Opinion
This writ рroceeding involves a defendant with as brief a lifespan in the underlying action as an adult mayfly. During its short presence in the lawsuit, the defendant filed a peremptory challenge to the assigned judge under Code of Civil Procedure section 170.6.
Does a peremptory challenge not yet reviewed and accepted by the court survive the dismissal of the litigant filing it? Petitioner, a codefendant, who did not file his own peremptory challenge, contends it does. According to the petitioner-codefendant, the peremptory challenge became immutable and irrevocable at the moment it was made, instantly requiring the removal of the assigned judge.
We recognize that Louisiana-Pacific Corp. v. Philo Lumber Co. (1985)
I
Factual and Procedural Background
Petitioner Richard A. Frisk (Frisk) was the founder and chief executive officer of real party in interest Northwest Surgical Development Company, Inc. (Northwest), which operates cosmetic treatment centers under the trade name “Athenix Body Sculpting Institute.”
In June 2011, Northwest purported to fire Frisk, and sued him for injunctive relief, breach of employment contract, breach of the shareholders’ agreement, and breach of fiduciary duty. Northwest alleged that Frisk diverted more than $650,000 from Northwest through various artifices, using the money for his personal benefit and for the purported benefit of another corporation, Avanti Skin Co. (Avanti), which Frisk also is said to have created. Northwest asserted additional causes of action against Frisk and Avanti for fraud, constructive trust, and declaratory relief.
On June 16, the case was assigned for all purposes to Judge Frederick P. Horn, and Northwest appeared ex parte to seek a temporary restraining order to prohibit Frisk from contacting Northwest’s officers and employees, entering its offices, or using its computers. Judge Horn granted the temporary restraining order.
Frisk vigorously opposed the preliminary injunction in proceedings before Judge Horn, who held an initial hearing, established a discovery and briefing schedule, and set the matter for a further hearing. Frisk did not file a peremptory challenge to Judge Horn.
Northwest did not serve Avanti with a copy of the complaint until early July, at which time the proceedings regarding the preliminary injunction were well under way. Northwest served Avanti by personally serving Frisk, who was its registered agent for service of proсess. Avanti retained separate counsel to represent it in the lawsuit.
On July 19, Avanti filed a peremptory challenge to Judge Horn. Avanti’s attorney alleged that Judge Horn “is prejudiced against Defendant Avanti or the interest of Defendant Avanti so that this declarant believes that Defendant Avanti cannot have a fair or impartial hearing of any matter before the Honorable Frederick P. Horn.”
On July 22, Northwest filed a request for dismissal without prejudice of the causes of action against Avanti only. The superior court clerk entered the dismissal as requested on the same day.
On July 26, Judge Steven L. Pеrk took the bench to determine the timeliness and technical sufficiency of Avanti’s peremptory challenge. Judge Perk declined to accept the peremptory challenge because Avanti was not a party to the action. The minute order stated: “Court deems Defendant Avanti Skin Company Inc’s Motion for Peremptory Disqualification Moot.”
On July 28, Frisk objected to Judge Horn’s failure to recuse himself following Avanti’s peremptory challenge. Frisk filed a petition for writ of mandate in this court. Frisk asked this court to direct the trial court to immediately assign the case to anothеr judicial officer. We issued a temporary
II
Discussion
A. Governing Principles
The Legislature’s enactment of section 170.6 granted litigants the right to disqualify judges for “prejudice” without proof. Prejudice is deemed to be established if a party or an attorney declares, under penalty of perjury, a good faith belief the judge is prejudiced. The affidavit of prejudice is incontestable, both regarding the alleged prejudice and the declarant’s sincerity. (Solberg v. Superior Court (1977)
Peremptory challenges are creаtures of statute. They are presented in the form of a motion, but they fall outside the usual law and motion procedural rules, and are not subject to a judicial hearing. (Truck Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court (1998)
Trial courts must act upon peremptory challenges at the first available opportunity, before ruling on contested issues, lest this important right be lost or diminished through procedural tactics or maneuvers. (See Hemingway v. Superior Court (2004)
In fashioning this device, the Legislature endeavored to “strike a balance between the needs of litigants and the operating efficiency of the courts.” {Home Ins., supra,
One of the most important limitations upon peremptory challenges is the requirement that a party to the action or proceeding must bring the challenge. (§§ 170.3, subd. (d), 170.6, subd. (a)(1); see Curie v. Superior Court (2001)
A second key limitation on peremptory challenges involves the doctrines of waiver and abandonment. Peremptory challenges do not implicate the court’s fundamental jurisdiction and may be waived by litigants who permit the proceedings to go forward without objection. (Stebbins v. White (1987) 190
In Andrisani v. Saugus Colony Limited (1992)
B. Avanti’s Peremptory Challenge Did Not Establish That Judge Horn Was Prejudiced Against a Party to the Action
Avanti becamе a party to this action when Northwest personally served it with a copy of the complaint in mid-July 2011. Avanti therefore was a party when it timely filed its peremptory challenge to Judge Horn on July 19, 2011.
Avanti’s status, however, changed when Northwest dismissed it as a defendant to the lawsuit. The superior court clerk entered the judgment of dismissal on July 22, 2011. When the clerk engaged in this ministerial task, the peremptory challenge still was pending because the court had not yet determined whether to accept it.
The court did not determine whether to accept Avanti’s peremptory challenge until July 26 when Judge Pеrk considered the matter. While Judge Perk was barred from Inquiring into the merits of the challenge, Judge Perk properly considered whether the peremptory challenge was “duly presented” and “duly filed.” (§ 170.6, subd. (a)(4); see Home Ins., supra, 34 Cal.4th at pp. 1032-1033; Hull, supra,
At the time Judge Perk did so, Avanti was not a party to the litigation, having been dismissed four days earlier. Obviously, under these circumstances, Avanti could not assert it was a party to the action who “cannot or believes that he or she cannot have a fair and impartial trial or hearing before the judge, court commissioner, or referee.” (§ 170.6, subd. (a)(6); see Avelar,
Our opinion does not contradict the longstanding principle that peremptory challenges, once accepted by the court, remain effective notwithstanding the subsequent dismissal of the challenging party. As our Supreme Court noted in Home Ins., supra,
C. The Louisiana-Pacific Decision
Frisk argues we should follow Louisiana-Pacific, supra,
In Louisiana-Pacific, the Court of Appeal reversed as “void” a judgment for a plaintiff following a court trial, finding that a codefendant’s properly filed and timely peremptory challenge divested the trial judge of authority to proceed further in the case, even though the codefendant who filed the challenge was promptly dismissed from the case.
The plaintiff sued three defendants, an individual and two corporations in which the individual defendant had a сontrolling interest. The individual defendant filed a timely peremptory challenge to the assigned trial judge. The next day, the plaintiff filed a voluntary dismissal, with prejudice, against the individual defendant, and proceeded to trial against the two corporate defendants. At trial, the corporate defendants objected to the challenged judge’s authority to proceed, but the judge disagreed, stating: “That defendant has been dismissed from the action and we’ll proceed against the others.” (Louisiana-Pacific, supra,
Louisiana-Pacific adopted a hard-and-fast rule for peremptory challenges to take effect immediately upon filing, thereby terminating “forthwith and irrevocably that judge’s authority to act in any manner in that case, save to transfer the case to another judge . . . .” (Louisiana-Pacific, supra,
As we have seen, this fundamental assumption is fatally flawed. Following the California Supreme Court decision in Hull, supra,
Hull undermines Louisiana-Pacific’s rationale that peremptory challenges are “irrevocable” and “irreversible” once exercised. To the contrary, Hull stresses the trial court must first determine to accept or reject the peremptory challenge. “[Appellant] argues, ‘all that a judge facing a peremptory challenge has to do is the ministerial function of determining whether the challenge has the proper form, whether the challenge was presented at the proper time, and possibly whether the party or attorney is mаking more than one motion in any one action or special proceeding.’ We disagree. ... In certain situations, the judge may ‘determine’ that prejudice was not properly established.” (Hull, supra,
In like fashion, in Truck, supra,
In Truck, a homeowners association exercised a peremptory challenge to the original trial judge, but the judge dismissed the challenge as untimely. After the original judge retired, the association sought to exercise its one-time peremptory challenge to the second judge. The other side objected, arguing thе peremptory challenge was exhausted immediately upon filing, regardless of outcome. Truck rejected the argument, holding that the peremptory challenge was not “duly” filed and presented until it came to the court for acceptance. “Here, the motion was not duly and properly made and the judge against whom the challenge was made dismissed it as untimely. Consequently, that judge had no reason to transfer the case for reassignment.” (Truck, supra,
Under these circumstances, Judge Perk properly looked at the state of the pleadings when the matter came before him at the July 26 hearing and determined Avanti’s peremptory challenge was moot because Avanti, the only party who had asserted the challenge, had been dismissed out of the lawsuit. Because of the dismissal, the motion was not duly and properly made by a party.
III
A Final Word on Finality
We publish this opinion because we have concluded Louisiana-Pacific has been trumped by subsequent cases like Hull, supra,
Shоrtly after Frisk filed his writ petition, we granted his request to stay the action below, including the pending proceedings on a preliminary injunction. This created a particular need for expedition, and we issued a Palma notice,
Had we issued a peremptory writ in the first instance, our decision by opinion would have followed the customary rules regarding finality, becoming final within 30 days after filing. This 30-day finality period serves the interests of openness and transparency by allowing us to modify or clarify the decision, either on our оwn motion, or in response to a petition for rehearing. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.490(b)(2).)
Do the same rules of finality apply to a “decision by opinion” denying a peremptory writ following a Palma notice in statutory situations where writs provide the only means of appellate review?
Here, the answer is yes. As explained in the drafters’ notes, the court rules “declare the general rule that a Court of Appeal decision is final in that court 30 days after filing. They then carve out specific exceptions—decisions that they declare to be final immediately on filing (see rule[] . . . 8.490(b)(1)). The plain implication is that all other Court of Apрeal orders ... are not final on filing.” (Advisory Com. com., rule 8.500(e).)
We have determined that this decision should fall within the general 30-day finality rule rather than the immediate finality exception of rule 8.490(b)(1). It is not a summary denial because it constitutes the law of the case and because it is accompanied by a formal opinion. Indeed, because the Palma notice dispensed with the need to file a return and hear oral argument, this matter has become the functional equivalent of a “cause” by our issuance of a
Rule 8.490(b), the immediate finality exception, is designed to apply to summary denials of writ petitions. “In our view, [the rule’s] exception to the ordinary 30-days-after-filing date of finality was intended to apply only to summary denials of writ petitions by the Court of Appeal . . . .” (Bay Development, supra,
Summary denials do not constitute law of the case, and do not establish any legal precedents. They come with little explanation, if any. “A short statement or citation explaining the basis for the summary denial does not transform the denial into a decision of a cause entitled to law of the case effect. As one court has explained; ‘. . . While it is true that the court accompanied the summary denial with an explanatory comment, we do not regard that comment as a formal opinion (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 14) precluding this court from considering the issue anew upon this hearing at which the parties have had an opportunity to brief and argue the case in full.’ ” (Kowis v. Howard (1992)
In contrast, our denial here is on the merits and constitutes law of the case. Because writ relief is the only authorized mode of appellate review for peremptory challenges, our decision, in contrast to routine summary denials, is binding on the parties, and cannot be revisited on a subsequent appeal. (Harvard-Westlake, supra,
By accompanying our decision to deny a writ with a written opinion setting forth the reasons for our ruling, we have complied with the constitutional requirements for formal written opinions as if the matter has become a “cause.” Indeed, we have certified the opinion for publication. In Bay Development, the Supreme Court found it “appropriate” to treat an appellate court’s denial of a writ petition by written opinion following oral argument “as the equivаlent of an order issuing an alternative writ or order to show
This opinion follows a Palma notice because of an “ ‘unusual urgency requiring acceleration of the normal process.’ ” (Lewis v. Superior Court (1999)
Proceedings in respondent court have been stayed, including whether to issue a preliminary injunction, pending our determination of the writ petition. “[Placing the matter on calendar would have delayed resolution of a case requiring an immediate decision.” (Lewis, supra, 19 Cal.4th at pp. 1251-1252.)
It is true that the Supreme Court in Bay Development recommended that appellate courts in the future “should follow the contemplated statutory procedure by issuing an alternative writ or order to show cause before setting a writ matter for oral argument.” (Bay Development, supra,
These circumstances distinguish Bay Development's emphasis on cases “in which the Court of Appeal sets a writ matter for oral argument, hears oral argument and resolves the matter by full written opinion.” (Bay Development, supra,
It makes sense to retain appellate jurisdiction in the Court of Appeal during the usual period of finality to reexamine a published opinion, thereby lessening the burdens on the Supreme Court to exercise its powers of grant and transfer. (See, e.g., Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Superior Court
Our interpretation of rule 8.490(b)(2) dovetails with the policies underlying the publication rules, which restаrt the period of finality when a publication order ensues. (See, e.g., rules 8.264(b)(3), 8.490(b)(4).) These provisions are “intended to allow parties sufficient time to petition the Court of Appeal for rehearing and/or the Supreme Court for review—and to allow potential amicus curiae sufficient time to express their views . . . .” (Advisory Com. com., rule 8.264(b).) We ask the obvious: how may parties or potential amici curiae address their concerns to the issuing court, if the court loses any power to review the published opinion on the day it is filed?
Under rule 8.500(c)(2), the parties to this writ proceeding cannоt challenge any alleged omission or misstatement in our statement of issues and fact in a petition for review to the Supreme Court unless they call such matters to our attention in a petition for rehearing. The parties cannot comply with this rule if our opinion is final immediately upon filing.
It is the combination of factors existing here that makes this matter the functional equivalent of a “cause” to which the 30-day rule of finality applies. By no means do we question the application of the immediate finality exception in rule 8.490(b)(1) to summary denials of writ petitions, even where they follow the issuance of a Palma notice. The mere issuance of a Palma notice, followed by a summary denial, does not create a “cause” within the meaning of article VI, section 14 of the California Constitution. (Brown, supra,
The “something more” that distinguishes this matter is our discretionary determination to issue a formal opinion in the course of an accelerated writ proceeding where our denial by opinion is a decision on the merits. (Harvard-Westlake, supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at pp. 849-850; see also Medina, supra,
IV
Disposition
We deny the petition for writ of mandate. This denial becomes final as to this court 30 days after filing. The temporary stay order is vacated immediately upon the filing of this decision. The parties shall bear their own costs in these original proceedings.
Rylaarsdam, Acting R J., and Ikola, J., concurred. '
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 23, 2011, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
Following the Supreme Court’s suggestion in The Home Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (2005)
We take judicial notice of the superior court file on our own motion to fully determine the procedural history. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d).)
Section 170.6, subdivision (a)(1), provides: “A judge . . . shall not try a civil or criminal action or special proceeding of any kind or character nor hear any matter therein that involves a contested issue of law or fact when it is established as provided in this section that the judge or court commissioner is prejudiced against a party or attorney or the interest of а party or attorney appearing in the action or proceeding.”
Section 170.6, subdivision (a)(4), provides: “If the motion is duly presented, and the affidavit or declaration under penalty of perjury is duly filed ... the judge supervising the master calendar, if any, shall assign some other judge, court commissioner, or referee to try the cause or hear the matter. In other cases, the trial of the cause or the hearing of the matter shall be assigned or transferred to another judge, court commissioner, or referee of the court in which the trial or matter is pending . . . .”
Section 170.3, subdivision (d), provides: “Thе determination of the question of the disqualification of a judge is not an appealable order and may be reviewed only by a writ of mandate from the appropriate court of appeal sought only by the parties to the proceeding. The petition for the writ shall be filed and served within 10 days after service of written notice of entry of the court’s order determining the question of disqualification. If the notice of entry is served by mail, that time shall be extended as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1013.”
Section 170.6 bars judicial officers from acting in civil or criminal actions if a peremptory challenge is filed pursuant to the statute by any “party or attorney appearing in the action or proceeding.” (§ 170.6, subd. (a)(1).) Similarly, section 170.3, subdivision (d), limits appellate review to writ petitions “only by the parties to the proceeding.”
The Supreme Court has recently explained the reasons for the streamlined writ process, named after its seminal decision in Palma, supra,
All subsequent references to rules are to the California Rules of Court, unless otherwise specified. Appellate courts, of course, retain the discretion to shorten the period of finality in writ proceedings “[i]f nеcessary to prevent mootness or frustration of the relief granted or to otherwise promote the interests of justice . . . .” (Rule 8.490(b)(3).)
Rule 8.490(b) provides, in pertinent part: “(1) The denial of a petition for a writ within the court’s original jurisdiction without issuance of an alternative writ or order to show cause is final in that court when filed. [j[] (2) Except as otherwise provided in this rule, a decision in a writ proceeding is final 30 days after the decision is filed.” (Italics added.)
Rule 8.264(a), which is expressly applicable to the filing and modification of decisions in writ proceedings (see rule 8.490(a)), distinguishes between “orders of the court” (rule 8.264(a)(1)) and “[a] decision by opinion . . . .” (Rule 8.264(a)(2).)
