California Appellate Report
Thoughts on recent Ninth Circuit and California appellate cases from Professor Shaun Martin at the University of San Diego School of Law.
Friday, January 30, 2026
Tavares v. ZipCar (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 30, 2026)
Brown v. DMV (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 30, 2026)
I'm glad that the Court of Appeal came out this way.
If you feel that someone's an unsafe driver -- perhaps due to their age, medical condition, or the like -- you're allowed to report that fact to the DMV. After contacting you and ascertaining the basis for your fears, the DMV may (or may not) ask the driver to provide a doctor's note certifying their medical ability to drive safely. And if the DMV's not happy with the doctor's note, they might ask the driver to retake a driver's test.
The DMV says that you're allowed to make these reports anonymously and that they'll try to keep these reports confidential "to the degree possible." Plaintiff here was one of those drivers, and sues to find out who initially ratted him out.
The Court of Appeal holds that there's no per se right to obtain the identity of the person who reported you to the DMV, and refuses to disclose that information here. That seems to me the correct approach to the various balancing factors.
I might highlight even more than Justice Robie does the need for anonymity here. Perhaps there's some risk of anonymous reporting out of spite or error or the like. But my sense is that a very large number of these anonymous reports come from family members; in particular, adult children who have ample reason to be seriously concerned about the risk of driving by one or more of their elderly parents -- to themselves as well as to the public. You're very rarely going to report your parent, even if it's entirely well founded, if you think it might come back to you.
I've personally seen several examples of children who were seriously, and for good reason, concerned about their parent's driving. Sometimes you can solve these things through persuasion, but a lot of times, you cannot. There's a fair degree of personal pride and freedom involved, after all. My grandmother, for example, lived in Alexandria (Virginia) and one night ended up randomly driving four hours in D.C., entirely lose, before ending up at a Denny's at 2:30 a.m. when a concerned waitress finally contacted my parents. Everyone knew she shouldn't drive, but she was insistent. Their solution was to pull the battery cables from her car and tell her that the car was "broken" and needed to be "fixed" -- a statement that was technically true, and served as a solution for the next year or two (as my grandmother's conception of time at that point was a fair piece off). But if the only solution had been to report her to the DMV, I'm confident that'd have been done. As long as it could be done anonymously.
Lots of families have stories like these. (My wife's aunt, for example, became an absolute terror on the roads during her final years.) The balancing test, in my view, comes out strongly in favor of anonymity.
(And, to be clear, I say this as a declaration of interest. I'm getting up there in age. If anyone in my family ever tries to stop me from driving, I'll be extraordinarily miffed. And out to get them.)
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Sellers v. Superior Court (Cal. Supreme Ct. - Jan. 29, 2026)
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
In re Conservatorship of B.K. (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 28, 2026)
Matthews v. Ryan (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 28, 2026)
I agree with Justice Bendix that the appellant forfeited any objection to the way prospective jurors were seated in this matter. But particularly since what happened below appears to be the typical way the trial judge here seats jurors, it might have been worth adding something like the following line in the opinion:
"We emphasize, however, that it is not proper for the trial court to ask for 'volunteers' to sit on the jury rather than calling the prospective jurors by number. We reiterate that random selection of jurors is a firm and sound policy mandated by the Legislature. The clerk must randomly select the names of prospective jurors for voir dire. Trial courts should not utilize -- and parties should promptly object to -- any variation from this procedure."
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Siam v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 27, 2026)
The Ninth Circuit has been fairly silent recently; only one published opinion in the last six days.
Fortunately, the Court of Appeal is still busy cranking things out. (Though nothing yet today)
I wanted to briefly mention this opinion from yesterday, because I definitely had conflicted opinions about it. The Court of Appeal grants the petition and orders the trial court to reconsider its refusal to grant mental heath diversion, and I understand and appreciate why it did so. At the same time, as I said, I'm torn.
On the one hand, the petitioner clearly has a mental health problem. That's the whole point of diversion; to try to get the underlying problem treated, rather than just throwing the person in jail.
On the other hand, those underlying mental health problems are clearly causing problems for society -- and particular victims -- as well. This was not a one-off event. Or, more accurately, it was a one-off event, and the petitioner got pretrial diversion for that, but that didn't solve the problem. So do we really want to keep granting pretrial diversion in such settings?
It's not a situation involving incredibly serious bodily harm, but nonetheless, people are getting injured. Here's his first offense, in San Diego, for which he received pretrial diversion:
"In the early morning hours of August 5, 2020, San Diego Harbor Police received a call from a taxi driver who reported a man who was his passenger, later identified as Siam, struck him three or four times in the back of the head with a skateboard and then fled by jumping out of the moving taxi. A little more than ten minutes later, police received a call from a hotel indicating a man matching the description given by the taxi driver was screaming and pressing the fire alarm in an elevator. When officers arrived at the hotel, they found Siam naked, laying on his stomach inside the elevator with his eyes closed and hands behind his back. He was “sweating profusely” and “yelling unintelligible phrases.” While being transported for medical evaluation, Siam spontaneously told the paramedic “he hit the cab driver in the head with his skateboard, jumped out of the moving vehicle, jumped off a bridge at the airport, and ran across the street.” He also said “he took off his clothes in the elevator because people told him to and that he had breathed in meth particles in the air.”
Here's his next offense -- the one at issue in the current appeal -- which transpired 19 months later:
"Around 9:20 a.m. on March 10, 2022, City of Newport Beach police received a phone call from employees of a car dealer who reported a man, later identified as Siam, entered their showroom, caused damage to a Rolls Royce, and then fled. When officers arrived on the scene, an employee explained Siam entered the showroom barefoot and said he wanted to buy a car with cash. He was fidgety and acting erratic. When asked which one he wanted to buy, Siam replied, “all of them.” He then asked if he could see inside a Rolls Royce parked in the showroom and became fixated on the hood ornament which appeared when the vehicle was unlocked. Siam proceeded to “rip[] it off the hood of the vehicle.” When asked why he did it, he made “a variety of statements that did not make any sense and stated that his father would pay for the damage[].” The employee was able to get back the hood ornament before Siam left. Officers were given video footage of the incident.
About 40 minutes later, around 10 a.m., Newport Beach police received another call about an incident involving a man who was later identified as Siam. A 60-foot yacht had been stolen from a dock in Newport Beach harbor and witnesses observed the yacht crash into docks and other moored boats, do two large loops while going full speed in reverse, and then proceed forward toward a bridge. It ultimately crashed into a seawall and stopped in the middle of the channel. Officers who reached and boarded the yacht shortly thereafter found Siam near the helm and “acting very erratic.” They arrested him without incident. While being transported, Siam “spontaneously stated he had taken Xanax and had drank multiple alcoholic beverages.” . . .
One person was injured during the incident. Specifically, a woman was in the galley of her sailboat when it was hit by the stolen yacht. The side of the boat “crashed in on her[,] throwing her down to the deck” and causing her to contact various solid objects, including a stove. She was again knocked down when her boat’s mast collapsed. Later that day she sought treatment at a hospital for a concussion, contusions to the back of her head, and bruises on, and pain in, various parts of her body."
Thoughts?
Is this a case where, yeah, pretrial diversion still makes sense -- because, clearly, the guy continues to have mental health problems? Or is this a case where, regardless of those underlying conditions, the petitioner simply needs to be locked up to prevent future victims?
Tough call, at least for me.
Thursday, January 22, 2026
In re Marriage of Starr (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 22, 2026)
I liked this opinion by Justice Goldman. Really well done.
It's a divorce case in which the wife says that the date of separation is 2012 but the husband says it's 2020. They're ready to go to trial on the separation date issue when the trial judge sua sponte notices that the wife's divorce petition alleges a separation date of 2020 as well, so holds this to be a judicial admission of the relevant date and enters judgment accordingly.
The Court of Appeal says: No dice. Which, in my view, is exactly the right result. We're not England in the 1700s. We prefer adjudication on the merits, not pleading errors. Both sides knew for years that the wife was claiming a 2012 separation date, and both sides were ready to dispute that issue at trial. No reason to hold the wife to an erroneous date in her pleading. (Justice Goldman gets there a slightly different way, but we end up in the same place.)
Plus, I think the Court of Appeal was right to not reassign the matter to a different judge on remand. I'm not extraordinarily pleased by what it seems like to me was the trial judge's penurious take on pleadings and the need to avoid a trial that everyone was completely ready for. But that doesn't establish bias or any reason for a new judge. Just try again.
On an entirely different note, as I read the opinion, I was struck -- and had a particular reaction -- to the wife's selection of counsel here. In 2020, she initially files for dissolution pro per. Then, in early 2021, she hires her first attorney, Fox & Bank, who substitutes in. The next year, in 2022, she decides to retain new counsel, Lisa Radcliffe. Only a month later, she hires yet new counsel. Then, the next year, 2023, she retains new counsel yet again. Can you guess what happens in 2024, as the case is about to go to trial? Yep. She retains new counsel again. Oh, and when she loses below, on appeal, it looks like she retains new counsel yet again.
When it's a divorce case and one of the spouses hires a new lawyer every single year, for a total of around a half dozen of them, I have a particular view of both the litigant as well as the underlying litigation. For whatever that's worth.
Oh, and I'm not sure what's up with the Court of Appeal only referring to the last three of the wife's lawyers by their initials -- "M.C.", "J.R." and "C.L." I'm sure they're not minors. I'm confident there's no allegation of sexual abuse by the attorneys or anything like that. And the opinion expressly mentions the full name of the other lawyers. I wonder what the deal is there? Seem strange.
Nonetheless: A well-written and persuasive opinion that seems to me to obtain an entirely just result. (Even if, on remand, I gently suspect that the losing party on appeal will probably end up prevailing on the merits.)
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
N.D. v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 20, 2026)
The Court of Appeal sanctions Las Vegas attorney (and member of the California bar) T. Matthew Phillips $25,000 based upon a series of vociferous yet unsupported claims that he made in a petition for writ of mandate. That's a fair hunk of change. But that sanction, including its size, seem eminently warranted to me.
The Court of Appeal's opinion explains at some length the particular statements for which Mr. Phillips deserves sanctions, but the basic summary is this:
"We are particularly concerned with Phillips’s disregard of his duty to uphold the respect owed to the judiciary. It is one thing to assert in a petition that the trial court committed error. An attorney acts well within their duty as an advocate to raise good-faith arguments challenging rulings, even when it presents an uphill battle. There is nothing inherently improper about making allegations of bias or discrimination against a trial court. . . .
But what attorneys cannot do is what Phillips did here: make serious accusations of impropriety against the court without a scintilla of supporting evidence. Phillips did not simply argue the trial court was wrong. He accused the trial court of being an active participant in a conspiracy with opposing counsel to intentionally deprive N.D. of her rights."
I was even more convinced that the Court of Appeal's sanctions against Mr. Phillips were justified when I did a little digging and found this Order, in which the Nevada judiciary declared Mr. Phillips to be a vexatious litigant and described -- in 46 pages, no less -- the wide variety of his repeated misconduct that led to that Order.
Even without knowing about that prior Order, which was issued last year (from a different jurisdiction), at the end of its opinion, the California Court of Appeal refers the matter to the California bar. Entirely appropriately.
Let's hope the bar does something. Quickly.
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Towns v. Hyundai Motor Co. (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 20, 2026)
Today the 2/4 proves that time travel is indeed possible:
"THE COURT:*
It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on December 22, 2025, be modified as follows:
1. On page 17, footnote 5, change the date of May 30, 2023, to May 30, 2018.
2. On page 17, footnote 5, change the date of April 11, 2023, to April 11, 2018.
3. On page 17, footnote 5, change the date of May 30, 2023, to May 30, 2018.
There is no change in the judgment."
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Microsoft v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 14, 2026)
I'm conflicted on who I would have wanted to win in this one. All I know is that there are definitely big names involved.
It's technically Microsoft -- a big name, for sure -- versus the Superior Court. But the real party in interest in the City of Los Angeles, another big name. The LAPD (no small organization itself) gets a warrant to search the electronic data of an alleged rape suspect. But that electronic data is held by USC -- no small fish either -- since the alleged suspect is a graduate student there. The warrant tells Microsoft that it's not allowed to tell even USC that the data is being searched, even though USC is a "friendly" entity and may itself have reason to investigate the alleged assault.
So Microsoft objects to the nondisclosure order, and when it loses in the trial court, files a writ.
The LAPD is represented by the City Attorney. Microsoft is represented by Davis Wright Tremaine, a First Amendment powerhouse. They sign up two amici to submit briefs, represented by Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe on the one hand and Perkins Coie on the other -- no slouches in their own right.
In the end, Los Angeles wins, and the NDO is upheld, in an opinion by Justice Tamzarian.
An important case, with important people on both sides.
Tuesday, January 13, 2026
People v. McCowan (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 13, 2026)
The police conduct a traffic stop, find an illegal weapon, and arrest the driver. The driver asserts that the stop was pretextual, and the officer testifies and is then cross-examined by counsel for the defendant.
I'm not certain whether the defendant's counsel was constitutionally ineffective in arguing the motion to suppress, and neither is the Court of Appeal, which holds that the more appropriate route is for this issue to be raised on habeas rather than on direct appeal.
Regardless of those merits, I thought that it was cold -- albeit perhaps appropriate -- for the trial court to say while denying the motion to suppress "that if defense counsel had 'simply refrained from cross-examining I would have granted your motion, because I regard the littering as pretextual, as a basis for a traffic stop, and the prosecution did not bring out either that there were other vehicles on the road, which is important to whether it is illegal to fail to use your turn signals, or, for that matter, consent to the vehicle search. However, those were brought out by the defense.'"
Ouch.
Not really what you want to hear. As either the defendant or his lawyer.
Monday, January 12, 2026
Mendocino Railway v. Meyer (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 7, 2026)
Thursday, January 08, 2026
Chong v. Mardirossian Akaragian LLP (Cal. Ct. App. - Jan. 8, 2026)
I agree with the overwhelming majority of what Justice Hoffstadt says here. Indeed, at least facially, I'm stunned that the plaintiff got as much as he did -- and certainly don't think he has much to complain about vis-a-vis his lawyer.
It's a legal malpractice claim involving an underlying personal injury case. The plaintiff is unhappy with the settlement amount negotiated by his lawyer. The injuries were substantial, but so was the settlement: over $6 million.
That's a chunk of change for an auto accident, no?
That was particularly my perspective here given the underlying facts. Yes, the plaintiff was rear ended. That's usually a pretty good case for liability. Usually.
But here, for one thing, plaintiff was under the influence of amphetamines and benzodiazepines at the time of the accident. That's not an especially great look. Particularly when that resulted in the plaintiff electing to stop his Porche 911 on the 134 Freeway in Burbank at 4:20 a.m. That might rightly be viewed as a fair amount of contributory negligence, right?
But at least when plaintiff "put the car in park, locked the doors, took off his shoes, reclined his seat, pulled the key out of the ignition, took off his seat belt, and fell asleep," he did so in a safe place on the 134 Freeway, right? A rest area or someplace like that?
Uh, no. He put his car into park and decided to fall asleep in the fast lane of the 134 Freeway.
No wonder he got rear ended, right?
Given these facts, I think a $6 million-plus settlement was fantastic. Indeed, I'm fairly stunned that our system works that way. Were I on the jury, most likely, I would have given the plaintiff far, far less than what he ultimately obtained.
Nonetheless, he still sues his lawyer. Claiming that the settlement was unauthorized.
The Court of Appeal nonetheless affirms the grant of summary judgment to the defendant law firm because the plaintiff ultimately retroactively agreed to the settlement. Holding that this retroactive agreement negates the legal malpractice claim for an unauthorized settlement.
There's a lot to be said for that result. As I said, I'm pretty much on board for Justice Hoffstadt's opinion. As well as not particularly inclined to think that the law firm's $6 million settlement was anywhere near too low.
My only marginal thought the other way involves the Court of Appeal's discussion of what counts as economic duress in this setting.
The law is that you're precluded from complaining about a settlement if you retroactively approve it, but not if your retroactive approval was under duress (which is what plaintiff here asserts). The Court of Appeal explains lots of good reasons why the plaintiff here wasn't under duress, and I generally agree.
But I wonder if there isn't a different, more general, type of "economic loss" at issue here -- one that, if argued, might argue for a different result.
Once plaintiff repudiated the settlement as unauthorized, the defendant promptly moved to enforce the settlement, since (after all) it was made with the plaintiff's agent. So there's a pending motion in that regard, and the defendant wants to interpose the facially valid settlement as an affirmative defense at trial.
As a result, at that point, to me, the plaintiff's not really facing the kind of pure unvarnished "should I accept the settlement or not" choice that the Court of Appeal perceives it to be. Instead, the question is really "Is it really worth continuing to fight this case given the new affirmative defense and motion to enforce the settlement?" That's different.
At a minimum, it's going to cost the plaintiff some time and money to fight the motion to enforce the settlement. That's a downside. In one world, that might well constitute sufficient "economic loss" to justify the duress rule. Maybe the plaintiff would ordinarily have decided to take his chances at trial, but the material difference now is that he doesn't want to spend that additional six months fighting just to potentially have a trier of fact moot out the fight by holding that the settlement agreement is enforceable.
In short, there's at least a duress component now that didn't exist before. A component that's not discussed in Justice Hoffstadt's opinion, but that might well make a difference either here and/or in other cases.
Or at least that's my take.
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
U.S. v. Ruiz (9th Cir. - Jan. 7, 2026)
Not because of the actual holding of the case, which involves whether the government can introduce a particular prior criminal conviction for smuggling undocumented aliens in order to help prove that he knew that the current aliens that he was (allegedly) smuggling were indeed undocumented. That's an issue that's important, of course, but that's not especially practically significant to most readers.
Rather, what struck me as surprising -- and troubling -- was a random, seemingly innocuous comment in the "background" section of today's Ninth Circuit opinion. Here's the first paragraph of that section:
"On June 10, 2023, Border Patrol Agents Ordoñez-Nuñez and Guzman were driving in separate unmarked vehicles along State Route (SR) 94 around Campo, California, less than two miles from the United States-Mexico border. The agents noticed an older, white Honda Civic driving ten miles below the speed limit and weaving “in and out of lanes” along the highway. Agent Ordoñez-Nuñez grew suspicious of the vehicle because the driver and passenger kept looking at him through the window and side mirror, and the car was “sitting very low on the rear axle” as if it carried extra weight in the back seat or trunk. After following the Civic for 15– 20 minutes, Agent Ordoñez-Nuñez ran a records check on it—the search included the vehicle’s travel patterns, whether it had gone through any immigration checkpoints, and where it was registered. He learned the car was registered in La Mesa, over fifty miles away, and had no history of traveling in the area or through any checkpoints. Based on these results, the agent 'requested for a marked Border Patrol unit to initiate a vehicle stop.'"
I live in San Diego, which is fairly close to Campo. Here's the part that surprised me:
" Agent Ordoñez-Nuñez ran a records check on it—the search included the vehicle’s travel patterns . . . . He learned the car . . . had no history of traveling in the area . . . ."
I knew, of course, that there are license plate readers pretty much everywhere these days. But what I did not know -- until today -- is that the police can access your travel records pretty much instantly, while in their vehicle and just by running your plates. I had thought -- wrongly -- that it at least took more effort than that. Something like an actual criminal investigation, or something like that.
Apparently not.
Monday, January 05, 2026
Doe v. California Ass'n of Directors (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 31, 2026)
Friday, January 02, 2026
Baird v. Bonta (9th Cir. - Jan. 2, 206)
I'll begin the new year with a prediction:
This opinion will be taken en banc.
The majority opinion strikes down California's open-carry licensing scheme for firearms. That regime allows individuals to carry concealed weapons, but doesn't allow individuals to publicly carry firearms in urban counties (i.e., counties with populations over 200,000). Judges VanDyke and Lee -- a dream panel for plaintiffs in a firearms case -- hold that these provisions violate the Second Amendment.
Judge Randy Smith dissents.
It tells you something, I think, when even a Republican appointee from Idaho doesn't agree with the conservative Second Amendment view adopted by his colleagues.
I'm not saying that the en banc court will necessarily reverse. There are many en banc panel draws that might end up agreeing with today's panel opinion. (Though I suspect that most of them would, in fact, go the other way.)
But I would put a lot of money on the case getting a majority vote for en banc review.
Monday, December 29, 2025
InSinkErator, Inc. v. Joneca Co. (9th Cir. - Dec. 29, 2025)
I understand why the defendants here did what they did, as well as why they felt they had to appeal the district court's grant of a preliminary injunction. But if there was ever a case in which I thought that the plaintiff was indeed obviously entitled to issuance of an injunction against false advertising, this one's it.
Plaintiff and defendant both make garbage disposals, and prominently (and understandably) market them with horsepower designations: 1/2 horsepower, 3/4 horsepower, 1 horsepower, etc. Plaintiff pioneered the market and defendant is a low-cost competitor who entered the U.S. market in 2005. Defendant's strategy is to market and label the horsepower of its products not on the output power of the actual disposal's grinding motor, but rather on how much "input horsepower" the device has as a whole; i.e., how much electric power is used by the system as a whole.
The district court granted a preliminary injunction, finding that the defendant's labelling was false. That seems spot on -- indeed, obviously -- right. How much horsepower a motor has is a description of how much output power the motor has, not how much total electric power it takes in. I want (and expect) my one horsepower motor to put out one horsepower of grinding, turning, or whatever. A motor isn't a one horsepower motor just because it sucks in 1 horsepower of current but inefficiently utilizes that power and cranks out only a quarter (or whatever) horsepower in output.
So I'm super pleased that the district court granted the injunction and that the Ninth Circuit affirms.
Many false advertising claims are tough ones. This one isn't.
(Or, as Lionel Hutz put it, "I've never seen a more blatant case of false advertising since my lawsuit against The Neverending Story."
Friday, December 26, 2025
Ammari v. Ammari (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 24, 2025)
Monday, December 22, 2025
U.S. v. Holmes (9th Cir. - Dec. 22, 2025)
Thursday, December 18, 2025
People v. Ismaeil (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 15, 2025)
When you're charged with soliciting a minor, you're not guilty if you thought the person was actually old enough to consent. Moreover, since it's a crime with mens rea, your mistake of fact doesn't necessarily have to be reasonable. Even if most people would think that she was only 16, for example, if you in fact thought she was 19, that's a defense. In this opinion, the trial court gave an erroneous instruction that the defendant's mistake had to be reasonable, the prosecutor harped on this issue at closing argument, and so Mr. Ismaeil gets a new trial. That's the rule.
At the same time, I'm not sure that the reversal is going to help Mr. Ismaeil that much. He was only sentenced to two years of probation. Now he's going to have to endure a new trial. Moreover, I strongly doubt the result of that trial is going to be any different than the earlier one at which he was convicted. Here's are the basic facts:
"In April 2018, Senior Inspector Darryl Holcombe of the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Office was conducting an investigation through the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. In that role, Holcombe had a profile on Whisper, a smartphone application. Holcombe set up a Whisper profile in which his persona was a female user between the ages of 15 and 17 (the only age category for minors). He pretended to be a 14-year-old girl named Lizzy, who was a sexually inexperienced high school freshman with separated parents. . . . Appellant—as a Whisper user calling himself Eddy— contacted “Iconsborn” through a direct message. After some initial back and forth, “Iconsborn” identified herself as Lizzy and asked appellant how old he was; appellant responded that he was 28. Lizzy said she was 14; appellant responded, “Ah lol.” . . .
After appellant sent Iconsborn a photo of his cat, Iconsborn responded by sending a photo she identified as herself with her dog. The photo was actually of a Homeland Security agent from New York when she was 14. Appellant complained about having to drive to Modesto the next day and Iconsborn responded, “I can’t wait to drive.” Appellant said he taught his sister how to drive, and Iconsborn said, “I wanna learn.” Appellant said that he could teach Iconsborn but added, “You’re supposed to have a permit before you get trained though.”
Iconsborn asked appellant, “Do u have a gf,” and he responded, “Nope,” and asked, “You have a bf?” Iconsborn said, “No,” and added, “I’m not really allowed to.” She explained that her mom was “weird about it” and, in response to appellant’s questions, denied that it was “like one of those arranged marriage things” or “a religious thing.” She continued, “I mean I’ve liked guys and hung out with them she just is protective.” Iconsborn said she had gone out on a couple dates and to a “school dance” with a guy. Appellant asked, “Anything after that?” and Iconsborn responded, “Kissing.” Appellant said, “That’s it?” and Iconsborn said, “Yeah that’s all I’ve done.” Appellant questioned further, asking, “Is it because you didn’t want to?” Iconsborn responded, “I do I just got nervous.” Appellant then said, “You’re missing out,” and “It’s the best thing ever lol.” Iconsborn responded, “Lol. Probably. Plus he would just tell everyone at school.” Appellant said, “So you need it to be a secret,” and added, “I can keep secrets.” Iconsborn wrote, “That cause u r older,” and appellant responded, “That’s true[.] . . . Things are more private when you’re older.”
Iconsborn asked appellant what he looked like and he sent her two photos—in one, he had a bare torso and a towel on the lower half of his body. Iconsborn responded, “Wow. Hot.” Appellant wrote that he had “other gifts too” and that he was “much more well equipped than most guys lol.” Iconsborn sent another photo, again of a law enforcement officer when she was 14. Appellant responded, “You’re on fire,” “You woke up my other half,” “Down below,” and “You better take responsibility for waking him up.”
Appellant then asked Iconsborn if she was “allowed to leave the house whenever you want or does your parents not let you?” She answered, “I live with my mom she usually works until 8,” and added that she and her sister sometimes had dinner with her dad. Appellant then wrote, “[I]f you want we can mess around this week.” Iconsborn answered, “Let me see if I can ditch my sister in the afternoon,” and appellant said he would get a “[h]otel room” so they could “mess around.”
The next morning, appellant sent Iconsborn two photos with the camera pointed at his groin area; in one, he was wearing only underwear. Iconsborn said she was going to the “mall with mom for a bit.” Appellant asked about meeting up in the afternoon, offering again to give a driving lesson and adding, “Then we can have fun after.” Appellant commented, “But it’s your first time,” and Iconsborn wrote, “I might not be good at it,” and “I don’t wanna get preggo cause yeah that would sux.” Appellant responded, “You won’t trust me lol,” and “I have very good self control and I know when to pull out.” Appellant offered to pick Iconsborn up but she said not at her house “[c]aus my older sis may be there.”
Appellant and Iconsborn continued to text and made plans to meet up in downtown Pleasant Hill. Appellant promised to have her home by 8:00 p.m. The final text in the thread is appellant announcing his arrival at the meeting place. He was met by law enforcement and detained. A search of his car revealed a brown bag containing a box of condoms and a container of lubricant, purchased about 30 minutes earlier."
Yeah. You're pretty much 100% getting found guilty again, dude.
I would just plead guilty and get it over with, personally.
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Pham v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 16, 2025)
Friday, December 12, 2025
California v. Federal Contempt (Apps - Dec. 11-12, 2025)
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
U.S. v. Kittson (9th Cir. - Dec. 10, 2025)
Monday, December 08, 2025
Peterson v. Zhang (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 8, 2025)
Today's opinion makes clear -- or at least provides yet another example of -- something that was decently clear already:
Protracted litigation between neighbors in a rich neighborhood -- here, Palos Verdes Estates -- is (at least amongst) the worst.
Thursday, December 04, 2025
Morgan v. Ygrene Energy Fund (Cal. Supreme Ct. - Dec. 4, 2025)
The California Supreme Court does it again. This time, in an opinion by Justice Kruger. Another opinion that begins by cogently summarizing both what the case is about and how it gets resolved. It reads (with citations omitted):
Under California law, a person who wants to challenge a tax ordinarily must first pay the tax and then seek available relief from tax authorities; if that effort is unsuccessful, the person may then file a tax refund action in court. Here we consider how these tax-challenge procedures apply in a dispute concerning a unique financing arrangement in which individuals repay funds in the form of taxes.
The arrangements at issue owe their existence to California’s Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) program, a program that allows local governments to provide homeowners with financing for energy efficiency home improvements in exchange for a voluntary special assessment added to their property taxes and secured by a lien on their real property. Although many local governments have adopted the PACE program, few run the program themselves; most have contracted with private companies. Plaintiffs are homeowners who have entered into PACE contracts administered by private entities. Plaintiffs allege that these private PACE administrators should have, but did not, comply with consumer protection and other regulatory requirements applicable to consumer lenders. Plaintiffs filed suit under the Unfair Competition Law (UCL), seeking various restitutionary and injunctive remedies, including an order requiring the PACE administrators to return PACE assessment monies received and prohibiting them from collecting delinquent assessments, unless and until the assessments are lifted from their properties.
At this stage of the proceedings, the sole question is whether plaintiffs were required to follow the statutory procedures for challenging taxes — meaning that they should have started not by filing suit in court, but by paying the PACE assessments and then seeking administrative tax relief from local authorities. The answer depends on the nature of plaintiffs’ claims and the relief they seek. By statute, PACE assessments are collected at the same time and in the same manner as local taxes, and so are subject to the same correction, cancellation, and refund rules as other taxes. Because plaintiffs’ central claims for relief effectively seek to invalidate the PACE assessments and prevent their future collection, plaintiffs are required to follow the applicable statutory procedures for challenging taxes. But plaintiffs are not required to follow the statutory tax relief procedures in order to pursue other, nontax-related, remedies concerning the administration of the PACE loans. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further consideration of whether plaintiffs should be granted leave to amend their complaints to plead only claims for relief that neither directly nor indirectly challenge a tax."
I'm not really sure that the PACE programs, or underlying legal issues, were really worth the rare grant of review by the California Supreme Court. But given that review was indeed granted, it's nice to see a great three-paragraph introduction at the outset.
Let's hope it becomes a trend.
Tuesday, December 02, 2025
Arroyo v. Pacific Ridge HOA (Cal. Ct. App. - Dec. 2, 2025)
Justice O'Rourke decides to publish this opinion, which involves a condo complex, alongside its associated homeowner's association, that's literally across the street from the University at which I work. As a result, I was keenly interested in learning about the various goings-on there.
In brief, it sounds like a nightmare.
Basically, it's a fight between one of the condo owners, who is/was on the board of the HOA, and the rest of the HOA. A fight that involves a plethora of lawsuits, a contested recall election, etc.
The condo owner, Rachel Arroyo, wins -- in part -- this round in the Court of Appeal, which holds that she was wrongfully excluded from various election-related materials distributed by the HOA.
So nice win for her.
But I nonetheless think she's losing in the end. Because while the Court of Appeal holds (in part) for her, it concludes its opinion by stating: "The judgment is reversed. On remand, the trial court is directed to conduct further proceedings so as to give Association the opportunity to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that its noncompliance with section 5105 did not affect the results of the election, and state its findings in writing as part of the record."
I'm fairly certain that the HOA will, in fact, be able to prove that fact on remand. Because the result of the prior election was 369 votes to recall Ms. Arroyo from the board of directors versus only 6 votes to retain her.
So I'm pretty sure she's going to lose on remand.
And, quite frankly, that she's probably not especially well-liked by her neighbors.
Doyle v. Royal (9th Cir. - Dec. 2, 2025)
I understand contemporary politics. If you're a conservative federal appellate judge -- especially one who's relatively young -- and looking to potentially "move up" to the Supreme Court, you may perhaps want to make your mark by decrying the purportedly absurdly liberal jurisprudential world in which we now live. That'll attract attention. Maybe it'll make you famous, or advance your career. And, perhaps, a lot of what you say is even something that part of you may in fact believe.
Those are my thoughts, anyway, after reading Judge Lee's partial dissent in this death penalty case.
Judge Lee bemoans the fact that this federal habeas case reaches the Ninth Circuit a full thirty years after the state court trial. He's not the only one, of course, to discuss the lengthy delays in habeas death penalty cases. I've said the same thing, for example, on a plethora of occasions. This is not a novel observation.
These delays happen for a plethora of reasons. AEDPA. The Supreme Court's convoluted exhaustion rules. Underfunded -- or entirely unavailable -- habeas defense counsel. Briefing extensions repeatedly requested by the prosecution. All of which are inventions of conservative (not liberal) institutions.
Liberal practices -- defense requests for extensions, for example -- obviously result in substantial delay as well. But it's a systemic problem. One that neither side of the political spectrum, conservative or liberal, is justifiably positioned to politically exploit.
That aside, the point that Judge Lee makes today in his partial dissent seems particularly unpersuasive. He argues that habeas delays result in -- and I'm using his words here -- "a get out of jail card" for prisoners. Because the delays take so long, he argues, even people that are clearly guilty get to go free, since the delay means that memories have faded, witnesses have disappeared, etc.
That seems to me a uniquely cynical, and untrue, argument.
For starters, during the entire period of delay, the defendant is in prison. Often, as here, on death row; hardly a place that's particularly comfortable, even compared to usual (deploring) prison standards. The principal, and facial, result of habeas delay is thus not to get people out of prison, but to keep them in prison -- even if their habeas petition will eventually be successful and they don't deserve to be there.
So rather than a "get out of jail free" card, it might better be argued that habeas delays instead are a "wrongfully stay in jail" card. The exact opposite of Judge Lee's point.
And, to be clear, the overwhelming majority of habeas petitions accomplish nothing but precisely such continued incarceration. Study after study has found that only one percent of federal habeas challenges to state convictions are successful. And pretty much every single one of those studies was conducted before the Supreme Court made it, though repeated (and continuing) opinions, much harder to win federal habeas petitions.
But, for argument's sake, let's take that incredibly small number of cases where a habeas petition is granted. Where, despite the plethora of limitation on granting habeas relief, the defendant is able to jump through all of the relevant hoops, and establishes -- as required by the writ -- that his confinement in prison does, in fact, violate the most sacred of our legal documents: the Constitution.
What then?
Judge Lee contends that it's a get out of jail free card. Balderdash. Almost invariably, the guy gets retried and convicted again. Especially in those cases, like Judge Lee describes this one, in which the defendant is "obviously guilty". Judge Lee's dissent doesn't reference even a single case in which the federal courts granted a habeas petition in which the guy was obviously guilty (or admitted his guilt) and the granting of the petition resulted in the guy going free, rather than simply being found guilty at a retrial that satisfies the requirements of the Constitution.
Now, in the 250-year history of our great Republic, have there perhaps been instances in which someone has gone free as a result of a federal habeas grant? Assuredly so. But particularly given the infinitesimal rate of habeas grants, I strongly doubt it's a substantial number, or one that would in any universe allow someone to credibly call federal habeas review a "get out of jail free" card.
I would write more, but I fear I'm belaboring the point. Which is that, yes, particularly in death penalty cases, I'm on board for the proposition that 30-year delays are entirely suboptimal. We should work to change that system. Totally agree.
But "get out of jail free" card? No. Not in the slightest. Simply untrue.
Monday, December 01, 2025
In re S.R. (Cal. Supreme Court - Dec. 1, 2025)
I really appreciate it when an opinion -- especially a California Supreme Court opinion -- explains at the outset (1) what the case is about, and (2) why, briefly, the opinion comes out the way it does. In truth, I'm going to read the whole thing regardless. But I like the roadmap. And, for different readers, including such an introduction may perhaps allow them to skip (or at least only peruse) the subsequent dozens of detailed pages.
For example, here's how Justice Liu begins his opinion today (with most citations omitted):
"California’s Child Abuse Central Index (CACI) is a database comprised of substantiated reports of “child abuse or severe neglect.” Certain state agencies are required to forward qualifying reports to the California Department of Justice (DOJ) for inclusion in the CACI. “[I]nformation included in the CACI is available to a wide variety of state agencies, employers, and law enforcement,” and inclusion of a parent’s conduct in the CACI carries significant consequences for the parent. (In re D.P. (2023) 14 Cal.5th 266, 279.) Once listed in the CACI, an individual remains listed until the age of 100, at which point the listing is removed.
The issue here is one we left open in In re D.P.: Whether a parent’s appeal from a juvenile court’s jurisdictional finding survives a mootness challenge where the parent shows that an agency must report the allegation underlying the court’s finding for inclusion in the CACI. The answer is yes. As the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (the Department) concedes, it is proper for a court to presume an agency will fulfill its reporting duty. Reversal of a jurisdictional finding can redress that harm by prompting removal of the parent from the CACI or by preserving a parent’s right to a grievance hearing to challenge an agency’s failure to reclassify the report as unsubstantiated. Thus, a parent demonstrates “a specific legal or practical consequence that would be avoided upon reversal of the jurisdictional findings” (In re D.P., supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 273) when the parent shows that the challenged allegation is one that an agency must report for inclusion in the CACI.
Here, the Department acknowledges that it is required to report the allegation against S.F. (Mother) to the DOJ for inclusion in the CACI. There is also no genuine dispute that Mother will suffer harm from being included in the CACI. Because Mother has demonstrated that this specific consequence could be rectified or avoided if she prevails in challenging the allegation on appeal, “the case is not moot, and merits review is required.” (In re D.P., supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 283.) Accordingly, we reverse the order dismissing Mother’s appeal and remand to the Court of Appeal for further proceedings."
Beautiful. Love it.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
People v. North River Ins. Co. (Cal. Ct. App. - Nov. 24, 2025)
Justice Wiley's brevity doesn't always work for me. But sometimes it lands exceptionally well. This opinion is an example of the latter.
The case was in the Court of Appeal, went up to the California Supreme Court, and is now back down. In the California Supremes, the majority opinion reversed and remanded, and Justice Kruger wrote a fairly detailed concurring opinion. So now the case is back in the Court of Appeal. Hence the current opinion.
Here's the first paragraph of the opinion that I really liked, especially the italicized word:
"The Supreme Court remanded the case to us. We adopt Justice Kruger’s concurring analysis. (North River, supra, 18 Cal.5th at pp. 23–32.) This analysis is not binding authority, because the majority of the high court did not speak to the issue she addressed. This analysis is, however, persuasive. It is highly persuasive. We remand the case to the trial court for the decisionmaking this analysis requires."
I smiled at that one.
The final substantive paragraph of Justice Wiley's opinion also gave me a chuckle. It reads (with, again, the italics in the original):
"The prosecution argues the majority did not share Justice Kruger’s analysis. That is not what the majority wrote. Rather, the high court acknowledged Justice Kruger’s concurrence and stated the “majority opinion expresses no views on those questions.” (North River, supra, 18 Cal.5th at p. 20, fn. 5, italics added.) We interpret this to mean the majority expressed no views on those questions."
Ho ho ho. Love it.
Monday, November 24, 2025
Deol v. California Vet. Med. Bd. (Cal. Ct. App. - Nov. 24, 2025)
Thursday, November 20, 2025
OneTaste, Inc v. NetFlix, Inc. (Cal. Ct. App. - Nov. 20, 2025)
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Schlichter v. Kennedy (Cal. Ct. App. - Nov. 17, 2025)
I'm surprised -- very surprised, actually -- that the Court of Appeal only imposes $1,750 in sanctions against the attorney here. I would have imposed a greater penalty. As well as have been much meaner.
It's another one of these "AI hallucination" cases, where someone writes a brief in whole or part with artificial intelligence that contains made-up cases (or cases with made-up citations) that fail to support anything relevant. Once caught, what attorneys generally do in these settings is to deliver to the court a huge mea culpa -- sometimes combined with a "Oh but we try real hard to catch these things, so sorry we failed in this particular case" defense. They generally end up getting sanctioned, of course, but the court at least appreciates their candor. And, in most cases, anyway, their apology. (Though, at the same time, also understanding the strategic nature of those admissions.)
The attorney here, by contrast, adopts a different approach. Once caught, after the Court of Appeal issued an order to show cause, he initially told the justices that the miscited cases were entirely his fault, and said that "the core allegation as to using 'AI hallucination' cases is entirely untrue" -- asserting instead that "none of the cases was the product of an AI hallucination, and these errors are entirely clerical in nature." He proposed that he be sanctioned $500 and not required to show up at the hearing on the OSC, but the Court of Appeal refused to discharge the writ.
At the hearing, the lawyer -- Jeffrey Dean Grotke -- admitted that he had used AI in preparing the brief, ostensibly only to better organize the brief. The Court of Appeal was not persuaded, and repeatedly held that Grotke's responses to the court were "not credible" (as well as lacked "candor") -- and described in substantial detail the basis for the court's belief in this regard. In the end, it sanctions Grotke $1,750, to be paid to the Court of Appeal, and directs that the opinion be sent to the State Bar.
All that seems entirely appropriate to me. It's good to publish opinions that make clear, even though it's crystal clear already, that attorneys have to be diligent in verifying their AI-generated work. And when they're not, it's entirely appropriate to not only publish the underlying opinion, as well as to refer to the sanctioned attorney by name, but to also send that opinion to the State Bar.
But I would have been even harsher here. It's one thing to prepare an AI-generated brief without checking the resulting work product. That's wrong, but it's only negligence. It's another thing, after being caught, to make representations to the court about that brief that are factually untrue. That's intentionally deceptive -- as well as premeditated.
Words like "not credible" and "lacks candor" are, in my view, entirely accurate to describe such conduct, but too soft. To me, that's an even more serious offense. And deserving of an even harsher response.
When you make a mistake, honorable people own up to it. To do otherwise, especially to a court, bespeaks volumes about one's character.