Opinion
Introduction
Petitioners, 1 Afriсan-American shoppers who claim they were beaten by security guards, sued the individual guards, 2 the guards’ employer IPC International Corporation (IPC), and others, alleging various tort causes of action. Petitioners noticed the depositions of the individual guard defendants. Fearing criminal prosecution arising from the same incident, the security guards moved the trial court for a protective order precluding the depositions, or staying them until the criminal statute of limitations expires. Petitioners opposed the motion and asked the trial court by a mandamus petition to prohibit the security guards from testifying at trial to matters about which they might, during deposition, invoke their privilege against self-incrimination (U.S. Const., 5th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15 3 ). The trial court denied both the security guards’ motion and petitioners’ petition. Petitioners then sought a writ of mandate in this court to direct the trial court to preclude thе security guards from testifying at trial to matters about which the security guards might during deposition invoke their privilege.
We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motions. The depositions have not commenced and the security guards have not yet sought to invoke their privilege against self-incrimination. For the *303 reasons set forth below, we hold the depositions should be allowed to proceed. The security guards can interpose appropriate objections sо that the trial court can then rule on the validity of their invocation of the privilege with respect to specific questions. If the security guards invoke their privilege, the court will be able to fashion whatever protective order it deems reasonable to balance the interests of the parties and the judicial system. Accordingly, we deny the writ petition without prejudice.
Factual and Procedural Background
After they were allegedly beaten by the security guards at the Dеl Amo Fashion Center, petitioners brought this action against the security guards, IPC, and other individuals seeking damages for, inter alia, assault, battery, malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, and discrimination.
In due course, petitioners noticed the depositions of the security guards. 4 The security guards then moved for a protective order to prevent the depositions from going forward (Code Civ. Proc., § 2025, subd. (i)(l)). The security guards described ongoing investigations by the United States Attorney’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) into whether the security guards had used force under color of law during the events which gave rise to this lawsuit. (18 U.S.C. § 242.) A federal grand jury had requested the security guards’ personnel files, and the FBI had interviewed and taken statements from certain IPC employees. Hence, the security guards asked the trial court, among other things, to stay the depositions entirely or until they were no longer in jeopardy of criminal prosecution.
Petitioners opposed the security guards’ motion. They argued it would be unfair to permit the security guards to invoke the privilege against self-incrimination to avoid their disclosure obligations during discovery, only to then waive the privilege and testify at trial. To prevent prejudicial surprise, petitioners urged, if the trial court issued a protective order barring the security guards’ depositions, that it also issue an order prohibiting the security guards from testifying at trial.
Before the court had ruled on the parties’ motions, the FBI closed its case. Likewise, the Assistant United States Attorney recommended that its file be closed. (Final disposition of the federal investigation depends upon Department of Justice approval.) The United States Attorney’s Office has indicated, however, that the investigation will be reopened if facts *304 warranting prosecution are developed. The United States Attorney refused to grant the security guards use or transactional immunity. 5
After hearing, the trial court denied the security guards’ request for a stay, explaining “[although staying this action until the statute of limitations expires is one consideration for the court, doing so probably serves no interest very well because of the prejudice arising to all parties from the extended delay itself.” The court noted that the statute of limitations for a federal criminal prosecution is five years and will expire in this case in November 2003. The court also “declin[ed] to grant an order excluding [the security guards] from testifying at trial if they have exercised their privilege against self incrimination” during discovery.
Petitioners filed their petition for writ of mandate asking this court to direct the trial court to order, if the security guards do not testify at their depositions, that they may not testify at trial. We issued аn order to show cause and temporarily stayed the proceedings in the trial court.
Discussion
1. Standard of review.
“Although writ review of discovery orders is not favored, it is appropriate in matters of first impression, which have importance to the courts and the profession, and in situations where general guidelines can be established for future cases. [Citation.]”
(Avant! Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(2000)
We review discovery orders under the deferential abuse-of-discretion standard.
(Avant! Corp. v. Superior Court, supra,
2. The legal principles.
a. The dilemma of competing interests.
In this case we are asked to consider three competing interests: (1) that of the defendant who invokes his privilege against self-incrimination during *305 discovery in civil litigation to avoid exposure to criminal prosecution; (2) that of the civil plaintiff who seeks to complete discovery without being unduly prejudiced if the defendant who invoked the privilege during discovery later waives it and testifies at trial; and (3) that of the justice system and the court in fairly and expeditiously disposing of civil cases. (Gov. Code, § 68607; Cal. Stds. Jud. Admin., § 2.1(h).)
Code of Civil Procedure section 2017 allows discovery into “any matter, not privileged, that is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 2017, subd. (a).) Evidence Code section 940 excludes from discovery information which may tend to incriminate a party.
(Pacers, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
However, a party is not entitled to decide for himsеlf or herself whether the privilege against self-incrimination may be invoked. “ ‘Rather, this question is for the court to decide after conducting “a
particularized inquiry, deciding, in connection with each specific area that the questioning party seeks to explore,
whether or not the privilege is well founded.” [Citation.]’ [Citations.]”
{Warford v. Medeiros
(1984)
Consequently, a civil defendant does not have the absolute right to invoke the privilege against self-incrimination.
(Alvarez v. Sanchez, supra,
*306
At the same time, courts must also consider the interests of the plaintiff in civil litigation where the defendant is exposed to parallel criminal prosecution. Plaintiffs are entitled to an expeditious and fair resolution of their civil claims without being subjected to unwarranted surprise. Among the myriad purposes of the civil discovery statutes is to safeguard against surprise and gamesmanship, and to prevent delay.
(Williams
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.
(1975)
Added to the mix, of course, is the interest of the courts in fairly and expeditiously disposing of civil cases, and in effiсiently utilizing judicial resources. (Gov. Code, § 68607; Code Civ. Proc., § 128, subd. (a); Cal. Stds. Jud. Admin., § 2.1;
Keating v. Office of Thrift Supervision
(9th Cir. 1995)
b. The various procedural resolutions.
Courts faced with a civil defendant who is exposed to a related criminal prosecution have responded with various procedural solutions designed to fairly balance the interests of the parties and the judicial system. Accommodation of the various interests, however, is usually made to a defendant in a civil action “from the standpoint of fairness, not from any constitutional right. [Citation.]”
(Blackburn v. Superior Court, supra,
Historically, courts have devised a number of procedures designed to accommodate the specific circumstances of the case. One accommodation is to stay the civil proceeding until disposition of the related criminal prosecution.
(Avant! Corp. v. Superior Court, supra,
3. Application of these principles to this case.
Here, there is no dispute that the security guards function under the threat of criminal prosecution. However, depositions have not gone forward and so the trial court has not had an opportunity to ascertain whethеr petitioners seek information in discovery which might tend to incriminate the security guards.
(Blackburn v. Superior Court, supra,
Because such exercise has not yet been undertaken here, the security guards’ request for a protective order and petitioners’ request for testimony preclusion were premature. Hence, we conclude the trial court exercised its discretion when it denied petitioners’ request to prohibit the security guards from testifying аt trial to matters that could be covered by the privilege during discovery. Under the circumstances, to preclude trial testimony
*309
would “force[] [the security guards] to choose between their silence and a ‘meaningful chance of avoiding the loss through judicial process of a substantial amount of property.’ . . .”
(Pacers, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Likewise, the trial court did not abuse its discretion refusing to stay the civil proceedings until the criminal statute of limitations expires, as the security guards had requested. The parties do not dispute that the criminal statute of limitation does not expire until November 2003, three years from the scheduled trial date of October 2000, and a few months before expiration of the five-year pеriod for bringing a civil action to trial in California. (Code Civ. Proc., § 583.310.) A delay of three years not only flies in the face of the policies behind Government Code section 68607 and the Standards of Judicial Administration, but also exposes both sides of the litigation to the risk of diminished memory and lost records. While a stay is a possible solution here (Pacers, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 162 Cal.App.3d at pp. 689-690), the court’s decision was not an abuse of discretion.
The depositions should procеed. If the security guards choose to invoke their right against self-incrimination with respect to particular questions, then they should do so at that time. This will provide the trial court with a clear record upon which to base a ruling about whether the constitutional *310 privilege is implicated. Once that determination has been made, the trial court will be in a better position to exercise its discretion and fashion a procedural ruling that can аccommodate the various interests of the parties and of the judicial system.
On remand, the trial court in the first instance in exercising its discretion to fashion discovery orders
(Obregon
v.
Superior Court, supra,
4. Conclusion.
The court did not abuse its discretion in denying petitioners’ request for trial-testimony preclusion and by declining to stay the proceedings. Any discovery order with respect to the security guards’ privilege against self-incrimination is premature. Until the depositions go forward and the security guards object to specific questions, the court has no basis on which to ascertain, with particularity, whether the information petitioners seek would support a conviction or lead to prosecution of the security guards. However, in the interests of fundamental fairness, once the privilege is properly and actually invoked, the court should consider fashioning an order which
*311 accommodates all of the competing interests and which allows petitioners to re-depose the security guards about matters not previously testified to, should the security guards opt to waive their privilege at trial.
Disposition
The writ is denied without prejudice. The alternative writ issued September 28, 2000, is discharged. The stay of September 28, 2000, is hereby vacated. Each party to bear its own costs.
Klein, P. J., and Croskey, J., concurred.
Notes
Petitioners are: Anthony Fuller, Eddie McIntyre, Jr., Keith Moultry, Lament Dinkins, Toney Fuller, Jr., and Roshawn Smith.
The named security guard defendants are: Kevin Yuan, also known as Kevin Kitamura, John Schimanski, Jesus Hernandez, Robert Banuelos, Sean Ferguson, Gilbert Sanchez, Clemente Saldana, Ronnie Franco, and Moses Idehen (Idehen is not a party to this writ).
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in relevant part: “No person shall... be compellеd in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
The California Constitution states pertinently in article I, section 15: “Persons may not. . . be compelled in a criminal cause to be a witness against themselves.”
The depositions of two of the security guards’ coworkers were also noticed. For simplicity, we refer to all deponents as the security guards.
“ ‘[U]se immunity’ and ‘transactional immunity,’ have been constitutionally sanctioned. ‘ “Use” immunity protects a witness only against the actual use of his compelled testimony and its fruits; “transactional immunity” protects him against later prosecution related to matters about which he testified.’ [Citation.] They are thus distinguished by the nature of the prohibitions which attach to the compelled testimony.”
(People v. Campbell
(1982)
Because it is not before us, we do not address the right of IPC to invoke its privilege against self-incrimination. (See Avant! Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at pp. 882-886.)
Government Code section 68607 provides in relevant part: “In accordance with this article and consistent with statute, judges shall have the responsibility to eliminate delay in the progress and ultimate resolution of litigation, to assume and maintain control over the pace of litigation, to actively manage the processing of litigation from commencement to disposition, and to compel attorneys and litigants to prepare and resolve all litigation without delay, from thе filing of the first document invoking court jurisdiction to final disposition of the action. [H] The judges of the program shall, consistent with the policies of this article: [U] (a) Actively monitor, supervise and control the movement of all cases assigned to the program from the time of filing of the first document invoking court jurisdiction through final disposition. HU (b) Seek to meet the standards for timely disposition adopted pursuant to Section 68603. [IQ . . . ffl] (e) Adopt a trial setting policy which, to the maximum extent possible, schedules a trial date within the time standards adopted pursuant to Section 68603 and which schedules a sufficient number of cases to ensure efficient use of judicial time while minimizing resetting caused by overscheduling. . . .”
The Standards of Judicial Administration, section 2.1(h) provides “the goal of each superior court should be to manage general civil cases from filing as follows: [IQ (1) Within 12 months, dispose of 90 percent; [H] (2) Within 18 months, dispose of 98 percent; [IQ (3) Within 24 months, dispose of 100 percent.”
