Mason v. YD Window CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 2021
DocketC091415
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mason v. YD Window CA3 (Mason v. YD Window CA3) 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
Mason v. YD Window CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/5/21 Mason v. YD Window CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (San Joaquin) ----

MIRANDA MASON et al., C091415

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. STKCVUWT20180008764) v.

YD WINDOW, INC., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiffs Miranda Mason et al. appeal the trial court’s orders (1) imposing monetary discovery sanctions of $9,087.55 on their attorney, Michael Bracamontes, and (2) denying a motion for relief from those sanctions. Plaintiffs contend the sanctions are improper. We agree, and reverse. BACKGROUND The facts of the underlying litigation are largely immaterial to this appeal. It suffices to say that during a March 2019 deposition in San Francisco that occurred in the

1 discovery phase of this civil action, a disagreement arose whether the deponent had an obligation to answer a question posed by Bracamontes. Defense counsel instructed the deponent not to answer the question. Bracamontes decided to suspend the deposition to seek the trial court’s resolution of the dispute despite defense counsel’s “suggest[ion] that [he] ask all of the questions that [he was] able to ask . . . before . . . suspend[ing] this deposition.” “If you don’t do that, we will ask for sanctions,” defense counsel said. “You know I traveled up here from Southern California.” Bracamontes replied: “I’m comfortable, if we have to suspend today, that I’m not going to be the one to get sanctioned, you and your client are. [¶] These are very foundational questions. This is an employment lawsuit. I’m asking [the deponent] what his job duties are.” In April 2019, plaintiffs filed a motion to compel the deponent’s testimony and seeking monetary sanctions, arguing “[d]efense counsel had zero basis in law for refusing to allow the [deponent] to answer” the question posed, and that provisions of the Civil Discovery Act (Code Civ. Proc., § 2016.010 et. seq.)1 “provide[ ] that if a deponent fails to answer a deposition question the examiner may either complete the examination on other matters or adjourn the deposition.” Defendants opposed the motion, arguing Bracamontes should have “complete[d] the examination of other matters,” the “objections were proper,” and plaintiffs “and/or” Bracamontes should be sanctioned for bringing the motion “without substantial justification.” The trial court appointed a referee to resolve the dispute and other discovery matters not at issue here.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 Referee’s Ruling In a September 2019 written ruling, the referee recommended the trial court “overrule all objections raised in the course” of the deposition, “and grant [p]laintiffs’ motion for [an] order compelling the deponent to answer” plaintiffs’ questions. The referee explained that defense counsel’s objections at the deposition were not well- founded and that “[t]here [was] support in the transcript [of the deposition] for [p]laintiffs’ contention that [defense counsel] precipitated the suspension” of the deposition “by means of interruptions, objections without merit, and similar obstreperous behavior.” Turning to the issue of the suspension of the deposition, the referee concluded that Bracamontes was “too quick to suspend the deposition,” observing that -- while section 2025.460, subdivision (e) “appears to give” the deposing party “a choice” “[w]hen a deponent fails to answer a question,” to “either (1) complete the deposition on other matters and subsequently bring a motion to compel . . . or (2) adjourn the deposition and file a motion to compel” -- “[t]he problem” was that “[u]nder the particular circumstances” of the case, the referee could not (in light of the principles and purposes of the Civil Discovery Act) “justify or excuse [p]laintiffs’ decision to suspend the deposition” so soon after it started and due to a “disagreement over a single line of (non- critical/preliminary) questioning.” Once defense counsel suggested “the deposition . . . continue on other issues,” the referee concluded, “it was incumbent on [p]laintiffs to proceed or at least try to proceed.” Accordingly, “suspend[ing] the deposition . . . was unreasonable under the circumstances. Unintentionally or not, the decision indisputably caused significant annoyance, burden and expense” to the other side. And given a court’s “general duty to control the course of discovery to further the purposes of discovery, the [r]eferee recommend[ed] that the [trial] court find that [Bracamontes’s] . . . decision to suspend the deposition . . . was unreasonable under the circumstances, caused significant and actual

3 annoyance, burden and expense . . . and constituted a misuse of the discovery process within the meaning of [section] 2023.010.” (Fn. omitted.) As for the parties’ requests for monetary sanctions, the referee posited section 2025.480, subdivision (j) as the relevant provision, and quoted its language that “ ‘[t]he court shall impose a monetary sanction . . . against any party, person or attorney, who unsuccessfully makes or opposes a motion to compel an answer . . . unless it finds that the one subject to the sanction acted with substantial justification or that other circumstances make the imposition of the sanction unjust.’ ” Under that rubric, the referee recommended the trial court deny plaintiffs’ request for monetary sanctions, because “ ‘other circumstances’ ”2 made imposition of a sanction unjust; but recommended granting defendant’s request for monetary sanctions -- “as against [p]laintiffs’ attorney[ ] only” -- “[b]y the same reasoning.” The referee recommended a monetary sanction of $9,087.55, which included the costs of defense counsel’s travel time and attorney fees. Last, the referee recommended the parties pay the referee’s fees on a 75/25 basis due to their “relative fault,” noting “there was a degree of provocation from” defense counsel before Bracamontes’s unreasonable decision to suspend the deposition. On September 20, 2019, the trial court “adopted in full” the referee’s recommended ruling. In October 2019, plaintiffs filed a motion for relief from sanctions, maintaining that section 2025.460, subdivision (e) permitted him to suspend the deposition due to the

2 “(1) that [p]laintiffs’ ‘meet and confer’ efforts were merely pro forma and inadequate under the circumstances, (2) that [p]laintiffs’ decision to suspend the deposition was unreasonable and inappropriate . . . , (3) that [p]laintiffs in fact caused ‘unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, or oppression, or undue burden and expense’ to other litigants within the meaning of [section] 2023.010, [subdivision] (c), and (4) that denial of money sanctions . . . is consistent with a trial court’s general duty to control the course of discovery to further the purposes of discovery.”

4 deponent’s failure to answer a question, but that “[g]iven the [r]eferee’s finding that [this] decision . . . was a mistake, said error was excusable” neglect under section 473, subdivision (b).3 In a later declaration in support of the motion, plaintiffs attached October 2019 correspondence from the referee to the parties, wherein the referee explained that it had “been thinking about the [r]ecommended [r]uling” and while “comfortable with [its] understanding of the issues, [its] analysis, and conclusions,” the referee wanted to “add that I do not believe that . . . Bracamontes intended to ‘play games’ with discovery or meant to cause any degree of harm to [d]efendants. I believe also that . . .

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Mason v. YD Window CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-yd-window-ca3-calctapp-2021.