*128Appellant Hamid Taeb and his attorney Michelle Trigger appeal from a *613Code of Civil Procedure section 128.5
We publish this opinion to make explicit that no vestige remains of the holdings in San Diegans for Open Government v. City of San Diego (2016)
The law concerning the kind of conduct sanctionable under sections 128.5 and 128.7 has, thus, largely returned to its pre- San Diegans state-with a more stringent standard requiring subjective bad faith applicable to section 128.5, and a lesser standard, requiring only objective bad faith, applicable to section 128.7. As we further explain, under this pre- San Diegans case law, on which the trial court relied, the conduct of counsel here was sanctionable under section 128.5.
BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are undisputed. In June and August 2016, respondent filed requests for orders concerning real property jointly owned by the parties. The family law court set the case for a readiness conference on January 30, 2017, in advance of the scheduled trial date, February 7.
Counsel for both parties contacted the court clerk on January 27 (10 days before the scheduled trial date), stated they were ready to proceed to trial, and asked that they be excused from appearing three days later at the readiness conference. In light of the attorneys' representations, the court excused their appearances and ensured that its calendar on February 7 was clear for a day-long trial.
*129When the court called the matter for trial on February 7, both parties and counsel for respondent were present. Trigger was not. In response to the court's inquiry as to why she was not present, Taeb responded that his lawyer "had another trial in Sacramento for a few days, and it's still going on." Opposing counsel then stated Trigger had notified her office the previous afternoon, stated her Sacramento trial was running longer than expected, and asked opposing counsel to agree to a continuance, which counsel had refused to do, pointing out the requests for orders had been pending for at least six months. Opposing counsel further complained that Trigger had failed to comply with other requirements of the trial setting order, including failing to provide copies of exhibits, failing to file a trial brief, and failing to provide an income and expense declaration, and asked that Taeb be barred from presenting any such items at trial.
The clerk then advised the court specially appearing counsel was on his way to formally ask for a continuance, and Taeb, at that point, told the court Trigger had sent him a motion he was to give to the *614court. The court waited for specially appearing counsel to arrive, which he did shortly.
Counsel forthrightly confirmed he was not ready to proceed with trial, but was there on behalf of Trigger to ask for a "good cause" continuance. When the court asked counsel why Trigger had assured the court on January 27 she was ready to proceed to trial, counsel said he did not know and, in fact, had not read the moving papers. Commenting counsel was not making an effective appearance, the court took a recess, giving him a half hour to read the papers and stating the situation was "highly irregular." The court also observed the situation was "not fair to the petitioner to have to pay her attorney to sit" in the court while specially appearing counsel reviewed the motion and told opposing counsel she could "elect to seek attorney's fees for her client."
Following the recess, specially appearing counsel repeated what was in the moving papers-that Trigger thought her Sacramento trial was going to end by January 26, but her client had unexpectedly exercised his right to testify, resulting in testimony continuing for several additional days. Trigger had also, the prior afternoon, contacted opposing counsel in the instant case, advising her of the continuation of the Sacramento trial.
Opposing counsel responded that by January 27, when Trigger told the court she was ready to proceed to trial, Trigger knew her client had decided to take the stand in the Sacramento case, knew the trial in that case had not concluded by the anticipated date, and knew that trial was going to continue for several more days. Given Trigger's prior failures to comply with court orders, including her failure to comply with the trial setting order, opposing counsel accused Trigger of tactical delay.
*130The court granted a three-day continuance, stating it expected to see a motion by opposing counsel to exclude the materials Trigger had failed to provide in violation of the pretrial order. The court further stated, "we've already discussed this Court's expectation that you will consider whether or not you wish to seek attorney's fees on behalf of your client for today's appearance."
On the new trial date, February 10, opposing counsel filed a Form FL-300 "Notice of Hearing" requesting sanctions pursuant to section 128.5. Respondent sought $3,575 for the attorney fees and costs incurred in needlessly appearing on February 7 and for preparation of the sanctions motion. Respondent additionally filed a memorandum of points and authorities, and a declaration in support of the sanctions request.
When the case was called, opposing counsel renewed her request that the court exclude all materials Trigger had failed to provide pursuant to the pretrial order. After Trigger acknowledged she had failed to comply with the order, the court granted the motion to exclude.
At the close of evidence, the court asked counsel how they would like to proceed. Opposing counsel stated she would be happy to present closing argument through briefs. Trigger stated she preferred live closing argument, but was happy to provide written argument if the court preferred. Given the nature of the issues, the court stated it would find written briefs "particularly helpful," and asked counsel how much time they needed. The court then set a briefing schedule.
At that point, Trigger stated, "the only other matter that I would bring up" is that "petitioner [ (respondent on appeal) ] has filed an attorney's fees request based on my matter being continued earlier this *615week." The court suggested Trigger address this in her closing argument briefing. Trigger responded, "[t]hat's what I was going to ask ... for efficiency so that we are not returning again for another court date." After one additional housekeeping matter not relevant to this appeal, trial concluded.
The trial court issued a proposed statement of decision on April 5, ruling in favor of respondent on the requests for orders. It also included in its proposed statement its ruling on the motion for sanctions, ordering Taeb to pay $1,575 and Trigger to pay $2,000.
Trigger filed objections to several aspects of the proposed statement, including the imposition of $2,000 in sanctions directly against her. Trigger repeated that she had been in trial in a serious criminal case at the time of the readiness conference, and stated opposing counsel "was not only aware of *131this ongoing trial, but aware there was a possibility it could interfere with the present case" and aware Trigger "would be seeking a continuance the following day." Trigger asserted she had wanted to proceed with trial in the instant case, pointing out the matter had been "continued and delayed before, through no fault or request" on her part. She further recited she had arranged for counsel to specially appear, and claimed she had made a motion to continue "at the first available opportunity," which "contained authority for a good cause continuance" the court "cannot ignore." Trigger maintained "there was no conduct to insinuate-let alone prove-that Ms. Trigger acted in bad faith. She was simply in trial and it went longer than reasonably expected."
Trigger further complained opposing counsel had "arrived the morning of trial with a motion seeking attorney fees." Trigger maintained that since attorney fees "were already at issue" in connection with the dissolution proceedings, opposing counsel should have just "updated" her numbers, instead of incurring even more fees preparing a sanctions motion. Trigger further asserted that rather than seeking any additional fees and expenses, opposing counsel should have extended the "professional courtesy" of acknowledging Trigger was not acting in "bad faith" in seeking the short continuance.
Trigger additionally complained no "evidence" had been taken in connection with the motion for sanctions. Rather, at the conclusion of the trial, the court had asked Trigger to oppose the sanctions motion in her closing argument briefing, which she had agreed to do to avoid an additional hearing and additional fees for both parties. Thus, Trigger asserted no "evidence" had been presented in support of the motion, "[o]nly argument." She likewise maintained the court's proposed statement of decision was devoid of reference to any "evidence" supporting the sanctions order. Trigger claimed the court found only that she had "inconvenience[d]" the court and respondent and this was not tantamount to the "bad faith" conduct required to impose sanctions.
Trigger also complained she and her client were not given an opportunity to present evidence, or to confront and cross-examine relevant witnesses. Trigger asserted the sanctions motion "was an afterthought and included in final argument for efficiency" and claimed the court could not impose sanctions "without any meaningful opportunity to be heard, without the review and admission of any relevant evidence, and without any facts" showing bad faith conduct.
Finally, Trigger urged the court, if it was persuaded the sanctions requested were appropriate and reasonable in amount, to either include that amount in *616the "general attorney fee award" to respondent and Trigger would handle the matter directly with her client, or to set an evidentiary hearing on sanctions. *132The court issued its final statement of decision and orders approximately two weeks later. The court devoted several pages to reciting the circumstances that led to the sanctions motion and on which the sanctions were based. The court acknowledged Trigger had been in trial and that her client had unexpectedly decided to testify, causing her Sacramento trial to run longer than Trigger had expected. What the court focused on, however, was that Trigger was fully aware she was running up against the trial date in the instant case and made no effort to seek a continuance. Moreover, she knew by January 26 that her client had unexpectedly exercised his right to testify and knew that the criminal trial was not going to conclude on that date as she had anticipated it would. Yet, the following day, the 27th, she told the court clerk she was ready to proceed to trial as scheduled. She then failed to either advise the court of the conflict or make a motion to continue until the instant case was called for trial 10 days later, on February 7. And even then, she sent a lawyer to specially appear who was not prepared to try the case or even to present Trigger's belated motion for a continuance. As a result of Trigger's conduct, the court had been adversely affected, as it had been too late to reset anything else on the court's calendar for that day, and opposing counsel and her client had needlessly incurred fees and costs in appearing. The trial court awarded $3,575 in sanctions, $2,000 of that amount against Trigger personally.
DISCUSSION
Statutory History
" Section 128.5, authorizing sanctions for certain bad faith actions or tactics, was originally enacted in 1981. (Stats. 1981, ch. 762, § 1, p. 2968.) As subsequently amended in 1994, the provision applied only to proceedings initiated on or before December 31, 1994. (Stats. 1994, ch. 1062, § 1, pp. 6395-6396; see Olmstead v. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. (2004)
By 1994, when the Legislature effectively hobbled section 128.5 and enacted section 128.7, the vast majority of courts had concluded section 128.5 *133"require[d] a showing not only of a meritless or frivolous action or tactic, but also of bad faith in taking the action or tactic." ( Dolan v. Buena Engineers, Inc. (1994)
In contrast, the law was well-settled under section 128.7 that courts were required to find only that a party's or attorney's conduct was " 'objectively unreasonable.' "
Section 128.5 was "revived in 2014 by Assembly Bill No. 2494 (2013-2014 Reg. Sess.), effective January 1, 2015 (Stats. 2014, ch. 425, § 1)." ( Nutrition Distribution, supra , 20 Cal.App.5th at p. 124,
*134Two years later, San Diegans considered the reach of the amended statute and held, among other things, that new subdivision (f) imported into section 128.5 the objective standard applicable under section 128.7. ( San Diegans, supra , 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 1318,
The Legislature responded to San Diegans with "urgency legislation enacted August 7, 2017 (Stats. 2017, ch. 169, § 1) ... 'to clarify the previous legislative intent.' (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of *618Assem. Bill No. 984 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 20, 2017, p. 1, italics omitted.)" ( Nutrition Distribution,
The Legislative history makes clear the language of section 128.5, subdivision (a) was refined, and the language of subdivision (f) augmented, to eliminate the confusion caused by San Diegans , including by "clarif[ying] that the standard applied in Section 128.5 is subjective bad faith." (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Assem. Bill No. 984 (2017- 2018 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 20, 2017, p. 1; see id. at p. 7 ["[T]his bill makes a technical correction to clarify that sanctions ... under Section 128.5 must be made in subjective bad faith-like it has always been interpreted. (See Levy v. Blum (2001)
In short, with the 2017 amendments, the law as to the meaning of "bad faith" under section 128.5 has returned to the majority view explicated and applied prior to San Diegans.
Subjective Bad Faith
As we have recounted, the Legislative history cited to Levy as illustrative of the subjective bad faith standard applicable under section 128.5. In that case, the appellate court affirmed sizeable sanctions assessed against a party and his lawyer in a probate proceeding. ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 628,
Among the issues on appeal was whether the trial court had properly ordered sanctions under section 128.5, rather than under section 128.7. ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 628,
*619The appellate court therefore commenced its discussion with an overview of the two statutes. ( Id. at pp. 635-638,
As to the standard under section 128.5, the court stated, "A bad faith action or tactic is considered 'frivolous' if it is 'totally and completely without merit' or instituted 'for the sole purpose of harassing an opposing party.' ( [Former] § 128.5, subd. (b)(2).) Whether an action is frivolous is governed by an objective standard: any reasonable attorney would agree it is totally and completely without merit. [Citations.] There must also be a showing of an improper purpose, i.e., subjective bad faith on the part of the attorney or party to be sanctioned." ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 635,
*136The Levy court further explained, "[w]hen the Legislature enacted section 128.5, its intent was ' "to broaden the powers of trial courts to manage their calendars and provide for the expeditious processing of civil actions by authorizing monetary sanctions now not presently authorized...." ' [Citation.] Section 128.5 authorizes the award of attorney fees as a sanction to control improper resort to the judicial process. [Citation.] The statute permits the award of attorney fees, not simply as appropriate compensation to the prevailing party, but as a means of controlling burdensome and unnecessary legal tactics. [Citation.] Section 128.5 requires much more than a party acting with 'no good reason' to justify an award of sanctions. There must be a showing not only of a meritless or frivolous action or tactic, but also of bad faith." ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at pp. 635-636,
The Levy court did not, however, in the published portion of its opinion, go on to discuss application of the subjective standard to the facts of the case. Rather, the court published only its discussion of the threshold question-the propriety of ordering sanctions under section 128.5, rather than section 128.7. ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at pp. 638-643,
The court only summarily recited, at the outset of its opinion, that it also concluded the trial court had not abused its discretion in finding the party's and the lawyer's actions sanctionable, and it was therefore affirming the sanctions as to the party, but reversing as to the lawyer for lack of notice sanctions had been sought against him, personally. ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 628,
The trial court in the instant case cited In re Marriage of Gumabao (1984)
Like the instant case, Gumabao arose from a dissolution proceeding. In that case, counsel for the former husband failed to appear for trial, and despite several calls from his office over the course of the day assuring the court clerk he would appear at specific times, he never appeared. ( *137Gumabao, supra , 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 574,
The appellate court phrased the issue before it as follows: "[S]ection 128.5 ..., enacted in 1981, empowers the trial court to award attorney's fees as sanctions against an attorney who is aware of his inability to appear at the time set for trial, has an opportunity to but fails to take appropriate steps to notify opposing counsel of such inability, fails to adequately inform the court of the reasons for his delay in appearance, and fails to appear in court in accordance with his representations." ( Gumabao , supra , 150 Cal.App.3d at pp. 573-574,
Gumabao has been cited with approval in several cases, including Wong v. Davidian (1988)
In Wong , the defendant moved to dismiss the plaintiff's lawsuit after four and one-half years of near stasis. The plaintiff responded with a motion to specially set the case for trial. ( Wong, supra , 206 Cal.App.3d at pp. 266-267,
*138On appeal, sanctioned counsel challenged the trial court's finding that his failure to appear was " 'inexcusable, and *621was an act in bad faith.' " He maintained he had been out of the country, but had made arrangements " 'with his client' " to retain substitute counsel. ( Wong, supra , 206 Cal.App.3d at p. 272,
In West Coast , the trial court found the plaintiff had filed and maintained a meritless lawsuit, which conduct was capped off by his lawyer taking a vacation just prior to the continued trial date, resulting in counsel not seeing a demand letter from the defendant's lawyer stating the defendant would seek sanctions if his attorney had to prepare for and appear at trial. By the time the plaintiff's attorney responded, defense counsel was already in transit from her office in northern California to the court in southern California. ( West Coast, supra , 2 Cal.App.4th at pp. 699, 701-702,
In assessing the propriety of awarding sanctions, the West Coast court first agreed with "the weight of authority"-that section 128.5 "requires a showing not only of a meritless or frivolous action or tactic, but also of a bad faith taking of the action or tactic." ( West Coast, supra , 2 Cal.App.4th at p. 702,
*139The court also pointed out that "a frivolous action may in itself be evidence from which a finding of subjective bad faith may be made." ( West Coast, supra , 2 Cal.App.4th at p. 702,
The West Coast court went on to cite as illustrative not only Gumabao , but several other cases. ( West Coast, supra , 2 Cal.App.4th at pp. 702-703,
The second was Mungo v. UTA French Airlines (1985)
Given this authority, the West Coast court concluded the trial court properly awarded sanctions. When the totality of the circumstances was considered, said the court, "one becomes satisfied that [the plaintiff and his lawyer] abused not only opposing party and counsel but the courts as well.
*140They started out with a very marginal lawsuit.... After release of the mechanic's lien the substance of the litigation became insubstantial in the extreme. [¶] [Plaintiff and his lawyer] would not or could not recognize this, however. They continued useless and unproductive 'discovery' actions and did not, in our opinion, bargain for disposition of the lawsuit in good faith. We view [their] approach to the date of trial as cavalier, in the extreme. While the case may in fact have been inconsequential, its filing and maintenance in the superior court created consequence. The cap to this inadvised series of events, of course, was requiring opposing counsel to prepare for and travel to San Diego for the trial, when [the plaintiff and his lawyer] either knew or should have known that they would not go to trial." ( West Coast, supra , 2 Cal.App.4th at p. 704,
*623We add to West Coast's legal recitation, the case of Jansen Associates, Inc. v. Codercard, Inc. (1990)
We therefore conclude Gumabao is not an aberrational decision, but is one of a number of cases decided over the years holding that section 128.5 sanctions can be imposed against a lawyer for unjustifiable dereliction in his or her obligations-i.e., conduct that is "frivolous"-committed with an improper motive, such as to harass or manipulate opposing counsel or the court-i.e., committed in subjective "bad faith"-and which results in an opponent incurring additional costs. In short, a lawyer whose dereliction in duty is "blatant" and who has "personally misused the judicial system" ( Luke, supra , 167 Cal.App.3d at p. 669,
We must also assume the Legislature was aware of this constellation of cases as *624it amended section 128.5. (See People v. Giordano (2007)
The Sufficiency of the Sanctions Ruling
Trigger maintains, as she did in her objections to the trial court's proposed statement of decision, that she was sanctioned because of circumstances beyond her control, i.e., that she found herself caught in a trial running longer than anticipated, a circumstance that could befall any lawyer. What Trigger has continually failed to acknowledge, however, is that the trial court did not impose sanctions because Trigger unexpectedly found herself still in trial in another case.
Rather, the court imposed sanctions against Trigger for actions within her control. Trigger affirmatively misrepresented to the court she was ready to *142proceed on the scheduled trial date and asked to be excused from the pretrial conference, when, in fact, she knew her client in the Sacramento case had unexpectedly decided to testify, knew that the Sacramento trial had not concluded when she had anticipated it would, and knew it was exceedingly unlikely she would be able to appear on the scheduled trial date in the instant case. And even though 10 days remained prior to trial, she thereafter made no attempt to apprise the court of her looming trial conflict and correct what she had previously represented. Not until the afternoon before trial in the instant case did she even tell opposing counsel she was still in trial in Sacramento. And she made no effort to let the trial court know.
In her objections to the court's proposed statement, Trigger claimed she made a motion to continue "at the first available opportunity." But this was another misrepresentation. In fact, far from making a motion to continue at the first opportunity, Trigger did not make a motion to continue until the eleventh hour-after the case was called for trial and her client appeared sans counsel but with instructions to tell the court Trigger was in trial elsewhere and to deliver to the court Trigger's belated motion to continue. Trigger did arrange for specially appearing counsel. However, before appearing in court, on short notice, specially appearing counsel did not even have an opportunity to read the moving papers or become conversant with the circumstances. In the meantime, opposing counsel had had to appear and then had to wait while specially appearing counsel read the moving papers and the trial court heard and ruled on the motion.
Trigger also, in her objections to the proposed statement, took great umbrage at opposing counsel's refusal to stipulate to a continuance at the eleventh hour, and she continues to do so on appeal. However, opposing counsel certainly could not assume the trial court would continue the trial, even with a stipulation. Furthermore, given what opposing counsel viewed as Trigger's "nonchalance" towards her trial obligations, and specifically her multiple failures to comply with the pretrial order (which Trigger admitted), counsel considered Trigger's handling of the scheduled trial date as more "bad faith" conduct.
Given the established case law, we have no difficulty concluding Trigger's conduct can support sanctions under section 128.5. Her misrepresentation to the court about her readiness for trial, and her failure to correct that misrepresentation at any point *625during the 10 days before trial, were, by any measure, unjustifiable derelictions in her obligations to the court, as well as to opposing counsel, and thus constituted "frivolous" conduct. This record is also sufficient to support a finding that Trigger engaged in this misconduct for an improper motive-to manipulate the court and to manipulate and harass the opposing party-and thus acted in subjective bad faith. Indeed, the *143conduct for which Trigger was sanctioned is not materially different from the attorney conduct sanctioned in the cases cited above.
Unlike in those cases, however, the trial court did not make an express finding that Trigger acted in bad faith. The question thus becomes whether this is fatal to affirmance of the sanctions against Trigger.
Section 128.5, subdivision (c) instructs courts on the form and content of sanctions orders as follows: "An order imposing expenses shall be in writing and shall recite in detail the action or tactic or circumstances justifying the order."
"But no more is required" in a written order than "a written factual recital, with reasonable specificity, of the circumstances that led the trial court to find the conduct before it sanctionable under the relevant code section." ( Childs , supra , 29 Cal.App.4th at p. 996,
The trial court recited in detail the factual circumstances leading to its imposition of sanctions, and thus amply satisfied the statutory directive that it "recite in detail the action or tactic or circumstances justifying the order." ( § 128.5, subd. (c).) Was the court also required to make an express finding that Trigger acted in "bad faith?" The case law indicates not, although we hasten to add this would be the better practice.
For example, in Dolan , the trial court denied a sanctions motion by defendants who were among many named defendants and who eventually obtained summary judgment. ( Dolan, supra , 24 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1502-1503,
The trial court had "summarily" denied the sanctions motion "without comment." ( Dolan, supra , 24 Cal.App.4th at p. 1504,
The court then acknowledged that "[w]hen a tactic or action utterly lacks merit, a court is entitled to infer the party knew it lacked merit yet pursued the action for some ulterior motive." ( Dolan, supra , 24 Cal.App.4th at p. 1505,
Similarly, in Summers , although the record reflected that the trial court found the plaintiff's lawsuit frivolous, the court denied sanctions. The Court of Appeal affirmed, explaining first that the defendant was incorrect in asserting frivolousness necessarily meant the plaintiff had acted in bad faith. The appellate court than pointed out that "[s]ince the trial court made neither express nor implied findings of bad faith, we cannot find that its denial of sanctions is wrong." ( Summers, supra , 225 Cal.App.3d at p. 1070,
*145Here, we are presented with the circumstances posited in Summers -the granting of a motion for sanctions and a thorough recitation of the conduct for which the sanctions were imposed, and which conduct may, under established case law, be sanctioned. Thus, given no findings to the contrary, we must presume in favor of the trial court's order " 'every finding of fact necessary to support it' " ( *627Summers , supra , 225 Cal.App.3d at p. 1071, fn. 19,
We cannot say the same as to her client, Taeb. He did appear on the scheduled trial date, and did nothing more than relay what Trigger told him and supply the court with Trigger's belated motion for a continuance. There is no evidence Taeb was even aware Trigger had misrepresented her readiness for trial or that, in the ensuing 10 days, she made no effort to correct what she had told the court. Nor is there any evidence Taeb knew, as Trigger did, that she could have filed a motion to continue well before the scheduled trial date and spared respondent and her attorney the additional costs they incurred as a result of Trigger's conduct.
We reach these conclusions whether we review for abuse of discretion or for substantial evidence. The vast majority of cases state simply that the abuse of discretion standard applies, including Levy cited in the 2017 legislative history. ( Levy, supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 628,
The Sanctions Order Was Procedurally Proper
Finally, Trigger advances a number of procedural objections to the sanctions order. She claims "no reasonable notice and opportunity to be heard" was provided to Trigger and her client; there is "no finding that due diligence had been exercised"; "the motion was not separately made"; "no safe harbor period was provided"; and "no order to show cause was issued." (Some capitalization omitted.) These complaints are wholly without merit.
The record on appeal, supplied by Trigger, includes respondent's separate motion for sanctions under section 128.5. (Trigger was also on notice, through her specially appearing counsel, that at the first trial call, at which Trigger failed to appear, respondent had been given leave to file a sanctions motion.) Moreover, at the close of evidence in the rescheduled trial, Trigger acknowledged on the record that she had notice of respondent's motion for attorney fees and sanctions. Trigger, herself, then raised the issue of how her opposition should be presented and agreed with the court's suggestion she do so in her closing trial brief. In fact, Trigger not only agreed with this procedure, but told the court "[t]hat's what I was going to ask," explaining she "would ask to do that for efficiency so that [they] are not returning again for another court date." Finally, in her objections to the court's proposed statement of decision, and specifically in the course of complaining that opposing counsel had not stipulated to a continuance of the trial, Trigger *147acknowledged that respondent had filed a "new motion" seeking attorney fees "including from Ms. Trigger personally in the form of sanctions."
In short, Trigger waived nearly all of her procedural objections in connection with the court's handling of the sanctions motion. (See People v. Leonard (2014)
As for her remaining procedural claims, since sanctions were imposed pursuant to motion, the court was not required to issue an order to show cause. ( § 128.5, subd. (f)(2)(B).) And given the nature of the conduct on which the sanctions were based- Trigger's misrepresentation to the court that she was ready to proceed to trial, when she was, in fact, not ready, her failure to ever correct the court's misapprehension as to her readiness, and her delay in seeking a continuance until after the case was called for trial-the "safe harbor" provisions are not applicable. Rather, these provisions allow time for the withdrawal of frivolous pleadings. ( § 128.5, subd. (f)(1)(B), (D).)
DISPOSITION
The order imposing sanctions pursuant to section 128.5 is reversed as to Taeb and affirmed as to Trigger. Each party to bear their own costs on appeal.
We concur:
Humes, P. J.
Margulies, J.
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.
These amendments also abrogated another of San Diegans ' holdings-that section 128.5 did not incorporate the safe harbor provisions of section 128.7. (Nutrition Distribution, LLC v. Southern SARMs, Inc. (2018)
Thus, section 128.7, which remains in effect, is narrower in scope and applies solely to misconduct in the filing or advocacy of groundless claims made in signed pleadings and other papers. (§ 128.7, subd. (b).)
Section 128.7 was modeled on rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and many of the provisions of the statute and rule are identical. (Guillemin v. Stein (2002)
As noted, San Diegans also held that despite the new language in subdivision (f), the "safe harbor" provisions of section 128.7, did not apply to 128.5. (Nutrition Distribution,
This legislative history also makes clear the standard under section 128.7 remains an objective one. (E.g., Conc. in Sen. Amends., Assem. Bill No. 984 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) as amended July 12, 2017, p. 3 ["[I]t should be noted that this bill does not affect the standard applied to CCP Section 128.7, which is reviewed under an objective reasonableness standard."].)
The appellate court additionally observed it believed section 128.5 sanctions could be awarded even if the lawyer's "actions were not wilful since the section does not require wilfulness to be an aspect of the actions or tactics." (Gumabao , supra , 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 577,
Thus, while the Court of Appeal in Abbett Electric Corp. v. Sullwold (1987)
Section 128.7 similarly states, "[w]hen imposing sanctions, the court shall describe the conduct determined to constitute a violation of this section and explain the basis for the sanction imposed." (§ 128.7, subd. (e).)
In Abbett , the court affirmed the denial of sanctions, concluding the sanctions order could not be "reasonably construed as containing a finding that [the attorney] lacked subjective good faith." (Abbett, supra , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 712,
As we have recited, the trial court included its sanctions ruling in its statement of decision issued after trial on the dissolution property issues. The sanctions ruling could, of course, have been issued as a separate order, and we have considerable doubt the procedural principles pertaining to statements of decision should apply to this ruling, particularly given section 128.5's explicit content requirements. However, even assuming they do, Trigger did not object to the proposed statement of decision on the ground the trial court failed to make an express finding she acted in bad faith. Nor, as we have observed, has she raised any such objection on appeal. Rather, she objected to the proposed statement on the grounds no evidence supported the court's sanctions order and that the court made other procedural missteps we address shortly. Accordingly, even under statement of decision principles, the doctrine of implied findings remains fully applicable. (See In re Marriage of Arceneaux (1990)
" 'Where the issue on appeal is whether the trial court has abused its discretion, the showing necessary to reverse the trial court is insufficient if it presents facts which merely afford an opportunity for a different opinion: "An appellate tribunal is neither authorized nor warranted in substituting its judgment for the judgment of the trial judge. To be entitled to relief on appeal from the result of an alleged abuse of discretion it must clearly appear that the injury resulting from such a wrong is sufficiently grave to amount to a manifest miscarriage of justice...." ' " (Dolan, supra , 24 Cal.App.4th at p. 1504,
