Appellant Lorine Harris appeals from the judgment on the pleadings in her legal malpractice lawsuit against respondent Milton Grimes. After review, we reverse and remand.
Procedural and Factual Background
In March 1989, Gardena Police Officer David Mathieson shot and killed appellant Lorine Harris’s unarmed son during the nighttime execution of a search warrant. Appellant alleges Mathieson accidentally fired his gun when a flash-bang grenade used by the police as they forced their way into the home startled Mathieson.
Appellant’s federal civil rights claim eventually went to trial, shorn by the court’s edict of the negligence claim. The court explained that it feared trying both claims would confuse the jury because they involved “contradictory standards of conduct for imposing liability”—intentional conduct for the civil rights claim, but only negligence for the state law claim.
The federal jury rendered a defense verdict for Mathieson. On June 18, 1993, the federal court entered judgment for him on the civil rights cause of action. At the same time, it dismissed the negligence claim without prejudice to appellant’s refiling it in state court. Citing equitable tolling principles, the court explained the dismissal was without prejudice despite the almost four-year delay between the death of appellant’s son and a refiled complaint because the statute of limitations was tolled while appellant’s suit was pending in federal court. (See Addison v. State of California (1978)
The state court set and continued the trial of appellant’s negligence complaint several times. In September 1995, appellant’s then attorney, Andrew Smyth, tentatively stipulated to binding arbitration of the claim. Based on the tentative stipulation, the court vacated the trial date and set a hearing in November for an order to show cause for dismissal. The court directed the parties to be prepared at the hearing to tell the court whether they agreed to arbitration. Several weeks before the hearing, appellant rejected the proposal to arbitrate, fired Smyth, and hired respondent Milton Grimes to take her negligence complaint to trial.
When appellant discharged Smyth, Smyth did not tell her or respondent about the pending order to show cause. Consequently, no one informed the court that appellant refused to arbitrate her claim. The court therefore appears to have assumed the parties had agreed to arbitration and dismissed appellant’s complaint.
In July 1997, respondent learned about the dismissal. He nevertheless appears not to have moved to set it aside, perhaps because more than six months had passed. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 473, subd. (b) [permits vacating dismissal only within six months of its entry].) The following February, respondent told appellant about the dismissal. In September 1998, she filed a malpractice complaint against him. She alleged he had mishandled her negligence complaint, particularly in not appearing at the hearing on the order to show cause and in failing to move to set aside the dismissal.
Trial of the malpractice action was set for February 21, 2001. On that day, respondent moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing appellant could not state a cause of action for malpractice because his alleged mishandling of the underlying negligence lawsuit against Mathieson did not damage her because her negligence lawsuit was untenable. (Mattco Forge, Inc. v. Arthur Young & Co. (1997)
Respondent also submitted that day a motion in limine for application of res judicata and collateral estoppel. He asserted the jury had concluded in the federal civil rights trial that Mathieson was not negligent in shooting appellant’s son. Thus, respondent argued, the court should not permit appellant to relitigate Mathieson’s liability.
The court did not expressly rule on respondent’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, although it voiced skepticism that appellant’s complaint against Mathieson was timely. The court agreed, however, that res judicata and collateral estoppel barred appellant’s complaint against respondent. In reaching its decision, the court relied on the opening statement by appellant’s counsel in the federal trial and the federal court’s jury instructions on unreasonable force in violation of someone’s civil rights. In the opening statement, appellant’s counsel told the jury he expected Mathieson to deny accidentally shooting appellant’s son and to claim instead that he intentionally pulled the trigger in self-defense while aiming at an armed man standing near appellant’s son, but hit her son instead. Based on its review of the jury instructions and opening statement, the court concluded the federal trial had established Mathieson’s shooting was “reasonable.” Accordingly, appellant could not pursue Mathieson for negligence. The court therefore entered judgment for respondent. This appeal followed.
Standard of Review
We independently review a judgment on the pleadings, and review the judgment, not the court’s rationale. (Ottv. Alfa-Laval Agri, Inc. (1995)
Discussion
The court found the federal jury determined Mathieson’s shooting of appellant’s son was reasonable. According to the court, res judicata and collateral estoppel bound appellant to that determination. The court thus concluded appellant was not entitled to relitigate in her state court lawsuit against Mathieson the issue of his negligence, making her lawsuit against him untenable. (Mattson v. City of Costa Mesa (1980)
Appellant contends the court erred in granting judgment on the pleadings because the court misapprehended the import of the federal civil rights trial.
Respondent contends the jury’s verdict for Mathieson necessarily meant it found his use of deadly force was reasonable, and if it was reasonable, it was by definition not negligent. Respondent’s contention fails for two reasons. First, the federal jury rendered a general verdict without any special findings. Thus, the jury could have reached its verdict for any number of reasons other than finding the shooting was a reasonable use of force. Second, and more important, “reasonable” conduct in civil rights law does not always mean reasonable conduct under negligence law. The two concepts are not the same. (See Lucas v. County of Los Angeles (1996)
Respondent also contends appellant’s negligence lawsuit against Mathieson impermissibly split her cause of action, which was an additional reason her lawsuit against Mathieson was untenable. According to respondent, appellant suffered a single injury from a single set of circumstances: the death of her son at the hands of the police. Under California law, that injury constitutes a single cause of action. (Lucas, supra,
Lucas is consistent with the Restatement Second of Judgments’ expression of widely held legal principles, which distinguishes between a party’s splitting of its causes of action and a court’s doing the same thing. The Restatement observes, “A given claim may find support in theories or grounds arising from both state and federal law. When the plaintiff brings an action on the claim in a court, either state or federal, in which there is no jurisdictional obstacle to his advancing both theories or grounds, but he presents only one of them, and judgment is entered with respect to it, he may not maintain a second action in which he tenders the other theory or ground. If however, the court in the first action . . . declined to exercise [its jurisdiction] as a matter of discretion[], then a second action in a competent court presenting the omitted theory or ground should be held not precluded.” (Rest.2d Judgments, § 25, com. e, p. 213.)
We acknowledge a two-decade-old decision, Mattson, supra,
We decline to follow Mattson, however, because Lucas is a more recent and, as reflected by the Restatement, widely endorsed pronouncement of the
Finally, respondent contends appellant’s negligence lawsuit against Mathieson was untimely.
Respondent’s contention does not persuade us. First, respondent presents no authority that the federal court’s omission of a claim from trial without entry of an order of dismissal (which came later) means the undismissed claim is no longer “pending.” To the contrary, Black’s Law Dictionary defines “pending” as including “hanging” or “unfinished.” Those words aptly describe appellant’s negligence claim during the time it dangled in limbo as a claim untried but not dismissed.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for further proceedings. Appellant to recover costs on appeal.
Cooper, P. J., and Boland, J., concurred.
Notes
In a federal trial that preceded appellant’s state court action here, Mathieson apparently claimed otherwise. Although testimony from the federal trial is not in the record, it appears Mathieson claimed he was not startled, but instead fired intentionally in self-defense at an armed man near appellant’s son, but accidentally hit her son instead.
Appellant named other defendants, but the proceedings against them are not the basis of appellant’s malpractice lawsuit against respondent and, thus, we omit any reference to them except where necessary for clarity.
The demurrer is not in the record, but we surmise its thrust from appellant’s response, which the record contains.
Appellant contends the court compounded its error by relying on extrinsic evidence from the federal trial of her former counsel’s opening statement and jury instructions. As she correctly notes, a motion for judgment on the pleadings is ordinarily limited to the face of the complaint and judicially noticed evidence. (Code Civ. Proc., § 438, subd. (d)); Cloud v. Northrop Grumman Corp. (1998)
When the court granted respondent’s judgment on the pleadings, it mentioned that it perceived a potential statute of limitations bar to appellant’s state court negligence lawsuit against Mathieson. The court did not, however, rely on this ground in dismissing appellant’s malpractice complaint. Nevertheless, we address the timeliness of appellant’s negligence complaint because we must affirm judgment on the pleadings if it was proper for any reason mentioned in the motion, regardless of whether the court relied on it. (Baughman, supra,
