MONARCH HEALTHCARE, Petitioner,
v.
The SUPERIOR COURT of Orange County, Respondent;
Andrew Cassidenti, Real Party in Interest.
Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division Three.
*621 Sedgwick, Detert, Moran & Arnold, David Humiston, Robert C. Bohner, Los Angeles, Hall R. Marston, Santa Monica, and Douglas J. Collodel, Los Angeles, for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
Pinto & Dubia, Christian F. Dubia, Jr. and Laura P. Couch, Irvine, for Real Party in Interest.
*620 OPINION
CROSBY, J.
The discovery rules do not discriminate against nonparty deponents. They need not scramble to retain a lawyer to file a motion to quash in order to challenge "records only" discovery requests that seek privileged information. It is sufficient to simply object.
I
Andrew Cassidenti, the head of an obstetrical medical practice group, sued Brian Koperek and other doctors for unfairly competing to secure a managed care contract from Monarch Healthcare covering some 100,000 Orange County residents. Koperek broke away from Cassidenti in 1995 and allegedly used confidential information to underbid him.
Cassidenti did not initially name Monarch as a defendant. Instead, in October 1998, he served a "records only" deposition subpoena on Monarch's custodian of records as a nonparty witness. (Code Civ. Proc., § 2020, subd. (d).) Cassidenti sought all documents relating to Monarch's negotiations with Koperek and with himself.
Monarch did not file a motion to quash. In December 1998, it produced some, but not all, of the documents, raising trade *622 secrets and privacy objections. Discovery was put on hold for six months pending a dispute regarding mandatory arbitration.
Monarch was named as a defendant in the third amended complaint and filed its answer in June 1999. That same month Cassidenti moved to compel production. Monarch opposed the motion and suggested an in camera inspection because the discovery sought "sensitive business strategy, financial planning, business operations, and technical information which has no direct bearing on Plaintiffs contention [regarding] breach of fiduciary duty by [ ] Koperek or by conduct purportedly consisting of unfair business practices."
At the hearing the trial court on its own accord announced that Monarch, as a nonparty at the time of the discovery request, could only object via a motion to quash: "I spent an hour and a half because neither one of you briefed the issue.... I spent an hour and a half looking for it. It isn't there. This code section requires you to file a motion to quash and you did not do that.... So none of this was preserved.... But it is as if your client didn't take any action, just hauled off and sent a letter saying sorry. But that is not what the code says." The court gave Monarch 30 days to produce the requested documents, "enough time to take a writ if you want to."
II
Monarch initially claims the court lacked jurisdiction to grant the motion to compel on grounds not stated in the notice of motion or moving papers. According to Monarch, "By going beyond those issues, and introducing a new and theretofore unconsidered ground in ruling on the motion, the [court] transgressed the boundaries of its power...."
We do not accept Monarch's absolute rule. Notwithstanding the parties' express or tacit agreement, the court had a responsibility to act in accordance with the statutory procedures set out by the Legislature. (People v. Mendez (1991)
However, fundamental principles of due process also call for those with an interest in the matter to have notice and the opportunity to be heard, so that the ensuing order does not issue like a "bolt from the blue out of the trial judge's chambers." (Campisi v. Superior Court (1993)
We do not consider the matter further, however, since Monarch has failed to preserve it. The judge advised the parties at the hearing of his view that nonparties were required to file a motion to quash. He listened to Monarch's hastily-formulated arguments, but was unpersuaded. Monarch asked for a stay of the order "so we can decide if we're going to take a writ," but did not seek a continuance or permission to file a supplemental brief. Neither did it file a motion to reconsider in order to address the "different circumstance" of the court's sua sponte injection of the motion to quash issue. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1008; cf. Gov.Code, § 68081.) The issue of inadequate notice was therefore waived. (Carlton v. Quint (2000)
III
We now turn to the merits. The procedure to obtain documents from a nonparty is through a "records only" or "records and testimony" deposition subpoena. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2020, subds. (a)(2), (a)(3); (d)(1).) Nonparties may file a motion to quash, but is this extra step necessary or may they simply wait and object, putting the onus on the proponent to move to compel? (Compare Code Civ. Proc., § 1987.1 [motions to quash] with id., § 2025, subd. (m)(l) [written objections].) The cases are surprisingly silent on this subject. And there was a striking disconnection between the parties (who never raised the subject of waiver) and the trial court (which ruled on this basis).
We begin by looking at the language of the Discovery Act, giving the words their usual, ordinary and commonsense meaning. Rather than construing isolated provisions, we look to the entire statutory scheme. (Peatros v. Bank of America (2000)
Section 1987.1 contains permissive, not mandatory, language regarding motions to quash. It states, "When a subpoena requires the ... production of books, documents or other things ... the *624 court, upon motion reasonably made by ... the witness ... may make an order quashing the subpoena entirely, modifying it, or directing compliance with it upon such terms or conditions as the court shall declare, including protective orders...." (Italics added.) The word "may" is not generally construed as a mandatory imposition. (See, e.g., In re Richard E. (1978)
Cassidenti now argues that such provisions only apply to oral depositions, not deposition subpoenas for business records from nonparties. He relies upon section 2025's title ("Oral depositions; protective orders; sanctions; audiotapes or videotapes; stenographic transcripts; use of deposition at trial or hearing"), as well as the fact that the term "deposition" at times is used within section 2025 without further clarifying whether it is limited to "oral depositions."
The title does not make the law. (DaFonte v. Up-Right, Inc. (1992)
In California Shellfish, Inc. v. United Shellfish Co. (1997)
The California Shellfish, supra, court saw no reason to create a harsher rule for nonparties than for parties. The court was concerned about the potential for abuse "[by a] calculating litigant [who] might conclude that it could benefit from the opportunity to access information it might not otherwise have...." (Id. at p. 24,
Discovery procedures are generally less onerous for strangers to the litigation. That is because they are less likely to be represented by counsel, familiar with the issues, or able to react with alacrity before responses are due. Why ask more of them than of represented parties? (See, e.g., 1 Cal. Civil Discovery Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1999) § 2.14, p. 55, italics added: "While all discovery devices are available against a party, only deposition subpoenas can be directed to a nonparty.... [¶] The distinction between parties and nonparties reflects the notion that, by engaging in litigation, the parties should be subject to the full panoply of discovery devices, while nonparty witnesses should be somewhat protected from the burdensome demands of litigation." (Italics added.).)[3]
The trial court's ruling runs afoul of another central principle of discovery: Privileges are preserved unless the holders fail to object in a proceeding where they have standing and the opportunity to claim them. (Evid.Code, § 912, subd. (a); see International Ins. Co. v. Montrose Chemical Corp. (1991)
*626 Despite our routine reluctance to review discovery rulings pretrial, we issue the instant writ to provide guidance on a matter of first impression. (Kennedy v. Superior Court (1998)
The parties ask us to determine the application of the trade secrets privilege. We decline this invitation to serve as a law-and-motion panel on the first go-around, and leave this matter to the reasoned discretion of the trial court.
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to vacate its orders granting the motion to compel further production and to set the matter for a new hearing on the grounds stated in the motion. No costs on appeal are awarded in these interim proceedings, but may be allowed to the side ultimately prevailing in the discretion of the superior court. This opinion is final 10 days after filing pursuant to rule 24(d) of the California Rules of Court, and our previously issued stay order is vacated at that time.
The alternative writ is discharged.
SILLS, P.J., and BEDSWORTH, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Recent legislation should afford judges more time to work up a pending motion (and give notice to counsel) since opposing papers now must be filed at least 10 calendar days before the hearing and reply papers at least 5 calendar days before the hearing. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1005, subd. (b).)
[2] Code of Civil Procedure section 1987.1 does speak of some circumstances where a waiver does not occur, but we do not believe this oblique language decides the issue before us. The statute states, "Nothing herein shall require any witness or party to move to quash, modify, or condition any subpoena duces tecum of personal records of any consumer served under paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 1985.3."
It is too much of a stretch to conclude from this wording that the Legislature intended to require nonparty witnesses who are not "consumers" to file motions to quash before pursuing otherwise valid privileges or objections. We echo the words of the court in In re Christian S. (1994)
[3] We refuse to adopt a crabbed interpretation of California Shellfish. A contrary rule would give litigants a tactical incentive to deliberately delay naming a target as a party. Monarch itself was served with discovery as a nonparty but then brought in as a party once it responded.
