Mireskandari v. Gallagher

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2020
DocketD076130
StatusPublished

This text of Mireskandari v. Gallagher (Mireskandari v. Gallagher) 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
Mireskandari v. Gallagher, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/30/20

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SHAHROKH MIRESKANDARI, D076130

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2015- 00029990-CU-FR-CTL) LAUREN GALLAGHER, as Executor, etc.,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, John S. Meyer, Judge. Affirmed. James & Associates, Becky S. James and Lisa M. Burnett for Plaintiff and Appellant. Reback, McAndrews & Blessey, Robert C. Reback and Rebecca G. Goldstein for Defendant and Respondent. In a second amended complaint (complaint), Shahrokh Mireskandari

alleged four causes of action against Joseph Scoma, M.D.,1 based on the reports and opinions Scoma provided at the request of a disciplinary tribunal in London, England, as part of the tribunal’s formal proceedings involving Mireskandari, his legal practice, and his license to practice law in the United Kingdom. The trial court sustained without leave to amend Scoma’s demurrer to the complaint and entered judgment in favor of Scoma and against Mireskandari. As we explain, on the record presented by Mireskandari, California’s litigation privilege codified at Civil Code section 47, subdivision (b) (section 47(b)), bars each of Mireskandari’s causes of action. Thus, we will affirm the judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND2 Mireskandari received an undergraduate degree from National University in California, graduated from the American University of Hawaii

1 Scoma passed away in April 2017, and in December 2017 the probate court appointed Lauren Gallagher as the executor of the Estate of Joseph A. Scoma. In November 2020, this court granted a motion to substitute Gallagher, as the personal representative of Scoma’s estate, as the respondent in this action. (Code Civ. Proc., § 377.41.) For ease of reading, we do not differentiate between Scoma and Gallagher, although the arguments on appeal are made by Gallagher, and the disposition of the appeal affects only Gallagher as the party respondent.

2 Because this is an appeal following a demurrer, we are limited to and “must accept the facts pleaded as true and give the complaint a reasonable interpretation.” (Mathews v. Becerra (2019) 8 Cal.5th 756, 762 (Mathews).) Under this standard, when describing or referring to the “facts,” we mean the facts as alleged in the complaint. Earlier this year, the complaint in this action was before us on Mireskandari’s appeal from a judgment in favor of different defendants following the sustaining of their demurrer without leave to amend. (Mireskandari v. Gilbert (July 23, 2020, D074976) [nonpub. opn.] (Gilbert).) 2 law school in 1997, and attended London Guildhall University Law School in London in 1998. He qualified as a solicitor in 2000, and by 2006 he was the managing partner of a London firm with mostly “black, minority, or ethnic origin” (BME) solicitors and staff. In 2007, Mireskandari publicly disclosed to a member of Parliament problems BME solicitors experienced “at the hands of the Legal Society of England and Wales (‘LSE’) and the Solicitors Regulatory Authority (‘SRA’)”

(together, the LSE/SRA).3 As a result, an internal review was commenced

On our own motion we take judicial notice of Gilbert. (Evid. Code, §§ 459, subd. (a), 452, subd. (a).) The appellate panel in this appeal is the same as in Gilbert, and we must accept the same facts here as we accepted in Gilbert (Mathews, supra, 8 Cal.5th at p. 762). Thus, in this opinion, we adopt without citation to Gilbert much of the factual presentation from Gilbert.

3 The LSE is the “governing body of legal professionals in the United Kingdom.” (Landen, The Prospects of the Accountant-Lawyer Multidisciplinary Partnership in English-Speaking Countries (1999) 13 Emory Int’l L.Rev. 763, 799.) Among other responsibilities, the SRA is “the regulatory arm of the [LSE]” (Parks, Justice and Equality (Jan.-May 2012) NBA Nat. Bar Assn. Mag.) and is one of a number of regulatory authorities that licenses individual lawyers in the United Kingdom (Hadfield & Rhode, How to Regulate Legal Services to Promote Access, Innovation, and the Quality of Lawyering (2016) 67 Hastings L.J. 1191, 1210). “The SRA has no legal existence separate from the LSE. Though the LSE and SRA are formally independent from the government, both are accountable to the statutorily-created Legal Services Board . . . , which is itself accountable to Parliament through the Lord Chancellor.” (Mireskandari v. Mayne (9th Cir. 2015) 599 Fed. Appx. 677, 677-678 [affirmance of dismissal of Mireskandari’s complaint against the LSE and the SRA on the basis that, because they “engage ‘in a public activity on behalf of the foreign government,’ ” the claims against them are subject to dismissal under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act of 1976 (28 U.S.C. § 1602 et seq.)].) Our references to “the LSE/SRA” are based on Mireskandari’s submissions to the trial court and his briefing on appeal in which he does not differentiate between the two entities. 3 relating to the allegedly discriminatory and racist practices of the LSE/SRA toward BME solicitors. In retaliation, the LSE/SRA began a campaign to discredit Mireskandari. As part of its effort to obtain Mireskandari’s “confidential information”—and, as a pretext for intervening in Mireskandari’s law practice—the LSE/SRA retained a Los Angeles law firm. The LSE/SRA instructed the Los Angeles law firm “to illegally access” a specific website “to obtain [Mireskandari’s] educational records without notice to or knowledge of [Mireskandari].” In late September 2008, one of the firm’s paralegals “unlawfully and illegally . . . gain[ed] access to [Mireskandari’s] confidential educational records” and communicated the information she received to the LSE/SRA. Within two weeks being advised of these records, the LSE/SRA demanded from Mireskandari information regarding his “educational and work background.” Approximately two months later, in mid-December 2008, the LSE/SRA intervened in Mireskandari’s law practice. More than two years later, in early April 2011, the Solicitor’s Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) “initiated the proceedings against [Mireskandari] regarding the intervention of [Mireskandari’s] legal practice and his license to practice law in the United Kingdom” (SDT proceedings). After approximately three weeks of testimony, the SDT temporarily adjourned the SDT proceedings. At that time, Mireskandari travelled to California. He became seriously ill and requested that the SDT proceedings be further adjourned. In support of his request, Mireskandari submitted evidence from California physicians of his illness, his inability to travel to England, and his inability to participate in the SDT proceedings.

4 In response, at the request of the LSE/SRA, the SDT appointed Scoma “as an independent expert (not the expert of the LSE/SRA),” and directed counsel to instruct Scoma “that he was to act as an independent expert.” Consistently, in April 2012, which was almost a year after the adjournment, Scoma was directed in writing “that he was to be an independent expert to determine whether [Mireskandari] was medically fit to travel to London for the conclusion of the proceedings before the SDT.” Scoma did not perform a physical examination of Mireskandari. Based on his receipt from Mireskandari’s doctor and his review of what he described as “ ‘a comprehensive medical package . . . contain[ing] the medical records concerning Mr.

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