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.
Monday, May 04, 2026
People v. Morris (Cal. Supreme Ct. - May 4, 2026)
Thursday, April 30, 2026
People v. Stayner (Cal. Supreme Ct. - April 30, 2026)
I'll be honest that was difficult -- very difficult -- for me to pay detailed attention to every word of this 269-page (!!) opinion.
(That count, by the way, does not include the many pages of the the partial dissent by Justice Evans.)
It's not that the opinion isn't important. It's involves the life or death, at least theoretically, of a human being, Cary Stayner, who's been sentenced to death.
The underlying difficulty is also largely not even the sheer size of the opinion. Though massive, even for a death penalty case, I've slogged through longer ones. (Though not many!) That task is doable, and indeed, I eventually did it here.
What made this one especially difficult for me was the outset of the opinion, which is where Chief Justice Guerrero understandably describes the underlying crimes. Once you've read that section, you know how the opinion is almost certainly going to come out, and in all honesty, at least for me, you're somewhat, if not wholly, sympathetic to that outcome.
Here's the first paragraph of the opinion:
"This case is an automatic appeal from a judgment of death. (Pen. Code,1 § 1239, subd. (b).) Defendant Cary Anthony Stayner used a ruse to enter the motel room of Carole Sund, her 15-year-old daughter Juli Sund, and their 16-year-old family friend Silvina Pelosso. Once inside the room, defendant brandished a gun and used duct tape to bind Carole and the girls. He murdered Carole by strangling her and murdered Silvina by strangling and suffocating her. Then, over the course of several hours, he repeatedly sexually assaulted Juli, after which he kidnapped her, sexually assaulted her again, and then murdered her by slitting her throat. About five months later, defendant kidnapped, murdered, and decapitated Joie Armstrong. Defendant confessed to his crimes in a detailed recorded interview."
It is difficult -- again, very difficult -- for someone to care deeply about formal "justice" in such a setting. Your retributive instincts are simply too strong.
That's even without learning, later on in the opinion, the additional details of these horrific murders. Or that after the murders, before he was caught, the defendant sent the FBI a letter that included a map of the location of one of the bodies (with his thumbprint on the stamp) that "included the words 'We had fun with this one.'”
After reading 269 pages, you get to Justice Evans partial dissent, who makes some very good points about why the death sentence here was perhaps the result of two very problematic events at the penalty phase. To reiterate: very good points.
But the facts of the case make you care less than perhaps you normally would. Or perhaps should.
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Detrick v. Shimata (Cal. Ct. App. - April 28, 2026)
Make sure that the declarations that you submit from witnesses who do not speak English include the relevant translation certifications. Otherwise they're getting excluded.
This is the first California appellate case, to my knowledge, to so hold. But it's an important one.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Dickinson v. Trump (9th Cir. - April 27, 2026)
You can probably guess how Judge Lee's opinion, joined by Judge Tung, describes the ICE protests in Portland and the police response to them You can probably also guess how the non-Trump appointee, Judge de Alba, describes those same events, including a detailed, five-page bullet point description of what the video of these protest shows these officers doing to the protesters.
Perhaps needless to say, the majority dissolves the district court's injunction that enjoined federal officials from using crowd control munitions against peaceful protesters, while Judge de Alba dissents.
People v. North River Ins. Co. (Cal. Ct. App. - April 28, 2026)
How much does it cost to have two San Diego County Deputy Sheriffs fly out to Texas and pick up a guy to fly back to San Diego?
Those were pretty nice seats on the plane, I guess.
(Two first class round trip nonstop tickets to Houston, where the jail at issue here is located, are currently under $2000. Economy nonstop tickets are under $200 each.)
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Bobo v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - April 22, 2026)
Justice Buchanan's opinion seems entirely persuasive. A trial court can't just categorically deny pretrial diversion because someone died, or because the family of the victim opposes it. You've got to analyze all of the relevant factors. So the Court of Appeal here reverses and remands to allow the trial court to assess things properly.
Yep. Sounds exactly right.
I nonetheless wanted to ask the question: Would you grant pretrial diversion here if you were the judge?
Here's a brief summary of the underlying facts, which are essentially undisputed:
"On the evening of November 11, 2024, Bobo was driving a Ford F-450 truck southbound on Kearny Villa Road approaching the signal-controlled intersection with an off-ramp from Route 163. A few seconds after Bobo’s light turned red, she went through the intersection. Bobo’s vehicle struck the driver’s side of a Toyota Highlander that was turning left on a green light from the off-ramp onto northbound Kearny Villa Road. The speed limit on Kearny Villa Road at the intersection was 50 miles per hour. Bobo and other witnesses later estimated she was going 55 to 60 miles per hour, but one witness estimated she was traveling up to 80 miles per hour. The impact from the collision killed Donato, the driver of the Toyota. Bobo’s truck struck a light pole and stopped.
Bobo appeared to be in shock at the scene. She told law enforcement she thought she had the green light but seemed unsure. Police saw no signs of intoxication. Bobo was 50 years old and had never been arrested or charged with a criminal offense.
Bobo was charged with misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter. (Pen. Code, § 192, subd. (c)(2).) She was arraigned in May 2025 and released on her own recognizance with an order not to drive.
Before trial, Bobo filed an “invitation” for the court to grant misdemeanor diversion under section 1001.95, with multiple supporting character references and attached family photos. She argued she was eligible for diversion because the charged crime was not one of the specifically excluded offenses. Her diversion request provided a lengthy background of her upbringing as an adopted child in San Diego, education, employment history, community ties, relationship with her adoptive parents, history as a single mother, relationship with her daughter and grandson, and service as a caretaker for 19 years after her mother was diagnosed with cancer.
The supporting character references described Bobo as a kind, caring, selfless, honest, generous, reliable, and compassionate person. One long-time friend reported that after the accident, Bobo called her “devastated and sobbing that she couldn’t live with herself.” According to the friend, the accident “weighed heavily” on Bobo, she sought counseling, and she “has never stopped grieving that moment.” Another friend similarly reported that the accident “ha[d] deeply affected [Bobo], as she is someone who would never intentionally hurt anyone.”
Bobo requested diversion for a period of 18 months on the following conditions: (1) she complete an in-person traffic course; (2) she complete 150 hours of volunteer service; (3) she write a letter to the victim’s family; (4) payment of restitution be reserved; (5) she remain law-abiding and “not pick up any new criminal cases”; and (6) any other terms the court deemed appropriate. . . .
The People submitted letters from two of Donato’s family members describing the devastating impact of her death, opposing Bobo’s request for diversion, and expressing the view that Bobo should not be able to get away with only community service. The letters described Donato as a 66-year-old grandmother and mother of two adult children, including a son with autism who experienced deep confusion and pain from her death. Donato immigrated from the Philippines and was the anchor of her family. She and her husband lived frugally, but she supported extended family members financially and emotionally, including putting some through college. She was active in her local church and community, compassionate, and generous to others. She was deeply loved and her family suffered tremendously from her death."
Diversion basically means that if the defendant does everything she's supposed to do within the relevant period (here, two years), the case essentially goes away.
Powerful equities on both sides.
So what would you do?
P.S. - The Court of Appeal's caption lists the second attorney for the San Diego City Attorney's Office as counsel on appeal as Paige E. Folkman, but from what I can tell, she went inactive shortly after the petition was filed.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Martinez v. Sierra Lifestar (Cal. Ct. App. - April 21, 2026)
Monday, April 20, 2026
People v. Bertsch & Hronis (Cal. Supreme Ct. - April 20, 2026)
Two people are convicted of kidnapping, raping and killing Linda Canady. Both are sentenced to death.
The California Supreme Court unanimously affirms the conviction and death sentence of Bertsch, but reverses the death sentence of Hronis. So even though they did the same thing -- no one's sure which one of them actually killed Ms. Canady (and it might well have been both of them), one allegedly ends up with a life sentence and the other is executed.
The California Supreme Court holds that Hronis gets relief because his alleged incompetency was not adequately addressed at the penalty phase. Hronis said that God told him that God would save him from an adverse verdict. When that didn't happen, and he was convicted, Hronis didn't want to put on a defense at the penalty phase, telling the judge that "he would prefer to send the jury home, save the state some money, be first in line to receive the death penalty, and “be with Jesus” rather than “rotting” in prison waiting for an appeal. He repeated: “If I can’t be free on the streets, I want to be free with Jesus. That’s exactly how I feel.”" The trial court "noted for the record that Hronis was “soft spoken, deliberate, and composed.”" By contrast, Bertsch didn't have the same issues, so his death sentence is affirmed.
As usual, it's not like either Bertsch or Hronis is actually going to be executed, regardless of today's decision. Which is why I said that only one of these two killers "allegedly" ends up getting executed. There's a death penalty moratorium in California, and that's not going to change anytime soon. Moreover, Ms. Canady was murdered in 1985 -- over four decades ago. Bertsch is now 68 years old, and Hronis is 67. Both of these senior citizens are dying in prison regardless.
Nonetheless, for all its practical worth (or lack thereof), here's a 200-plus page opinion on the subject.
Friday, April 17, 2026
Panelli v. Target Corp. (9th Cir. - April 17, 2026)
Thursday, April 16, 2026
People v. Harzan (Cal. Ct. App. - April 16, 2026)
Twice in one week.
First it was on Monday, and today, in an entirely different published opinion, we see it again.
The common reality in both cases, which you see again and again and again in these cases:
If someone texts you saying she's 13 and willing to have sex with you, it's a cop.
People v. Superior Court/Austin (Cal. Ct. App. - April 16, 2026)
Defendant files a Racial Justice Act claim alleging that the Riverside District Attorney disproportionately seeks the death penalty against Black defendants than White defendants. The judge assigned to the case was former ADA with the Riverside DA's office. She didn't participate in the existing prosecution, and was not the responsible district attorney in any of the 28 cases that the defendant is comparing to his for RJA purposes. She was, however, at staff meetings in which the decision to seek the death penalty was discussed, so arguably has some personal knowledge of why that penalty might have been sought in any of those particular cases.
As a result, there's a challenge for cause seeking her recusal. The presiding judge denies the challenge, but the Court of Appeal reverses. "Here, Judge Shouka made recommendations as to filing charges in homicide cases during the relevant period of time involved in the RJA motion, and was present at staffing meetings where decisions were made in other cases as to the charges to be filed. While we do not find that Judge Shouka was actually biased in this case, a person aware of these facts might reasonably entertain a doubt as to whether Judge Shouka could be impartial in determining if the DAO had a pattern of institutional bias, explicit bias, or historical and systematic bias in filing homicide charges, when she was personally involved in these decisions while at the DAO."
You can see the argument, right?
Here's the interesting thing, though. Albeit a twist nowhere discussed in the Court of Appeal's opinion.
The party seeking recusal here isn't the defendant. It's the Riverside DA's office.
In other words, the Riverside DA's office is worried that the judge at issue might have personal knowledge of how death penalty decisions are, in fact, made in that office; in particular, whether they are based upon racial or other illegal grounds. That's information that the DA's office does not want considered.
It would be fairly routine for a defendant to not want a former DA who's now a judge deciding if that DA's office was racist in its charging decisions. That's what you might expect.
It's a bit different when the DA's office itself doesn't want a former DA in that office expressing judgment on that issue.
Interesting twist, eh?
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Walton v. Victor Valley CCD (Cal. Ct. App. - April 15, 2026)
Are some state court judges really granting summary judgment motions because the attorney's declaration (that attaches deposition transcripts, etc.) left out the "under penalty of perjury" part, thereby justifying its wholesale exclusion? And making that ruling even though the attorney's there and more than willing to correct the mistake right at the hearing?
Good job by the Court of Appeal publishing this opinion to make clear that's not okay.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Zand v. Sukumar (Cal. Ct. App. - April 14, 2026)
Monday, April 13, 2026
U.S. v. Williams (9th Cir. - April 13, 2026)
An ICE agent trying to have sex with an undercover cop pretending to be a 13 year old prostitute.
Classic.
Thursday, April 09, 2026
Y.P. v. Wells Fargo (Cal. Ct. App. - April 9, 2026)
I was going to mention this opinion today simply as a reminder of a very common check scam. One to which, sadly, a nontrivial number of lawyers have fallen victim, including but not limited to the plaintiff here.
I will, in fact, make that reminder. Because it's important. Don't fall for this:
"On an unspecified date, Y.P. [a sole practitioner] received “what appeared to be a legitimate debt payment cashier’s check in the amount of $99,700.00” from a “purported client.” The check was “purportedly issued by Falls City National Bank” and “written on behalf of ‘Fastenal, Inc.’ ” The check “ostensibly represented what [Y.P.] believed to be partial payment of a debt obtained as part of a legal matter being handled by [Y.P.] on behalf of [the] purported client.”
On Friday, March 18, 2022, Y.P. deposited the check into the IOLTA account.1 On Monday, March 21, 2022, the client directed Y.P. to wire transfer $89,730 “as soon as the funds from the Check cleared” and to retain $9,970 as the legal fees for his services."
Needless to say, the "cashier's check" was fraudulent, the whole thing was a scam, the bank reversed the deposit after the wire went out, and the lawyer lost the entire amount of the $89,730 wire. (My children would now insert a sad face emoji here, but we're far too old for that.
To reiterate: Don't wire money out for an "excess" deposit. Do. Not. Do. It.
But as I read further in the opinion, I also wanted to mention the doctrinal merits. The trial court dismissed the lawyer's lawsuit against the bank on the pleadings, and after reading the first couple of paragraphs of the opinion, I assumed that the Court of Appeal would affirm. And, indeed, it largely does so.
But not entirely.
The lawyer-plaintiff here added one critical set of facts. Plaintiff alleges that he called the bank and was expressly told by a bank employee that the certified check "had cleared" (when, of course, it had not), and that he then went to the bank, told that same employee that he was super suspicious about the check, but that same employee again reiterated that the check had cleared and plaintiff was thus "good to go" to send the wire.
The Court of Appeal says, essentially: "Well, your other causes of action are meritless, but yeah, if the bank employee did indeed say those things, that would indeed count as a negligent misrepresentation." So that part of the lawsuit -- and only that part -- survives.
Now, between you and me, the lawyer here is presumably well trained in the law, and a well trained lawyer might perhaps realize that his lawsuit against the bank for getting scammed might not one that regularly goes so well, and hence that lawyer might perhaps be inclined to maybe just maybe add some allegations about some alleged oral statements that may or may not have actually transpired, but that would be good enough to get past a demurrer (and likely past summary judgment as well, since they involve a credibility call between the lawyer that says they happened and a bank employee who will perhaps say they didn't).
Of course, I'm not saying that happened here. Of course not. What do I know? I'm just saying that things like that could happen. In a parallel universe, perhaps.
So two lessons. One, don't fall for this scam. Two, if you do fall for that scam, it would be really helpful if you alleged (truthfully, of course) that you contacted the bank and they repeatedly assured you that the fake check that you deposited had already cleared.
All good?
Oh, one last thing. Not surprisingly, the plaintiff here does not want his real name in a published opinion that tells the entire world that he was scammed. So plaintiff sues under his initials: Y.P.
The text of the Court of Appeal's opinion similarly consistently refers to the plaintiff as Y.P., and never uses his real name.
And then, on the last page, when it lists the counsel for the parties:
"Peretz & Associates, Yosef Peretz and David Garibaldi, for Plaintiff."
Oops.
Tuesday, April 07, 2026
U.S. v. Verhonich (9th Cir. - April 7, 2026)
Monday, April 06, 2026
People v. Deen (Cal. Supreme Ct. - April 6, 2025)
It's a death penalty case. I totally understand why counsel for the defendant, who's out of peremptory challenges, wants this juror excused for cause. What I don't understand is why the prosecution doesn't realize that letting this juror on creates serious, serious risks of reversal on appeal.
Which, of course, happens. Unanimously. So we now have to redo the entire -- very, very long -- trial yet again. Years later.
One of the two victims of the murder was the chief of police of the small town at issue. Here's the juror's contacts with that victim:
"Juror No. 5 was forthcoming and open as to his associations with Chief Speer, the fact that he had heard details from law enforcement on the day of the killings and thereafter, and that he followed the case in the press. He wrote in his questionnaire that he would have difficulty keeping an open mind and that the accusation of killing a police officer would prevent him from being fair and impartial. He explained that he had known Chief Speer for a number of years, had business dealings with him, knew his wife, would have coffee with him from time to time, and campaigned for him when he ran for sheriff. He added: “in that sense, a friendship existed.” He was on his way to attend Speer’s funeral but was called away as he was approaching the service. He knew 14 of the potential witnesses. When asked if his experience as a police employee would make it difficult for him to be fair and impartial, he replied: “I would like to think not, but of course being in law enforcement, entrenched in it for 15 years might be a little difficult.” Nevertheless, Juror No. 5 said he could be a fair and impartial juror in a case where someone was accused of murdering Chief Speer, could set aside what he had heard from law enforcement sources, could fairly evaluate the testimony of people he knew, and could “wait until the end of the case . . . until both sides had presented their case and argued the case” before making up his mind."
Come one. You're not letting that person on the jury, right? We have actual neutral prospective jurors sitting there and available. No reason to put someone like this on.
Even if they say -- just like we all would want to say (and believe) -- that they could be neutral, just select another juror.
Unless you're affirmatively desirous of an incredibly expensive appellate reversal and retrial.
Friday, April 03, 2026
Ex Parte Milligan (Supreme Court - April 3, 1866)
I occasionally pursue old opinions for fun. This Supreme Court opinion -- Ex Parte Milligan -- was published exactly 160 years ago, to the day, on April 3, 1866.
The opinion was incredibly prescient. So on its anniversary, I thought I'd mention it briefly.
In 1864, the United States arrested Lambdin Milligan, an Indiana lawyer who was an outspoken opponent of the Civil War. Even though Milligan was a civilian, the U.S. tried him before a military commission for alleged offenses against the Union (basically, opposing the war, alongside an alleged connection to a cache of weapons) and sentenced him to hang.
Milligan brought a habeas petition claiming that it was illegal to try him before a military commission instead of before a civilian jury. The Supreme Court agreed. In freeing Milligan, the Court wrote these words, which seem incredibly timely on this day 160 years later. So I thought I'd share them with you:
"The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all circumstances . . . . This nation, as experience has proved, cannot always remain at peace, and has no right to expect that it will always have wise and humane rulers, sincerely attached to the principles of the Constitution. Wicked men, ambitious of power, with hatred of liberty and contempt of law, may fill the place once occupied by Washington and Lincoln . . . ."
Yep. Indeed.
Thursday, April 02, 2026
The Merchant of Tennis v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - April 2, 2026)
I wrote this back on the same day the amendment to the opinion came out on March 23, and today the Court of Appeal issues this.
Today's modification doesn't mention it, but the docket also reflects that on March 24, 25 and 26, the prior amendment was stricken, the remittitur was issued, and then the next day the Court of Appeal ordered the remittitur recalled. Leading to a renewed remittitur and amended opinion today.
All of which is a lot of procedural work just to get things cleaned up the way they should be.
Which I'm sure everyone appreciates. So thanks, Justice Miller.
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
O'Dell v. Aya Healthcare Svcs (9th Cir. - April 1, 2026)
But here's the thing. The Supreme Court has said it's okay. In an 8-1 opinion -- Parklane Hosiery -- back in 1979, the Court addressed precisely the unfairness that Judge Tung isolates and held that it was nonetheless the right and proper policy for federal courts. No one's doubted that this reasoning applies to every issue to which preclusion might possibly be applied, including whether or not a particular contractual provision -- whether an arbitration clause or anything else -- was invalid. Again, until today.
But guess what? The Supreme Court already not only thought of that, but expressly dealt with it. The Court took great pains to say in Parklane Hoisery that when such prior rulings are indeed inconsistent, the district court has discretion to refuse to apply offensive nonmutual issue preclusion in such a setting. That, again, is a generally applicable rule, applicable to arbitration clauses and every other contractual provision as well. If the panel had relied upon that generally applicable exception, great, that'd make total sense. But not only does the panel not do so, but it doesn't even mention that exception. Much less talk about how it solves the precise problem at issue here.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
U.S. v. Casildo (9th Cir. - March 31, 2026)
There was only one published opinion in the Ninth Circuit, California Supreme Court, and California Court of Appeal today. And even that one wasn't all that doctrinally interesting.
That said, one person definitely cared deeply about that sole opinion: Francis Casildo.
Mr. Casildo is what a normal person might call a "long-time drug dealer," though we in the legal world prefer "career criminal." He has a 2006 drug conviction in Nevada and a 2011 federal conviction for distribution of cocaine. So when the jury convicted him in of distributing methamphetamine, that was his third strike. Which means a big jump in the sentencing guidelines range.
The judge ultimately sentenced Mr. Casildo to a little over 19 and a half years in prison. But expressly did so because the three drug strikes made Mr. Casildo a career criminal under the guidelines. At sentencing, the judge said:
"The guideline range is properly calculated at 262 to 327 months, and as we discussed earlier, that was driven almost completely by the fact that Mr. Casildo is regarded as a career offender, having had two prior drug trafficking convictions. And I think that essentially says it all. Were it not for those two prior convictions or if there had only been one prior drug conviction, we would be talking about a very, very different case, a very, very different sentence, probably something on the order of what Mr. Requena received, maybe even less."
After an unsuccessful appeal, Mr. Casildo filed a motion to vacate his sentence. The district court denied the motion, but the Ninth Circuit reverses, holding that his attorney, who had been instructed by Mr. Casildo to oppose the career services finding, deficiently failed to do so: "We hold that there was cause for, and prejudice resulting from, Casildo’s procedural default, and that his failure to raise his claim on direct appeal may therefore be excused. On the merits, we hold that Casildo’s conviction under § 453.321(1)(a) is not a controlled substance offense under § 4B1.1(a). We reverse and remand for further proceedings."
It's not like Mr. Casildo is going to get out of prison any time soon. But he's nonetheless likely looking at trimming off a non-trivial portion of this just-under-two-decade sentence.
And it's March 31, not April 1, so it's not an April Fool's Day joke either.
Monday, March 30, 2026
People v. Newt (Cal. Ct. App. - March 30, 2026)
Friday, March 27, 2026
Thursday, March 26, 2026
In re Bergstrom (Cal. Ct. App. - March 26, 2026)
The Court of Appeal this afternoon refuses to grant relief to Robert Q. Bergstrom, who is accused of molesting several of his relatives and who is being kept on a no-bail order.
Two things about Mr. Bergstrom that are mentioned nowhere in today's opinion:
First, he's 84 years old, and accused of molesting his granddaughters.
Second, he's an attorney.
No bueno for him.
Bair v. Dept. of Transportation (Cal. Ct. App. - March 26, 2026)
The third time's not a charm; as a result, the windy single-lane Route 101 through Humboldt County will now get wider.
The California Department of Transportation has been trying to widen this portion of the 101 for almost two decades. The road in this area goes through massive old growth redwood trees that are 300 feet tall and thousands of years old, many of which are immediately adjacent to the highway. To get through this portion with minimal disruption to the trees, the existing road becomes a narrow, tightly curving two-lane road that doesn't have regular shoulders and in which it's hard for vehicles to stay in their lanes. The DOT wants to widen it, alongside mitigation measures to reduce the impact on the roots of the redwood trees. That way, the DOT says, traffic will be safer, and regular-sized trucks, which are currently prohibited on this part of the 101, will now be allowed.
Some residents and environmental groups in the area oppose the change, and file a writ that claims that the environmental impact report was improperly prepared. They lose in the trial court, but win on appeal. The DOT revises the report and submits it again. Groups file another writ, and win again. The DOT then tries a third time, and groups file the present (third) writ. But this one loses, both in the trial court and on appeal.
So, at this point, nothing's stopping that route from getting wider.
For better or worse.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Garden Storage Centers v. Simpson (Cal. Ct. App. - March 24, 2026)
If it were me, on remand, I wouldn't disqualify the law firm here.
A party was employed by a company and alleges wrongful termination. During their employment, they received some emails that were sent to them (deliberately) by the company's attorney. Before leaving the company, they sent those emails to their personal email because they thought they helped establish the company's misconduct. After filing suit, they then turned those emails over to their lawyer, who then produced them during discovery and used them (in part) to advance their case.
The Court of Appeal says that's unethical. That just like you have a duty to return privileged documents that were inadvertently produced by the other side, so too, it holds do lawyers have a duty to return any privileged documents that your client turns over to you. Even ones that were deliberately sent to them by the company during their employment.
Let's assume for now that this holding is correct. Though, as you might well imagine, there are some serious distinctions -- maybe dispositive, maybe not -- between (1) viewing documents that contain information that your client never had any reason to know about and that were obviously accidentally produced to you, as opposed to (2) viewing documents that contain information that your client already knew about and was deliberately and intentionally sent to them. Put that aside. Assume you're the trial court on remand, and the Court of Appeal has now made it clear that an attorney's ethical obligations are the same in both scenarios: return the documents and don't make use of them.
Disqualification is still discretionary in such a setting. And I wouldn't DQ the lawyers here. For multiple reasons, only two of which I'll bother to mention.
First, until today, this wasn't the rule. As the Court of Appeal's opinion admits (in a footnote), Rule 4.4 expressly only applies to inadvertently produced documents, and does not apply to privileged documents that are intentionally disclosed to a client. Could a lawyer nonetheless have potentially anticipated today's holding? Maybe. But the applicable ethical rule was, at a minimum, unclear. That weighs heavily against harming both lawyer and client by disqualifying the lawyer for doing something they thought at the time was permissible.
Second, there's a difference. One the Court of Appeal admits. With inadvertently produced documents, if you review them, you're gaining access to information that you should never have had, so DQing you will effectively remedy that problem by compelling the retention of a new lawyer who won't have access to those documents and that information (since they'll have been returned). By contrast, here, the cat's long out of the bag. The client already got this privileged long ago. They know about it. They are fully aware of what's in the emails. Indeed, they even know the stuff's important, which is why they sent it to their own email in the first place.
Disqualifying the original lawyer doesn't solve the problem. Sure, the client has to get a new lawyer, and now, the client has already returned the emails (and knows full well that if they hide another copy and give them to the lawyer, they'll just be DQ'd again). But the client still knows the stuff. They can testify to it. They can tell whatever they remember to their lawyer, either in writing or (more likely) orally. That stuff is already out, and while there's perhaps a chance the emails themselves aren't going to be formally used, the information is available. At this point, nothing we do is going to put Pandora back in that box.
As Justice Perluss explained three or so years ago, in a different case: "Courts cannot effectively police what a client, after reading or hearing another party’s confidential communications, chooses to tell his or her lawyer. As the cases indicate, attempting to restrict oral disclosures of that sort risks undue interference with candid discussions between the client and counsel; and disqualification would, in any event, be an ineffective remedy because the client might provide the same information to new counsel." For that reason, the proper response to a lawyer deliberately using inadvertently produced privileged documents -- disqualification, in at least some settings -- doesn't really work for me here. At least not in the context raised in this particular litigation.
That said, after today, make sure you know the relevant rule. If you see an obviously privileged email from the other side, even one that was deliberately sent to your client at the time, you may well have an obligation to stop reading it and give it back.
So be careful. No one wants to risk getting disqualified if they can avoid it.
Monday, March 23, 2026
The Merchant of Tennis v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - March 23, 2026)
One of the (many, many) suboptimal things about becoming an older lawyer is that you forget whether the rule you're thinking about is an old rule and whether there's a newer rule that's taken its place.
I was reminded of this reality when I read Justice Miller's modification of his opinion this afternoon. It reads, in full:
"On the court’s own motion, the majority opinion filed in this matter on January 14, 2026, is modified as follows:
To the “Disposition,” we add the following sentence: “Each side is to bear their own costs on appeal.”
Except for this modification, the majority opinion remains unchanged. The modification does not effect a change in the judgment."
Here was my thought. With a reminder that perhaps I'm thinking about an old rule, or maybe I'm simply mistaken on the merits. Nonetheless, this was definitely my internal thought:
"Wait. Deciding not to award costs does effect a change in a change in the judgment. Doesn't it?"
Well? Doesn't it?
It seems like it does change the judgment to me. Before, because the opinion was silent, the prevailing party was entitled to costs. That's money. Now, after the modification, they're not. So as a result of the change, they're entitled to less money. I would think that's a change in the judgment. (As well as one that might potentially have practical effects. Maybe you were fine with the opinion because even though it didn't give you everything you wanted, at least you got your costs, which maybe were huge. But then once you didn't get costs, maybe you wanted to seek review or something like that.)
I understand -- or at least think I understand -- why Justice Miller wants to say it doesn't effect a change in the judgment. As a practical matter, it probably doesn't, in fact, matter that much. And the underlying opinion was issued way back in January, over 60 days ago, so the Court of Appeal probably does not want to restart the clock vis-a-vis the finality of its decision at this point.
But I can't help still thinking that it does, in fact, change the judgment. And think, though perhaps I'm remembering incorrectly, that other opinions that have done exactly the same thing have said that such changes do, in fact, effect a change in the judgment.
I read what I believe is the underlying rule, which doesn't provide a precise answer to the question. One might perhaps read Rule 8.264(c)(2) to say that the Court of Appeal can decide for itself whether or not to say that a change modifies the judgment. But that surely can't be what it actually means, can it? If so, couldn't the Court of Appeal issue an opinion, wait for a while, and then eventually say "We hereby modify the appeal; in the original opinion we held that plaintiff won, but now we amend the opinion to say that defendant wins, and we hereby insert the word 'not' before every verb in the prior version. This does not effect a change in the judgment. Ha!" Or change "affirmed" to "reversed," change "We hereby instruct the court to enter a judgment for $10" to "$10 million," etc. That can't be right.
So I think that this is, in fact, actually a change. FWIW.
P.S. - I also wonder, parenthetically, what made the Court of Appeal go back and revisit the cost award after so long? The docket doesn't reflect that anyone ever filed anything in the interim. Did the panel really just wake up one day and randomly think "Geeze, you know what, now that I think of it, I don't feel like awarding costs to the prevailing party in that appeal that I decided two months ago?"
Friday, March 20, 2026
People v. Taft (Cal. Ct. App. - March 20, 2026)
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Sheerer v. Panas (Cal. Ct. App. - March 19, 2026)
Are you kidding me?!
Thomas Panas is in San Mateo county, working (presumably) for a tech company making nearly $20,000/month in salary, another $26,000/month in commissions/bonuses, and getting additional stock grants worth over $120,000 in the first three months of the year. In short, he's rich.
But he's also engaged in contentious divorce proceedings with his ex-wife over child support obligations for his two children (over whom they share custody 50/50). There's a lot of money at stake, mostly over how much the child support payments should be increased over the baseline given his expansive bonus and stock payments.
Notwithstanding what's at stake, Mr. Panas (1) represents himself pro per on appeal (despite Covington & Burling on the other side), (2) write his pro per brief with a.i., and (3) doesn't bother to check the citations or factual record cites hallucinated by the computer, or even write a table of contents, follow the rules with respect to formatting, etc.
Seriously?
Because the Court of Appeal is incredibly nice, Mr. Panas avoids getting sanctioned. But geeze.
Get a lawyer, my friend.
P.S. - He also loses the appeal.
People v. Perez (Cal. Ct. App. - March 19, 2026)
Eric Perez gets pulled over in a traffic stop. It turns out he's been driving on a suspended license since 1993. (!) Mr. Perez could be arrested, but the officer doesn't feel like it, and cites him instead. But the officer doesn't want him driving, so has the car towed. They conduct an inventory search, find some drugs and a firearm (which, as a felon, he's not allowed to have), and charge him accordingly.
Mr. Perez says the search was illegal and moves to suppress, the trial court denies the motion, but the Court of Appeal reverses. Since the vehicle was parked legally, and the driver not arrested, there's no reasonable basis to tow. So Mr. Perez wins, and he gets to withdraw his conditional no contest plea on remand if he wants.
Here's the thing, though.
Mr. Perez was sentenced to two years probation. That was roughly a year ago -- and his offense was nearly four years ago. So he's pretty much done already, even under the original deal.
So, on the one hand, why would Mr. Perez withdraw the plea? He's pretty much done with the sentence already. Just a little more probation left. Why withdraw the plea, which was pursuant to a deal, and risk getting convicted at trial and potentially subjected to a much more serious sentence?
On the other hand, assuming that Mr. Perez withdraws his plea, why even retry the guy in the first place? Presumably he's done a fine job during his previous year of probation, and doesn't have any additional offenses in the last four years. The government thought that two years of probation was a reasonable sentence previously. Why spend the time and money on a retrial just to keep the guy on probation for another year?
This opinion is important from a policy perspective. It matters a lot whether the police are allowed to tow your car.
But practically, for Mr. Perez? Tough to really justify doing much more on remand in this particular case.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Dion v. Weber (Cal. Ct. App. - March 18, 2026)
When you get a fraud judgment against a California corporation that doesn't pay it, you can get up to $50,000 of it from the Victims of Corporate Fraud Compensation Fund.
Plaintiffs here get a default judgment for fraud and file an application for compensation from the Fund, but their application is denied on the grounds that their claim was outside the statute of limitations. The Court of Appeal holds that's not okay; that since the plaintiffs prevailed in court (where the defendant defaulted and hence didn't raise the limitations defense), that's the end of things. Pay 'em.
The opinion says numerous times that "[a]llowing the Secretary to relitigate the merits of the underlying causes of action" would be permissible; e.g., that it "undermines the judicial goals of fostering finality and would create a significant possibility of inconsistent judgments." But the underlying statute clearly allows precisely such relitigation. Section 2288(b)(1) says: "The Secretary of State may defend any action on behalf of the fund and shall have recourse to all appropriate means of defense and review, including examination of witnesses and the right to relitigate any issues that are material and relevant in the proceeding against the fund." The underlying judgment only creates a presumption, according to the statute: "The claimant’s judgment shall create a rebuttable presumption of the fraud, misrepresentation, or deceit by the corporation, which presumption shall affect the burden of producing evidence."
The Court of Appeal responds that (b)(1) only applies to contested judgments, and that the statute purportedly creates a "dual track" such that for default judgments (like here), only subsection (b)(2) applies. (That subsection reads: "If the civil judgment, arbitration award, or criminal restitution order in the underlying action on which the final judgment in favor of the petitioner was by default, stipulation, consent, or pursuant to Section 594 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or if the action against the corporation or its agent was defended by a trustee in bankruptcy, the petitioner shall have the burden of proving that the cause of action against the corporation or its agent was for fraud, misrepresentation, or deceit.")
That's not the way I read those sections. Paragraph (b)(1) says nothing about being applicable only to "contested" actions. The word's not even in there. I read (b)(1) as saying that the Fund can relitigate anything. Period. With the proviso that there's a rebuttable presumption that the underlying judgment is correct. Paragraph (b)(2) cuts back on that, in my view, only by saying that in default cases, there's no such presumption, and the burden of proof in those cases is instead on the plaintiff (unlike in non-default cases, where it's on the Fund).
Wholly beyond the words of the statute, it seems strange to be that there'd effectively be NO statute of limitations on claims against the Fund. Can I really get a default judgment against a 1870s corporation today (because they don't show up) and get $50,000 from the Fund? That would just seem weird. Not the way things usually work.
I get the desire to compensate victims of fraud. But we've got that desire in regular lawsuits as well, yet still have limitations periods. I'm just not sure the statute here operates in the way the Court of Appeal thinks it does.
But, hey, for victims of fraud: a good opinion for ya.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
People v. Jones (Cal. Ct. App. - March 17, 2026)
Monday, March 16, 2026
People v. Riggs (Cal. Ct. App. - March 16, 2026)
Criminal cases are often depressing. You often see people at their worst. And, obviously, there are often horrific acts at issue.
This opinion involves a serious crime: assault with a semiautomatic firearm. But what struck me as most depressing was the reaction of the victim, "Jane Doe".
Jane was dating "John" (another pseudonym) but had previously dated the defendant, Riggs. Jane and John were riding together on a quad when Riggs came to the house looking for Jane. Stuff then happens:
"Father and Jane’s two brothers were at home. Riggs was angry and “talking shit” about Jane to her brother. Riggs left the house toward the street.
Riggs then saw John and Jane riding the motor bike together. Father, still in his home, heard gunshots outside. At some point, John fled on foot.
Father next heard Riggs and Jane screaming as they approached the house. Both came inside, and Father saw Jane had blood on her face. Riggs grabbed Jane’s hair and hit her multiple times. Riggs pointed the gun at Father and Brother and threatened to shoot them.
Brother ran out of the room to hide and called Mother to ask her to call the police. Mother called 911, and the 911 operator called Brother. During the call, Brother sounded scared. Brother reported Riggs was in the house with a gun, breaking things and hitting his sister. Earlier, he heard shots fired outside the house toward the street.
Riggs called the family “snitches” for calling the police. He then grabbed Jane and pulled her outside the house into the backyard.
When Jane and Riggs were outside, a Riverside County Sheriff’s Department helicopter arrived in response to a 911 call reporting a man with a gun. The helicopter’s video camera captured Riggs hitting Jane in the abdomen with his hand and then with the handle of a shovel. Sheriff’s deputies soon arrived. When they did, Riggs appeared to be lifting the shovel to hit Jane again, but he dropped the shovel on the deputies’ orders. Deputies took Riggs into custody. He had a bag of methamphetamine in his shoe.
After the incident, Jane’s face was covered in blood and swollen, and she had bruising on her face, scalp, neck, and arm. She was bleeding from her nose and mouth, and she was upset and crying. At the scene, Jane told police her ex-boyfriend, Riggs, hit her with his fist multiple times. She accepted some medical treatment but refused to go to the hospital.
Sheriff’s deputies examined the scene. Inside Jane’s residence, there was blood on the floor and the furniture. In the backyard, investigators found a semiautomatic firearm in a metal shed near where they contacted Riggs. The firearm was wrapped in a towel that had blood on it. The magazine was empty, and the slide of the gun was locked to the rear of the empty chamber, which indicated all bullets had been fired from the firearm. The firearm was capable of firing only 9-millimeter bullets.
Just north of the front of Jane’s home, law enforcement found four spent 9-millimeter cartridge cases. Further north, 75 to 100 yards from the home, they found the motor bike and three additional spent 9-millimeter cartridge cases nearby. The motor bike’s engine had been hit by two bullets, leaving one bullet hole and one strike mark.
Riggs had gunshot residue on both hands. His DNA was on the trigger, trigger guard, and slide of the gun found in the metal shed."
That's a serious offense, right? And poor Jane. She's the victim of a serious crime. You rightly feel incredibly bad for her. She has to deal with all this stuff, and God knows what she's had to deal with in the past.
What is perhaps most depressing, however, is how she elects to live her live after this whole ordeal:
"Two days later, Jane went to the hospital for her injuries. She was with John. She reported that she was injured falling off a bicycle. Medical professionals found the injuries inconsistent with her story and called law enforcement. When a Sheriff’s investigator came to the hospital, Jane was defensive and did not want to talk to him. She refused to let him take pictures of her injuries.
At the time of trial, Riggs was Jane’s boyfriend again. Although Jane testified at trial, she was an uncooperative witness for the prosecution and denied her earlier statements to the deputies. She testified that John “tried to . . . hit [Riggs] off the road” with the motor bike and she “flew off the bike” as it “wrecked”. She stated the scrapes and bruises on her face came from falling off the motor bike face-first onto dirt and pavement."
Jeeze.
Fortunately, the jury understands what's going on here, and convicts Riggs, who's sentenced to over 25 years in prison. So his personal relationship with Jane has, for all practical purposes, essentially ended. Thankfully.
Still. After all this, going back to Riggs and testifying on his behalf. A classic reaction, I know. But nonetheless profoundly distressing.
I'm a tiny reminded of the classic film noir ending: "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."
Here, it's Riverside.