Levingston v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2018
DocketE066271
StatusPublished

This text of Levingston v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan (Levingston v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan) 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
Levingston v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 8/17/18

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

LISA LEVINGSTON,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E066271

v. (Super.Ct.No. RIC1400688)

KAISER FOUNDATION HEALTH OPINION PLAN, INC. et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. John W. Vineyard, Judge.

Reversed and remanded with directions.

Shegerian & Associates, Carney R. Shegerian, and Jill McDonell for Plaintiff and

Appellant.

Davis Wright Tremaine, John P. LeCrone, Rochelle L. Wilcox, and Aaron N.

Colby for Defendants and Respondents.

The attorneys for plaintiff Lisa Levingston, O.D., failed to file an opposition to a

motion for summary judgment. They had been substituted into the case after

Levingston’s former attorneys were disqualified and the opposition that the former attorneys had filed was stricken. At the hearing on the motion, Levingston’s new counsel

claimed they had not known that they needed to file a new opposition; they requested

relief from default, under Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b), and a

continuance. The trial court found that new counsel’s failure was inexcusable neglect. It

therefore granted summary judgment.

We will hold that, due to her new counsel’s neglect — which the trial court quite

properly found to be inexcusable — Levingston was not entitled to relief under Code of

Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b); nevertheless, under controlling case law,

she was entitled to a continuance to file an opposition.

I

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Levingston filed this action on January 24, 2014. She named as defendants Kaiser

Foundation Health Plan Inc., Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, and Southern California

Permanente Medical Group (collectively Kaiser). She claims that she is a

“whistleblower”; she asserts causes of action including retaliation and wrongful

termination.

Initially, Levingston was represented by the Mathews Law Group. Later, Helmer

Friedman, LLP associated in as co-counsel.

On April 1, 2015, Kaiser filed a motion for summary judgment. On June 2, 2015,

Levingston’s counsel filed her opposition. Almost immediately, Kaiser filed an ex parte

application to expunge privileged information and to disqualify Levingston’s counsel.

2 Although the application itself is not in the record, apparently it was made on the ground

that Levingston’s opposition included a privileged document that Kaiser’s counsel had

disclosed inadvertently.

In response to the application, the trial court ordered portions of Levingston’s

opposition sealed. It declined to disqualify Levingston’s counsel ex parte, but it set a

hearing date for a disqualification motion.

Kaiser then filed a noticed disqualification motion. On July 17, 2015, the trial

court granted the motion. It disqualified Levingston’s counsel and enjoined them from

discussing the contents of the privileged document. It also struck Levingston’s entire

opposition. It continued the hearing on the motion for summary judgment to January 22,

2016 (i.e., approximately six months), “to allow for Plaintiff to retain new counsel, and

for new counsel to prepare and file a new Opposition to Defendants[’] Motion for

Summary Judgment . . . .”

On November 16, 2015, Levingston substituted Shegerian & Associates, Inc. as

her new counsel. Their new opposition to the motion for summary judgment was due by

January 8, 2016. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. b)(2).) However, they failed to file a

timely opposition.

On January 15, 2016, Kaiser filed a notice that Levingston had failed to file an

opposition.

On January 22, 2016 — the date set for the hearing on the motion for summary

judgment — Levingston’s new counsel filed an ex parte application for relief under Code

3 of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b), and for a continuance. According to the

evidence in that application, when they took over the case, they believed that the motion

for summary judgment had been fully briefed. Neither Levingston nor Levingston’s

former counsel told them anything about “the circumstances surrounding the

disqualification of former counsel” or about “the previously filed summary judgment

papers” — supposedly out of concern about violating the trial court’s injunction. Until

new counsel received Kaiser’s notice of failure to file an opposition, which was on

January 20, 2016, they intended to just show up at the hearing and argue the motion.

At the hearing on January 22, 2016, the trial court’s tentative ruling was to grant

the ex parte application, because it felt that the failure to file an opposition was due to an

excusable “miscommunication.” After hearing argument, however, it changed its mind.

In that argument, new counsel claimed that they had been relying (1) on what

Levingston told them, which was that “everything had been briefed,” and (2) on the case

file they received from former counsel, which did not include the order disqualifying

former counsel and striking the opposition. That led to this exchange:

“[NEW COUNSEL]: . . . [A]ll we knew is that they were just disqualified.

“THE COURT: And that was not a big red flag that you should look at the court’s

file and look at the order and what the status of the case was?”

New counsel then claimed that, as of January 20, 2016, they had not yet started

preparing for the summary judgment hearing: “[W]e normally prepare for [a] summary

judgment motion the day before the hearing.” The trial court asked:

4 “THE COURT: Had you read th[e] opposition?

“[NEW COUNSEL]: We had not read it yet.

“THE COURT: Do you have it?

“[NEW COUNSEL]: I — don’t believe —

“THE COURT: Be careful with that answer. I’ve ordered it not be distributed.

“[NEW COUNSEL]: I don’t believe we had it and we were going to get it off the

court’s docket.

“THE COURT: I will tell you what you are telling me now is not very credible,

and it’s certainly I do not think excusable neglect. It’s hard for me to believe . . . that you

have been in the case since November, have not looked at the case file to the point where

you did not know the order that struck the opposition existed, were prepared to come here

and argue a dispositive summary judgment motion and . . . had not looked at any

opposition to prepare for that argument . . . .”

The trial court ruled, “I do not find excusable neglect in any way whatsoever.” It

therefore denied the ex parte application. It then granted the motion for summary

judgment.

On January 25, 2016, Levingston’s new counsel filed a noticed motion for relief

under Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b), requesting both mandatory

5 relief and discretionary relief. The motion included a proposed opposition to the motion

for summary judgment.1

On March 22, 2016, after hearing argument, the trial court denied the motion. To

the extent that the motion sought discretionary relief, it ruled that there was still no

excusable neglect, and there were no grounds for reconsideration under Code of Civil

Procedure section 1008. To the extent that the motion sought mandatory relief, it ruled

that such relief is not available from an order granting summary judgment.

On April 21, 2016, the trial court entered judgment in favor of Kaiser and against

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Levingston v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levingston-v-kaiser-foundation-health-plan-calctapp-2018.