WILLIAM F. WISNIEWSKI et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. JAMES H. CLARY, Defendant and Respondent.
Civ. No. 44129
Second Dist., Div. Three.
Mar. 26, 1975.
46 Cal. App. 3d 499
Ted Sullivan and James E. Sutherland for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Sikora, Price & Livingston and Donald R. Price for Defendant and Respondent.
John H. Larson, County Counsel, and John P. Farrell, Deputy County Counsel, as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Respondent.
COBEY, Acting P. J.—Plaintiffs, William F. and William M. Wisniewski, appeal from a minute order, made and filed on November 7, 1973, directing them to pay fees of the attorneys for defendant, James H. Clary,1 in the sum of $300 as sanctions for the failure of plaintiffs to
The threshold question posed is whether the challenged order is appealable under the foregoing circumstances. It is not an order made expressly appealable by
The next question to decide is whether the policy enforced was within the power of the court making it. Long prior to the mandatory settlement conference counsel for plaintiffs and for defendant had received from the clerk of the court, by mail, a written statement of the applicable Los Angeles County Superior Court policy, reading as follows: “If at the time of the scheduled settlement conference, plaintiff or those parties seeking affirmative relief fail to appear, the judge shall order the trial date vacated, and order the parties to show cause at 10:30 a.m., in Department 1, on a date to be set by the court why the case should not
This policy of the local superior court was adopted pursuant to division I, section 9, subdivision (d) of the Standards of Judicial Administration recommended by the Judicial Council, which, in pertinent part, as adopted on January 1, 1972, read: “Require settlement conferences to be held in all ready cases, . . . At settlement conferences the superior courts should require the attendance of all parties, their trial attorneys and, when a party is insured, a representative of the insurance company . . . .”
The Judicial Council is expressly authorized by
Plaintiffs contend that this policy of compelling the attendance of themselves at the mandatory settlement conference in this case was unenforceable because it took the form of a local policy rather than a local rule and because a party in a civil case may not be required to be personally present at any stage of the litigation.3 (See Silvagni v. Superior Court, 157 Cal.App.2d 287, 291-292 [321 P.2d 15]; Taylor v. Bell, 21 Cal.App.3d 1002, 1008 [98 Cal.Rptr. 855], cert. den., 408 U.S. 923 [33 L.Ed.2d 334, 92 S.Ct. 2493].) Section 128, subdivisions 3 and 4, which codify at least partially the inherent powers of a court, states in effect that every court is empowered to provide for the orderly conduct of the proceedings before it and to compel obedience to its judgments, orders and process. Section 187, which likewise codifies an inherent power of a court, authorizes a court to take all the means necessary to carry its jurisdiction into effect and, where the Code of Civil Procedure or a statute does not specify a mode of proceeding, to adopt any suitable process or mode of proceeding that may appear most conformable to the spirit of the Code. Finally, according to Hays v. Superior Court, 16 Cal.2d 260, 264 [105 P.2d 975], “a trial court has the [inherent] power to exercise a reasonable control over all proceedings connected with the litigation before it.”
We regard the rule-making power of superior courts, enunciated in the aforementioned
We believe that the trial court in this case possessed the inherent power to require by policy that plaintiffs be physically present at the mandatory settlement conference. A court may not compel a litigant to settle a case, but it may direct him to engage personally in settlement negotiations, provided the conditions for such negotiations are otherwise reasonable. The fact that it may not force a party to be personally present at the trial of a civil action (see 1 Witkin, op. cit., Jurisdiction, § 123, pp. 652-653) does not mean that it may not command his attendance in person at a mandatory settlement conference. A civil trial may proceed expeditiously without the presence of a party, but, as noted earlier, the presence of all parties personally at settlement negotiations enhances their chances of success. For this reason we regard the inconsistent language found in Silvagni, supra, and repeated in Taylor, supra, as being overly broad.
We turn now to the particular sanction imposed—the award of attorneys fees to defendant in the amount of $300 on pain of the action being otherwise dismissed.6 The contention can be made that this was a conditional dismissal and was therefore authorized by the quoted policy
Thus, we do not reach the question whether the order under appeal constituted an abuse of discretion. We do observe, though, that the fact that plaintiffs, as wage earners, would have lost another day from their work and the compensation therefor if they had attended the mandatory settlement conference is not persuasive to us that they should not have been punished for their failure to attend. Once an individual chooses to litigate, he should be prepared to bear the ordinary and reasonable burdens of litigation—whether those be in the preparation of the case for trial, discovery, pretrial conferences, trial or post trial proceedings.
The minute order, insofar as it awards attorneys fees to defendant, is reversed.
Potter, J., concurred.
ALLPORT, J.—I concur on the ground that the written statement of Los Angeles Superior Court policy does not authorize sanctions by way of attorney‘s fees for the failure of plaintiffs to appear at the settlement conference.
