Opinion
I. Introduction
In this сase we hold that multiple monetary sanctions may not be aggregated to meet the $750 threshold for appealability established by Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (k). George Calhoun purports to appeal from an order denying his motion for change of venue and imposing monetary sanctions on his attorney. We dismiss the appeal.
II. Background
George Calhoun filed suit in Solano County Superior Court against the Vallejo City Unified School District and Public Employees’ Union, Local One, for wrongful termination. He subsequently moved to change venue to San Francisco. The defendants opposed the motion and requested monetary sanctions. The school district sought the sanctions under Code of Civil Procedure sections 128.5 (sanctions for bad faith actions or tactics) and 396b, subdivision (b) (sanctions for making or resisting venue motion); the union did so only under section 396b. In an order filed on May 5, 1993, the court denied the venuе motion and ordered plaintiff’s counsel, Michael Calhoun, to pay $525 to each of the two defendants.
Michael Calhoun filed a notice of appeal stating that “George Calhoun, plaintiff, appeals . . . from the order imposing sanctions entered on May 5, 1993.” The opening brief challenges both the denial of the venue motion and the imposition of sanctions.
III. Discussion
A. The Venue Ruling
We begin with the portion of the order denying the venue motion. We lack jurisdiction to review this ruling, for two reasons. First, the ruling is nonappealable. Review of an order granting or denying a motion for change of venue lies only by petition for writ of mandate. (Code Civ. Proc., § 400.) The order is not made appeаlable by statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1) or by
Second, there was not even an attempt to appeal the venue ruling. The notice of appeal specifies only the portion of the order imposing sanctions. Because the two rulings are not interdependent, the purported partial appeal from the sanction ruling precludes review of thе venue ruling.
(Gonzales
v.
RJ. Novick Constr. Co.
(1978)
Appellant asks us to treat the purported appeal as a writ petition. But the exercise of that option is reserved for “unusual circumstances.”,
(Olson
v.
Cory
(1,983)
B. The Sanction Ruling
Review of the sanction ruling is governed by Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (k), which permits an appeal from “a superior court judgment directing payment of monetary sanctions by a party or an attorney for a party only if the amount exceeds seven hundred fifty dollars ($750).” Lesser sanction judgmеnts are reviewable only upon writ petition or on appeal after final judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (k).)
As with the venue ruling, there are two reasons why we lack jurisdiction to review the sanction ruling. First, the purported appeal is nоt by the sanctioned attorney, Michael Calhoun, but by the plaintiff, George Calhoun. Subdivision (k) of section 904.1 authorizes an appeal of a sanction ruling by the party against whom the sanctions were imposed.
(Imuta
v.
Nakano
(1991)
The law on this point is unsettled. There are three pertinent cases, which are divergent in their treatment of the problem.
The court in
Imuta
v.
Nakano, supra,
The court in
Rao
v.
Campo
(1991)
In
Champion/L.B.S. Associates Development Co.
v.
E-Z Serve Petroleum Marketing, Inc.
(1993)
We are of the opinion that when subdivision (k) was added to Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, effective in 1990, the Legislature did not envision aggregation of multiple sanctions as a way to meet the $750
Aggregation of multiple sub-$750 sanction orders to create appealability would derogate this restriction on the right of appeal. To borrow from Justice Crosby, it would mean the return of many of the “small potatoes” appeals of which the Legislature meant to relieve the appellate courts. The very notion of aggregation runs counter to the fundamental restrictive purpose of subdivision (k).
Moreover, the standards for aggregation suggested by the majority in
Champion/L.B.S.
and by
Imuta
are, in our view, too vague and unwieldy to be of practical value. The majority in
Champion/L.B.S.
would ask whether the “same conduct” is being subjected to multiple sanсtions.
(Champion/L.B.S. Associates Development Co.
v.
E-Z Serve Petroleum Marketing, Inc., supra,
Such standards for aggregation would inject an unwelcome dose of uncertainty into the appellate process. The Legislature intended to create a $750 “bright line” threshold for appealability of monetary sanction orders.
(Champion/L.B.S. Associates Development Co.
v.
E-Z Serve Petroleum Marketing, Inc., supra,
We conclude that because of the Legislature’s intent to reduce the number of appeals from monetary sanction orders and the confusion that would result from a rule permitting aggregation, multiple sub-$750 sanctions may not be aggregated under any circumstances to meet the appealability threshold of Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (k). We endorse a bright line rule that a sanction order is nonappealable if it does not impose any sanction exceeding $750, and thus an order requiring payment of multiple sanctions, none of which exceed $750, is nonappealablе even if the total aggregated sanctions exceed $750.
This does not leave the sanctioned party without an appellate remedy. Subdivision (k) of Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1 expressly preserves the right to rеview of a sub-$750 sanction order upon an extraordinary writ petition. 1 If the trial court has truly done wrong in imposing a small monetary sanction—not often the situation, in our experience—we can right the wrong quickly through a writ proceeding. If, as is more likely, the petitioner has no legitimate point to make, we can dispose of the writ petition summarily, without oral argument or a written opinion, and thus with minimum disruption of judicial resources. In either case, the aрpellate process is streamlined to the benefit of all concerned. These “small potatoes” sanction cases—whether or not meritorious—properly call for us to put on our writ hats, not our appeal hats.
The appeal is dismissed.
Peterson, P. J., and Haning, J., concurred.
Notes
Of course, a sanction order which does not exceed $750 is also reviewable on an appeal from the final judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (k).)
