Court Opinion

ID: 2748040
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-11-05 00:02:01.37147+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:25:44.107431
License: Public Domain

Filed 11/4/14 Rider v. Sire Enterprises CA1/2
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION TWO

INGRID RIDER,
         Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                     A140099
v.
SIRE ENTERPRISES, LTD,                                               (Marin County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. CIV1106245)
         Defendant and Appellant.

         Defendant Sire Enterprises, Ltd. (Sire) appeals from judgment after a jury verdict
for compensatory and punitive damages in this pregnancy discrimination case. However,
no trial issues are presented on this appeal.
         Instead, Sire argues that the trial court abused its discretion in shortening the time
for service of plaintiff’s motion for summary adjudication on liability to less than the 75-
day notice required by Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (a).1 It is
undisputed that on November 2, 2012, the trial court granted plaintiff’s unopposed ex
parte application to permit the motion to be heard on January 9, 2013, a date when Sire’s
timely filed motion for summary judgment was already scheduled to be heard.
         However, it is also undisputed that Sire’s counsel did not consent to the order
shortening time. The controlling authorities are clear that, in the absence of consent by
all affected parties, the trial court has no discretion to shorten the mandatory 75-day
         1
        Unless otherwise indicated all further statutory citations are to the Code of Civil
Procedure.

                                                             1
notice period. Because Sire was not asked to consent and did not do so, we must reverse
the judgment and do not reach the parties’ other arguments.
                                     BACKGROUND
       The pleadings and the cross motions for summary judgment disclose the following
background facts: Plaintiff had been employed by Sire from February 2009 until
November 15, 2011, when she was fired. On September 20, 2011, she had emergency
surgery for an ectopic pregnancy. Her employer knew of the pregnancy and the surgery
and received a medical certification from plaintiff’s doctor on September 27, 2011,
stating that she needed to be absent from work until December 1. However, in October,
Sire also received reports from other employees that plaintiff was engaging in activities
inconsistent with a need for a medical leave. Sire then asked plaintiff for further
information from her doctor, and when it was dissatisfied with the doctor’s non-specific
reference to a physical or emotional condition affecting a major life activity, and with
telephonic responses from plaintiff, its president fired her for perceived “scamming” of
the company.
       On December 6, 2011, plaintiff filed a complaint with the Department of Fair
Employment and Housing and promptly received a right-to-sue letter.
                      PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT
       The original complaint was filed on December 22, 2011.2 On July 17, 2012, the
court set a trial date for February 26, 2013. Sire filed its motion for summary judgment
or, in the alternative, for summary adjudication, on October 4, 2012, and reserved a
hearing date for that motion on January 9, 2013.
       The first notice Sire received that plaintiff intended to file her own motion for
summary adjudication came on October 30, 2012. At that time counsel for plaintiff gave

       2
         The only complaint provided to us is plaintiff’s second amended complaint for
violation of pregnancy leave law and wrongful discharge in violation of public policy,
filed on December 13, 2012, after Sire’s motion for summary judgment had been filed.
No issue is raised on appeal concerning the change in the complaint in light of the
pending summary judgment motion.

                                             2
notice to counsel for Sire of an ex parte hearing the next day to schedule a plaintiff’s
motion for summary adjudication. Upon receipt of that notice (which is not in the record)
counsel for Sire emailed to ask “what the ex parte is about.” Counsel for plaintiff replied
a few minutes later: “I have to appear ex parte to have the motion for summary
adjudication put on an already full law and motion calendar. The first available date,
according to the clerk, was 2/27, and the motions are required to be heard 30 days before
trial. So, I’m asking the court to put Rider’s motion on 1/9, along with defendant’s
motion. I’m not seeking any shortening time of notice to your client. That’s all.”
       Instead of appearing on October 31, however, counsel for plaintiff sent counsel for
Sire another notice: “Please be advised that I will be appearing ex parte on Friday,
November 2, 2013 [sic: 2012] at 8:30 a.m. in Dept. B to have Plaintiff’s Motion for
Summary Judgment/Adjudication of Issues added to a full calendar, hopefully, the
calendar of January 9, 2013.”
       The ex parte application and proposed order that counsel for plaintiff filed on
November 2, 2012, were plaintiff’s “EX PARTE APPLICATION FOR ORDER TO
PLACE MOTION ON FULL CALENDAR.” Counsel’s application explained the
problem: trial was scheduled for February 26, 2013, but the earliest normal law and
motion date was not until February 27. Because the court’s calendars were all full,
plaintiff requested January 9, 2013, because Sire’s motion was scheduled to be heard that
day. Although counsel cited section 437c, subdivision (a), in the context of noting that a
hearing on February 27 would violate it, she did not address whether her proposed
January 9 hearing date would not. She closed her application stating, “I have not
received any notice from Ms. Aqui that she attends [sic] to oppose this ex parte
application.” Neither did she state that Ms. Aqui had consented to it.

                                              3
       The court granted the application and allowed plaintiff’s motion to “be set on the
already full calendar of January 9, 2013.” Plaintiff’s motion was filed that day,
November 2, 2013, but served by mail rather than by hand delivery or overnight.3
       Sire filed its opposition to plaintiff’s motion on December 28, 2012. Its first
argument was that plaintiff’s motion was procedurally defective for failure to provide 75
days’ notice as required by section 437c, subdivision (a), citing Urshan v. Musicians’
Credit Union (2004) 120 Cal. App. 4th 758, 767 (Urshan), discussed below. Sire made
clear that it had not been asked to agree to shorter notice and had not done so. Sire then
responded to plaintiff’s motion on its merits, arguing that it had a complete defense to
plaintiff’s claim for violation of the pregnancy discrimination law, Government Code
section 12945.
       In her reply to Sire’s opposition, plaintiff argued implied consent from the notice
of the ex parte hearing given to counsel for Sire and Sire’s failure to oppose that ex parte
application. She also cited, as she does here, Karlsson v. Ford Motor Co. (2006) 140
Cal. App. 4th 1202, 1224 (Karlsson).
       The court provided a tentative ruling granting plaintiff’s motion and denying
Sire’s motion in advance of the argument on January 9, 2013. At the hearing, counsel for
Sire again argued first that plaintiff’s motion was procedurally defective under section
437c, subdivision (a). Sire was given leave to file a supplemental declaration providing
the emails which preceded the ex parte hearing on November 2, 2012. After arguments
were completed, the court took the matter under submission.
       On June 24, 2013, the court entered its order affirming its tentative ruling in all
respects.4 The court’s only comment with respect to Sire’s argument under section 437c,

       3
        The trial court’s order did not specify how service should be made or specify a
modified briefing schedule despite the fact that Sire’s opposition would be due on
December 28 because the 14th day before the hearing was Christmas, followed by a
weekend.
       4
           On February 7, 2013, plaintiff apparently requested that the February 26 trial
date be continued. The court vacated the trial date and set a case management conference
in its stead. On February 26, a new trial date was set for August 13, 2013.

                                              4
subdivision (a), was: “Finally, plaintiff’s motion is not procedurally defective as the
court allowed plaintiff’s motion to be heard on shortened notice, without objection by
defendant.”
       Trial commenced on August 13, 2013, and concluded with jury verdicts on August
16, 2013, of $36,000 in economic damages, $10,000 in non-economic damages and
$100,000 in punitive damages.5 Judgment was entered on the jury’s verdict on
September 4, 2013. Notice of appeal was timely filed on October 23, 2013.
                                       DISCUSSION
       As the leading authority on California civil procedure makes clear: “The court
may not shorten the 75-day notice period without the parties’ consent. CCP §437c(a)
gives the court power to shorten time on other summary judgment time requirements, but
not on the 75-day notice of hearing.” (Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil
Procedure Before Trial (The Rutter Group 2014) ¶ 10:80:5, p. 10-34, citing McMahon v.
Superior Court (2003) 106 Cal. App. 4th 112 (McMahon) and Urshan, supra, 120
Cal. App. 4th 758.) That rule has been clear for more than 10 years.
       In McMahon, a trial court had granted plaintiff’s motion for trial preference
because of age and health in an order setting the trial date and various other pretrial dates.
(McMahon, supra, 106 Cal.App.4th at p. 114.) As part of that order the court ordered
parties moving for summary judgment to give 21 days’ notice instead of the 75 days
required by section 437c, subdivision (a). (Ibid.) Plaintiffs, who had sought and obtained
the preferential trial setting, filed a writ challenging the shortened period for summary
judgment notices. (Ibid.)
       The Court of Appeal framed the question this way: “Absent consent of the parties,
does a trial court have authority to shorten the minimum notice period for the hearing of a
summary judgment motion? We answer this question in the negative . . . .” (McMahon,
supra, 106 Cal.App.4th at p. 114.) The court reasoned that the Legislature had expressly

       5
         As noted above, no trial issues are presented on this appeal; nor could they be
since the parties did not have the trial reported.

                                              5
provided the courts with discretion to shorten two of the time periods in section 437c,
subdivision (a)—the 60 days after the moving party’s general appearance which must
otherwise pass before a summary judgment motion may be filed and the requirement that
the motion be heard 30 days before trial—but not the 75-day notice provision. It applied
the “ ‘ “ ‘ “well recognized principle of statutory construction that when the Legislature
has carefully employed a term in one place and has excluded it in another, it should not
be implied where excluded.” ’ ” ’ ” (McMahon at p. 115.) And it rejected arguments that
trial courts have inherent authority to control their calendars in the face of an explicit
statutory requirement, and that such legislation violates the principle of separation of
powers. (Id. at pp. 116-117.)
       McMahon was followed in Urshan, a collection case in which, in order to avoid a
potentially unnecessary jury trial involving a pro per plaintiff, the court invited
defendants to file a motion for summary judgment and set a 10-day briefing schedule for
that motion. McMahon had not been decided at the time of those proceedings, but was
available for Division Seven of the Second District to follow when Urshan’s appeal
arrived. And they did, holding that “only two days to prepare a summary judgment
motion or an opposition is a woefully inadequate period of time to prepare and present
what may well turn out to be the most important series of documents in the entire case.
The Legislature recognized this reality of litigation and by its use of mandatory language
deprived a trial court of the authority to shorten the notice period for hearing summary
judgment motions.” (Urshan, supra, 120 Cal.App.4th at p. 766.)
       Sire cites and relies upon Urshan and McMahon here and did so with respect to
Urshan in the trial court. Plaintiff responds that “[t]he Trial Court did not abuse its
discretion in finding that Sire waived any objection to the summary adjudication hearing
date.”6 She supports that argument by a recitation of the events in late October which

       6
        The parties suggest that the appropriate standard of review on this issue is
whether the trial court abused its discretion in approving a schedule for plaintiff’s
summary adjudication motion on less than 75 days’ notice. They cite Urshan, supra, 120
Cal.App.4th at page 763. However, McMahon makes clear that the trial court lacks

                                               6
lead up to the court’s approval of plaintiff’s “PROPOSED ORDER GRANTING
PLAINTIFF’S EX PARTE APPLICATION FOR ORDER TO PLACE MOTION ON
FULL CALENDAR.” Plaintiff also relies upon Karlsson, supra, 140 Cal. App. 4th 1202,
and properly contrasts the extreme facts before the court in Urshan with those before us.
However, her reliance on Karlsson is misplaced.
       The entire discussion of Urshan in Karlsson¸ upon which plaintiff relies, occurs in
footnote 16. (Karlsson, supra, 140 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1224-1225, fn. 16.) Karlsson was
a complicated product liability case in which a jury awarded $30 million in compensatory
and punitive damages against Ford, based in part upon instructions directing liability as
sanctions for Ford’s failure to comply with appropriate discovery requests. (Id. at pp.
1206-1207.) The text accompanying footnote 16 makes clear that Ford had argued it had
inadequate notice of a hearing set on two weeks’ notice to give the parties an opportunity
to address whether sanctions which had previously been imposed on Ford, or lesser
sanctions, would be appropriate. (Id. at pp. 1224-1225, fn. 16.) The court held that
Ford’s “notice issue has not been preserved for appeal” because Ford had an adequate
opportunity to prepare for the hearing, Ford did not object that it received improper
notice and did not ask for a continuance but instead participated in the hearing on the
merits. (Id. at p. 1224.) In that context, footnote 16 rejected Ford’s reliance on Urshan.
       Plaintiff relies on the sentence in Karlsson that “[c]ritical to the order reversing the
summary judgment that was entered for the defendant [in Urshan] was the fact that any
objection to the statutorily unauthorized shortened notice period would have been futile.”
(Karlsson, supra, 140 Cal.App.4th at p. 1225, fn. 16.) We need not agree or disagree

discretion to approve a shortened notice period without the consent of the parties.
Urshan simply says “we find dispositive Urshan’s argument the trial court abused its
discretion by shortening time to permit Musicians to file, and to hear, a motion for
summary judgment.” (Urshan, supra, 120 Cal.App.4th at p. 763.) The Urshan court
thus did not decide that the proper standard of review is abuse of discretion. If the trial
court in this case had found that Sire consented, as a factual matter, that finding would be
binding if supported by substantial evidence. But the court did not. Rather, it found only
that Sire did not object when the ex parte matter was brought.

                                              7
with the Karlsson court’s reading of Urshan in that respect. But while the facts before
the court in Urshan were extreme, and quite different from those before us, the holding of
Urshan that the Legislature has deprived the trial courts of authority to shorten the notice
period required under section 437c, subdivision (a), is equally applicable here.7
Karlsson, which was not a summary judgment case at all, in no way calls that holding
into question.
       Plaintiff cites Urshan for the proposition that repeated failure to assert any
objection “equates to a knowing consent to the shortened notice period.” Not so. What
Urshan held on the very page cited is that “[w]aiver of minimum notice [for a summary
judgment hearing] should only be based on the affirmative assent of the affected parties.
As earlier noted, the court did not solicit, and did not secure, Urshan’s consent to the
shortened notice period. His silence and, in essence, forced participation in the
proceedings given the factual circumstances of this case, is not a valid substitute for
knowing consent to shortening the statutorily mandated notice period.” (Urshan, supra,
120 Cal.App.4th at p. 768.)
       As discussed above, the facts in Urshan are much more extreme than those before
us. However, any suggestion that the notice required by the plain language of section
437c, subdivision (a), absent the actual consent required by McMahon and by Urshan,
could, under any circumstances, be satisfied by a finding of “implied consent” is
misguided, at least in this case, for several reasons. Initially, the trial court made no such
finding. Rather, although plaintiff had argued implied consent in support of her motion,
the court found only that there had been no objection to shortening time. The absence of
an objection in November does not equate with the giving of affirmative consent to the ex
parte order which was entered at plaintiff’s request.
       Further, plaintiff’s email notification to Sire’s counsel and the papers she filed
with the court obscured the fact that the effect of her request for a hearing on an “already
full calendar” would be to shorten the mandatory 75-day notice period. All of her papers

       7
           Plaintiff makes no reference to, or attempt to distinguish, McMahon.

                                              8
emphasized that an order was needed telling the clerk that it would be acceptable to
overload an already full calendar. None mentioned that if granted, the court would be
entering a de facto order shortening time. To the contrary, counsel for plaintiff expressly
represented to Sire’s counsel: “So, I’m asking the court to put Rider’s motion on 1/9,
along with defendant’s motion. I’m not seeking any shortening time of notice to your
client. That’s all.” 8 (Emphasis added.) Moreover, as mentioned above, the law has been
clear for at least 10 years that the 75-day notice period can be shortened only with
consent of all parties. Yet counsel for plaintiff made no effort to seek or obtain the
necessary consent.
       Finally, by presenting the matter as she did, plaintiff’s counsel deprived defense
counsel and the court of the opportunity to craft a reasonable accommodation consistent
with section 437c, subdivision (a). Had counsel been candid, Sire might have agreed to
the January 9, 2013, hearing date so that both motions could be heard together. But
plaintiff never asked. If not, plaintiff’s counsel could have sought her order to place on
an already full calendar for January 16 or January 23, 2013, dates which would have
satisfied the 75-day notice requirement, and asked to have Sire’s motion continued to the
same date. These legitimate options for complying with section 437c, subdivision (a),
and having the motions heard together were cut off. Hence this case presents no reason
to recognize an implied consent exception to the 75-day notice requirement.
                                CLOSING THOUGHTS
       It is truly unfortunate that, after a jury has deliberated and reached a conclusion on
this case it must be remanded for further proceedings. However, plaintiff’s counsel has
presented us with no authority excusing her for not obtaining Sire’s consent to the
hearing on her motion on shortened time or making other arrangements consistent with
the notice requirement of section 437c, subdivision (a).

       8
          Without question counsel for Sire could have been more diligent in calculating
the amount of time available between October 31 and January 9. But a lack of diligence
in this regard does not equate with a knowing waiver, much less affirmative consent to
the shortened notice which resulted from service by mail on November 2.

                                              9
       Because the judgment must be reversed for this reason, we decline to review the
merits of plaintiff’s summary adjudication motion except to make clear that section 437c,
subdivision (f)(1), permits summary adjudication motions as to causes of action and
affirmative defenses. It does not permit motions for “partial summary judgment” in
which all elements of a cause of action are established except for damages. We also note
that Supreme Court review has been granted in the case upon which plaintiff and the trial
court relied in rejecting Sire’s “honest belief” defense. (Richey v. AutoNation, Inc.
(2012) 149 Cal. Rptr. 3d 280, review granted Feb. 13, 2013, S207536.)
                                      DISPOSITION
       The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. Sire shall recover its costs on appeal.

                                                  _________________________
                                                  Brick, J.*

We concur:

_________________________
Kline, P.J.

_________________________
Richman, J.

      * Judge of the Alameda County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.

                                             10