California Appellate Report
Thoughts on recent Ninth Circuit and California appellate cases from Professor Shaun Martin at the University of San Diego School of Law.
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Cervantes-Torres v. United States (9th Cir. - June 24, 2025)
People v. Barrett (Cal. Supreme Ct. - June 23, 2025)
Friday, June 20, 2025
Lawyers for Fair Reciprocal Admission v. United States (9th Cir. - June 20, 2025)
The plaintiff's attorney here has filed numerous meritless lawsuits trying to get admitted to the federal courts in California even though he's not a member of the California bar. His latest lawsuit suffers the same fate.
Judge Bennett kindly avoids mentioning in his opinion that the guy, Joseph R. Giannini, has repeatedly failed the California bar.
Maybe just study harder this time and take it yet again?
Norman v. Strateman (Cal. Ct. App. - June 20, 2025)
Justice Petrou seems absolutely correct here. Yes, there was an enforceable oral settlement agreement in front of a judicial officer, which normally can be summarily enforced. But the claims at issue included a corporate derivative claim. Those need to be judicially approved, and this one wasn't. Hence the remand.
That said, I have no doubt whatsoever that the settlement agreement will be approved on remand. So it's unclear what the appellant really obtains from the successful appeal (or why it's worth it).
I also liked how expeditiously the Court of Appeal resolved this one. It wasn't a tough one (in my view). And the process went incredibly quickly once the matter was fully briefed.
Well done.
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
U.S. v. Sanchez (9th Cir. - June 18, 2025)
There are some immigration cases where the petitioner is fairly sympathetic. Other cases tug less on one's heartstrings.
Here, Eliel Nunez Sanchez was brought to the United States by his parents without inspection when he was a child. So he's an undocumented alien, which typically puts him somewhat on the "sympathetic" side of the equation.
Then, when he is 20 years old, he's "convicted of possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine) while armed and was sentenced to nine months in jail." Somewhat less sympathy there.
Then, four years later, he's "arrested for possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine) for sale" and deported to Mexico. Again, as a repeat offender, albeit for a drug crime, somewhat less sympathy.
Then, "between 2010 and 2019, Nunez illegally reentered the United States eight times and was deported seven times." Well, shucks. I totally understand why he'd want to remain in the United States. But there's not a ton of tugging on the heartstrings here.
Finally, "in February 2020, a grand jury in the Central District of California charged Nunez with illegally reentering the United States after having previously been subject to an order of exclusion, deportation, or removal" and sentenced to two years in prison. He appeals the conviction, but loses both below and in the Ninth Circuit.
Maybe he'll stay in Mexico at this point. Perhaps not. Time will tell.
Monday, June 16, 2025
Lemus-Escobar v. Bondi (Cal. Ct. App. - June 16, 2025)
Thursday, June 12, 2025
Brown v. Attorney General (9th Cir. - June 12, 2025)
The middle of today's Ninth Circuit opinion contains the following passage:
"What happened goes beyond prosaic misconduct. The jurors did not merely crowd together or shuffle by interested parties. See Godoy, 861 F.3d at 967. They invited a witness and her friend onto the elevator during trial, promised not to tell anyone about it, and allowed the women to openly converse. And not just any witness—Gallon was the sole codefendant whose testimony the prosecution considered important enough to cut a deal for. Gallon was silent in the elevator, but the friend encouraged the jurors to believe Gallon and rely on the video evidence. Most jurors failed to report the incident as required by the court. Not ideal."
Nicely put. And I love the last sentence.
The Ninth Circuit nonetheless affirms the dismissal of defendant's habeas petition as harmless error.
P.S. - The author of the opinion is Judge Brown, sitting by designation from the Southern District of Texas. As the caption reveals, the defendant's last name is "Brown" as well. Which made me wonder whether there's any statistical difference in results on appeal when, as here, the authoring's judge's last name is the same as the defendant's (or when someone with that same last name is on the panel).
Maybe someone will run the data and write a law review article about that same day. (Won't be me, though.)
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
De Souza Silva v. Bondi (9th Cir. - June 11, 2025)
Monday, June 09, 2025
State of Alaska v. Federal Subsistence Board (9th Cir. - June 2, 2025)
Friday, June 06, 2025
People v. Nixon (Cal. Ct. App. - June 5, 2025)
Thursday, June 05, 2025
People v. Porter (Cal. Ct. App. - June 5, 2025)
Animal Protection & Rescue League v. County of Riverside (Cal. Ct. App. - June 4, 2025)
Wednesday, June 04, 2025
Hubbard v. City of San Diego (9th Cir. - June 4, 2025)
Today's Ninth Circuit opinion arose across the street from my home.
A group of yoga instructors teach yoga for "free" (they accept donations, and most people contribute) on the beach -- specifically, Sunset Cliffs -- in San Diego. Typically, 30-60 people participate. The good thing about doing it on the beach, apart (of course) from the fantastic view, is that it doesn't cost the instructors anything, as opposed to having a yoga studio.
The City of San Diego didn't like that, so last year, passed an ordinance that said you can't do that, and started enforcing it. The yoga teachers sued and moved for a preliminary injunction, but lost.
Today, the Ninth Circuit reverses, holding that yoga's an expressive activity and that the ordinance is unconstitutionally content-based because it disallows (inter alia) yoga while allowing other types of expressive activity (e.g., teaching Shakespeare) on the beach.
So come on down. Free beach yoga. In a very pretty spot.
P.S. - It seems to me that the City could probably accomplish its desired objectives by instead imposing a "tax" on any expressive activities on the beach. Just say that any "donations" solicited in a public park on the beach are subject to City tax of 90% or so. Sure, there might be some enforcement difficulties. But I suspect that as long as it was content neutral, and applied to all expressive activities (very few of which request donations), that would probably survive constitutional scrutiny.
Monday, June 02, 2025
People v. Emanuel (Cal. Supreme Ct. - June 2, 2025)
You can readily understand from the underlying evidence why the California Supreme Court unanimously holds today that there was insufficient evidence that Louis Emanuel was recklessly indifferent to human life sufficient to find him guilty of first degree murder. He wasn't the shooter, and even the trial court found that he didn't know that his accomplice was bringing a gun to the robbery or planned to kill anyone.
Okay. Fair enough.
But I couldn't help but notice that the only real testimony here came from the defendant and those who have ample reason to assist him (e.g., his girlfriend). That's one big advantage of killing someone: You're typically the only ones left to explain what exactly went down during the robbery.
Here, for example, Mr. Emanuel and his accomplice met in a public park to buy a pound of marijuana. Now, that could just be a classic buy; no large risk to human life there. (Though probably not zero.)
But the buyers sua sponte offered to buy the week for $2200, even though everyone knew that the market rate was $1800. No explanation for why they made an above-market offer without even negotiating. And as far as I can tell from the opinion, there was no evidence that the buyers actually brought any cash. Plus, after the murder, Mr. Emanuel allegedly told his girlfriend that the seller wouldn't "give it up" and, as a result, was shot.
Doesn't that potentially lead one to believe that Mr. Emanuel and his accomplice had actually planned on robbing the seller from the outset? (I couldn't find any evidence that the robbery was just a spontaneous decision on the part of the accomplice, as opposed to planned.) And if the robbery was indeed planned, it seems fairly obvious that the planning involved a weapon, since very few people likely give up a pound of weed based upon a mere verbal entreaty to do so.
So, sure, Mr. Emanuel says that he had no idea that his accomplice had a weapon, that the victim (Mr. Sonenberg) struggled for control of the weapon, and that the accomplice "aimed the gun at Sonenberg’s leg, but Sonenberg pushed it up" which is why the bullet hit Sonenberg's neck and killed him.
But what do you expect Mr. Emanuel to say? Mr. Sonenberg's not exactly there to contradict him. And his girlfriend only knows what Mr. Emanuel told her. That's the upside of killing the sole eyewitness to the crime. (Except, of course, for the actual shooter, but he hardly has reason to dispute your version of events.)
I'm not saying that it's clear beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Emanuel knew that there was a gun and that, as a result, he's guilty of first degree murder.
But a legal principle under which it makes a fair bit of difference whether the victim is left alive or not is probably one with some serious adverse incentive effects.
Thursday, May 29, 2025
In re D.B. (Cal. Ct. App. - May 28, 2025)
It's indeed unfortunate. But I have to agree with Justice Greenwood. In a juvenile dependency case, where the issue is whether a 17-year old child should be taken away from the custody of her mother, if the facts demonstrate that the child is indeed assaulting and threatening the mother, then, yes, the trial court has the power to enter a restraining order against the child.
(To be clear: I'm not saying it's unfortunate that I agree with Justice Greenwood. That's utterly fine. It's instead that the facts of the underlying case are indeed unfortunate.)
It's a disaster of a fact pattern. The father is incarcerated and has a substance abuse problem. The mother allegedly has a history of substance abuse and mental health issues. There are serious allegations that the mother consistently demeaned and occasionally physically abused then daughter. And then daughter got pregnant and had her own child. At 15. Daughter and mother continued to not get along, daughter and her own daughter lived with mother, mother allegedly failed to take care of granddaughter when daughter was not doing so, daughter "stated she cut herself and smoked marijuana, behaviors which Mother knew of but did not address," daughter gets taken out of the house and placed in a housing center at which she allegedly "made threats to kill another child at the housing center, refused to comply with the staff’s instruction, and left her placement," daughter eventually gets her own daughter taken away from her by the court, daughter allegedly sends a Google Maps picture of mother's house to mother showing it in flames, etc. etc. etc.
Ugh.
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Travelers Indemnity Corp. v. WCAB (Cal. Ct. App. - May 28, 2025)
Are there many published appellate opinions involving former major league baseball players seeking workers' compensation benefits? I doubt it. But here's one.
The player -- George Zeber -- didn't have a lot of years with the Yankees; he primarily backed up Willie Randolph. Still. He was in the major leagues. No small feat.
(Oh, and before his playing days, he was drafted and deployed in Vietnam. I bet there aren't many players who fit that particular bill.)
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
Thomas v. Corbyn Rest. Group (Cal. Ct. App. - May 27, 2025)
I like the scam. Learn about a half million dollar settlement somehow, then spoof a series of emails to counsel for defendant -- here, Tyson & Mendes -- to get 'em to wire the check to a bogus account rather than to plaintiff.
Well played, scammers.
I also think that Justice Rubin and the trial court are both spot on. The fault here belongs to defendant, which is the party who was best in a position not to be scammed. So they -- or, more likely, their counsel (or its insurance company) -- has to pay the missing $475,000.
Again. This time, to the actual plaintiff, rather than a scammer.
Monday, May 26, 2025
U.S. v. Greene (9th Cir. - May 23, 2025)
Namir Greene gets sentenced to 10 years in prison for robbing a convenience store and a gas station during a three week period, but the Ninth Circuit finds plain error and remands for resentencing.
On Mr. Greene's side, the ten year sentence does seem quite a bit harsh, and Judge Christen's opinion explains that Mr. Greene had "promising high school academic performance and strong family support" plus acceptance of responsibility etc. I'm also not exactly sure why robbing a Shell station with a BB gun somehow persuaded the feds to get involved and charge the guy with a Hobbs Act violation. Usually this kinda stuff -- even with a carjacking -- is left to state courts, no?
On the other hand, while Judge Christen mentions a lot of things favorable to Mr. Greene, I did notice that he had a criminal history score of II -- though nowhere in the opinion is there any explanation of any prior criminal history. Maybe there's more at play here than meets the eye.
Friday, May 23, 2025
U.S. v. Watson (9th Cir. - May 23, 2025)
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
People v. Mathis (Cal. Ct. App. - May 21, 2025)
On many levels.
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Mae M. v. Komrosky (Cal. Ct. App. - May 19, 2025)
Monday, May 19, 2025
Beasley v. Superior Court (Cal. App. Div. - May 19, 2025)
Traffic ticket law. An underappreciated field. You rarely get published opinions in the area, and when you do, as here, they're usually from the Appellate Division.
But they're interesting. Plus, it's perhaps the most common arena in which people come into contact with the California justice system.
The question in this one is actually fairly straightforward. When you receive a traffic ticket, the officer generally writes (gives you a copy of) the ticket on a standard form prepared by the Judicial Council. If you want to plead guilty (or nolo contendre) and pay the fine, that's great, you can do so. No problem.
But there's a statute -- Section 40513(b) of the Vehicle Code -- that says that if plead not guilty, the case against you (i.e., the traffic ticket) can go to trial only if the traffic ticket "has been prepared on a form approved by the Judicial Council." Otherwise, if it's not, the prosecutor is required to file a traditional complaint against you in order to actually create jurisdiction.
So the question is this: What does Section 40513(b) mean when it says "prepared on a form approved by the Judicial Council?" Does it mean currently approved by the Judicial Council? Or does it instead mean ever approved by the Judicial Council?
If, as here, the officer writes you a ticket on an old form -- one that's been superseded -- does that qualify under Section 40513(b), or not?
Now, for me, taking the words of the statute at their face value, I would think that the statute means that the form has to be the current form, not one from a while back. If the Legislature cared enough to require that traffic tickets be on forms approved by the Judicial Council, they presumably wanted the current form used, not one back from the 1920s or so.
The Appellate Division, however, holds otherwise. Old forms are fine. At least when, as here, the differences aren't material. (Which, in truth, they'll probably never be.)
You can see why the Appellate Division might well come out that way. We generally don't care that much these days about the forms of pleading. As long as you get notice, we're generally cool with that. And we don't want to let people off traffic tickets just because officers aren't keeping their form books updated. We want the speeding public to be found guilty and such. Hence the holding here.
Still, I wonder just how far this reasoning goes. Is it really true that forms from the 1920s can be used, since they were, after all, at some point approved by the Judicial Council? The Appellate Division says it's not deciding that question, which I appreciate, but the question nonetheless remains.
Plus, there are other statutes and rules on the books that seem analogous. To take but one example I found, Rule 1.35(a) says that the Clerk is required to file (e.g., has no discretion to reject) "[f]orms approved by the Judicial Council for optional use." Clerks nonetheless routinely reject filings that are on old versions of the Judicial Council forms. Does today's opinion mean that's now impermissible? The words of the relevant provisions are pretty much identical, after all: those old versions were indeed "approved by the Judicial Council." Do Clerks now need to accept even old forms from the 1920s, or decide for themselves whether the variances are "material" or not?
Seems like an interesting issue. One that I bet comes up in practice pretty much every day.
To be determined.
Friday, May 16, 2025
Woodland v. Hill (9th Cir. - May 16, 2025)
Want to check out a variety of full color photographs of nearly-nude men in a Ninth Circuit opinion?
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Yelp v. Paxton (9th Cir. - May 15, 2025)
Monday, May 12, 2025
People v. Hinojos (Cal. Ct. App. - May 12, 2025)
If you want someone killed in prison, I gotta admit, it seems like a pretty good business model to get someone who's already serving a life sentence in that prison to do it for you.
That doesn't mean it's ethical or moral, obviously. Clearly it's not.
But still. Seems like a sound plan.
(Assuming you don't get nailed for conspiracy, of course.)
I also learned something else reading this opinion. I didn't know that the Mexican Mafia's "tax" on illegal operations in prison was one-third. Seems steep.
I also wonder if that tax is gross or net. Say I pay a guard $600 to smuggle a cell phone into prison and sell it to another prisoner for $900. Do I owe $300 tax, or only $100?
The former would seem fairly inimical to entrepreneurship, no?
Friday, May 09, 2025
Hofer v. Boladian (Cal. Ct. App. - May 9, 2025)
Sometimes the introduction to the opinion (helpfully) says pretty much everything you need to know:
"In this case, the litigants seeking to compel arbitration initiated this lawsuit by filing a complaint in court and, while in the judicial forum, sought two forms of preliminary injunctive relief, opposed a demurrer, propounded more than 700 discovery requests, demanded a jury trial in their case management conference statement and represented they would be litigating substantive motions, and posted jury fees. It was not until the opposing party filed a cross-complaint that the litigants filed the motion to compel arbitration—more than six months into the litigation in court. Does the litigants’ conduct in this case constitute a waiver [of arbitration]? We conclude it does, and affirm the trial court’s order denying the motion to compel."
Thanks for that, Justice Hoffstadt.
Tuesday, May 06, 2025
Sanders v. Superior Court (Cal. Ct. App. - May 6, 2025)
As God is my witness, I not understand why defense counsel sometimes fail to pay arbitration fees the day the invoice comes in.
It's not strategic behavior. CCP 1281.98 says that you waive arbitration in employment and consumer cases if the party that drafted the arbitration agreement fails to pay the fees within 30 days. The defendant here -- the brokerage firm Edward Jones & Co. -- successfully moved to compel arbitration, so it clearly wanted the arbitration to go forward. Yet when the $54,000 JAMS arbitration invoice came in, with an express statement that the bill was due upon receipt, it didn't pay the thing until JAMS sent a reminder 34 days later. (Despite paying the two prior JAMS invoices when due.)
That's too late. Arbitration waived.
To reiterate: Just pay the thing. Immediately. It's important. Really important.
Monday, May 05, 2025
People v. Oyler (Cal. Supreme Ct. - May 5, 2025)
I'm not surprised that the jury found the defendant guilty here. He's definitely an arsonist who set at least several wildland fires. We're not excited about people who do that.
I am, however, somewhat surprised that the defendant was sentenced to death.
He has no criminal history. There's no evidence that he intended to kill anyone; though, of course, there's always that risk. And the evidence that he started the one fire that killed the five firefighters -- the only one of the fires in which anyone was injured -- was very slim, in my mind. The guy might not even be guilty of that one; I think he probably is, but it's also possible that it was one of the many other people in this world who like to start similar wildfires.
(I'm not persuaded that the device used to start this particular fire was really unique. It's a cigarette attached to a matchbook. I'm not a serial arsonist, and even I know that's exactly how to start these sorts of things. The fact that the matches here were sometimes wooden matches, and that the matches were sometimes pointed in both directions, is hardly novel; again, I'm a complete novice in this area, and I could easily see even myself constructing such a device.)
So you're talking about someone for whom there was no intent to kill, no criminal history, and residual doubt as to his guilt.
Look, I understand the reality. It's a wildfire in which five innocent firefighters were horribly burned and killed. People want retribution for that. Especially people, as here, in the vicinity of that fire. I get why the jury sentences him to death. As well as why the California Supreme Court affirms.
But of the many, many death penalty cases I've read, this one stands out to me as strongly on the low end of the "obviously should be killed" spectrum.
Read all 162 pages of the opinion if you'd like.
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
People v. Benson (Cal. Ct. App. - April 28, 2025)
The witness to an alleged gang murder was "working as a sex worker nearby on the night of the shooting." She testifies at the first trial, which ends in a hung jury, and at the second trial, she's so worried about gang retaliation (in my mind, anyway) that she recants everything she said at the first trial as well as denies all of her former statements to the police. Defendant is convicted, sentenced to 120 years to life, and appeals.
It's not required (AFAIK) by the Rules of Court or by the California Style Manual, but were I the one writing this published opinion, I wouldn't mention -- as Justice Stratton's opinion does -- the full name of this particular (very frightened) witness. She's apparently on Facebook, after all (with her kid, no less). No reason, in my view, to further identify this former-sex-worker-turned-reluctant-gangland-murder-witness by name.
Monday, April 28, 2025
De la Cruz v. Mission Hills Shopping Center (Cal. Ct. App. - April 28, 2025)
Thursday, April 24, 2025
CFPB v. CashCall (9th Cir. - April 24, 2025)
They almost made it.
The Consumer Finance Protection Bureau sued CashCall on behalf of consumers for deceptively attempting to collect interest and fees to which it was not legally entitled. It won, with an initial $10.7 million award, but the CFPB appealed, claiming that the award should have been higher, and the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, at which point the district court upped the award to $137 million in restitution. Then the Ninth Circuit affirmed, and today, issues an amended opinion and denies CashCall's motions for rehearing and rehearing en banc.
CashCall is politically well-connected, and Paul Clement represented them on appeal. As you may know, President Trump is currently gutting the CFPB, and is in the process of firing 90% of its workforce.
I suspect that if CashCall could have held out just a little longer, they might have gotten out of the $137 million award.
Still might, of course.
But, for now, it stands.
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
Newman v. Underhill (9th Cir. - April 23, 2025)
I'm clearly the outlier here, since this opinion is written by Judge Graber and is unanimous. But really?
The police in San Bernardino try to pull over a Chevy Tahoe for the very, very serious offense of "expired registration and an unilluminated license plate." The driver doesn't stop, and when the officer gives chase, eventually runs on foot into a dead end street, at which point the officer (who's stopped to first "clear" the Tahoe) loses track of him. But the last time the officer saw the guy, the suspect was heading towards one of the houses in the neighborhood, so the officer goes into the back yard of that house in search of the guy. No dice. But maybe, just maybe, the suspect went in the house; apparently, the back door of that house is unlocked.
Other officers arrive, a police helicopter comes, they search all around the area for heat signatures or the suspect but can't find any, so they surround the house and tell the occupants to come out. No dice there either. It sounds like there might indeed be someone in the house -- there are noises there -- but there's no response, and no one's coming out.
To reiterate: They're confident the suspect isn't anywhere near. The police have surrounded the house. It has been around ten minutes since the officers have last seen the guy. Maybe he's in the house (or maybe someone else is), but the officers have been screaming for a couple of minutes, and there's no response.
(As it will turn out, the owner of the house is "a quadriplegic in a wheelchair," and he's indeed inside.)
Here's my take:
It's someone's home. Their castle. The place is surrounded. No one's getting out, or away. And the guy you're chasing is merely wanted for evading the police and expired tags.
You can't just call in for a warrant?
Apparently not.
After waiting 10 minutes, the police barge in the back door, find the owner sitting in his bedroom, search the place with his consent, and find the suspect. The owner then sues, claiming they needed a warrant.
The Ninth Circuit says: Nope. Hot pursuit. No need for a warrant.
I just can't get around the fact that there's utterly no reason to get (or require) a warrant here. Zero. It's someone's home. There are no exigent circumstances.
Get a warrant.
Monday, April 21, 2025
Marino v. Rayant (Cal. Ct. App. - April 18, 2025)
This opinion is a perfect example of the Streisand effect. A result generated in part, ironically enough, by someone who has written about the Streisand effect.
Lawrence Marino initially obtained an 18-month civil harassment restraining order against Mark Rayant at a proceeding at which Mr. Rayant was not present. Later, Mr. Rayant appeared in court and argued that he had never received notice of the proceedings, and on that basis, the court vacated the restraining order.
Mr. Rayant subsequently asked the trial court to seal the records of the proceeding, arguing that the public existence of the (now vacated) order harmed his ability to get certain jobs. The trial court refused to do so, and Mr. Rayant appealed.
Before the appeal, the only people who could view the proceedings below were those who went through the specific and somewhat arduous process of looking through trial court proceedings. But the appeal now results in a written opinion -- one that's a robust twenty five pages, and includes a slew of detailed facts about the underlying events -- that's easily accessible to pretty much everyone. Indeed, when you now run a Google search for "Mark Rayant," the opinion is one of the very first results that comes up.
Hence the Streisand effect. An attempt to reduce publicity and access that only increases it.
And here's the twist. The opinion was originally unpublished. That's bad for Mr. Rayant, since even unpublished opinions are still readily accessible. But the Court of Appeal now decides to publish the opinion, which only makes it even more readily accessible.
Who asked the Court of Appeal to publish the opinion? Not Mr. Rayant, who both lost the appeal and who has little reason to want its factual recitation of events to be even more public.
Rather, publication was instead requested by Eugene Volokh. Someone who's previously written about the Streisand effect.
Irony indeed.