Court Opinion

ID: 2805837
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-06-04 22:03:45.574381+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:10:57.374545
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/4/15 Katrenick v. Bank of America CA6
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

KASEY KATRENICK,                                                     H039048
                                                                    (Santa Clara County
         Plaintiff and Appellant,                                    Super. Ct. No. 1-10-CV-171659)

         v.

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., et al.,

         Defendants and Respondents.

         Plaintiff Kasey Katrenick obtained a $558,000 loan secured by a deed of trust on
real property. She claims her loan servicer, Bank of America Home Loans Servicing
(Bank of America), induced her to default on her loan so she would qualify for a loan
modification. She alleges Bank of America then promised a permanent, affordable loan
modification, reneged on that promise, and unlawfully initiated foreclosure proceedings.
After she received a notice of trustee’s sale, she filed this action against Bank of America
and others to enjoin foreclosure of her home. No sale has occurred in the five and one
half years since the notice of default was recorded.
         Katrenick appealed the trial court’s judgment of dismissal after it sustained the
defendants’ demurrer to her second amended complaint without leave to amend. After
we issued an order directing Katrenick to correct egregious deficiencies in her appellate
briefs, she filed a substitution of attorneys form, to substitute herself in place of her
counsel, Andrew Russell Martin. Then, just two days before oral argument, the parties
filed a stipulation to dismiss the appeal with prejudice because they had settled the case.
We ordered the parties to appear for oral argument and thereafter ordered Katrenick and
her former counsel, Martin, to show cause why this court should not impose sanctions for
unreasonable violations of the California Rules of Court. We have reviewed Katrenick’s
and Martin’s responses to our order to show cause (OSC) and conclude that while the
rules violations here are sufficiently egregious to support imposition of sanctions, we will
not impose them under the unique circumstances in this case. In light of the parties’
stipulation and resolution of the case, we will dismiss the appeal.

                                           FACTS

       In reviewing the propriety of a trial court order sustaining a demurrer, we accept
as true all factual allegations properly pleaded. (Gu v. BMW of North America, LLC
(2005) 132 Cal. App. 4th 195, 200.) Accordingly, our summary of the facts is drawn from
the allegations of the second amended complaint, the documents attached thereto, and
facts the court properly judicially noticed. (Ibid.)
       Katrenick owns a single-family residence in San José, California (the Property).
In May 2005, Katrenick refinanced the Property and obtained the loan that is the subject
of this litigation. As part of the transaction, Katrenick executed an interest-only,
adjustable rate promissory note (Note) for $558,000. The Note provided that the loan
would be repaid over 30 years. To avoid default during the first seven years, the Note
required Katrenick to pay interest only at a fixed rate of 5.875 percent, which was
$2,731.88 per month. After seven years, the loan would fully amortize and the interest
rate would adjust every year. The adjusted interest rate would never be less than 2.25
percent or more than 10.875 percent.
       The loan was secured by a deed of trust on the Property (Deed of Trust). The
Deed of Trust identified Katrenick as the “Borrower,” Preferred Mortgage Banking
(Preferred) as the “Lender” and “Trustee,” and Mortgage Electronic Registration

                                              2
Systems, Inc. (MERS) “acting solely as nominee for Lender and Lender’s successors and
assigns” and as the “beneficiary” under the Deed of Trust. The Deed of Trust provided:
“The Note or a partial interest in the Note (together with this Security Instrument) can be
sold one or more times without prior notice to Borrower.”
        In April 2009, almost four years after obtaining the loan, Katrenick sought a loan
modification from her loan servicer, Bank of America. Although Katrenick was making
her payments and was not in default, she “desperately needed” the loan modification.
(The record does not explain why Katrenick needed a loan modification, but in her
response to the order to show cause Katrenick states she “was unable to pay her
mortgage” after December 2008 because her son’s father stopped paying child support
after he was laid off work.) Katrenick alleges that Bank of America told her she would
not be approved for a loan modification because she was not in default, so she defaulted
on her May 2009 payment and all succeeding payments.
        On October 21, 2009, ReconTrust Company (ReconTrust) recorded a Substitution
of Trustee and Assignment of Deed of Trust (Substitution & Assignment), which
(1) assigned the beneficial interest under the Deed of Trust, together with the Note, to
U.S. Bank, as “Trustee for the Holders of Bear Stearns ARM Trust, Mortgage Pass-
through Certificates, Series 2005-4” (U.S. Bank); and (2) substituted ReconTrust as
Trustee in place of Preferred. Six days later, on October 27, 2009, ReconTrust recorded a
Notice of Default, which stated that the amount past due was $18,159.86 as of October 9,
2009.
        Katrenick “submitted her first loan package” for a loan modification to Bank of
America in January 2010. Notwithstanding her request for a loan modification, on April
1, 2010, Katrenick received a notice of trustee’s sale (Notice of Sale). The amount due
on the loan had increased to $601,731.06 because, by that time, Katrenick’s nonpayment
had triggered an acceleration clause that required her to pay the full amount of the loan,
plus penalties and unpaid interest. The trustee’s sale was scheduled for April 29, 2010.

                                             3
The sale did not take place as scheduled and to date there has been no foreclosure sale.
On May 5, 2010, Katrenick received a letter from Bank of America denying her request
for a loan modification.

                                  PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       Katrenick filed her original complaint, which asserted 10 causes of action, on May
11, 2010. The named defendants were Preferred, Bank of America, ReconTrust, MERS,
and U.S. Bank. All of the defendants, except Preferred, demurred to the original and first
amended complaints. (We shall hereafter refer to Bank of America, ReconTrust, MERS,
and U.S. Bank jointly as “Defendants.”)1 As a result of the first two demurrers, the trial
court overruled demurrers to six of Katrenick’s causes of action and sustained demurrers
to four causes of action without leave to amend. Although the demurrer to Katrenick’s
claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress was overruled, Katrenick abandoned
that claim in her first amended complaint.
       After Defendants answered, Katrenick obtained new counsel (Vernon Bradley)
who filed a motion for leave to file a second amended complaint. The proposed second
amended complaint asserted fifteen causes of action. It contained 337 paragraphs, was
82 pages long, and was accompanied by 89 additional pages of exhibits. The second
amended complaint (1) added factual allegations regarding the loan modification process,
(2) dropped two claims that were in the first two complaints, (3) divided the fraud cause
of action into four separate claims that alleged different species of fraud, (4) reasserted
the previously abandoned negligent infliction of emotional distress claim, and (5) added
five new claims. The second amended complaint realleged three causes of action for

       1
         Katrenick delayed serving Preferred. Preferred filed an answer in August 2012.
After the court entered a judgment of dismissal as to Defendants, Katrenick dismissed the
action without prejudice as to Preferred. Preferred is not a party to the appeal.

                                              4
which the court had already sustained demurrers without leave to amend. The court
granted leave to file the second amended complaint.
       The second amended complaint alleged, among other things, that Defendants
“tricked” Katrenick into defaulting so they would have a “pretext” to foreclose and
“Defendants always secretly intended to deny a permanent modification” because they
wanted “to ‘steal’ ” the Property and her equity therein. Katrenick also alleged that
Defendants engaged in illegal “dual tracking” (simultaneously pursuing a loan
modification while “secretly” seeking foreclosure), and that foreclosure was necessary to
cover up “fatal chain-of-title and standing problems” resulting from fraud “committed as
part of the securitization debacle.” She asserted that after her loan was securitized, she
was no longer obligated to makes payments on the loan, since the investors in the
securitized trust had insurance to cover any losses. And she alleged that Defendants
improperly processed her loan modification applications.
       Defendants demurred to the second amended complaint on the ground that none of
the causes of action stated facts sufficient to state a cause of action. The trial court struck
the causes of action for fraud, unfair business practices, and quiet title because it had
previously sustained demurrers to those claims without leave to amend. The trial court
sustained the demurrers to the remaining causes of action without leave to amend and
entered a judgment of dismissal.

                                         DISCUSSION

   I. Deficiencies in Katrenick’s Briefs and Violations of Rules of Court

       A. Failure to Include a Statement of Facts

       California Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(2)(C) provides that an “appellant’s
opening brief must . . . [p]rovide a summary of the significant facts limited to matters in
the record.” (All further rules citations are to the California Rules of Court.) Rather than

                                               5
include a statement of facts, Katrenick’s opening brief states: “Appellant will disclose
the relevant facts below in the argument for ‘Foreclosure Fraud’ and ‘Modification
Fraud.’ All of the facts discussed here are based on allegations in the [second amended
complaint] and/or facts from Appellant’s securitization expert.” What then follows is a
combination of legal arguments and six pages listing purported fraudulent acts by
“Respondents” without a single record citation. The first time Katrenick mentions any of
the Defendants by name is on page 16 of her opening brief. This does not comply with
the requirements of rule 8.204(a)(2)(C). (See also State of California ex rel. Standard
Elevator Co., Inc. v. West Bay Builders, Inc. (2011) 197 Cal. App. 4th 963, 968 [failure to
provide a statement of facts as required by rule 8.204(a)(2)(C) was a “flagrant violation”
of the rule and one factor the court considered in imposing sanctions on appeal]; Lopez v.
C.G.M. Development, Inc. (2002) 101 Cal. App. 4th 430, 435-436, fn. 2 [party that
provides inadequate statement of facts “cannot be heard to complain” that appellate court
overlooked any material facts on review of summary judgment].)

       B. Failure to Provide Record Citations

       Each and every statement in a brief concerning matters that are in the appellate
record must be supported by a citation to the record. (Rule 8.204(a)(1)(C); Myers v.
Trendwest Resorts, Inc. (2009) 178 Cal. App. 4th 735, 745 (Myers); City of Lincoln v.
Barringer (2002) 102 Cal. App. 4th 1211, 1239 (Barringer) [record citations in statement
of facts do not cure failure to include record citations in argument portion of brief].) This
requirement allows the reviewing court to locate relevant portions of the record
expeditiously. (Myers, at p. 745.) Stating facts without providing a record cite, or citing
to a document rather than a specific page or pages in the document, violates this rule.
(See, e.g., Evans v. Centerstone Development Co. (2005) 134 Cal. App. 4th 151, 166
(Evans) [“plaintiffs repeatedly cite to 170 pages of their motion to vacate without
directing us to specific pages”]; Doppes v. Bentley Motors, Inc. (2009) 174 Cal. App. 4th
6
967, 990 [“Sections of the statement of facts in the appellant’s opening brief include no
record citations at all.”].)
       When a litigant repeatedly provides no page citations to the record, the rule
violation is “egregious[],” significantly burdening the opposing party and the court.
(Evans, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at pp. 166-167.) “[I]t is counsel’s duty to point out
portions of the record that support the position taken on appeal.” (Del Real v. City of
Riverside (2002) 95 Cal. App. 4th 761, 768.) “The appellate court is not required to search
the record on its own seeking error.” (Ibid.)
       When a brief fails to refer to the record in connection with the points raised on
appeal, the appellate court may treat those points as having been waived. (Barringer,
supra, 102 Cal.App.4th at p. 1239; see also Dietz v. Meisenheimer & Herron (2009)
177 Cal. App. 4th 771, 799-801 [several contentions waived because the appellant failed to
provide record citations demonstrating that he had raised those issues in the trial court].)
The appellate court may also ignore unsupported contentions or strike portions of the
brief entirely. (Dominguez v. Financial Indemnity Co. (2010) 183 Cal. App. 4th 388, 392,
fn. 2; Stockinger v. Feather River Community College (2003) 111 Cal. App. 4th 1014,
1024-1025; Ojavan Investors, Inc. v. California Coastal Com. (1997) 54
Cal. App. 4th 373, 391).
       There are only six record citations in Katrenick’s 54-page supplemental opening
brief. Only two of those six record cites are to specific pages or paragraphs in the record.
The rest are to the entire second amended complaint (82 pages of allegations, plus
89 pages of exhibits), or to 62 paragraphs of the second amended complaint, or to
56 paragraphs of the second amended complaint. Six pages of the supplemental opening
brief list facts that allegedly support Katrenick’s various fraud claims: 30 facts in all.
But we have no way of knowing, without wading through more than 170 pages without
guidance from appellant, whether any of these facts were pleaded in Katrenick’s second
amended complaint because there is not a single record citation in this part of the brief.

                                                7
And Katrenick’s 28-page reply brief contains no record cites at all. Katrenick’s briefs
egregiously violate the Rules of Court and provide little guidance in analyzing the merits
of the challenged judgment.
       This is the same conduct Katrenick’s appellate counsel, Andrew Russell Martin
(State Bar No. 226244),2 was recently criticized for by the First District Court of Appeal
in an unpublished opinion. (Sato v. Bank of America (March 2, 2015, A138944); see also
Conrad v. Ball Corp. (1994) 24 Cal. App. 4th 439, 443-444, fn. 2 [appellate court may cite
unpublished opinion for background information].) The Sato court noted that Martin had
filed at least two other briefs in that court that contained the same rules violations and
“put [Martin] on notice” that it would consider imposing sanctions should he file an
appellate brief in the future that is bereft of proper citations to the record.
       Eight months after Martin filed Katrenick’s original opening brief, we granted his
request to file a supplemental brief to address the effect of a new appellate court decision
that was filed two months after the original brief was filed. Rather than file a
supplemental letter brief discussing the effect of the new case, Martin filed an entirely
new, 54-page opening brief. Neither the original opening brief nor the supplemental
opening brief contained a statement of facts or proper record citations. And the brief
covers did not comply with rule 8.40(c)(1) because they failed to properly identify which
party was filing the brief.
       On December 9, 2014, “[t]o conserve limited judicial resources and to ensure the
arguments of counsel are not obscured as a result of lengthy, duplicative briefing,” we
ordered Katrenick to “file a new opening brief, captioned ‘Appellant’s Amended Opening
Brief,’ containing a synthesis of the opening briefs filed May 15, 2013, and March 21,
2014, . . . .” Among other things, we ordered that the amended brief “shall contain

       2
         Martin had worked for Vernon Bradley as an associate on a contract basis and
worked on this case in the trial court. After Bradley was adjudicated ineligible to practice
law by the State Bar in November 2013, Martin took over the appeal.

                                               8
appropriate citations to the record in compliance with rule 8.204(a)(1)(C).” We also
ordered that if Katrenick wished this court to consider only her supplemental opening
brief, she “need not file a synthesis of the two prior briefs but may instead file an
amended opening brief identical to the brief filed March 21, 2014, but with the insertion
of appropriate record citations . . . .” (Italics added.)
       Three or four days after we issued our order, Katrenick signed a substitution of
attorneys form, which stated she would be representing herself in place of attorney
Martin. In light of the substitution, on our own motion, we gave Katrenick 18 additional
days to comply with our order. In the order, we stated that failure to cite to the record is a
serious rules violation and warned that failure to provide record citations may result in a
waiver of Katrenick’s contentions on appeal. Katrenick did not file an amended opening
brief and never corrected the rule 8.204(a)(1)(C) violations.

       C. Failure to Provide Complete Citations to Legal Authority

       Katrenick’s supplemental opening brief contains at least seven quotes from case
law that are not supported by a pinpoint page citation. It is not helpful to this court to
quote from a case and expect the court to search the entire case to find the quoted
material. The brief also references “binding” state or federal law in two locations without
any citation to legal authority.

   II. Request for Dismissal of Appeal

       On April 21, 2015, two days before the matter was set for oral argument, the
parties filed a stipulation for dismissal of the appeal with prejudice. By that time, the
court had expended considerable judicial and staff resources processing the appeal,
including: (1) reviewing the 882-page record and the briefs, which exceeded 144 pages;
(2) preparing a draft opinion that discussed each of Katrenick’s fifteen causes of action,
as well as the deficiencies in Katrenick’s briefs; (3) issuing four orders regarding

                                               9
Katrenick’s briefs; and (4) preparing for oral argument. Since dismissal after the record
has been filed is discretionary (rule 8.244(c)(2); Greb v. Diamond International Corp.
(2103) 56 Cal. 4th 243, 247), we directed the parties to appear for oral argument.
       Katrenick represented herself at oral argument; Defendants were represented by
their counsel of record. Katrenick stated that she had retained another attorney, who was
not representing her on appeal, but who had helped her obtain a loan modification. She
also stated that she had refinanced her loan on March 9, 2015. Defendants’ counsel
advised the court that he first learned of the loan modification one week before oral
argument, at which time the parties entered into the stipulation to dismiss the appeal. We
took the request to dismiss the appeal under submission.

   III.   Order to Show Cause Re Sanctions For Unreasonable Rules Violations

              A. Order to Show Cause and Responses Thereto

       After oral argument, we issued an order to show cause, which advised the parties
that we were considering imposing appellate sanctions for unreasonable violations of the
Rules of Court. Therein, we ordered Katrenick and her former attorney, Martin, to show
cause why monetary sanctions should not be imposed for the following rules violations:
(1) failing to provide record citations (rule 8.204(a)(1)(C)); (2) failing to comply with
prior orders of this court directing appellant and Martin to file an amended opening brief
that contained appropriate citations to the record (rule 8.204(a)(1)(C)) and a compliant
cover (rule 8.40(c)(1)); (3) failing to include a statement of facts in the opening brief
(rule 8.204(a)(2)(C)); (4) citing legal rules without citations to authority or pinpoint
citations (Niko v. Foreman (2006) 144 Cal. App. 4th 344, 368); and (5) failing to procure a
copy of the record from opposing counsel or this court after learning that prior counsel
had allegedly “misplaced” the record (rule 8.153).

                                              10
        We have received written responses to our order to show cause from both
Katrenick and Martin. Katrenick states that she did not know anything about the rules
violations and relied on her attorneys to comply with the rules of court in preparing the
briefs. Martin argues that (1) it would be inappropriate to sanction him since he
“substituted out of this appeal well before the deadline” for the amended opening brief
(January 8, 2015), and (2) the “CRC violations could have been fixed if [he] had been
given a fair opportunity to file an Amended Opening Brief as ordered.” He argues:
“Dispositively, Martin planned to file the Amended Opening Brief to fix all the
deficiencies complained of herein.” (Bold in original.) He then states that on
December 12, 2014, his partner John Holman e-mailed Katrenick “to warn her that she
needed to amend the brief to continue with the appeal.” In a declaration, Martin quotes
Katrenick’s e-mail response to Holman, in which she stated, “Attached is the
[substitution of attorney] form you requested.” Later that day, Holman sent Katrenick
another e-mail that warned her that she needed to comply with our December 9, 2014
order if she wanted her case to “continue” and to file the amended brief by January 8,
2015.
        Martin also argues it would be inappropriate to sanction Katrenick. He asks us to
“show leniency towards [Katrenick] since she did not seem to understand the risk of
monetary sanctions upon improper abandonment of her appeal” and argues that sanctions
are not necessary “to protect against recidivism,” because Katrenick is unlikely to file
another appeal.

              B. Applicable Legal Standards

        Rule 8.276 provides in relevant part: “(a) On motion of a party or its own motion,
a Court of Appeal may impose sanctions, including the award or denial of costs under
rule 8.278, on a party or an attorney for: [¶][¶] (4) Committing any other unreasonable
violation of these rules.”

                                            11
       In Alicia T. v. County of Los Angeles (1990) 222 Cal. App. 3d 869 (Alicia T.), the
court imposed sanctions for several rules violations by the appellants, including persistent
citation of a depublished case, failure to address controlling published authority, no
citations to the record, and the addition of irrelevant factual material. The court held the
appellants’ failure to comply with these rules was “compounded and unreasonable”
because after the respondent pointed out the rules violations in its brief, the appellants’
counsel violated the same rules in his reply brief. (Id. at pp. 884-885.) The court stated:
“This court does not assess sanctions in a haphazard or spontaneous manner. In this
instance, our purpose is to emphasize the substantial additional time required to craft an
opinion when the court rules are ignored as flagrantly as they are herein. The public fisc
is limited, and justices and support staff must carefully monitor and utilize their
resources.” (Id. at p. 885.) The court concluded that although the appeal in Alicia T.
could not “be viewed as frivolous,” sanctions were “appropriate to deter future similar
violations of the court rules.” (Ibid.)
       The Alicia T. court acknowledged that under former rule 18, now rule 8.204(e),
when a brief fails to comply with the rules on briefs, “the defective briefs may be:
(a) returned to counsel for correction and redeposited with the court within a specified
time, (b) ordered stricken with leave to file a new brief within a specified time, or
(c) considered as if properly prepared.” (Alicia T., supra, 222 Cal.App.3d at pp. 885-
886.) But the court rejected those options “because the violations in issue . . . involve
more than the mere form of the brief. Counsel’s refusal to desist in the citation of an
opinion ordered not to be published and failure to address controlling published authority
merits, in our view, a more severe sanction than those set forth in [former] rule 18.”
       The Alicia T. court conducted a hearing after oral argument on the propriety of
awarding sanctions. The court estimated “the average cost to process a civil appeal at a
conservative $3,995.” (Alicia T., supra, 222 Cal.App.3d at p. 886.) Based upon that
estimate and the hearing, the court assessed sanctions against the appellant’s counsel of $

                                             12
750 “to compensate for the difference between the cost to process, review and decide this
case had it been properly presented, and the cost to perform these tasks on the briefs
filed.” (Ibid.)

              C. Analysis

       Martin cites Steketee v. Lintz, Williams & Rothberg (1985) 38 Cal. 3d 46 (Steketee)
and Stuart v. Superior Court (1992) 14 Cal. App. 4th 124 (Stuart) for the proposition that
an attorney cannot be held liable for failing to meet deadlines that expire after the
attorney ceases to represent the client and is replaced by other counsel. In Steketee, the
plaintiff sued a law firm and two of its attorneys for legal malpractice, claiming the
attorneys allowed the statute of limitations on the plaintiff’s medical malpractice action to
expire. The California Supreme Court found that the statute of limitations ran on the
plaintiff’s medical malpractice action in September 1979. However, the plaintiff had
discharged the defendant attorneys in January 1979 and obtained other counsel.
Affirming summary judgment for the defendants, the Supreme Court held that “[a]n
attorney cannot be held liable for failing to file an action prior to the expiration of the
statute of limitations if he ceased to represent the client and was replaced by other
counsel before the statute ran on the client’s action.” (Id. at p. 57; accord, Stuart, at pp.
127-128 [attorney not liable for legal malpractice for failing to serve summons and
complaint and file proof of service with the court within the time prescribed by statute
where attorney had ceased to be the attorney of record three months before the “ ‘critical
time in question’ ”].) Citing Steketee and Stuart, Martin argues that he “was relieved of
any responsibility for [Katrenick’s] failure to amend the opening brief and, indeed, had
no legal power to take such action during the relevant period.”
       This case is distinguishable from Steketee and Stuart because Martin prepared the
supplemental opening brief. He was thus responsible for the (1) failure to cite to the
record, (2) the non-complaint cover, and (3) the inappropriate, duplicative nature of that

                                              13
brief, all of which prompted our December 9, 2014 order. He was also responsible for
failing to include a statement of facts and failing to provide complete citations to legal
authority. The question becomes whether Martin can avoid sanctions because he did not
have “a fair opportunity” to comply with our December 9, 2014 order and correct the
errors after he substituted out of the case.
       Our December 9, 2014 order was, in effect, an order under rule 8.204(e)(2)(A)
ordering Katrenick’s brief “returned for corrections and refiling within a specified time.”
While Alicia T. outlines the applicable standards to be followed when imposing sanctions
for violating the Rules of Court, Martin does not cite any cases that address the propriety
of sanctioning counsel where the court has ordered correction of a brief under
rule 8.204(e)(2)(A) and counsel then substitutes out of the case before the deadline for
filing a corrected brief. We conclude that while Steketee and Stuart involve claims for
legal malpractice, they support the conclusion that it would be inappropriate to sanction
Martin for failing to comply with this court’s December 9, 2014 order after he substituted
out of the case. While the rules violations and the last-minute dismissal has resulted in
the waste of significant judicial and staff resources in this case, and the rules violations
here are sufficiently egregious to warrant the imposition of sanctions, we conclude that
since Martin substituted out of the case before he had an opportunity to comply with our
December 9, 2014 order, we will not sanction him in these circumstances. And under the
circumstances of this case, we will also exercise our discretion not to sanction Katrenick,
and we will grant the parties’ request to dismiss the appeal.
       Martin has one other appeal pending in our court. In his response to our order to
show cause, he “promise[d] that all future briefs will fully comply with all Rules of
Court” and stated he would seek leave to amend the brief in the pending matter “to ensure
full compliance.” We will hold him to this promise.

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                                      DISPOSITION

       The appeal is dismissed with prejudice. In accordance with the parties’
stipulation, the remittitur shall issue immediately. And as stipulated, the parties shall
bear their own costs and attorney fees.

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                      _______________________________
                      Márquez, J.

WE CONCUR:

_____________________________________
 Rushing, P. J.

______________________________________
 Premo, J.