Yu v. Pozniak-Rice

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 2025
DocketB337415
StatusPublished

This text of Yu v. Pozniak-Rice (Yu v. Pozniak-Rice) 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
Yu v. Pozniak-Rice, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/21/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

JONATHAN YU, B337415

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 23VERO01828) v.

LORAIN POZNIAK-RICE,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Karen Moskowitz, Judge. Reversed with directions. Lorain Pozniak-Rice, in pro. per., for Defendant and Appellant. No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent. _______________________________ INTRODUCTION

A person seeking a civil harassment restraining order must serve the person allegedly doing the harassing with, among other documents, a copy of the petition for the restraining order. That is not always easy to do. People accused of engaging in harassing conduct may not make themselves readily available for service of process. Yet, the law required the petitioner to personally serve the petition. In Searles v. Archangel (2021) 60 Cal.App.5th 43 the respondent was evading service, but was following the petitioner on Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. We rejected the petitioner’s request to serve the petition by social media, holding that, though electronic service of such petitions may be an idea whose time has come, electronic service of petitions for civil harassment restraining orders was not statutorily authorized, and only the Legislature can authorize alternative methods of service. (Id. at pp. 49-50.) The Legislature responded to our decision in Searles by enacting Code of Civil Procedure section 527.6, subdivision (m)(2),1 which authorizes the court, on a sufficient showing the respondent is evading service or cannot be physically located, to allow the petitioner to serve the petition by any method “reasonably calculated to give actual notice to the respondent.” This appeal involves what showing is sufficient under the new statute to allow service of a petition by a method other than personal service.

1 Statutory references are to this code.

2 The trial court here found Lorain Pozniak-Rice was evading service of a petition for a civil harassment restraining order and authorized the petitioner, Jonathan Yu, to serve Pozniak-Rice by email and mail. Pozniak-Rice argues the restraining order is invalid because Yu did not personally serve her with the petition and other documents, as required under section 527.6, subdivision (m)(1), and because substantial evidence did not support the court’s order under section 527.6, subdivision (m)(2), authorizing Yu to use alternative methods of service. Because substantial evidence did not support the court’s finding Yu made a diligent effort to personally serve Pozniak-Rice, as required before the court may authorize an alternative method of service, we reverse the order issuing the restraining order. We direct the trial court to reinstate the temporary restraining order and to conduct further proceedings on Yu’s petition.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Yu Files a Petition for a Civil Harassment Restraining Order Against Pozniak-Rice On October 27, 2023 Yu filed a petition for a civil harassment restraining order under section 527.6 against Pozniak-Rice. Yu sought to protect himself, his mother, and his sister from ongoing harassment by Pozniak-Rice. Yu listed Pozniak-Rice’s last known address as “6640 Sepulveda Blvd # 216,” in Van Nuys, California. Yu alleged that he had been in a romantic relationship with Pozniak-Rice’s daughter, Mia Marx, and that the relationship ended in January 2023. According to Yu, beginning in mid-August 2023 Marx and Pozniak-Rice began to “aggressively

3 harass and stalk” him, his friends, and his family “by use of annoying and repeated phone calls, trespassing on private property, making threats of harm, intimidation, and maliciously making false statements to authorities.” Yu alleged Marx and Pozniak-Rice harassed him and others more than 15 times during the preceding two months, including two incidents where Marx and Pozniak-Rice entered secured areas of Yu’s apartment complex. In one incident Pozniak-Rice blocked the garage entrance, while Marx entered the complex, encountered Yu’s mother, and chased her around the building while yelling racist and defamatory statements. In the other incident Pozniak-Rice and Marx entered the complex and posted signs throughout the complex disparaging Yu. Yu attached to his petition pictures of Pozniak-Rice and Marx taken by his complex’s security system on both occasions. Yu also filed police reports regarding the two incidents. Yu filed a declaration stating he had not given Pozniak-Rice notice of the request for a restraining order because he “was afraid that the violence would reoccur when [he] gave notice that [he] was asking for these orders.” On October 30, 2023 the court issued a temporary restraining order that enjoined Pozniak-Rice from harassing or contacting Yu, his mother, or his sister or attempting to take action to obtain their addresses or locations. The order also required Pozniak-Rice to stay at least 100 yards away from Yu, his mother, his sister, and their homes, vehicles, and workplaces. The court set a hearing on the petition for November 21, 2023. The court ordered Yu to personally serve copies of the petition for a restraining order, the notice of hearing, the temporary restraining order, and several Judicial Council forms on

4 Pozniak-Rice at least five days before the hearing and to file a proof of service.

B. The Court Continues the Hearing on the Petition To Allow Yu To Find and Serve Pozniak-Rice At the November 21, 2023 hearing Yu told the trial court he had made diligent efforts to serve Posniak-Rice using a process server, but had been unable to locate and serve Pozniak- Rice with copies of the petition and the other documents. Yu attempted to submit an email from the process server regarding service efforts, but the court declined to consider it because it was not a sworn declaration of due diligence. The court, however, continued the hearing to give Yu more time to locate and serve Pozniak-Rice. The court continued the hearing on the petition to December 19, 2023 and extended the temporary restraining order to that date. The court also ordered Yu to personally serve Pozniak-Rice by December 14, 2023 with copies of the petition for a restraining order, the notice of hearing, the temporary restraining order, the order regarding the continued hearing date, and several Judicial Council forms.

C. The Court Grants Yu’s Request To Serve Pozniak-Rice Using Alternative Methods At the December 19, 2023 hearing Yu told the court he still had not been able to personally serve Pozniak-Rice with copies of the required documents and asked the court to authorize service by an alternative method under section 527.6, subdivision (m)(2). Yu submitted a declaration by Manuel Berdichevsky, who stated he had unsuccessfully attempted to serve Pozniak-Rice six times at the Sepulveda Boulevard address Yu had listed in his petition

5 as her last known address. Berdichevsky said that he made “diligent” and “extensive” (but unspecified) efforts to contact or locate Pozniak-Rice, but that he had been unable to find her. He further stated he had a “reasonable belief” Pozniak-Rice’s “non-disclosure of a current address, coupled with her adoption of her daughter’s name and a last-minute change in appearance for remote proceedings, implies a deliberate attempt to avoid service.” The court reviewed the declaration and found that Pozniak- Rice was evading service and that there was good cause to allow Yu to use alternative methods to serve the petition and related documents. Yu told the court that Pozniak-Rice lived with Marx and that Marx had recently (within the last 10 days) filed with the court (apparently in another proceeding) a change of address (to a post office box).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Yu v. Pozniak-Rice, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yu-v-pozniak-rice-calctapp-2025.