Thomas Realty Co. v. Superior Court

199 Cal. App. 3d 91, 244 Cal. Rptr. 733
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1988
DocketB031754
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 199 Cal. App. 3d 91 (Thomas Realty Co. v. Superior Court) 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
Thomas Realty Co. v. Superior Court, 199 Cal. App. 3d 91, 244 Cal. Rptr. 733 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

199 Cal.App.3d 91 (1988)
244 Cal. Rptr. 733

THOMAS REALTY CO., INC., Petitioner,
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY, Respondent; MERRILL LYNCH REALTY, Real Party in Interest.

Docket No. B031754.

Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Two.

March 1, 1988.

*92 COUNSEL

Richards, Watson & Gershon, Mitchell E. Abbott and William B. Rudell for Petitioner.

No appearance for Respondent.

Dennis, Juarez, Shafer & Young, Ernest Allen Wish, Stuart I. Koenig and Kevin M. Brew for Real Party in Interest.

OPINION

THE COURT.[*]

Petitioner seeks a peremptory writ of mandate compelling the superior court to honor its challenge filed pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 170.6. The trial court struck the challenge as untimely.[1]

(1) The issue presented is a recurring one. Section 170.6, subdivision (2), provides in part that when the parties know the identity of the judge or commissioner "assigned to or who is scheduled to" hear a matter at least 10 days before the date set for hearing, a challenge is untimely unless made at least 5 days before the hearing.[2] When a party files a motion and calendars it for hearing in a specified department of the superior court, is the judge's identity "known" for purposes of that provision?

*93 In striking the challenge in the instant case, the trial court was following the holding of People v. Roerman (1961) 189 Cal. App.2d 150, 164-165 [10 Cal. Rptr. 870]. There a challenge filed on the day of trial of a case assigned more than 10 days earlier to trial in a designated department was held untimely; the court explicitly rejected the contention that assignment to a particular department does not constitute an assignment to a judge.[3] Numerous other cases, spanning nearly the entire lifetime of section 170.6, have stated, in dictum, that the five-day rule applies in comparable circumstances.[4] (Eagle Maintenance & Supply Co. v. Superior Court (1961) 196 Cal. App.2d 692, 695 [16 Cal. Rptr. 745]; Sambrano v. Superior Court (1973) 31 Cal. App.3d 416, 419 [107 Cal. Rptr. 274]; People v. Escobedo (1973) 35 Cal. App.3d 32, 37, 40 [110 Cal. Rptr. 550]; Villarruel v. Superior Court (1973) 35 Cal. App.3d 559 [110 Cal. Rptr. 861]; Los Angeles County Dept. of Pub. Social Services v. Superior Court (1977) 69 Cal. App.3d 407, 414 [138 Cal. Rptr. 43]; In re Jose S. (1978) 78 Cal. App.3d 619, 627 [144 Cal. Rptr. 309]; People v. Hall (1978) 86 Cal. App.3d 753, 758 [150 Cal. Rptr. 412]; In re Robert P. (1981) 121 Cal. App.3d 36, 40-42 [175 Cal. Rptr. 252]; People v. Superior Court (Hall) (1984) 160 Cal. App.3d 1081, 1086 [207 Cal. Rptr. 131]; Landmark Holding Group, Inc. v. Superior Court (1987) 193 Cal. App.3d 525, 529 [238 Cal. Rptr. 475] [review den.].)

Despite this extensive authority, however, and without mentioning People v. Roerman, supra, a pair of First District decisions have held that because a motion assigned to a department is not assigned to the judge who usually presides there, the challenge may be made as late as the commencement of the hearing. (Bouchard v. Insona (1980) 105 Cal. App.3d 768 [164 Cal. Rptr. 505]; Retes v. Superior Court (1981) 122 Cal. App.3d 799 [176 Cal. Rptr. 160] [hg. den.].) Both cases point out that judges do not sit every day in their regular departments and that hearings are sometimes reassigned to other departments on the hearing date.

Bouchard relied on five cases for the propositions that "Decisions involving advance assignments for trial make it clear that the 10-day/5-day rule does not apply if the assignment is merely to a department" and "it [is] clear that, for Code of Civil Procedure section 170.6 purposes, assignment of a matter to a particular department is not the same as assigning it to a particular judge." (105 Cal. App.3d at pp. 772, 774.) The five cited cases, however, did not in fact support Bouchard.

*94 Three of the five are among the group of cases cited earlier in this opinion. Each held that when a hearing is continued, a challenge need not have been filed five days before the original hearing date. As noted earlier, each opines, in dictum, that the challenge must be filed five days before the new hearing date.[5]

The fourth and fifth cases on which Bouchard relied are Woodman v. Selvage (1968) 263 Cal. App.2d 390 [69 Cal. Rptr. 687], and Spector v. Superior Court (1961) 55 Cal.2d 839 [13 Cal. Rptr. 189, 361 P.2d 909]. Neither decision supports the holding in Bouchard. Woodman held timely a challenge filed 28 days before a continued hearing date. Spector held timely a challenge made at the time of hearing, because the party filing the challenge could not have known before the hearing that the court would deny his request that his motion to modify an injunction be heard by the judge who had issued the injunction. (In addition — as Bouchard recognized — the five-day rule did not apply in Spector because the motion had been set for hearing less than ten days in advance.)

In fact, Bouchard was unprecedented; it was the first decision to hold that when a matter is calendared for hearing in a designated department over 10 days in advance, a party may delay making its challenge until the time of the hearing.

Bouchard also claimed to "comport with the literal language of section 170.6." In fact, though, the contrary interpretation is supported by the statutory terminology. The five-day rule comes into play if the parties have ten days' advance knowledge of the identity of the judge "assigned to or who is scheduled to try the cause or hear the matter" (italics added). When a matter is set for hearing in a specified department to which a particular judge is regularly assigned, the matter is not "assigned to" that judge, but it must be considered "scheduled" to be heard before that judge.[6] The statute says "assigned or scheduled," not just "assigned." Yet the Bouchard holding necessarily treats the words "or who is scheduled" as without significance, in violation of the elementary rule that a court should avoid *95 construing a statute in a way that makes some of its words surplusage. (See, e.g., People v. Black (1982) 32 Cal.3d 1, 5 [184 Cal. Rptr. 454, 648 P.2d 104].)[7]

Retes, supra, 122 Cal. App.3d 799, follows Bouchard, and relies on statistical evidence on the proportion of court days (75.4 percent) the regularly assigned judge did not preside in the law and motion department during the three month period when the particular motion was pending in the trial court. In doing so, Retes necessarily weakened Bouchard, by implying a rule that application of Bouchard turns on an examination of court statistics in each case.[8] If this means the trial courts should determine the timeliness of each section 170.6 challenge by gathering data from the court administrator's office, it is hard to imagine a more impractical rule.[9]

Accordingly, we hold that People v. Roerman, supra, 189 Cal. App.2d 150, is still good law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 Cal. App. 3d 91, 244 Cal. Rptr. 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-realty-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1988.