MASIMO CORPORATION, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. THE VANDERPOOL LAW FIRM, INC., Defendant and Appellant.
G061829
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION THREE
5/2/24
(Super. Ct. No. 30-2019-01081908)
Theodore R. Howard, Judge.
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Theodore R. Howard, Judge. Affirmed.
The Vanderpool Law Firm, Brooke L. Bove and Douglas B. Vanderpool for Defendant and Appellant.
Latham & Watkins, David J. Schindler, Robert J. Ellison and Alice R. Hoesterey for Plaintiff and Respondent.
INTRODUCTION
The Vanderpool Law Firm (Vanderpool) appeals from an order awarding $10,000 in discovery sanctions against it and three defendants, John Bauche, BoundlessRise, LLC (Boundless), and Skyward Investments, LLC (Skyward). Vanderpool represented all three defendants in a lawsuit brought by Masimo Corporation based on Bauche‘s misappropriation of corporate funds while he was a Masimo employee. The action was stayed twice, once while Bauche appealed from the denial of an anti-SLAPP motion and again to allow a federal criminal case against him to be resolved.
Masimo was unsuccessful in obtaining substantive discovery responses from the defendants - instead of boilerplate objections - and finally moved to compel responses to interrogatories and document requests. The referee supervising discovery at this point recommended the motion to compel be granted and Masimo be awarded $10,000 in discovery sanctions. The trial court agreed and entered an order to that effect, awarding sanctions against Vanderpool and the three defendants.
We affirm the order. Vanderpool‘s main argument - that it had substituted out of the case as counsel before the motion to compel was filed and was therefore unsanctionable - is unavailing. It is not necessary to be counsel of record to be liable for monetary sanctions for discovery misuse. Vanderpool‘s other arguments are equally unavailing. The referee and the court correctly conclude that Vanderpool and its clients were liable for discovery misuse. We conclude Vanderpool was also woefully uncivil.
FACTS
Masimo sued Bauche, Boundless, and Skyward in July 2019, after Bauche was indicted in federal court for embezzling nearly $1 million from Masimo while he was an employee. Bauche had told Masimo that he needed an “outside vendor” to assist him in his duties, and he obtained permission to engage one. The outside vendor was Boundless, a company of which Bauche was the sole member. When his fraud was
After discovering the fraud, Masimo fired Bauche and referred the matter to law enforcement. A federal grand jury indicted Bauche for mail fraud, money laundering, and related crimes.
Masimo first served discovery - interrogatories and document production requests - on the defendants in August and September of 2019. The responses, served in September and October of 2019, consisted of boilerplate objections with no substantive responses.
The defendants also filed an anti-SLAPP motion on October 1, 2019, which was denied. They appealed, thereby forcing a discovery stay, which was not lifted until March 2021, after we upheld the decision to deny the anti-SLAPP motion.1
Masimo filed its first motion to compel discovery responses on April 20, 2021. Bauche claimed that responding to the discovery would violate his Fifth Amendment rights, as the federal criminal case against him was still going on. The court stayed the action again. This stay was lifted in December 2021, after Bauche completed his federal diversion program and the federal case was dismissed.
By this time, the court had appointed a discovery referee. The parties and the referee held a discovery motion scheduling conference in February 2022, at which time Vanderpool represented that it would provide further discovery responses.2
On March 11, 2022, Vanderpool filed forms providing for withdrawal of counsel for Bauche, Boundless, and Skyward. In each case, Bauche - a non-lawyer - was listed as representing all three defendants, including the two companies.3
Masimo filed its renewed motion to compel and request for sanctions with the discovery referee on April 18, 2022.4 Masimo asked for $17,500 in sanctions against the defendants and Vanderpool. The motion was heard on May 16, with Vanderpool specially appearing.
The referee, a retired judge, issued his recommendations to the court on May 16, 2022. He recommended that the motions to compel responses be granted, and he awarded Masimo discovery sanctions of $10,000 against the defendants and Vanderpool.
Vanderpool argued that sanctions could not be awarded against it because it had substituted out as counsel in March before the motion to compel was filed in April 2022. As the referee explained, “[Vanderpool] put all of these events into motion while it was actively representing these three defendants, and to allow such a law firm that substituted out of the case a ‘free pass’ to escape that responsibility defies logic.”
The referee also had a few words to say about Vanderpool‘s including a letter from some members of Congress regarding Masimo‘s CEO as part of its opposition
The court adopted the referee‘s recommendations and signed the order on September 12, 2022.
DISCUSSION
Vanderpool‘s opening brief based its appeal on three arguments.5 First, it was not counsel of record at the time the second motion to compel discovery was filed, and therefore no sanctions could be awarded against it. Second, the trial court did not independently consider the discovery referee‘s findings before entering the order awarding sanctions. Finally, Masimo‘s counsel failed to meet and confer before filing the motion. None of these arguments has merit or support in the record.
We review an order imposing discovery sanctions for abuse of discretion, and we overturn such an order only for “arbitrary, capricious, or whimsical action.” (Van v. LanguageLine Solutions (2017) 8 Cal.App.5th 73, 80.) Factual findings are upheld if supported by substantial evidence. (Padron v. Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York, Inc. (2017) 16 Cal.App.5th 1246, 1266.)
Unquestionably Vanderpool engaged in discovery misuse when it supplied the initial responses to the interrogatories and to the document production requests and when it supplied the supplemental responses, especially after representing to the discovery referee that it would “promptly” provide “further responses.” The referee undoubtedly assumed these would be substantive responses, not a repetition of what had occasioned the discovery motion in the first place.
Masimo first served discovery - interrogatories and document production requests - on the defendants in August and September 2019. The responses, served in September and October, commenced with a page and a half of “general objections,” which are, of course, ineffective. (See
After agreeing on the occasion of a conference with the discovery referee to provide further discovery responses, Vanderpool served supplemental responses to Massimo‘s form interrogatories, special interrogatories, and document production requests. Although Bauche provided some substantive responses to the form interrogatories - he revealed his date and place of birth, his current residence address, his possession of a driver‘s license, his educational history, and his ability to read and write English - his responses to the special interrogatories and the document production requests were once again solely objections. To the boilerplate objections based on standing and an arbitration agreement provided to the original responses, Vanderpool added boilerplate objections of retaliation, relevance, and invasion of privacy.7 In fact, the responses to the document production requests were so boilerplate that the individual responses began “Responding Party objects to this interrogatory . . . .” Only intermittently did these responses refer to a “request for production.”8
Contrary to Vanderpool‘s argument, the statutory language authorizing monetary sanctions for discovery misuse does not limit their imposition to counsel of record. “Any attorney” advising that conduct can be liable for monetary sanctions.9 Vanderpool indisputably advised defendants to stonewall Masimo‘s discovery efforts not
The record contradicts Vanderpool‘s second argument, that the trial court did not independently consider the referee‘s findings. The record includes a minute order of September 13, 2022, which states, “The Court, having received the above documents [i.e., the referee‘s recommendation report, Vanderpool‘s objections to the report, and Masimo‘s opposition to the objections], reviewed the Discovery Referee‘s Recommendation report received on 05/16/2022, reviewed the Objection to the Report and Recommendation filed by [Vanderpool] on 05/26/2022, and reviewed the Opposition to [Vanderpool‘s] Objection to Report and Recommendation filed . on 06/07/2022. [¶] After review of all three documents, the Court signed the Discovery Referee‘s Recommendations report on 09/12/2022.” Vanderpool cites no authority to the effect that the trial court must prepare a ruling separate from the discovery referee‘s recommendations.
Finally, Vanderpool argues that Masimo‘s counsel failed to meet and confer before filing the motion to compel discovery. Vanderpool ignores the fact that Masimo‘s counsel met and conferred with Bauche directly, as Vanderpool would not meet and confer. Bauche told counsel that he was standing by Vanderpool‘s objections and would not provide further responses.
The record shows Masimo‘s efforts to meet and confer with Vanderpool before filing the April 18, 2022, motion, and Vanderpool‘s refusal to do so. After dodging letters and emails, Vanderpool finally made its refusal to meet and confer explicit in an email: “Your remedy is elsewhere, and an attorney with your billing rate
This court has in the past had occasion to deplore the lack of civility that has flourished in the legal profession in recent decades. In fact, we devoted an entire opinion, Lasalle v. Vogel (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 127, to tracing the deterioration in the way attorneys now address and behave toward each other. As we observed in Kim v. Westmoore Partners, Inc. (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 267, 293, “Our profession is rife with cynicism, awash in incivility. Lawyers and judges of our generation spend a great deal of time lamenting the loss of a golden age when lawyers treated each other with respect and courtesy.”
More recently, another court has echoed this sentiment in upholding a severe reduction in an attorney fee request: “Excellent lawyers deserve higher fees, and excellent lawyers are civil. Sound logic and bitter experience support these points. [¶] Civility is an ethical component of professionalism. Civility is desirable in litigation, not only because it is ethically required for its own sake, but also because it is socially advantageous: it lowers the costs of dispute resolution. The American legal profession exists to help people resolve disputes cheaply, swiftly, fairly, and justly. Incivility between counsel is sand in the gears. [¶] Incivility can rankle relations and thereby increase the friction, extent, and cost of litigation. Calling opposing counsel a liar, for instance, can invite destructive reciprocity and generate needless controversies. Seasoning a disagreement with avoidable irritants can turn a minor conflict into a costly and protracted war. All those human hours, which could have been put to socially productive uses, instead are devoted to the unnecessary war and are lost forever. All
Evidently Vanderpool‘s principal attorney, Douglas Vanderpool, did not get the memo. We have quoted above from the condescending email he sent to Masimo‘s counsel, Robert Ellison, expressing the firm‘s refusal to meet and confer. After being served with the moving papers for the motion to compel, Douglas Vanderpool began an email to Ellison with the subject line “You are joking right?” The body of the email continued in the same vein: “In 30 years of practice this may be the stupidest thing I‘ve ever seen. Robert is this really why you went to law school? Quit sending us paper. you know we are out of the case so just knock it off and get a life. Otherwise we‘re going to be requesting sanctions against your firm for even bothering us with this nonsense.”
Douglas Vanderpool made good on his threat to ask for sanctions against Masimo and its counsel, a request the trial court denied. Although he went into great detail about his 31-year career as an advocate and arbitrator, he badly missed the mark of excellence articulated in Karton: “[E]xcellent lawyers are civil.” (Karton, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 747.)
Civility is not about etiquette. This is not a matter of bad manners. Incivility slows things down, it costs people money - money they were counting on their lawyers to help them save. And it contravenes the Legislature‘s directive that “all parties shall cooperate in bringing the action to trial[.]” (
Incivility is the adult equivalent of schoolyard bullying and we will not keep looking the other way when attorneys practice like this. They will be called out and immortalized in the California Appellate Reports.
DISPOSITION
The order awarding discovery sanctions against the Vanderpool Law Firm is affirmed. Respondent is to recover its costs on appeal.
BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
WE CONCUR:
GOETHALS, J.
MOTOIKE, J.
