Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2026
DocketB342675
StatusUnpublished

This text of Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4 (Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4) 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
Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 2/24/26 Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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(a). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115(a).

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR

TRAVEL, ENTERTAINMENT, B342675 AND MARKETING, LLC (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. v. 21SMCV00061)

BRIAN DELINO, et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Edward B. Moreton, Jr., Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Williams Iagmin, Jon R. Williams for Defendants and Appellants. John L. Dodd & Associates, John L. Dodd and Bendel Law Group, Jason R. Bendel for Plaintiff and Respondent. The sole issue in this appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion by imposing terminating sanctions against defendants for failure to comply with a discovery order. We conclude that, under the circumstances of this case, the court erred in ordering terminating sanctions as the initial remedial measure. At the time sanctions were imposed, the trial was two months away, and the record does not show that lesser sanctions would have failed to obtain defendants’ compliance. We therefore remand the matter to the trial court to consider the appropriate sanctions for defendants’ violation of the discovery order. The court has broad discretion on remand to impose a sanction, or combination of sanctions, that is less severe than a terminating sanction.

BACKGROUND

Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing, LLC (Team) sued its former employee, Brian Delino, and his company, BigDaddyFormals, LLC (collectively, Delino), alleging Delino misappropriated Team’s business, customers, and prospective clients. Delino filed a cross-complaint, alleging Team violated various provisions of the Labor Code when he was a Team’s employee, and, once he left, Team tortiously interfered with his business. In April 2023, Team served Delino with requests for production of documents and special interrogatories. Delino’s responses to the document requests consisted largely of boilerplate objections (e.g., the requests are overbroad, not reasonably particularized, and seek confidential trade secret information). Delino responded to certain special interrogatories, and objected to others (such as an interrogatory seeking the

2 name of his first client) on the purported grounds of trade secret privilege and third-party privacy rights. Team also noticed the deposition of Brian Delino, which included a request to produce documents. In response, Delino’s counsel objected to these document requests with similar boilerplate objections, including that the requests are not reasonably particularized, overbroad, and the documents requested are protected by the responding party’s right to privacy. Delino appeared for his deposition, but on many occasions refused to and/or was instructed not to answer the questions. Delino also failed to produce the documents listed in the deposition notice. In October 2023, Team filed motions to compel further responses to the document requests and special interrogatories, and, about two months later, filed a motion to compel Delino’s testimony at his deposition and production of documents. Team also sought monetary sanctions. The trial court heard all three discovery motions on January 8, 2024. The court granted the motions to compel further responses to the special interrogatories and document requests, and ordered Delino provide supplemental responses and documents by January 17, 2024. It also granted Team’s motion to compel Delino’s testimony at his deposition and to produce documents at the deposition. The court denied Team’s request for monetary sanctions, however, on the ground that it could not conclude that the arguments raised by Delino in his opposition papers were made without substantial justification. On January 12, counsel exchanged emails regarding scheduling a mediation in February or March. Delino’s counsel asked whether Team’s counsel would agree “to staying all

3 discovery issues until mediation is complete.” Team’s counsel replied that he could not agree to stay the discovery until March. But Team’s counsel provided an alternative proposal: “If you want to try and mediate before the discovery is due, we should mediate next week. . . . Maybe mediate toward the end of this month with documents due 10 days after the mediation? One other thought . . . you and I try and settle the case before the [documents] are due [on January 17] and I give you an extra 10 days to produce? Let me know if you want to discuss.” Delino’s counsel agreed with the “proposed option of attempting to settle with the document production extended 10 days.” On January 19, the parties filed a stipulation to continue the final status conference and the January 29, 2024 trial date. The stipulation further provided that “discovery is reopened and discovery and law and motion cut-offs shall be governed by the new [final status conference] and [t]rial date.” The stipulation also noted that mediation was scheduled for March 19, 2024. Based on the parties’ stipulation, the court issued an order continuing the trial date to June 24, 2024, and ordered that all discovery deadlines be continued to correspond to the new trial date. On February 9, having not received supplemental responses or documents, Team filed a motion for terminating sanctions or, alternatively, monetary sanctions. Delino opposed, arguing in part that the parties agreed to extend the discovery response date to 10 days after the mediation, and thus, the responses were not yet due. On February 22, Delino filed a petition for writ of mandate in this court seeking relief from the trial court’s order granting

4 Team’s motions to compel. On March 6, 2024, a different panel of this court summarily denied the petition. The trial court held an initial hearing on Team’s motion for terminating sanctions and monetary sanctions on March 8, and issued a tentative ruling granting the motion. At Delino’s request, however, the court continued the hearing to April 22 to allow Delino time to seek review in the California Supreme Court of this court’s denial of his writ petition. At the April 22 hearing, the court stated it intended to adopt its tentative ruling issued for the March 8 hearing (with one change regarding the date for Team to submit default prove- up papers). Delino’s counsel requested the court “impose an incremental sanction,” explaining that he produced several documents during the previous week, and he planned on producing additional documents that day. He therefore asked the court “to set one last deadline” for his client to produce all the documents requested by the end of the day or the following morning. The trial court denied the request, and adopted the tentative ruling as the order of the court. In its written ruling, the trial court rejected Delino’s claim that the parties agreed to a 10-day extension after mediation, explaining that Team made clear that the ten-day extension was as of the due date imposed by the court, and the parties stipulated that document production would take place before the mediation. The court thus found that Delino’s interpretation of the ten-day extension “is belied by statements made in [the parties’] own stipulation.” The court further found Delino willfully failed to comply with the discovery order and that Delino has “not acted in good faith and with reasonable diligence.” The court noted that the discovery sought “goes to the heart of the

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Travel, Entertainment, and Marketing v. Delino CA2/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travel-entertainment-and-marketing-v-delino-ca24-calctapp-2026.