Zand v. Sukumar

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 2026
DocketA171273
StatusPublished

This text of Zand v. Sukumar (Zand v. Sukumar) 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
Zand v. Sukumar, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 4/14/26

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

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

AFSHIN ZAND, Cross-complainant and A171273 Appellant, (Alameda County v. Super. Ct. No. RG20064932) PONANI SUKUMAR, Cross-defendant and Respondent.

Afshin Zand, representing himself, appeals from an order awarding attorney’s fees against him under Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, subdivision (c)(1) (all further undesignated code references are to the Code of Civil Procedure). In a prior appeal, we affirmed an order dismissing Zand’s cross- complaint in an action filed by Ponani Sukumar and awarding Sukumar the attorney’s fees he incurred to obtain the dismissal. (See Zand v. Sukumar (Feb. 29, 2024, A163376) [nonpub. opn.] (Zand I).) Our opinion awarded Sukumar additional attorney’s fees incurred on appeal, with the amount to be determined on remand. In this second appeal, we affirm again, seeing no merit to Zand’s arguments attacking the attorney’s fees order entered on remand. We reject each of Zand’s assertions of error as baseless and again order him to pay

1 Sukumar’s attorney’s fees, this time for the present appeal. We also impose sanctions for the pursuit of a frivolous appeal. I. BACKGROUND “On June 15, 2020, Sukumar initiated the present action by filing a complaint against Zand, asserting several causes of action, including breach of contract, unjust enrichment, intentional and negligent misrepresentation, and unfair competition.” (Zand I, supra, A163376.) Zand filed a cross- complaint against Sukumar. “[T]he trial court (Hon. Dennis Hayashi) struck [Zand’s] cross-complaint . . . under the anti-SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16),” and awarded attorney’s fees to Sukumar under section 425.16, subdivision (c)(1). (Zand I, supra, A163376.) Zand appealed in Zand I, contending “reversal [was] warranted because,” among other things, “Sukumar’s underlying complaint against [him] contained falsehoods and perjury.” (Zand I, supra, A163376.) We found the Zand I appeal to be meritless and affirmed the dismissal of the cross-complaint as well as the attorney’s fees order. (Ibid.) We also granted a motion by Sukumar for attorney’s fees incurred on appeal. (Ibid.) On remand, the trial court (Judge Spain) granted Sukumar’s fee request in part, awarding $41,580 in fees. 1 Zand filed a timely appeal. II. DISCUSSION Rather than present a challenge to Judge Spain’s attorney’s fees order on the ground that the amount of fees is unsupported or unreasonable, Zand attempts to attack Sukumar’s entitlement to fees by claiming that Judge

1 We take judicial notice on our own motion of the record filed in Zand

I.

2 Hayashi did not actually grant Sukumar’s anti-SLAPP motion or did not do so effectively. He makes a variety of other, equally unusual arguments. For example, he contends that no amount of fees is compensable because, by filing a notice of errata alerting us to some incorrect record citations in the respondent’s brief in Zand I and failing to file a motion seeking to file an amended brief, Sukumar effectively withdrew his respondent’s brief, so “no attorney work was done.” According to Zand, our opinion in Zand I not only awarded attorney’s fees for zero compensable work, but failed to recognize each of the trial judges who ruled against him in this case lacked jurisdiction to do so, and therefore so did we in deciding Zand I. Zand’s arguments are all aggressively creative but not one of them has a shred of merit. Because he asserts claims of error he failed to raise in Zand I or that we rejected in that appeal, explicitly or implicitly, he seeks to collaterally attack the order granting Sukumar’s anti-SLAPP motion and our now final opinion affirming it. Zand had his opportunity in Zand I to contest Sukumar’s entitlement to attorney’s fees under section 425.16, subdivision (c)(1), and he lost. We decline to revisit that issue. Sukumar points out, and we agree, that Zand’s attempt to circle back and mount a fresh attack on Judge Hayashi’s anti-SLAPP ruling is either foreclosed by the law of the case doctrine (City of Santa Paula v. Narula (2003) 114 Cal.App.4th 485, 491–492) or is based on nonappealable judicial disqualification arguments that, even if they had arguable merit, should have been pursued by writ review years ago. (§ 170.3, subd. (d).) A. 1. We begin with a step-by-step chronology of the principal issue Zand focuses upon, an issue at the root of many of his arguments: His assertion

3 that Judge Hayashi never actually entered an order resolving Sukumar’s anti-SLAPP motion. Judge Hayashi held a hearing on Sukumar’s anti-SLAPP motion and took the motion under submission on February 17, 2021. In a reasoned order signed and dated February 23, 2021, adhering to a tentative ruling that was published and contested, Judge Hayashi granted the anti-SLAPP motion, awarded attorney’s fees to Sukumar, and ordered Zand’s cross-complaint dismissed with prejudice. Despite being signed and dated February 23, 2021, the order bears a file stamp indicating it was filed on April 23, 2021. Although Sukumar served and filed a Notice of Entry of Order attaching the file-stamped order on April 30, 2021, there appears to have been some confusion about who had the obligation to serve the order once it was filed—Sukumar, or the court clerk. 2 On April 26, 2021, Sukumar filed an ex parte request asking that the court clerk serve the order. But any confusion over service was cleared up by early May. The court’s minutes of May 6, 2021 indicate that Sukumar’s April 26, 2021 ex parte application was “dropped.” 3 The dropping of the April 26, 2021 ex parte request makes sense since, by the time the May 6, 2021 order was entered, the order granting the anti-SLAPP motion had been filed, Sukumar had served a notice of its entry, and the matter of service of the order had become moot.

2 We note that the order includes the following language addressing

administrative matters, just before the court’s signature: “The Court will prepare the order and mail copies to the parties. Cross-Defendant Sukumar shall promptly file and serve the notice of entry of order.” 3 The format and substance of the May 6, 2021 order track with the

April 26, 2021 ex parte application by Sukumar. The order specifically addresses two requests, numbered “request #1” and “request #2,” which respectively match the subject matter of two separate requests made in Sukumar’s April 26, 2021 ex parte application.

4 Zand offers a more sinister interpretation of the record. In his view, the order dated February 23, 2021 and file-stamped April 23, 2021 was just a “draft.” He claims that Sukumar’s counsel improperly obtained this “draft” and attached it to the April 30, 2021 Notice of Entry of Order, fraudulently making it look like the anti-SLAPP motion was granted, when it never actually was. Because the Register of Actions (ROA) 4 does not show any entry on April 23, 2021, Zand claims no such order was actually filed on April 23, 2021. His explanation for how the order came to be file-stamped is that Sukumar’s counsel “manipulated the clerk” into filing it. 5 The main item of “proof” for Zand’s suggestion that there was no order granting Sukumar’s anti-SLAPP motion is a digital image pasted into his opening brief, unsupported by any record citation, depicting what appears to be a fragmentary excerpt from the ROA. The image seems to show five entries in the ROA for items spanning the date range April 21, 2021 through

4 The ROA, formally titled “Domain Case Summary,” appears in the

Zand I record as an attachment to the Clerk’s certification in that appeal. 5 When asked at oral argument how Sukumar’s counsel had come into

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Bluebook (online)
Zand v. Sukumar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zand-v-sukumar-calctapp-2026.