Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt Disney Co.

66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268, 155 Cal. App. 4th 736, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1604
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2007
DocketB178340
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268 (Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt Disney Co.) 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
Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt Disney Co., 66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268, 155 Cal. App. 4th 736, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1604 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*740 Opinion

WILLHITE, Acting P. J.

In this case of first impression in California, we hold that when a plaintiff’s deliberate and egregious misconduct makes any sanction other than dismissal inadequate to ensure a fair trial, the trial court has inherent power to impose a terminating sanction.

In 1991, plaintiff Stephen Slesinger, Inc. (SSI), sued defendant the Walt Disney Company (Disney), alleging that Disney failed to pay certain royalties under its licensing agreement with SSI. That agreement granted Disney rights to exploit the Winnie the Pooh series of children’s stories—rights that SSI’s founder had obtained in 1930 from Pooh’s creator, A.A. Milne. In 1992 or 1993, to assist in prosecuting its lawsuit, SSI hired an investigator to surreptitiously obtain Disney documents. Other than a purported admonition to obey the law, SSI provided no direction or supervision for the investigator’s activities. Working at least until 1995, the investigator took thousands of pages belonging to Disney, including documents marked privileged and confidential. He obtained the documents by breaking into an uncertain number of Disney office buildings and secure trash receptacles, and by trespassing onto the secure facility of the company with which Disney had contracted to destroy its confidential documents. The documents were passed on to SSI’s attorneys and principals, who reviewed them, but kept no records of the documents they received or of those they discarded. Until 2002, SSI concealed the investigator’s activities from Disney and the court. In 2004, following an evidentiary hearing on a motion by Disney for a terminating sanction, the trial court concluded that no lesser sanction could protect Disney against SSI’s use of illicitly obtained information. Therefore, as an exercise of its inherent power, the court dismissed SSI’s lawsuit with prejudice.

On SSI’s appeal from the terminating sanction, we conclude that California trial courts have inherent power to issue a terminating sanction when a plaintiff’s misconduct is deliberate, is egregious, and makes lesser sanctions inadequate to ensure a fair trial. Because substantial evidence shows that SSI’s misconduct meets this standard, we also conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing SSI’s case as an exercise of the court’s inherent power.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Litigation

British author A.A. Milne created the Winnie the Pooh series of children’s stories. In 1930, Stephen Slesinger acquired from Milne the rights to commercially exploit the works in the United States and Canada. Stephen *741 Slesinger formed a corporation, SSI, to which he assigned the Pooh rights. In 1961, SSI licensed certain rights of commercial exploitation to Disney. SSI and Disney modified their licensing agreement several times. In 1983, they executed a new contract, which became the focus of the instant litigation.

In February 1991, SSI sued Disney for breach of contract, fraud, and declaratory relief. In the operative third amended complaint, SSI alleged that Disney breached its contractual obligations to account and pay for its exploitation of the Pooh rights under the 1983 agreement, including sales of Pooh merchandise. SSI also alleged that during the negotiations leading to the 1983 agreement Disney misrepresented, among other things, the items for which it would pay royalties, and that Disney thereafter misrepresented its compliance with its contractual obligations to account for royalties. In its declaratory relief claim, SSI sought a declaration that it could terminate the contract based on Disney’s breaches.

Lengthy, bitter litigation followed, occasioned by claims and counterclaims of misconduct. In 2001, SSI obtained evidentiary and monetary sanctions against Disney for destroying substantial portions of the files of Vincent H. Jefferds, a senior Disney vice-president who was Disney’s principal representative in negotiating the 1983 licensing agreement. A key dispute in SSI’s lawsuit involves representations allegedly made by Jefferds during the negotiations.

Having obtained sanctions against Disney, however, SSI fell victim to its own litigation abuses. In 2003, Disney moved for a terminating sanction against SSI, alleging that SSI had committed pervasive misconduct. In February 2004, the trial court (a different judge from the one who had sanctioned Disney) held a five-day evidentiary hearing on Disney’s motion. The evidence was complex and conflicting; it included, among other things, live testimony, deposition testimony, witness declarations, correspondence between the parties, and prior discovery pleadings. What emerged was a portrait of litigation misconduct run riot, involving SSI’s employment of an investigator, Terry Lee Sands, to take documents from Disney facilities and trash receptacles as well as the secure facility of the document destruction firm retained by Disney. We summarize the entire record under the applicable standard of review: in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling terminating SSI’s lawsuit, drawing all inferences in support of the trial court’s ruling which are reasonably supported by the evidence. (See Laguna Auto Body v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (1991) 231 Cal.App.3d 481, 487, 491 [82 Cal.Rptr. 530] (Laguna).)

*742 2. SSI’s Principals and Agents, and the Hiring of Terry Lee Sands

SSI is a family-run corporation. During the period relevant to this appeal, its sole corporate officer (President) and sole board member was Shirley Slesinger Lasswell, widow of SSI’s founder Stephen Slesinger. Lasswell was responsible for managing SSL She lived in Florida, and kept SSI’s Winnie the Pooh files in her office there. Lasswell died while this appeal was pending.

SSI’s sole shareholder is Pati Slesinger, Lasswell’s daughter by Stephen Slesinger. Pati Slesinger managed SSI’s lawsuit against Disney from the inception, keeping in close contact with Lasswell.

One of SSI’s agents was David Bentson, Pati Slesinger’s husband. 1 Bentson performed many tasks to assist SSI in its lawsuit, and worked directly with Terry Lee Sands, the investigator whose conduct lies at the heart of Disney’s sanction motion.

Sands was never a licensed private investigator. Nonetheless, in 1992 or 1993 he was working for the Nick Harris Detective Agency when the agency was hired by SSI’s then attorney, Marshall Morgan, to work on SSI’s lawsuit. 2 Within a month, Sands began working directly with David Bentson and Attorney Morgan. His assignment was to help SSI prosecute its lawsuit by surreptitiously obtaining Disney documents.

Sands’s employment lasted at least until 1995, and probably longer. 3 Based on the advice of SSI’s counsel, Bentson admonished Sands to “make sure what you’re doing is legal and that you do it by the book.” Bentson, however, took no steps to ensure that Sands obeyed the admonition. As Bentson *743

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268, 155 Cal. App. 4th 736, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-slesinger-inc-v-walt-disney-co-calctapp-2007.