Filed 1/24/14 Martinez v. Neema CA1/2
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.


              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION TWO


ANDY W. MARTINEZ,
         Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                                                     A133116, A134475, A134790
v.
FRANCOIS NEEMA,                                                      (Sonoma County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. SCV-246810)
         Defendant and Appellant.


                                              I. INTRODUCTION
         In these three consolidated appeals, two men, both of whom had previously dated
the same woman and later allegedly became involved in offensive e-mails, appeal from
different orders of the Sonoma County Superior Court. Plaintiff Martinez, appearing in
pro per, appeals from that court’s (1) grant of summary judgment to defendant Neema
from Martinez’s first amended complaint alleging libel, libel per se, abuse of process,
intentional infliction of emotional distress, and conspiracy and (2) subsequent order
imposing sanctions on him. Neema appeals from (3) the trial court’s order denying him
further sanctions against Martinez.
         We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment against Martinez and in
favor of Neema, and also both of its orders regarding the award of sanctions.
                     II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
         Plaintiff Martinez is a resident of Los Angeles County. Defendant Neema is a
resident of Sonoma County. The woman they were both once allegedly involved with,
Kimberly Doane, was apparently a resident of Marin County.


                                                             1
       In his first amended complaint filed on April 13, 2010, Martinez—there, as here,
acting in pro per—alleged 18 causes of action against Neema. The basis of all of them
was his charge that Neema created false Yahoo e-mail accounts using Martinez’s name
and, via them, sent e-mails to Doane, e-mails that were allegedly intended to interfere
with Doane’s “attempt to reconcile” with her estranged husband. That complaint further
alleged, via many different causes of action, that the dispatch of these e-mails led Doane
to seek and secure a temporary restraining order against Martinez subjecting “Plaintiff
[i.e., Martinez] to civil action,” for which he sought awards of damages and punitive
damages from Neema.
       Martinez and Neema engaged in more than a year of discovery and related
litigation. For example, Neema requested that Martinez admit that Neema did not in fact
create the Yahoo e-mail accounts or send Doane any e-mails using Martinez’s name as
the purported author; Martinez denied those requests.
       On April 1, 2011,1 Neema filed a motion for summary judgment, which was set
for hearing on June 21. On June 7, Martinez filed an opposition to that motion, an
opposition which included numerous evidentiary objections, but no declaration pursuant
to Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (h).2 On June 16, Neema filed his
reply papers in support of his summary judgment motion, papers which included his reply
to Martinez’s evidentiary objections and his own similar objections.
       On June 22, one day in advance of a continued hearing date, the trial court (the
Honorable Patrick Broderick) issued a tentative ruling granting Neema’s motion for
summary judgment.
       Although Martinez had not made a timely request for oral argument on Neema’s
summary judgment motion, he claimed he misunderstood the required procedure for
doing so, and moved the trial court to hear oral argument, which it agreed to do.


       1
           Unless otherwise stated, all further dates noted are in 2011.
       2
         Hereafter, section 437c(h); unless otherwise noted, all further statutory citations
are to the Code of Civil Procedure.


                                                2
       On July 7 and 11, respectively, Martinez filed motions (1) to introduce oral
evidence at the hearing and (2) for leave of the court to amend his pleadings before any
hearing on Neema’s summary judgment motion. A hearing on the motion for summary
judgment was held on July 12.
       Via a formal order filed on July 25, the trial court denied both of Martinez’s
motions as untimely, and also ruled on the evidentiary objections of the parties and
Martinez’s request for judicial notice. It then upheld its June 22 tentative ruling. In so
doing, the court stated: “Even if all of Plaintiff’s evidence is considered, as well as the
documents for which Plaintiff seeks judicial notice, there is insufficient evidence to show
that Defendant Francois Neema was involved in any way with the e-mails at issue in this
lawsuit. It can be argued that the evidence seems to show that Defendant Mark
Quesenberry was the person impersonating Plaintiff. However, the evidence shows no
connection between Defendant and the phony e-mails and no conspiracy between
Defendant Neema and Defendant Mark Quesenberry.[3] There are no properly drawn
inferences from the evidence which create any triable issues of material fact for either of
those claims.”
       The court thus granted Neema’s motion for summary judgment; a formal
judgment in his favor was entered on August 17.
       A few days before that, however, Martinez filed a motion for reconsideration; a
hearing thereon was set for October 11. On September 2, he filed a notice of appeal from
the trial court’s August 17 judgment. On September 27, Neema filed his opposition to
Martinez’s motion for reconsideration. The trial court denied that motion on November
28 on the basis that the motion set forth no new facts or law supporting it.
       After the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, on October 3 it entered an order
allowing plaintiff Martinez to file a second amended complaint, but specifically to do so
as to other parties. He was directed not to allege “any claim related to phony e-mails


       3
          Quesenberry was added as a defendant to the action sometime after the filing of
the first amended complaint, but is not a party to this appeal.


                                              3
against Defendant Francois Neema because that matter has been adjudicated, and any
claim related to phony e-mails is barred as to Defendant Neema by the doctrines of res
judicata and collateral estoppel.” Nonetheless, Martinez did include Neema as a
defendant in his second amended complaint and, after a hearing on December 1, the trial
court ordered Martinez to pay Neema sanctions in the amount of Neema’s costs and
attorney fees “incurred as a result of having to respond” to that second amended
complaint. On February 27, 2012, the court entered an order awarding Neema attorney
fees and costs in the amount of $5,155.15, an amount consistent with Neema’s earlier
applications for such.
       On March 5, 2012, Martinez filed a notice of appeal from this order.
       In the meantime, on September 14, Neema had filed a motion for sanctions against
Martinez for the latter’s failure to admit in the course of discovery that Neema was not
involved in the phony e-mails that had been sent to Doane. Martinez opposed this motion
on November 17, and Neema replied to this opposition on November 21. On December
15, the trial court denied that motion.
       On January 31, 2012, Neema filed a notice of appeal from that order. (5 CT 856.)
       On March 20, 2012, this court issued an order consolidating all three of these
appeals.
                                    III. DISCUSSION
A.     The Trial Court’s Grant of Summary Judgment to Neema Was Proper
       We will deal first with the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
Neema. Under the de novo standard of review applicable to such rulings (see, e.g.,
Kasparian v. AvalonBay Communities, Inc. (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 11, 24), we have no
problem affirming this ruling. That is so principally because Martinez has provided no
factual record in either his five-volume appellant’s appendix (nor is there any in the
clerk’s transcript apparently ordered by Neema) which establishes that there was any
factual evidence overlooked by the trial court which proved—or for that matter even
suggested—that Neema was the author of the e-mails sent to Doane.



                                             4
       In arguing that there was, Martinez has supplied this court with briefs which (1)
contain few if any citations to the record provided us, (2) suggest that the record contains
factual material for which no citations are provided, and (3) omit many key procedural
and substantive facts from the record, matters which are contained in the clerk’s
transcript and a respondent’s appendix supplied by Neema.
       The law is clear that an in pro per party to an appeal is not entitled to any
“preferential consideration” but, rather, “ ‘is to be treated like any other party and is
entitled to the same, but no greater consideration than other litigants and attorneys.’
[Citation.]” (First American Title Co. v. Mirzaian (2003) 108 Cal.App.4th 956, 958, fn.
1, and cases cited therein.) Pursuant to this law we will analyze the arguments presented
by both parties in these consolidated appeals under these same standards.
       In his brief to us,4 Martinez devotes almost half of it to a recitation of the
procedural facts underlying these appeals. He then summarizes the merits of his case
thusly: “[T]his is a case clearly with merit, with evidence of tortious acts on behalf of
Defendant Neema and fellow conspirators that involved fraudulent impersonations,
hidden identities, and manipulative behavior, a case in which new evidence was still
being discovered and new parties being added when the motion [for summary judgment]
was filed.”
       Martinez then cites, and relies upon for several pages in his brief, the decision of
one of our sister courts in Bahl v. Bank of America (2001) 89 Cal.App.4th 389 (Bahl), in
arguing that, here, the trial court erred in not granting him a further continuance to
produce additional evidence in support of his opposition to Neema’s motion for summary
judgment. Indeed, the trial court’s denial of further continuances to Martinez regarding
his opposition to Neema’s motion for summary judgment in this (then) over one-year-old
case, is a principal ground for Martinez’s appeal.
       In Bahl, supra, 89 Cal.App.4th 389, the court reversed a grant of summary
judgment rendered by the trial court in favor of the defendant because, principally, the

       4
           Martinez addresses all three appeals in his one brief to us.


                                                5
trial court denied the opposing party’s request for a continuance to adduce additional
evidence in opposition. Bahl, however, does not aid Martinez. First of all, it was decided
before the 2002 amendments to section 437c, amendments which enlarged the time to file
an opposition to a motion for summary judgment from 28 to 75 days. (See § 437c, subd.
(a).) On that basis alone, it has been effectively distinguished by at least one later
decision. (See Cooksey v. Alexakis (2004) 123 Cal.App.4th 246, 260.)
       Second, a trial court’s decision not to grant a continuance under section 437c(h) is
reviewed for abuse of discretion. (See Knapp v. Doherty (2004) 123 Cal.App.4th 76,
100-102.) Particularly in view of the liberality shown Martinez by the trial court,5 it is
difficult if not impossible to find such an abuse here.
       Third, in Bahl the opposing party supported his request for a continuance with a
declaration under section 437c(h),6 which Martinez failed to do here. (See Bahl, supra,
89 Cal.App.4th at pp. 393 & 398.) The reason such a declaration is required is for the
party to “ ‘show that its proposed discovery would have led to “facts essential to justify
opposition.” ’ ” (Scott v. CIBA Vision Corp. (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th 307, 325-326.) As a
leading treatise has noted, this means that a party seeking a continuance must meet
several specific requirements. (See Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Procedure
Before Trial (The Rutter Group 2013) ¶ 10:207.15, p. 10-88, and cases cited therein.)
Martinez clearly did not do so here.
       Fourth and probably most importantly, as our colleagues in the Third District
wrote regarding Bahl: “Plaintiff relies on Bahl[, supra,] 89 Cal.App.4th 389, arguing that
a continuance is ‘virtually mandated upon a good faith showing that a continuance is
necessary to obtain facts essential to justify opposition’ to a summary judgment motion.

       5
        For example (1) its grant to Martinez of oral argument, although such had not
been timely requested by him, and (2) its grant to him of leave to file a second amended
complaint against defendants other than Neema.
       6
         Section 437c(h) provides that as and when affidavits are submitted showing “that
facts essential to justify opposition may exist but cannot, for reasons stated, then be
presented,” the court shall either deny the summary judgment motion or grant a
continuance to permit such evidence to be obtained. (§ 437c(h).)


                                              6
Plaintiff is correct that Bahl made that observation. For the purpose of this opinion, we
need not decide whether it is correct; for assuming that it is, the court's observation does
not aid plaintiff here. The virtual mandate to which plaintiff refers presupposes a good
faith showing that there are facts in opposition that may exist and a good faith showing
why those facts could not have been presented at the time of the hearing. Plaintiff has
made neither showing here, and the motion to continue was properly denied.” (Bushling
v. Fremont Medical Center (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 493, 512.)
       Precisely the same principle applies here: despite his voluminous pleadings in the
trial court, as that court found, Martinez presented no credible evidence to it showing that
Neema was (or was very likely) the author of the “phony” e-mails sent to Doane.
       First of all, Martinez had, during the course of the year-plus discovery, requested
information on Neema’s geographic locations when the “phony” e-mails were sent to
Doane. Neema supplied that information via responses to interrogatories, documents he
produced, and a declaration.
       Although, in his deposition, Martinez stated that he had evidence which placed
former co-defendant Quesenberry at or near some of those locations, he conceded that his
discovery had produced no such evidence as to Neema. Indeed, in his deposition answers
to seven separate and distinct questions posed to him by Neema’s counsel, Martinez
answered “No” or “Correct” to all of them, thus effectively confirming that he had no
evidence linking Neema to the fake Yahoo e-mails to Doane. And he also conceded that
he could not and did not challenge the authenticity of any of the documents produced by
Neema during the course of the extensive discovery in the litigation.
       Additionally, Neema’s filings during the course of that discovery made clear that
he did not know and had never met Quesenberry. Absolutely nothing in the over 500
hundred pages of documents filed by Martinez in the trial court is cited by him as
contradicting any of these important premises supporting the trial court’s ruling.
       Indeed, about the only specific item of proffered evidence cited by Martinez in
support of his claim that Neema (an individual with some sort of a French heritage) was
the author of the “phony” Yahoo e-mails to Doane was a declaration by an alleged


                                              7
linguistics expert from New York, one Robert Leonard. That individual opined that, after
reviewing those e-mails, he had concluded that it was a reasonable “hypothesis” that
someone with a French heritage might have been the author of the e-mails, i.e., that “the
distribution of the language data” suggests that such a “hypothesis” was superior to a
negative hypothesis regarding such a connection. The trial court correctly concluded that
this declaration was inadmissible because it was made in New York and did not state that
it was made pursuant to the laws of California. (See §§ 2013 & 2015.5 and Kulshrestha
v. First Union Commercial Corp. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 601, 609-612.)
       Beyond this, the only other evidence Martinez claims to have presented to the trial
court in support of his claim that Neema was the alleged author of the e-mails to Doane
were stated in his answers to Neema’s interrogatories. But all these statements did was
suggest that (1) Neema and Quesenberry possibly knew each other (a fact specifically
denied by Neema as noted above), (2) contrary to Neema’s sworn statements, Martinez
believed that Neema in fact had sent the e-mails and used a PDA, smart phone, or laptop,
and (3) both Neema and Quesenberry had dated Doane in the past.
       However, clearly all of this in no way amounts to credible evidence that Neema
was the author of the e-mails sent to Doane. At the most, it consists of theories and
arguable inferences that might be drawn from the evidence presented by Martinez. But
the law is clear that if only “inferences” are produced by a party opposing a motion for
summary judgment, “those inferences must be reasonably deducible from the evidence,
and not such as are derived from speculation, conjecture, imagination, or guesswork.”
(Joseph E. Di Loreto, Inc. v. O’Neill (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 149, 161; see also Annod
Corp. v. Hamilton & Samuels (2002) 100 Cal.App.4th 1286, 1298-1299 and Waschek v.
Department of Motor Vehicles (1997) 59 Cal.App.4th 640, 647.) As our Supreme Court
has made clear: “Speculation . . . is not evidence.” (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 864.)
       However, and very clearly, possible inferences based on speculation are all that
Martinez can and does cite in his opposition to Neema’s motion for summary judgment.
Such is clearly inadequate: when a party moving for summary judgment is confronted


                                             8
with an opposition which lacks supporting factual evidence, that party may argue that
absence of evidence-based opposition in support of its motion. The party opposing the
grant of summary judgment must then “ ‘set forth specific facts showing that there is a
genuine issue for trial.’ ” (Hunter v. Pacific Mechanical Corp. (1995) 37 Cal.App.4th
1282, 1286, disapproved on other grounds in Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co., supra, 25
Cal.4th at p. 855, fn. 23.) Put another way: “Once the burden shifts as a result of the
factually devoid discovery responses, the plaintiff must set forth the specific facts which
prove the existence of a triable issue of material fact.” (Union Bank v. Superior Court
(1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 573, 590; see also DiCola v. White Bros. Performance Products,
Inc. (2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 666, 667-683; McGonnell v. Kaiser Gypsum Co. (2002) 98
Cal.App.4th 1098, 1104; 6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Proceedings Without
Trial, §§ 240-242, pp. 685-688 and further authority cited therein.)
       Clearly, plaintiff Martinez did not meet this standard in his opposition to Neema’s
motion for summary judgment or in his brief to us. Thus, Martinez’s “Separate
Statement of Undisputed Material Facts in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for
Summary Judgment,” filed by him on June 8, consisted of 22 pages of allegedly
“supporting evidence,” but with, in actuality, little if any supporting evidence cited.
Thus, most of these supposed statements of fact contain no citations to any evidence
adduced during discovery; they are followed by two pages of nothing but citations to
depositions, etc., but with absolutely no attempt to suggest what items of the voluminous
evidence cited supports which of the previous factual assertions.
       For example, the principal statement of undisputed fact asserted by Neema (No. 2
in this pleading) was that “Plaintiff’s attempts to locate Defendant Neema relative to the
subject emails and logins have failed; Neema was not present in any of the identified
locations.” Martinez’s response to assertion No. 2—which he thereafter repeatedly cites
to in his later “responses”—consists of approximately 14 pages of factual statements,
which are then followed by two pages of citations to depositions and other discovery
documents. But, notably, at no point does Martinez attempt to link the two, i.e., a reader
of these pages has absolutely no idea which of the factual assertions are supported by


                                              9
which of the evidentiary citations. Thus, this pleading totally fails to satisfy any rational
test of an understandable opposition to a motion for summary judgment.
       Martinez’s brief to this court fares no better. Its first 24 pages consist of a
statement of facts and a “Statement of Appealability.” The first six pages of the
“Discussion” portion discusses the Bahl case (discussed and distinguished, ante) and
contends that that case supported his need for a continuance in the trial court. However,
in none of these pages is there a single citation to the record; the only citations of any sort
in those pages are to Bahl and one other case about the need for a “ ‘compassionate
response to a request for a continuance.’ ” (Quoting Lerma v. County of Orange (2004)
120 Cal.App.4th 709, 714.) The next four-plus pages are devoted to the argument that
the trial court’s grant of summary judgment “is ambiguous” because it does not state
whether its finding of “insufficient evidence” refers to the evidence plaintiff had already
submitted or the evidence “Plaintiff did not have time to submit . . . [or] was ruled
inadmissible by the court.” But, again, Martinez cites to no evidence, in either category,
which negated the trial court’s ruling except its ruling—noted above—regarding the
declaration of the reputed New York linguistics expert.
       About 12 pages of “ARGUMENT” follow and, in them, plaintiff Martinez asserts
no less than eight separate and distinct arguments regarding how the trial court erred in,
e.g., denying his request for a continuance to introduce additional evidence, his request to
introduce oral evidence at the hearing, and his request to amend his pleadings, and also
denying admission of the declaration of the linguistics expert and in imposing costs on
him. But, other than another citation to the declaration of linguistics expert Leonard, no
evidence in the record is cited.
       In sum, in neither his argument to the trial court nor his brief to us does Martinez
cite any evidence (other than the declaration of Leonard which, as noted above, was
excluded under section 2015.5) which, even slightly, supports his argument that there
was tangible evidence in the record that Neema was, or even very possibly was, the
author of the “phony” e-mails to Doane. We thus have no problem in sustaining the trial
court’s grant of summary judgment to Neema.


                                              10
B.     The Sanctions Award to Neema Is Supported By the Record
       The operative standard of review of a trial court’s order either granting or denying
sanctions against a litigant is abuse of discretion. (See, e.g., Sabek, Inc. v. Engelhard
Corp. (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 992, 1001, and cases cited therein; and Kojababian v.
Genuine Home Loans, Inc. (2009) 174 Cal.App.4th 408, 422.) We find no such abuse of
discretion by the court regarding its award of attorney fees and costs to Neema.
       We affirm the trial court’s order awarding attorney fees and costs to Neema in the
amount of $5,155.15 because of Martinez’s very obvious failure to follow the trial court’s
specific direction that he not name Neema as a defendant in Martinez’s second amended
complaint. Indeed, the trial court made its position on this subject clear to Martinez not
once, but twice. The basis for these orders was the trial court’s finding that Martinez,
despite being given the opportunity, had failed to prove any tortious conduct by Neema.
Martinez’s failure to adhere to these very specific orders of the trial court establishes that
it was clearly not an abuse of discretion for the trial court to award these sanctions against
Martinez.
       This disposes of Martinez’s appeal, and we turn to that of Neema.
Neema’s Appeal
C.     The Trial Court’s Denial of Discovery Sanctions to Neema Was
       Not an Abuse of Discretion
       As noted, after obtaining the summary judgment in his favor, Neema filed a
motion for sanctions against Martinez based on his failure to admit that Neema was not
involved in the e-mails sent to Doane. The specific background on this was that
on or about March 29, 2010, about six weeks after Martinez had filed his original
complaint and two weeks before he had filed his first amended complaint—in short,
before the case was even at issue—Neema served a set of Requests for Admission on
Martinez. The first two requests asked Martinez to admit that Neema “did not create
email accounts in your name” and did not send the four e-mails attached to Martinez’s
complaint. The following month, Martinez filed denials of these two requests for
admission.


                                              11
       Over a year and a half later, after the discovery and litigation described above and
the trial court’s order granting Neema’s motion for summary judgment, Neema filed a
motion for sanctions in the amount of $86,078.58, i.e., the “total amount of fees and costs
incurred since the date of receipt of Plaintiff’s denial of the above-quoted Requests for
Admission.” Neema’s motion was based on section 2033.420, which essentially provides
that if a responding party fails to admit something which the propounding party later
proves to be true, the propounding party may move the court to order the responding
party to pay reasonable expenses incurred in making that proof, including reasonable
attorney’s fees. And the section expressly provides that “(b) The court shall make this
order unless it finds any of the following: . . . [¶] (3) The party failing to make the
admission had reasonable ground to believe that that party would prevail on the matter.
[¶] (4) There was other good reason for the failure to admit.”
       On November 17, 2011, Martinez filed his opposition to that motion, which
opposition included a declaration of Martinez and several attachments. The motion was
heard on December 1, 2011, before Judge Broderick, who had been involved in the
litigation since before the motion for summary judgment was heard. Judge Broderick
heard extensive argument on the motion, as discussed in detail below. On December 15,
he entered an order denying Neema’s request for sanctions. In so doing, he stated:
“Although the Court ultimately granted the motion for summary judgment in favor of
defendant Neema, it does not necessarily follow that the plaintiff did not have a
‘reasonable good faith belief’ that he would be able to prove his theories of liability
against Neema at trial.” Judge Broderick then cited and discussed two cases arising
under the governing statute where sanctions had been awarded, but noted that in both
there was no arguable issue (because of expert testimony developed in the course of the
litigation) about the presence or absence of liability.7 He then concluded his opinion


       7
        Those cases are Garcia v. Hyster Co. (1994) 28 Cal.App.4th 724 (Garcia) and
Barnett v. Penske Truck Leasing Co. (2001) 90 Cal.App.4th 494 (Barnett). Both cases
were cited to the trial court by Neema and, as noted, were specifically addressed and
distinguished by both its tentative decision and its formal ruling. Indeed, the facts and

                                              12
denying the requested sanctions by stating: “The test is not whether Mr. Martinez was
ultimately able to prove his theories. Rather, the test is whether at the time the plaintiff
refused to admit [the] request for admissions he held a reasonable good faith belief that
he would prevail at trial on those issues,” citing, in support of his conclusion, the case of
Laabs v. City of Victorville (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 1242, 1277 (Laabs).
       In Laabs, the Fourth District affirmed a denial of a request for sanctions under
section 2033.420. In so doing, it first noted that, under that statute, a court should not
award sanctions if it finds that “ ‘the party failing to make the admission had reasonable
ground to believe that that party would prevail on the matter.’ ” (Laabs, supra, 163
Cal.App.4th at p. 1276.) The opinion then concluded that, in the case before it, the trial
“court could have easily concluded that at the time plaintiff refused to admit such matters
she reasonably held a good faith belief that she would prevail at trial on these issues.
Therefore, the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the City’s motion with respect
to these matters.” (Id. at p. 1277.)
       The Laabs court cited and relied upon an earlier decision interpreting and applying
the predecessor statute to section 2033.420, subdivision (b): Brooks v. American
Broadcasting Co. (1986) 179 Cal.App.3d 500 (Brooks). In Brooks, Division Four of this
court affirmed a trial court’s order partially granting and partially denying a motion
seeking expenses incurred by defendants in a personal injury case after the plaintiff had
denied two specific requests for admission. The holding of Brooks which the Laabs court
found particularly pertinent to the issue before it was this: “In evaluating whether a
‘good reason’ exists for denying a request to admit, ‘a court may properly consider

holdings of both cases also support the trial court’s discretionary ruling here. In Garcia,
the request for admission was served 21 months after the complaint was filed and after
the completion of much discovery, including that which demonstrated employer
negligence. Despite that, the party which would be adversely affected by that evidence
denied employer negligence. In Barnett, the plaintiff later admitted that the accident had
not occurred as he had stated, and on which his earlier denial of the request for admission
was based. Here, by contrast, the request for admission was filed and answered almost
immediately after the original complaint was filed; in the interim, Martinez never
changed his version of events.


                                              13
whether at the time the denial was made the party making the denial held a reasonably
entertained good faith belief that the party would prevail on the issue at trial.’ ” (Laabs,
supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1276, quoting Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 511.)
       As both the Laabs and Brooks decisions confirmed, our standard of review of such
a ruling by the trial court is abuse of discretion. (See also Wimberly v. Derby Cycle Corp.
(1997) 56 Cal.App.4th 618, 637, fn. 10.) It is not, even in part—as Neema contends in
his brief to us—de novo review.8 And we find no abuse here.
       The record demonstrates that Judge Broderick considered this issue carefully, both
prior to oral argument, when he had issued a tentative decision, and at the hearing. Thus,
for example, in the discussion of this tentative holding with counsel for Neema at oral
argument, Judge Broderick first noted that the fact that, long after the filing of the
requests for admission by Neema and their denial by Martinez (both in early 2010), the
grant of Neema’s motion for summary judgment (in August 2011) involved “two separate
situations” and “two distinct time periods,” thus suggesting that “a different analysis” is
required regarding the reasonableness of Martinez’s denial of the requests for admission
and his later opposition to Neema’s motion for summary judgment.
       This observation provoked a questioning response from Neema’s counsel that
“what we’re supposed to be asking is what is the reasonable basis for his belief?” In
responding to that question, Judge Broderick first noted that a declaration filed by
Martinez specified (1) several conversations between the parties as to the various
controversial e-mails, (2) the fact that Ms. Doan [sic] had not “obtained an order to stay
away,” and (3) “the declaration of this Robert Leonard Ph.D.”9 In addition, the record


       8
        In support of this assertion, Neema cites Ghirardo v. Antonioli (1994) 8 Cal.4th
791, 799, but that case did not address at all the standard of review of a trial court order
regarding the award or denial of sanctions under section 2033.420—or any other statute.
       9
        The trial court was possibly referring to the fact that Martinez’s earlier filings in
support of his motion for reconsideration of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment
included a revised version of the Leonard declaration, this time verified in California, but
substantively the same. It may also have considered the fact that, along with that filing,
Martinez requested the trial court to allow him to take the deposition of Leonard.


                                              14
included Martinez’s declaration that had been submitted in opposition to the motion for
summary judgment which testified to some events that had occurred before he had filed
this lawsuit—and of which he was aware at the time he denied the requests for admission
early in this lawsuit.10
       Judge Broderick then went on to note that in Laabs the trial court “did not make a
finding” as to the truth or not of the specific request for admission. And, he continued:
“In that matter, the party had held a good faith belief. The appellate court even goes
further and says the court could have concluded that at the time the plaintiff refused to
admit such matters, she held a good faith belief that she would prevail at trial on these
issues. I agree with you as we both talked about these cases there is not a lot of cases that
articulate what that code section means. I was surprised to see how far this appellate
court was willing to extend this analysis. The trial court did not even make that specific
finding. The appellate court says but the trial could have, so there is not going to be
sanctions issued. They go on to clarify that it is her reasonably held good faith belief that
she would prevail not that a reasonable person or reasonable attorney.”
       After a response to this from Neema’s counsel, Judge Broderick suggested that,
even if there is later a defense verdict, the defendant is not “automatically entitled to
attorney fees.” Rather, “The analysis is at the time they denied the request for admission,
what was taking place at that time.” Neema’s counsel responded by inquiring, “[I]f the
case is dismissed on the ground of absolutely no evidence whatsoever, then how can you
say at any time there was an objectively reasonable belief that he’d win?” And Judge
Broderick responded: “It is not whether I would have had an objective reasonable belief

       10
           For example, Martinez testified that: “1. Defendant Neema approached me a
few weeks before the first impersonation and was noticeably upset that Ms. Doane had
not obtained and [sic] order or a stay away agreement against me. [¶] 2. In addition to
being noticeably upset, in the same conversation defendant Neema asked me questions
about Doane’s estranged husband, such as where he worked and lived and what he did for
a living. . . . [¶] 3. A few weeks after the conversation in which defendant Neema asked
me about Doane’s estranged husband, Mr. Doane received the first email impersonation
which included many of the details that defendant had learned from our previous
conversations.”


                                              15
or whether you or your client would have. The Labbs [sic] case makes it clear it is what
that party’s reasonable belief [is]. In the Labbs [sic] case, it doesn’t talk about whether
they had sufficient evidence. It doesn’t talk about whether they had the witnesses and
documents to prove their case. They talk about whether the plaintiff held a good faith
belief that she would prevail at trial on these issues.”
       After a few further comments by both Neema’s counsel and Martinez, Judge
Broderick reaffirmed his ruling denying Neema’s request for expenses in proving his
case, stating: “[T]he court looks to the appellate courts and their interpretation of the
statute for guidance. In this matter the court has identified just by way of a couple of
examples. The court’s finding that Mr. Martinez at the time he denied the request for
admission held a reasonable good faith belief that he would prevail at trial. Again
whether he ultimately does so is not the issue or whether others would agree with him
that he had the basis to hold that belief is not the issue. It is a reasonable person’s
standard. It’s the standard of the person who is sitting down reading the request for
admission and denying it. Therefore the court will deny the request for sanctions.”
       Neema argues that Judge Broderick abused his discretion when he applied “a
Subjective Standard of Reasonableness” to evaluate Martinez’s belief that he would
prevail at trial. He argues that such should be evaluated based on an objective view of
the reasonableness of Martinez’ belief that he would prevail. In other words, as we
understand the argument, the test must be an objective one. This is clearly the view of
our dissenting colleague, who urges that some opinion must come out and point blank say
so. We disagree.
       As our colleagues pointed out in Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at page 508,
“With the exception of several minor, nonsubstantive language revisions, section 2034,
subdivision (c), has remained the same since it was enacted as part of the Discovery Act
in 1957. (Stats. 1957, ch. 1904, § 3, p. 3336.)” The statute says what it says, and
apparently has served its purpose well, yielding a grand total of two cases in 55 years.
Put otherwise, courts apparently have not had much trouble applying the language of
section 2033.420, subdivision (b): whether the responding party had reasonable ground


                                              16
that it might prevail. As the leading practical treatise puts it, the “responding party may
avoid sanctions by establishing that it had a reasonable basis for believing it would
prevail on the issue at time of trial, and relied thereon in denying the RFA. [Code Civ.
Proc., § 2033.420, subd. (b)(3).] [¶] The responding party must show that at the time of
denial, it held a reasonably entertained (i.e., based on admissible evidence) good faith
belief that it would prevail on the issue at trial. [See Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p.
1276.]” (Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Proc. Before Trial (The Rutter
Group rev. #1 2012) ¶ 8:1408, p. 8G-39.)
       Here, Judge Broderick concluded that “[A]t the time [Martinez] denied the request
for admission [he] held a reasonable good faith belief that he would prevail at trial.
Again whether he ultimately does so is not the issue or whether others would agree with
him that he had the basis to hold that belief is not the issue. It is a reasonable person’s
standard.” The two most applicable authorities, Laabs and Brooks, clearly support this
view, as they make clear that the test is whether the denier of the request for admission
held a good faith belief in the substance and basis of his denial.11 Here, as discussed at
length above, Judge Broderick carefully followed the law as set forth in Laabs. That is
what he was compelled to do. (See Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 57
Cal.2d 450, 455.) It was hardly an abuse of discretion.
       Judicial discretion has been described as “the sound judgment of the court, to be
exercised according to the rules of law.” (Lent v. Tilson (1887) 72 Cal. 404, 422.) This


       11
          The Brooks court, in the denial of sanctions regarding one request for admission
framed the issue even more narrowly, i.e., whether the denying party “had a sufficiently
good reason to deny request No. 51.” (Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at pp. 512-513.)
And, unlike our dissenting colleague, we find nothing in either Laabs or Brooks which
“stand squarely for the proposition that ‘ “the reasonableness that justifies a party’s
refusal to admit a request for admissions under section 2033.420 is objective.” ’ ” (Dis.
opn. at p. 4.) Our review of those opinions discloses that neither the words “objective” or
“subjective” were used therein. Rather, and as noted above, both opinions repeatedly
stated that the test was whether the party denying the requests for admission entertained,
at the time of the denial, that such was based on a “good faith belief.” Which was
precisely the standard relied upon by the trial court in its order here.


                                              17
“ ‘implies absence of arbitrary determination, capricious disposition or whimsical
thinking.’ ” (In re Cortez (1971) 6 Cal.3d 78, 85.) We discussed the concept in People v.
Jacobs (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 728, 736: “Various definitions and principles describing
the abuse of discretion standard of review have been stated and repeated in numerous
cases, such as in Blank v. Kirwan (1985) 39 Cal.3d 311, 331, that we will set aside a trial
court ruling only upon a showing of ‘ “ ‘a clear case of abuse’ ” ’ and ‘ “ ‘a miscarriage
of justice.’ ” ’ As to what is required to show such abuse, it has been said that a trial
court abuses its discretion only when its ruling ‘ “ ‘fall[s] “outside the bounds of
reason.” ’ ” [Citation.]’ (People v. Benavides (2005) 35 Cal.4th 69, 88; accord, Denham
v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 566 [abuse of discretion requires a showing that
the trial court ‘ “exceed[ed] the bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being
considered” ’].) More colorfully, it has been said that discretion is abused only when the
trial court’ s ruling is arbitrary, whimsical, or capricious. (People v. Linkenauger (1995)
32 Cal.App.4th 1603, 1614; People v. Branch (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 274, 282; see
People v. Giminez (1975) 14 Cal.3d 68, 72 [‘ “capricious disposition or whimsical
thinking” ’].)” We would be hard pressed to apply any of those adjectives to Judge
Broderick here.
                                    IV. DISPOSITION
       The judgment and orders of the trial court are all affirmed.




                                                   _________________________
                                                   Haerle, J.


I concur:


_________________________
Richman, J.




                                              18
Concurring and dissenting opinion of Kline, P.J.
       I concur in all portions of the majority opinion save that sustaining the trial court’s
order denying Neema discovery sanctions against Martinez.
       The chief claim Neema advances in his appeal is that, as he titles the argument in
his opening brief, “The Trial Court Abused its Discretion When it Applied a Subjective
Standard of Reasonableness to Measure Martinez’[s] Belief That He Would Prevail at
Trial.” According to appellant, the trial court reasoned that as long as Martinez
genuinely believed that his belief he could establish Neema impersonated him online was
reasonable, “that was the end of the inquiry.” Appellant says this is not the standard, and
applying it “was an abuse of the trial court’s discretion,” as the subjective test the court
employed “essentially eviscerates the remedy provided for in [Code of Civil Procedure
section] 2033.420.” As appellant says, ”[a]ny party facing sanctions would only have to
say that he thought his belief that he would prevail was reasonable when he denied the
requests for admissions, no matter how unsupported that belief may have been by any
evidence.”
       Unfathomably, my colleagues refuse to candidly address this central claim or even
acknowledge that the trial court applied a subjective test, as I believe it clearly did, which
was a manifest abuse of discretion.
       The majority states that Code of Civil Procedure section 2033.420, subdivision
(b)(3)1 “says what it says, and apparently has served its purpose well, yielding a grand
total of two cases in 55 years. Put otherwise, courts apparently have not had much
trouble applying the language of [that statute]: whether the responding party had
reasonable ground that it might prevail. As the leading practical treatise puts it, the
‘responding party may avoid sanctions by establishing that it had a reasonable basis for

       1
           All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

                                               1
believing it would prevail on the issue at time of trial, and relied thereon in denying the
RFA. [Citation.] [¶] The responding party must show that at the time of denial, it held a
reasonably entertained (i.e., based on admissible evidence) good faith belief that it would
prevail on the issue at trial. [Citations.]” (Maj. opn. at p. 17.)
       Of course section 2033.420 “says what it says,” as do all statutes; and it makes
sense only if reasonableness is to be assessed objectively. Courts have had “no trouble”
applying the language of the statute because it would be virtually useless if the standard
of reasonableness were subjective, and all that was required to avoid sanctions was a
good faith belief one would prevail. The statute has yielded “a grand total of two cases in
55 years” (maj. opn. at p. 16) (both of which apply an objective standard) only because
the proper standard, which has never been disputed, is so obvious that appellate courts
were not called upon to explicitly confirm it. Moreover, neither Labs v. City of
Victorville (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 1242 (Labs), nor Brooks v. American Broadcasting
Co. (1986) 179 Cal.App.3d 500 (Brooks), nor any other case, has ever said, as do my
colleagues, that the test is merely that the denier of the request for admission held a good
faith belief in the substance and basis of his denial (maj. opn. at p. 17, and fn. 11), which,
as the majority acknowledges, “was precisely the standard relied upon by the trial court
in its order here” (maj. opn. at p. 17, fn. 11).
       It is a complete mystery to me why the majority is unwilling to state that the
standard of reasonableness must be objective; recognize that a subjective standard was
improperly applied in this case; and simply remand the matter to the trial court to apply
the proper standard.
       The majority avoids the simple issue Neema presents by theorizing that the trial
court found Martinez’s belief he would prevail at trial reasonable on the basis of
admissible evidence referred to in the declaration Martinez submitted in opposition to
Neema’s motion for sanctions. As will be seen, the trial court made no such evidentiary
finding; indeed, the only explanation given by the trial court for its reasonableness
                                               2
determination was that Martinez’s subjective belief he would prevail was held in good
faith, and under Laabs that was a sufficient basis upon which to deny Neema’s motion for
sanctions.
                                              I.
       The majority’s attempt to obscure the trial court’s application of a subjective
standard fails. Early on at the hearing on Neema’s motion for sanctions, the court
indicated that, in its view, the opinion in Laabs, supra,163 Cal.App.4th 1242, required
only “that at the time the plaintiff refused to admit such matters, she had a good faith
belief that she would prevail at trial . . . .” Though some of the court’s language is
confusing, one thing is clear: in the mind of the court, a good faith belief was sufficient
to prevent an award of sanctions, even if it was not based on a “reasonable ground,” i.e.,
objectively unreasonable. For example, noting that although the plaintiff in Laabs was
deemed to have held a good faith belief she would prevail at trial,” the trial court
expressed “surprise[]” at “how far this appellate court was willing to extend this
analysis,” because it went on “to clarify that it is her reasonably held good faith belief
that she would prevail, not that [of] a reasonable person or reasonable attorney.”
(Italics added.) As the court stated, the issue “is not whether I would have had an
objective reasonable belief or whether your client would have [such a belief].”
According to the trial court, “whether others would agree with [Martinez] that he had the
basis to hold that belief is not the issue,” because the standard is that “of the person who
is sitting down reading the request for admission and denying it.”
       A subjective test of reasonableness is supported neither by reason nor the text of
the pertinent statute, which requires the party failing to make the admission to have a
“reasonable ground to believe that that party would prevail on the matter.” (§ 2033.420,
subd. (b)(3), italics added.) If reasonableness need not be objective, and a good faith
belief sufficed to bar sanctions, fools would be franchised.


                                              3
       According to the majority, “nothing in either Laabs or Brooks” stands for the
proposition that “ ‘the reasonableness that justifies a party’s refusal to admit a request for
admissions under section 2033.420 is objective.’ ” (Maj. opn. at p. 17, fn. 11.) They
have not read the opinions carefully.
       Laabs is instructive in several ways.
       In that case, a passenger in a car injured in a collision sued a city alleging her
injuries were caused by a dangerous condition of public property under Government
Code sections 830 and 835. She argued that the placement of a light pole too close to the
roadway contributed to the severity of her injuries. The trial court granted the city’s
motion for summary judgment and subsequently denied the city’s motion for defense
costs under section 1038, and for expenses incurred in proving matters that the passenger
had denied as discovery sanctions under section 2033.420. (Laabs, supra, 163
Cal.App.4th 1242.)
       Section 1038, which is similar in some respects to section 2033.420, provides that
in certain proceedings, the court, on motion of the defendant, shall, at the time of granting
various forms of summary relief, “determine whether or not the plaintiff . . . brought the
proceeding with reasonable cause and in good faith belief there was a justifiable
controversy under the facts and law which warranted the filing of the complaint . . . . If
the court should determine that the proceeding was not brought in good faith and with
reasonable cause . . . the court shall render judgment in favor of [the defendant] in the
amount of all reasonable and necessary defense costs, in addition to those courts normally
awarded to the prevailing party.” (§ 1038, subd. (a).) Referring to this statutory
language, and citing cases, the Laabs court stated that in order to deny a motion for fees
under section 1038, “the court must find the plaintiff brought or maintained the action (1)
in the good faith belief in the action’s justifiability, and (2) with objective reasonable
cause.” (Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1271, italics added.)


                                               4
       The issue in Laabs with respect to section 1038 arose from the fact that the trial
court had not expressly found that the plaintiff acted “in the good faith belief in the
actions justifiability” and “with objective reasonable cause,” and identified the basis of
the reasonable belief. (Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1271.) Therefore, one of the
issues in the case was whether the requirement that “that the court make the required
good faith and reasonable cause determinations [means] that the court is further required
to explicitly state such determinations in the record.” (Id. at p. 1272.) The court
answered the question in the negative, stating: “Although the court did not expressly
state its finding regarding the issues involved in the motion, neither the statute nor other
authority required it to do so. Thus, based upon the doctrine of implied findings and the
fundamental rules of appellate review upon which it is based we are required to infer any
factual determinations necessary to support the order.” Over the dissent of Justice
Hollenhorst, the Laabs majority simply inferred that the trial court had determined “that
that action was brought in good faith and reasonable cause” (id. at p. 1273), and on the
basis of that inference concluded that the city’s motion for fee under section 1038 was
properly denied.
       The Laabs court then turned its attention to section 2033.420, the statute of
concern here. The plaintiff opposed the city’s motion for sanctions under that statute on
the ground that the admissions sought were not matters of substantial importance
(§ 2033.420, subd. (b)(2)) and, if they were, that she “ ‘had good reason to deny several
of the requests.’ ” (Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1276; § 2033.420, subd. (b)(3).)
As in applying section 1038, the trial court applied section 2033.420 without making any
explicit findings whether, as the plaintiff claimed, the claims were either “of no
substantial importance” to the case, or the plaintiff “had reasonable ground to believe
[she] would prevail on the matter.” Also over the dissent of Justice Hollenhorst, the
majority solved this problem by imputing the requisite findings to the trial court. With
respect to three of the requested admissions, the Laabs majority determined that “[t]he
                                              5
trial court could reasonably have concluded that [said admissions] were not central to the
disposition of the case” (Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1276, italics added), and
that, with respect to the remaining requested admissions, the trial court “could have easily
concluded” that the plaintiff “reasonably held a good faith belief that she would prevail at
trial on these issues.” (Id. at p. 1277, italics added.)
       Justice Hollenhorst dissented from the orders applying sections 1038 and
2033.420 “[b]ecause the trial court failed to state whether or not it had found that Plaintiff
brought or maintained her action in the good faith belief in the action’s justifiability and
with objective reasonable cause” (Laabs, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1290, dis. opn. of
Hollenhorst, Acting P.J.) and without “stating any reasons.” (Id. at p. 1291, dis. opn. of
Hollenhorst, Acting P.J.)
       As the trial court in this case also made no express factual findings—apparently
interpreting Laabs as relieving it of that responsibility—my colleagues, like the Laabs
majority, fill the void by implying the requisite finding. Laabs does not, however, justify
use of the doctrine of implied findings in the circumstances of this case, which are very
different from those in Laabs.
       In Laabs the trial court provided no reason to think its determination was based on
an erroneous (i.e., subjective) standard of reasonableness, and under fundamental rules of
appellate review, the reviewing court was therefore justified in assuming it applied the
correct standard. In this case, however, as the previously quoted language of the trial
court makes clear, the court applied an erroneous standard. Fundamental rules of
appellate review and the doctrine of implied findings cannot be used to sustain such an
abuse of discretion.
       In short, Laabs does not, as my colleagues claim, “clearly support” their opinion;
and neither does Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d 500, which they also rely upon. Brooks
simply says, in language quoted in Laabs, that in determining whether a “good reason[]”
exists for denying a request to admit, “a court may properly consider whether at the time
                                               6
the denial was made the party making the denial held a reasonably entertained good faith
belief that the party would prevail on the issue at trial.” (Id. at p. 511, italics added.)
Laabs and Brooks both squarely stand for the unremarkable proposition that the
reasonableness that justifies a party’s refusal to admit a request for admissions under
section 2033.420 is objective. The fact that neither Laabs nor Brooks uses the word
“objective” or “subjective” provides no reason to think, as do my colleagues, that a
subjective standard is appropriate. (See maj. opn. at p. 17, fn. 11.)
       Because the trial court’s application of a subjective standard of reasonableness

constituted a manifest abuse of discretion, I would remand the matter to the trial court for

reconsideration of Neema’s motion for sanctions pursuant to the proper, objective, standard of

reasonableness.

                                                II.
       The majority’s reasons for affirming the denial of sanctions do not stand up to
scrutiny. Though unclear, the majority opinion appears to uphold the trial court’s ruling
on two grounds: First, that Martinez denied the two requests for admissions very early in
the litigation, before he had time to seek and obtain discovery; second, that the trial court
relied on factors Martinez identified in his declaration in opposition to Neema’s motion,
which provided a reasonable basis upon which Martinez could believe he would be able
to show that Neema injuriously impersonated him online.
       The trial court did not rely on either of these factors, and neither stands up to
scrutiny.
       The first factor ignores the lengthy discovery and other investigations of Neema
undertaken by Martinez, or others acting at his request, long before he filed this action
against Neema. As for the Martinez declaration, the record fails to show that any of
Martinez’s factual representations played any role in the trial court’s denial of Neema’s
motion for sanctions. I address the two factors in turn.


                                                7
                                             A.
       Preliminarily, it is clear that “[a] party responding to requests for admissions has a
duty to make a reasonable investigation to ascertain the facts even though the party has
no personal knowledge of the matter when the party has available sources of information
as to the matters involved in such requests for admissions. [Citations.] Thus, if a party
denies a request for admission (of substantial importance) in circumstances where the
party lacked personal knowledge but had available sources of information and failed to
make a reasonable investigation to ascertain the facts, such failure will justify an award
of expenses under section 2034, subdivision (c).” (Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at
p. 510.) Moreover, as Justice Sabraw pointed out in Brooks, it is not “enough for the
party making the denial to ‘hotly contest’ the issue. . . . there must be some reasonable
basis for contesting the issue in question before sanctions can be avoided.” (Id. at
p. 511.)
       There are, however, circumstances in which a requested admission may be
reasonably denied even though hindsight shows it to be unreasonable. Thus, very early in
litigation, before significant discovery has been undertaken, it is ordinarily possible for a
plaintiff to reasonably believe he would be able to adduce evidence that would support
his assertions though subsequent developments show the belief to have been
unreasonable. A plaintiff should be provided some time in which to produce such
evidence. As has been said, “[s]ometimes a party justifiably denied a request for
admission based upon the information available at the time of the denial, but later learns
of additional facts or acquires information which would have called for the request to be
admitted if the information had been known at the time of the denial. If such a party
thereafter advises the party that propounded the request for admission that the denial was
in error or should be modified, a court should consider this factor in assessing whether
there were no good reasons for the denial.” (Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 510, fn.
omitted, citing Garrison v. Warner Brothers Pictures (9th Cir. 1955) 226 F.2d 354, 356.)
                                              8
       There are, however, no such extenuating circumstances here.
       As the majority explains, Neema’s motion for sanctions was based on Martinez’s
refusal to admit that Neema “did not create e-mail accounts in [his] name,” and “did not
send the e-mails attached as Exhibits A, B, C, and D to [his] complaint.” As the trial
judge knew, with the help of a private investigator and an attorney, Martinez had been
diligently investigating Neema’s online conduct for more than a year before he filed the
present action. Much of his investigation was conducted in the form of discovery in a
judicial proceeding relating in some ways to this one. Before he commenced this lawsuit,
Martinez had been sued by Kimberley Doane for harassment. In defending himself
against Doane’s claims (some of which he felt should have been made against Neema),
Martinez took Neema’s deposition, and in February and June of 2009—a year before he
filed the complaint herein—Martinez filed deposition subpoenas for the production of
business records from Neema’s internet service provider, Yahoo, seeking disclosure of
any internet accounts possibly maintained or used by Neema to impersonate Martinez in
e-mails to Doane. The voluminous information Martinez obtained from these and other
efforts, which was filed with the trial court in this case in connection with Neema’s
motion for summary judgment, demonstrably failed to show either that Neema created e-
mail accounts in Martinez’s name, or that Neema sent Doane the e-mails attached to
Martinez’s complaint, or to corroborate any of Martinez’s other suspicions regarding
Neema’s online activities.
       The information Martinez possessed before he sued Neema was alone sufficient to
provide a reasonable person in his position substantial reason to appreciate and
acknowledge his inability to show that Neema created e-mails in his name or sent the e-
mails attached to Martinez’s complaint, which was necessary in order for him to prevail
in this action.
       But there is more. Prior to the time Neema requested the admissions at issue,
Martinez had been authoritatively informed by multiple knowledgeable public agencies
                                             9
that his prodigious efforts to establish that Neema had impersonated him online had
failed and were not worth pursuing.
       In April and May 2009, Martinez provided the District Attorney of Marin County
and the San Anselmo Police Department all of the information he and his private
investigator had obtained from Yahoo and other sources assertedly supporting Martinez’s
theory that Neema had created e-mail accounts in Martinez’s name which he had used to
send Kimberley Doane the four e-mails attached to Martinez’s complaint. After
reviewing the information, both agencies concluded that the information provided no
support for Martinez’s suspicions nor even warranted further investigation.
       The San Anselmo Police Department prepared a six-page single-spaced analysis of
Martinez’s evidence. After concluding that “there is no concrete evidence linking any of
the persons on the list that Martinez provided, particularly Neema, who Martinez suspects
was the main culprit in this case,” the police department informed Martinez that “there is
no more the Law Enforcement community can do in regards to your case until evidence
is produced that links Neema or another suspect to the crime. . . . [¶] If at any time in the
future, you can provide evidence that links Neema or another person to this crime I would
be more than willing to revisit the case . . . . Martinez never provided any such evidence,
and the police never conducted any further investigation.
       After Martinez complained about the police department’s adverse conclusion, the
department gave the information Martinez had assembled to the Northern California
Computer Crimes Task Force for its independent review. After reviewing the
information given Martinez by Yahoo, and other information Martinez had produced, the
Chief Inspector for the Task Force, Carl Chapman, agreed that the materials not only
failed to show any evidence Neema had impersonated Martinez online, but failed to
justify any further investigation of the allegation.
       Although this is a civil, not a criminal proceeding, Martinez could not prevail in
this action without the evidence Neema asked him to admit he was unable to acquire after
                                              10
conducting a year-long investigation with the assistance of a private investigator and an
attorney, and use of the judicial discovery process.
       In short, as the trial court was aware, at the time he denied Neema’s requests for
admissions, Martinez had long known that multiple law enforcement agencies, including
one specializing in computer crime, considered his prolonged efforts to inculpate Neema
quixotic. Martinez’s consistent inability, despite monumental efforts, to produce such
evidence would have led a reasonable person to conclude he could not prevail in this civil
action for online defamation.
                                              B.
       The majority refers to the fact that at the hearing on Neema’s motion for sanctions,
the trial court referred to Martinez’s declaration in opposition to the motion. (Maj. opn.
at pp. 14-15.) The trial court statement referenced by the majority is as follows:
“[Martinez] talks about Mr. Neema approaching him a few weeks before the first
impersonation. He thinks Mr. Neema is upset that Ms. Doan[e] has not obtained an order
to stay away. He goes further on to talk about a few weeks after this conversation, Ms.
Doan[e] received the first e-mail impersonation. He then goes on to talk about the e-
mails and then he goes on to talk about the declaration of this Robert Leonard Ph.D.” 2
The majority treats the matters adverted to by the court in the statement just quoted as
identifying the factual bases for its denial of Neema’s motion. This is not the case. First
of all, the court was clearly just summing up Martinez’s position; it was not making
findings. Moreover, the court never bothered to assess the probative value, if any, of the


       2
          Essentially, Dr. Leonard states in his declaration that his “preliminary analysis of
[Neema’s] known writing” compared with a single “e-mail impersonation” led him to
believe that a more thorough and complete analysis of other unidentified writings might
have been composed by the same person who composed another e-mail known to have
been sent to a third party by Neema. So far as the record shows, Dr. Leonard never
undertook the “thorough and complete analysis of the writings” he considered necessary
to test this hypothesis.

                                             11
factors mentioned in Martinez’s declaration. Indeed, the court never made any factual
findings in support of its ruling on the motion, save that Martinez’s (subjective) belief he
would prevail was held in good faith. The reason the court granted the motion was
essentially legal, not factual.
       Immediately after summing up Martinez’s declaration, the court commenced an
extended discussion of the Laabs opinion indicating that, in its view, the question was not
the reasonableness of the various factors Martinez gave for believing he would prevail,
but the good faith in which he held that belief. The court began by stating that “what I
found interesting about the [Laabs] case is the appellate court notes that the trial court did
not make a finding. In that matter, the party held a good faith belief. The appellate court
even goes farther and says the [trial] court could have concluded that at the time the
plaintiff refused to admit such matters, she held a good faith belief that she would prevail
at trial on these issues. . . . I was surprised to see how far this appellate court was willing
to extend this analysis. The trial court did not even make that specific finding [of
reasonableness]. . . . [because] it is her reasonably held good faith belief that she would
prevail not that [of] a reasonable person or reasonable attorney.”
       When counsel for Neema rhetorically asked “how can you say at any time there
was an objectively reasonable belief that he’d win?” the court responded: “It is not
whether I would have had an objective reasonable belief or whether you or your client
would have. The [Laabs] case makes it clear it is what that party’s reasonable belief
[sic]. In the [Laabs] case, it doesn’t talk about whether they had sufficient evidence. It
doesn’t talk about whether they had the witnesses and documents to prove their case.
They [only] talk about whether the plaintiff held a good faith belief that she would prevail
at trial on these issues.” (Italics added.)
       After further discussion, and hearing Martinez’s response to Neema’s motion,
(which response never referred to the Leonard declaration), the court denied Neema’s
motion and made clear that it did so in reliance on “the appellate courts and their
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interpretation of the statute” and specifically the “[Laabs] versus City of Victorville
case.” Under Laabs, the court reiterated, “whether others would agree with [Martinez]
that he had a basis to hold that belief is not the issue” because the standard is not that of
an objectively reasonable person, but “the standard of the person who is sitting down
reading the request for admission and denying it.”
       In short, the court did not deny Neema’s motion for sanctions on the basis of the
Leonard declaration or any of the other factors mentioned in the Martinez declaration, but
on the basis of the conclusion that Martinez’s belief he would prevail was maintained in
good faith. The two-page order denying Neema’s motion for sanctions, which makes no
reference to the matters set forth in the Martinez declaration, consists entirely of a
discussion of the case law, and makes clear the court’s reliance solely on its view that,
under Laabs and Brooks, the test is whether, at the time of the denial of requested
admissions, the party denying the request had a good faith belief. My colleagues share
that view. (Maj. opn. at p. 17, fn. 11.) As indicated, I believe it makes a mockery of
section 2033.420, subdivision (b)(3).
                                             III.
       The trial court’s application of a subjective standard of reasonableness constitutes
not only an abuse of discretion but results in unfairness.
       The proceedings initiated and maintained by Martinez in the trial court in propria
persona, his conduct in that court during a period of two years, and his appeals to this
court from the rulings granting Neema summary judgment and sanctions, which border
on the frivolous, reflect a desire to establish Neema’s involvement in a conspiracy to
defame that—so far as the record shows—exists only in Mr. Martinez’s imagination. But
there is nothing imaginary about the costs Neema was forced to bear as a result of
Martinez’s indefatigable pursuit of his claims, which he had good reason to know were
unsustainable at the outset. The prodigious memoranda, requests for discovery,
declarations, supplemental declarations, requests for reconsideration, requests for judicial
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notice, requests to accept late papers, and numerous other pleadings repeatedly filed by
Martinez over the years, almost all of which were unavailing, compelled Neema to
engage counsel who billed him $113,166.43 for fees and costs; considerably more than
the $86,078.85 he sought to recover.
       Neema has established a right to have his request for reimbursement of these costs
evaluated under the proper legal standard. The primary purpose of requests for
admissions is to provide an incentive to set at rest triable issues so that they will not have
to be tried, and thereby expedite trial. (Cembrook v. Superior Court (1961) 56 Cal.2d
423, 429.) The basis for imposing sanctions under section 2033.420 is related to that
purpose. “Unlike other discovery sanctions, an award of expenses pursuant to [then]
section 2034, subdivision (c) [the predecessor to present section 2033.420] is not a
penalty. Instead it is designed to reimburse reasonable expenses incurred by a party in
proving the truth of a requested admission where the admission sought was ‘of
substantial importance’ [citations] such that trial would have been expedited or shortened
if the request had been admitted.” (Brooks, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 509.)
       It is in my view unjust to deprive Martinez’s innocent victim of the possibility of
diminishing the economic pain he was unjustifiably obliged to bear.
       For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from that portion of the opinion
sustaining the denial of Neema’s request for discovery sanctions. I would remand the
case to the trial court with directions to determine whether, at the time he refused to
admit Neema’s request for admissions, Martinez held an objectively reasonable belief he
would prevail at trial on the pertinent issues.



                                                   _________________________
                                                   Kline, P.J.




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