Miraskandari v. Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 2022
DocketB301785M
StatusPublished

This text of Miraskandari v. Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP (Miraskandari v. Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP) 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
Miraskandari v. Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/25/22 (unmodified opinion attached) CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

SHAHROKH MIRESKANDARI, B301785

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC517799 v.

EDWARDS WILDMAN ORDER MODIFYING OPINION PALMER LLP et al., [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]

Defendants and Respondents.

THE COURT:

It is ordered that the opinion filed on April 8, 2022, be modified as follows: The following additional paragraph should be added to footnote 1, on page 3: “Mireskandari’s lead appellate counsel, Becky S. James, filed the opening brief and appellant’s appendix while at her former firm, James & Associates. In mid-2021, James merged her former firm with Dykema Gosset, and Mireskandari retained Dykema Gosset to represent him in this appeal and to file the appellant’s reply brief on his behalf. In his reply brief, Mireskandari opposed the motion for sanctions without authorization. (Rule 8.276(d) [“An opposition [to a motion for sanctions] may not be filed unless the court sends [written] notice” that it is considering imposing sanctions.].) He asserted the motion was “meritless,” arguing (among other things) his 9,700-page appellant’s appendix necessarily complied with the California Rules of Court because, if it had not, this court’s “clerk would have had a duty to reject it.” (See rule 8.18 [“Except as these rules provide otherwise, the reviewing court clerk must not file any record or other document that does not conform to these rules.”].) The argument naturally ignored that, notwithstanding the reviewing court clerk’s role under rule 8.18, sanctions are authorized for unreasonable rule violations when those violations appear in a duly filed document. (See rule 8.276, subd. (a)(4).) Ultimately, when this court notified Mireskandari we were considering imposing sanctions and authorized him to file an opposition, his appellate counsel acknowledged the rule violations in his appendix and opening brief.”

2 There is no change in the judgment.

____________________________________________________________ EGERTON, J. LAVIN, Acting P. LIPNER, J. ∗ J.

∗ Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.

3 Filed 4/8/22 (unmodified opinion) CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC517799 v.

EDWARDS WILDMAN PALMER LLP et al.,

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Terry A. Green, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part.

Dykema Gossett, Becky S. James and Lisa M. Burnett for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Valle Makoff, John M. Moscarino and Katherine Balatbat for Defendants and Respondents. _________________________

* Under California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts 2 through 7 of the Discussion section. Plaintiff Shahrokh Mireskandari sued his former attorneys, defendants Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP (EWP) and Dominique Shelton, for professional negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract, alleging, among other things, defendants failed to advise him of our state’s anti-SLAPP statute before filing a complaint on his behalf against a newspaper publisher in California federal court. He alleged the lawsuit predictably drew a successful special motion to strike, which caused him to incur substantial attorney fees litigating and losing the motion and deprived him of discovery he intended to use in a disciplinary proceeding pending against him in the United Kingdom, ultimately resulting in the loss of his law license, substantial fines and fees, and bankruptcy. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary adjudication of the professional negligence claim, concluding Mireskandari could not establish causation under the case- within-a-case method because he could not prove he would have prevailed in his lawsuit against the publisher but for defendants’ negligence. We conclude the trial court erred. As we will explain, while we agree with the court’s subsequent ruling that Mireskandari’s damages claim based on the adverse outcome of the U.K. disciplinary proceeding was too speculative to create a question of fact for a jury, those damages were only part of his cause of action for professional negligence. Because an attorney owes a duty of care to advise a client of foreseeable risks of litigation before filing a lawsuit on the client’s behalf, we conclude Mireskandari asserted a viable claim that, but for defendants’ negligent failure to advise him of the risks associated with a potential anti-SLAPP motion, he would not have filed

2 his lawsuit in California and would not have incurred damages from litigating and losing an anti-SLAPP motion. Mireskandari asserts several other claims of error regarding the court’s pre-trial, trial, and post-trial rulings. We reject each of these challenges for the principal reason, among others, that Mireskandari has categorically failed to meet his burden to present an adequate record and argument affirmatively demonstrating prejudicial error. Defendants moved for the assessment of sanctions against Mireskandari and his appellate counsel based on several material violations of the California Rules of Court governing the opening brief and appellant’s appendix in civil appeals. 1 We gave Mireskandari and his counsel written notice that we were considering imposing sanctions for some of those violations. (Rule 8.276(c).) In response, Mireskandari’s counsel acknowledged the rule violations, but explained they were unintended and resulted largely from an unanticipated combination of receiving a disordered record from trial counsel and strained office resources due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While we remain troubled by the scope of these admitted infractions, we conclude counsel’s contrition and the unprecedented hardship her office and staff faced due to the pandemic make sanctions inappropriate in this case. We reverse the order summarily adjudicating the professional negligence claim and affirm the judgment in all other respects. The motion for sanctions is denied.

1 Rule references are to the California Rules of Court.

3 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case and the underlying litigation that spawned it have a lengthy history. Our summary here will be brief, and we will discuss certain proceedings in more detail when we address Mireskandari’s related claims of error. 1. The Daily Mail Articles and the U.K. Disciplinary Proceeding Against Mireskandari Mireskandari was educated in the United States and later moved to London, England. He was admitted to the English bar as a solicitor in 2000 and became a partner in the law firm of Dean & Dean in 2005. Beginning in September 2008, the Daily Mail, a London tabloid, published a series of unflattering articles about Mireskandari. Among other things, the articles said Mireskandari had been convicted of fraud in California in connection with a telemarketing scam; he claimed to have a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania, of which the university had no record; he failed to pass his classes at a “minor local” law school in the United States; he obtained his law degree from the American University of Hawaii, which subsequently was shut down by the courts; and he overcharged clients for legal work. In December 2008, the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA), the regulatory body for solicitors in England and Wales, took over Dean & Dean and brought a disciplinary action against Mireskandari in the Solicitor’s Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT). The SRA alleged Mireskandari had misrepresented his education, training, and background to gain bar admission.

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Miraskandari v. Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miraskandari-v-edwards-wildman-palmer-llp-calctapp-2022.