PATRICIA M. FLEMING, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
PORFIE JOSE GALLEGOS, Defendant and Respondent.
Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Six.
*70 COUNSEL
Muegenburg, Norman & Dowler and Michael G. Walker for Plaintiff and Appellant.
England, Whitfield, Schroeder & Tredway, David W. Tredway and Terry R. Bailey for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
GILBERT, J.
An attorney files an action for his client. The attorney does no work on the case. The client gives the case to a second attorney who also does no work on the case. The second attorney also fails to tell the client he has not filed the form substituting himself in as the client's new attorney. Because of this inactivity, the case never gets to the point where there is a hearing or a deposition. The case is dismissed for failure to prosecute.
We draw upon that legal oxymoron known as "positive misconduct" to conclude that the negligence of the attorneys shall not be imputed to the client. (See Carroll v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc. (1982)
Plaintiff Patricia M. Gallegos, now known as Patti Fleming,[1] appeals a judgment of dismissal entered after she failed to prosecute her action for nearly four years. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 583.410 and 583.420.) We reverse and hold Fleming's attorneys' neglect should not be imputed to her under the discretionary dismissal statutes. (Daley v. County of Butte (1964)
FACTS
On September 14, 1988, plaintiff Fleming brought an action to recover title to real property in Ventura, California. She also recorded a lis pendens against the property. Three and one-half years earlier, Fleming and her former husband, defendant Porfie Jose Gallegos, made an agreement concerning the property. Attorney S. represented Fleming in bringing her lawsuit.
Gallegos answered the complaint and also cross-complained regarding title to the property. Fleming promptly answered the cross-complaint. During two days in December 1988, and January 1989, Gallegos deposed Fleming.
*71 Thereafter, except for discovery of certain bank records, Fleming did not prosecute her action for the next three years and nine months. Neither she nor her attorneys communicated with Gallegos or his attorneys, undertook discovery, filed an at-issue memorandum or obtained a trial date.
Four years after Fleming filed her complaint, the trial court considered Gallegos's motion to dismiss Fleming's lawsuit for want of prosecution. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 583.410 and 583.420.) Fleming appeared at the hearing with a new attorney and presented a declaration describing her representation by Attorney S. and later, Attorney M.
According to her declaration, Attorney S. represented Fleming for two years and nine months. She found it "very difficult" to reach him. When she did, he "direct[ed] the conversation away from [her] case and talk[ed] about his new baby and his jazz [music]." He "kept putting off" deposing Gallegos. "[Attorney S.] indicated that he was having a difficult time working.... [H]is interest was in his music." During 1990 and 1991, Fleming was "unsuccessful, getting ... Attorney S. to move [her] case forward."
On April 3, 1991, Fleming retrieved her file from Attorney S. and signed a substitution of attorney form, in propria persona. With an apparent knack for selecting the wrong attorney, this time she delivered the file to Attorney M. Although she signed a blank substitution of attorney form for him, he never completed the form. Neither did he file it with the court or send it to Gallegos or his attorney.
History repeated itself. During the time Fleming believed Attorney M. to be representing her, she spoke with him "from time to time" regarding her lawsuit. He professed overwork but promised to "do something within the next week or two for sure." In May 1992, Attorney M. informed Fleming he was "buried" and "would not be able to get to it." The next month, she retrieved her legal file from Attorney M.
Fleming then spoke with six attorneys, who, for different reasons, declined to represent her. On August 5, 1992, she reviewed the Ventura County Superior Court file of her action and learned a discretionary dismissal motion was pending. (Gallegos's attorneys had mailed the notice of motion to Fleming's former address, the last of record.) She thereafter retained Attorney Donald Everhart to represent her at the dismissal hearing. With Everhart and her attorneys on appeal, Fleming experienced something refreshingly new, attorneys who actively represented her interests.
At the hearing, the trial judge discussed factors pertaining to discretionary dismissals. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 373.) She remarked that Fleming was *72 "st[uck] with what [her] attorneys have done. If they were negligent or ... slow, that binds you." Fleming contended her delay was excusable but she did not argue the theory of attorney abandonment. (See Carroll v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc., supra,
DISCUSSION
(1a) Fleming contends the trial court abused its discretion by dismissing her action. She concedes inexcusable delay but argues the trial court should not have imputed her attorneys' neglect to her, under the exception of Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
Gallegos responds that attorney procrastination alone is insufficient to invoke the Daley theory of attorney abandonment. He relies upon Freedman v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (1987)
In Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
The term "misconduct" usually refers to acting improperly, but here we are concerned with not acting at all. Like the sentry who falls asleep at his post, the attorney who does nothing is guilty of misconduct. Although the word "positive" refers to a high degree of misconduct, the indolence we see here and in Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
*73 In Daley the appellate court refused to impute counsel's "inexcusable and extreme" neglect to his client for purposes of a discretionary dismissal. (Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
In Orange Empire Nat. Bank v. Kirk (1968)
In Aldrich v. San Fernando Valley Lumber Co. (1985)
(2) The Daley exception pertains where an attorney abandons the client through a total failure to represent that client. The attorney de facto substitutes himself out from his client's case. (Carroll v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc., supra,
To invoke the Daley exception, however, the client must be relatively free from negligence. (Carroll v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc., supra,
(1b) Here Fleming's attorneys displayed an unwillingness to either prosecute her lawsuit or to cease representing her, despite her continued checking on the progress of her lawsuit. Attorney M. expressly promised he would work on her lawsuit soon; Attorney S. expressed an inability to concentrate on his work. Reasonably implicit in Attorney S.'s statements as well as in *74 his apparent reluctance to drop his representation of Fleming was the inference he would be attentive to the lawsuit soon. Assurances of attentive representation was one factor determining the conclusion of attorney abandonment in Orange Empire Nat. Bank v. Kirk, supra,
Attorney M. also failed to complete the substitution of attorneys form for apparently one year. He thus misled Fleming into believing he was representing her. This was one factor that led to the decision of attorney abandonment in Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
Fleming inquired of and checked up on her attorneys frequently. She sought replacement counsel reasonably promptly and reviewed her superior court file personally. She timely employed counsel to resist the discretionary dismissal motion. Under these circumstances, we cannot say she was negligent in prosecuting her action. "Clients should not be forced to act as hawk-like inquisitors of their own counsel, suspicious of every step and quick to switch lawyers." (Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
Freedman v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., supra,
Here, in contrast, Fleming's attorneys expressly and impliedly promised they would prosecute her lawsuit while they took no action whatsoever. Moreover, we do not believe the Daley exception turns upon the failure to appear at trial or a critical court hearing. Daley concerned a "history of delay and neglect" and "consistent and long-continued inaction" by counsel. (Daley v. County of Butte, supra,
Gallegos requests that we draw an inference that he has been prejudiced by the existence of the lis pendens against the property. He has not presented any evidence of prejudice, by declaration or otherwise, such as an inability to refinance or sell the property.
(3) Since the decision of our Supreme Court in Blank v. Kirwan, supra,
In view of our resolution, we do not discuss Fleming's other contentions.
We see the irony in our decision. The attorney whose neglect is so extreme that it amounts to positive misconduct (Freedman v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., supra,
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed. Neither party shall recover costs on appeal.
Stone (S.J.), P.J., and Yegan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denhied March 31, 1994, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
NOTES
Notes
[1] To ease the reader's task, we shall refer to plaintiff Patricia Gallegos as "Fleming" and defendant Porfie Jose Gallegos as "Gallegos."
