Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 16, 2020
DocketB295021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8 (Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8) 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
Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 9/16/20 Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

PAMELA TEREN et al., B295021

Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC713109) v.

NANCY ABROLAT,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Dennis Landin, Judge. Affirmed. EPPS & Coulson, Dawn M. Coulson and Kari A. Keidser for Defendant and Appellant Sherman Law Corporation and Lisa Sherman for Plaintiffs and Respondents. _____________________________ For 12 years now, the parties in this case have been embroiled in an acrimonious dispute over the dissolution of their law partnership. In the underlying case, Nancy Abrolat sued Pamela Teren for allegedly stealing partnership clients, but that case ended in terminating sanctions because Abrolat refused to sit for a second day of her deposition when ordered to do so. Abrolat appealed that ruling but dismissed her appeal at the 11th hour. We found the appeal frivolous and imposed significant sanctions of over $160,000 on Abrolat for pursuing it. The dispute perhaps could have ended there. But now, Teren and her law corporation have sued Abrolat for malicious prosecution and abuse of process. Only the malicious prosecution claim is at issue here. Abrolat filed an anti-SLAPP motion to strike it. (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16; hereafter section 425.16.) In opposition, Teren submitted a blanket request for judicial notice of over 4,000 pages of records in the underlying case and other related cases. In response, Abrolat lodged nine identical blanket evidentiary objections to all 4,000-plus pages offered by Teren. The court denied the anti-SLAPP motion. Neither party properly approached the evidentiary requirements for Abrolat’s anti-SLAPP motion. Teren’s en masse request for judicial notice of thousands of court records did little to carry her burden to show that she had evidence to support her claims that would be admissible at trial, which is required to survive an anti-SLAPP motion. For Abrolat’s part, her blanket objections to the same thousands of pages did nothing to show that any particular document would be inadmissible at trial. Ultimately, the trial court relied on only two documents to conclude Teren’s malicious prosecution claim had minimal merit. Following the trial court’s lead, we will do the same. We agree

2 those two documents demonstrate Teren’s claim has minimal merit, so we affirm. Given both parties’ evidentiary failures, we deny Teren’s motion for sanctions. BACKGROUND The basic background facts are not disputed, so we take them from Teren’s verified complaint and the trial court’s order denying the anti-SLAPP motion. Abrolat and Teren dissolved their law partnership in 2008. Abrolat sued Teren for breach of contract, fraud, and related claims, alleging Teren stole potential clients from her (the underlying case). Abrolat had also filed a lien on one of Teren’s cases (referred to as the “Lefkir case”), which blocked Teren from receiving any portion of a $495,000 attorney’s fee she earned from the resolution of the case. Abrolat also froze a $500,000 partnership fee paid on another case (the “DOE case”), which Teren alleged should have been split between them. During discovery in the underlying case, Abrolat failed to appear for her second deposition and refused to comply with two court orders compelling her appearance. This resulted in the trial court issuing an order granting Teren’s motion for terminating sanctions. In that order, the trial court found (1) Teren’s counsel deposed Abrolat in a first session; (2) around the same time, Teren discovered evidence Abrolat had been “spying” on Teren’s computer and filed a Second Amended Cross- Complaint alleging claims based on that spying; (3) Abrolat violated two court orders to appear for a second deposition or provide a doctor’s note under the penalty of perjury excusing her absence; (4) Abrolat provided no admissible evidence to excuse her non-appearance; and (5) monetary and terminating sanctions were warranted.

3 At the hearing on the sanctions motion, the court noted the evidence “shows a pattern, practice of delay in this action on the part of plaintiffs, as well as the willful disobedience of this court’s order, given the repeated failure to present admissible evidence showing that Nancy Abrolat suffers from . . . a serious medical condition that prevents her from sitting for deposition.” The court dismissed Abrolat’s operative complaint with prejudice and entered default judgment in Teren’s favor on her cross-complaint. Abrolat moved for reconsideration of the default judgment, which the trial court denied. The court found she failed to show excusable neglect, believing her behavior was “strategic from the beginning” and was “strategic now.”1 Abrolat appealed the default judgment. (Abrolat v. Teren, B260471.) We did not resolve the merits because Abrolat dismissed the appeal before filing her reply brief, resulting in issuance of the remittitur. We granted Teren’s motion to recall the remittitur and imposed significant sanctions on Abrolat. We called her dismissal of the appeal “part of her continued gamesmanship after she misled Teren into believing she would file a reply brief, only to then file a request for dismissal without notice.” We found “little question” her appeal “was frivolous because ‘ “any reasonable attorney would agree that th[is] appeal is totally and completely without merit.” ’ ” We also inferred Abrolat’s true motive was delay: “[Abrolat] was subject to a substantial default judgment for the

1 Teren attached the transcripts from the hearings on the motion for terminating sanctions and motion for relief from default judgment as exhibits to her malicious prosecution complaint.

4 fees she continuously withheld from Teren, putting a serious financial strain on Teren. The longer the appeal remained open, the more serious the strain became and the greater the advantage to Abrolat. Any doubt about her motive was eliminated when she waited until the last possible moment and out of the blue to dismiss the appeal without even a hint of notice to Teren, thereby cutting off Teren’s ability to file any sanctions motion.” We imposed $160,718.92 in sanctions on Abrolat, representing Teren’s attorney’s fees in litigating the appeal (with an offset for some fees already paid by Abrolat).2 Teren then filed the verified complaint at issue here alleging claims for malicious prosecution and abuse of process based on the underlying case. Abrolat demurred and filed an anti-SLAPP motion. The court sustained the demurrer for the abuse of process claim, but overruled the demurrer as to the malicious prosecution claim. It also denied Abrolat’s anti-SLAPP motion as to the malicious prosecution claim. In denying the anti-SLAPP motion, the court granted Teren’s blanket request for judicial notice, which identified four “exhibits” that contained over 4,000 pages of records in the underlying case, the prior appeal, a related bankruptcy case, and the malicious prosecution case here.3 Abrolat asserted nine identical blanket evidentiary objections to all 4,000-plus pages,

2 Teren attached a copy of our order in the underlying case as an exhibit to her malicious prosecution complaint.

3 The trial court also granted Abrolat’s request for judicial notice of “various court filings,” but the request is not in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
Teren v. Abrolat CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teren-v-abrolat-ca28-calctapp-2020.