Uwadiale v. Makiyama CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 2014
DocketA137521
StatusUnpublished

This text of Uwadiale v. Makiyama CA1/5 (Uwadiale v. Makiyama CA1/5) 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
Uwadiale v. Makiyama CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 3/24/14 Uwadiale v. Makiyama CA1/5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FIVE

GRACE UWADIALE,

Plaintiff and Appellant, A137521

v. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. MSC0903497) TODD MAKIYAMA,

Defendant and Respondent. _____________________________________/

The trial court dismissed plaintiff Grace Uwadiale’s dental malpractice action against Todd Makiyama, DDS, because plaintiff and her attorney, Alfred O. Anyia, did not attend the pretrial issue conference and failed to file pretrial documents in violation of Contra Costa Superior Court, Local Rules, rule 5. The court denied plaintiff’s motion to set aside the dismissal pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (b).1 Plaintiff appeals. She contends the court erred by dismissing her lawsuit “without an opportunity to be heard” and abused its discretion by denying her motion to set aside the dismissal under section 473, subdivision (b) (section 473(b)).

1 Unless otherwise noted, all further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. All “local rule” references are to the Contra Costa Superior Court, Local Rules. 1 We conclude the court erred by dismissing plaintiff’s action because: (1) Anyia, not plaintiff, was responsible for the local rules violation; (2) there was no evidence less severe sanctions would be ineffective; and (3) plaintiff did not receive notice and an opportunity to be heard before the court dismissed the case. (§ 575.2; Gov. Code, § 68606.) We also conclude the court erred by denying plaintiff’s section 473(b) motion to set aside the dismissal. We reverse the orders dismissing the action and denying plaintiff’s motion to set aside the dismissal. We remand to the trial court to vacate the orders and, in its discretion, to hold a hearing on the possible imposition of sanctions other than terminating sanctions for plaintiff’s counsel’s failure to comply with the local rules. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Plaintiff sued Dr. Makiyama for dental malpractice and sought compensatory damages. Plaintiff amended the complaint. The court set a February 2012 trial date and plaintiff’s then counsel filed an issue conference statement. At the issue conference, however, plaintiff appeared in propria persona and moved to continue trial. The court granted plaintiff’s request, gave her 60 days to obtain new counsel, and scheduled a trial setting conference for April 18, 2012. Plaintiff retained attorney Anyia shortly before the trial setting conference. Anyia’s colleague attended the trial setting conference, where the court ordered the parties to mediate and set an August 9, 2012 issue conference and an August 20, 2012 trial date. The court’s minute order provided, “All counsel, parties, claims representatives and persons with settlement authority must appear at the issue conference.” Mediation did not resolve the dispute. Before the issue conference, Dr. Makiyama filed and served pretrial documents in compliance with local rule 5K.2 Plaintiff did not

2 Local rule 5 requires trial counsel, “all principles or clients and claims representatives with settlement authority” to attend an issue conference 14 days before the trial date. That rule also requires the parties to file issue conference statements, motions in limine, a settlement statement, and jury questionnaires before the conference. 2 file any documents required by local rule 5 and neither she nor her attorney attended the issue conference. At the unreported conference, defense counsel “orally move[d]” to “dismiss this case with prejudice for failure to appear [at] this date and for failing to file pertinent documents as per the code.” The court granted the motion, vacated the trial date, dismissed the case with prejudice, and awarded costs to Dr. Makiyama. In its written order, the court “noted that Plaintiff did not comply” with local rule 5 “in that neither Plaintiff nor her trial counsel appeared at the Issue Conference and neither Plaintiff nor her counsel filed any of the requisite pre-trial documents[.]” Shortly thereafter, plaintiff moved to set aside the dismissal pursuant to section 473(b), claiming her “counsel inadvertently did not take cognizance of [the] issue conference date and as such did not calendar the date for a hearing[.]” In her memorandum of points and authorities, plaintiff argued she “should not be made to pay for the mistake of her lawyer who was at fault in not informing [her] of the hearing and who also did not appear for the hearing.” Plaintiff also argued relief was mandatory pursuant to section 473(b)(1) and that granting the motion would not prejudice Dr. Makiyama. In a declaration in support of the motion, Anyia averred his colleague attended the April 18, 2012 trial setting conference, where the court set the date for the issue conference. Anyia testified, “I believe [the colleague] informed me of such issue conference hearing date. However, due to the fact that this case was previously set for trial and the fact that I had not familiarized myself with the local Rules of court, I inadvertently zeroed in on the trial date (which I was preparing for) and failed to calendar the issue conference hearing date in this case.” Anyia further averred he asked defense counsel after the mediation whether “there was any other hearing set in this case apart from the trial date” and counsel “responded in the negative.” Anyia stated his “failure

(See local rule 5K(1)-(4).) Local rule 25 provides, a “violation of these rules may result in sanctions and penalties including but not limited to dropping a matter from the calendar, vacating a trial date, dismissal for lack of prosecution, imposition of a fine or . . . costs payable to the Court, actual expenses and counsel fees, witness fees and jury fees arising as a result of such violation payable to opposing counsel.” 3 and Plaintiff’s failure to appear at the issue conference hearing . . . was not meant to flaunt or ignore the jurisdiction of this court but was due to the aforementioned mistake and inadvertence on my part in not properly calendaring the future dates in this case given to [his colleague][.]” Finally, Anyia stated granting the motion would not prejudice Dr. Makiyama. Anyia attached an issue conference statement, a statement of the case, and a trial brief, to his declaration. In opposition, Dr. Makiyama argued plaintiff’s failure to appear at the issue conference was not excusable mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or neglect because Anyia had actual notice of the issue conference based on his receipt of Dr. Makiyama’s pretrial documents before the issue conference. According to Dr. Makiyama, “this was not the first time Mr. Anyia has had a case dismissed due to his failure to meet pre-trial deadlines. Mr. Anyia was the attorney of record for the plaintiffs” in a Los Angeles County Superior Court case dismissed in 2009 “‘because pre-trial deadlines were not met.’” Dr. Makiyama also argued plaintiff was aware of the issue conference because she appeared in propria persona at a previous issue conference. Finally, Dr. Makiyama claimed granting the motion would prejudice him. At a hearing, plaintiff’s counsel admitted “fault” and “responsibility” for failing to attend the issue conference with his client.

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