Kaiser Foundation Hospitals v. Superior Court
This text of 190 Cal. App. 3d 721 (Kaiser Foundation Hospitals v. Superior Court) 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.
Opinion
Opinion
In this original proceeding we are asked to determine whether a motion to disqualify a judge made pursuant to section 170.6 of *723 the Code of Civil Procedure 1 was timely and whether the subsequent order granting a motion to vacate an arbitration award was an abuse of discretion.
The underlying action is a complaint for wrongful death filed by real parties in interest against petitioners on July 21, 1981. The parties stipulated to binding arbitration and, after a hearing held in February 1986, the arbitrators found in favor of petitioners in a two-to-one decision. On April 10,1986, real parties filed a petition in superior court to vacate the award on the ground that the neutral arbitrator should have disclosed the fact that he had accepted an appointment as a party arbitrator for petitioners in an unrelated case. The motion was noticed for hearing in Department One on May 9, 1986, and later continued by stipulation to May 20.
When the petition came on for hearing on May 20, petitioners submitted a challenge of the Honorable Henry Ramsey, Jr. pursuant to section 170.6. Real parties protested, pointing out that under a local rule petitioners were able to discover the (adverse) tentative ruling prior to the hearing. Judge Ramsey recognized the problem of timing concerning the making of a section 170.6 challenge under the tentative ruling system but nevertheless denied this challenge as untimely. 2
*724 The court then granted the petition to vacate the award and ordered a rehearing before new arbitrators. In response to the instant petition for writ of prohibition and/or mandate, this court issued an alternative writ.
I. Motion to Disqualify Judge
Section 170.6 guarantees to litigants “an extraordinary right to disqualify a judge. The right is ‘automatic’ in the sense that a good faith belief in prejudice is alone sufficient, proof of facts showing actual prejudice not being required.” (Italics in original.) (McCartney v. Commission on Judicial Qualifications (1974) 12 Cal.3d 512, 531 [116 Cal.Rptr. 260, 526 P.2d 268].) “However, that section imposes a restriction that such a challenge may not be filed after the challenged judge has made a determination which bears on the merits of the case.” (California Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v. Superior Court (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 267, 271 [234 Cal.Rptr. 413].) Furthermore, the statute prescribes certain time limits within which the motion must be made. Pertinent here is (1) the requirement that when the judge is known at least 10 days before the date set for the hearing, the motion must be made no later that 5 days before the scheduled date—the 10-day/5-day rule—and (2) the proviso that if the motion is directed to a hearing, the motion must be made not later than the commencement of the hearing.
Petitioners contend that they did not know the judge who was to hear the motion to vacate the award with sufficient certainty to invoke the 10-day/5-day rule and, since they made the motion to disqualify before hearing commenced, the motion was timely and by law must be granted.
Petitioners rely here, as they did below, on the case of Bouchard v. Insona (1980) 105 Cal.App.3d 768 [164 Cal.Rptr. 505]. In Bouchard, a motion to vacate and set aside a default judgment was filed in the law and motion department. Three days before the date set for the hearing, one of the parties moved to disqualify the judge regularly assigned to the law and motion calendar. The motion was denied on the ground that it was untimely under the 10-day/5-day rule. Appellant argued that “the judge who will actually hear the matter is not known until the calendar is called, the 10-day/5-day rule has no application, and a motion to disqualify is timely until the hearing actually commences.” (Id., at p. 771.) The reviewing court agreed, commenting that even respondents recognized that it was but a probability rather than a certainty that the judge regularly assigned to law and motion would actually hear the case. (Id., at p. 772; see also Retes v. Superior Court (1981) 122 Cal.App.3d 799 [176 Cal.Rptr. 160].)
Accepting petitioners’ argument in a situation where there is a tentative ruling procedure such as that which exists in Alameda County would allow *725 a party to wait until after learning of the tentative ruling before exercising a section 170.6 challenge: A hearing is not held unless a party is dissatisfied with the tentative ruling. 3 We feel about such a result as did the court in McClenny v. Superior Court (1964) 60 Cal.2d 677, 689 [36 Cal.Rptr. 459, 388 P.2d 691], where the court remarked: “We cannot ignore in defendant’s position the potentiality for abuse of section 170.6. We cannot permit a device intended for spare and protective use to be converted into a weapon of offense and thereby to become an obstruction to efficient judicial administration.”
Nor do we believe such a result is necessary under Bouchard which did not consider the timeliness of a section 170.6 challenge in a jurisdiction which employs a tentative ruling procedure. Section 170.6 allows for accommodation for procedures not specifically addressed therein: “In the case of trials or hearings not herein specifically provided for, the procedure herein specified shall be followed as nearly as may be.”
We hold that the 10-day/5-day rule may be followed in jurisdictions having a tentative ruling procedure where motions are set in a department which has a regularly assigned judge. If, however, the regularly assigned judge does not, in fact, rule on the motion or if the regular assignment has been changed without sufficient notification to the parties, the tentative ruling system must give way to the parties’ right to exercise the section 170.6 challenge. A local rule may not deprive a party of its right to challenge under section 170.6. (Cf. Sambrano v. Superior Court (1973) 31 Cal.App.3d 416 [107 Cal.Rptr. 274].) In such a situation, the challenge must be allowed at the time of hearing despite the challenging party’s knowledge of a tentative ruling.
*726 In the instant case, it is clear that Judge Ramsey was the regularly assigned judge in Department One where the motion was noticed. Petitioners have never contended they were ignorant of this assignment. We hold, therefore, that their challenge at the time set for hearing was untimely.
II. Motion to Vacate Arbitrators’ Award *
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190 Cal. App. 3d 721, 235 Cal. Rptr. 630, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-foundation-hospitals-v-superior-court-calctapp-1987.