unable either to calendar the motion or to file the necessary opposition papers.

MCI vigorously opposed the motion, asserting that Ms. Offenbacher-Costa's declaration was riddled with inconsistencies and unworthy of belief, that no copy of plaintiffs proposed opposition accompanied the motion, and that summary judgment *903 would have been granted regardless of whether plaintiff had filed opposition papers.

Notwithstanding these arguments, the trial judge (not the same judge who granted the original summary judgment) granted plaintiffs application and vacated the judgment. MCI appeals from that order.

APPEAL

I

Section 473(b) grants a court discretionary power "upon any terms as may be just," to "relieve a party or his or her legal representative from a judgment, dismissal, order, or other proceeding taken against him or her through his or her mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect."

In 1991, the Legislature added a provision to section 473(b) prescribing mandatory relief to a defendant against whom a default was taken, where the default was caused by his or her attorney's inadvertence, mistake or neglect, regardless of whether the attorney's blunder was excusable. (Stats. 1991, ch. 1003, § 1, p. 4662; see Garcia v. Hejmadi (1997) 58 Cal. App.4th 674, 681-682, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d 228 (Garcia), Cisneros v. Vueve (1995) 37 Cal. App.4th 906, 909-910, 44 Cal.Rptr.2d 682.)[2]

In 1992, section 473(b)'s mandatory relief provision was extended to allow relief to a plaintiff suffering a "dismissal" attributable to attorney fault. The mandatory provision now states: "Notwithstanding any other requirements of this section, the court shall, whenever an application for relief is made no more than six months after entry of judgment, is in proper form, and is accompanied by an attorney's sworn affidavit attesting to his or her mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or neglect, vacate any (1) resulting default entered by the clerk against his or her client, and which will result in entry of a default judgment, or (2) resulting default judgment or dismissal entered against his or her client, unless the court finds that the default or dismissal was not in fact caused by the attorney's mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or neglect." (Italics added; Stats. 1992, ch. 876, § 4, pp. 4071-4072.)

Under the mandatory relief provision of section 473(b) where there is an attorney's affidavit of fault, relief is required unless it is determined that the attorney was not actually the cause of default or dismissal. (Lorenz v. Commercial Acceptance Ins. Co. (1995) 40 Cal. App.4th 981, 989, 47 Cal.Rptr.2d 362.)

One precondition for obtaining relief under section 473(b) which has remained unchanged for decades has been the requirement that the "[application for relief shall be accompanied by a copy of the answer or other pleading proposed to be filed therein, otherwise the application shall not be granted." (Italics added.)

We have no doubt the pleading attachment requirement is equally applicable to the mandatory provision of section 473 as to its discretionary counterpart. By inserting the phrase in the mandatory provision that the application for relief must be "in proper form" (§ 473(b)), the Legislature surely meant to incorporate the requirements applicable to all section 473 applications, including the proposed pleading requirement which appears in the same paragraph. (See also Garcia, supra, 58 Cal.App.4th at p. 681, 68 Cal.Rptr.2d *904

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116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 900, 96 Cal. App. 4th 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jakubowsky-v-mci-telecommunications-corp-calctapp-2002.