Martel v. County of Los Angeles
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by Judge REINHARDT; Dissent by Judge NORRIS.
ORDER
The opinion and dissent filed April 12, 1994, 21 F.3d 940 (9th Cir. 1994), are withdrawn. A new opinion and dissent are filed in their place, and the petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing en banc is dismissed as moot without prejudice.
OPINION
The district judge in this case is an exceptionally able, hard-working, and conscientious jurist. However, he enforces a procedure widely known as the “rocket docket.” His standard practice is to set cases for trial within three months of the filing of the answer. He adhered to that policy in this § 1983 police brutality action. As a result, the plaintiff, Angel Martel, was forced to go to trial before he had any opportunity to conduct meaningful discovery. Martel appeals from the jury’s verdict in favor of the defendants. Because we conclude that the district judge’s refusal to grant any continuance constituted an abuse of his discretion, and because his enforcement of his “rocket docket” policy violated the Local Rules of the Central District of California, we reverse.
I.
Angel Martel was diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic following a brain injury suffered in 1978. On June 6, 1990, while at his home in Pico Rivera, California, he experienced delusions that someone was attempting to break into his car. He took a shotgun and went into his backyard. Martel’s brother-in-law, Henry Ortega, followed him into the yard and attempted to disarm him. In the struggle, the gun discharged without causing injury. Martel’s wife, Ester, heard the shot and called 911 for assistance. Eight sheriffs deputies responded to the call and attempted to restrain Martel. Martel alleges that the deputies entered the backyard, removed the shotgun from the immediate area, and subdued him. He alleges that, after he surrendered, the deputies beat him with flashlights and batons, kicked him, and shocked him with a taser. Martel claims that the beating left him with a broken left kneecap and right leg, as well as head lacerations.
On April 22, 1991, Martel filed suit against the County of Los Angeles, the L.A. County Sheriff, one named deputy sheriff, and several “John Doe” defendants. He sought damages under the federal civil rights statutes, as well as several state law causes of action. Two days after Martel filed his complaint, the district judge issued a copy of his standing order setting forth the procedures followed in his court. Although the local rules of the district court require a minimum of at least four months between service of the answer and a pretrial conference, the order stated:
This court strives to set trial dates as early as possible and does not approve of pro*733 tracted discovery. EXCEPT FOR UNUSUALLY COMPLEX CASES, COUNSEL SHOULD EXPECT THE CASE TO GO TO TRIAL WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF THE FILING OF THE FIRST ANSWER.
Order of April 24, 1991, at 3. To emphasize the point, the order went on to state that “[c]ontinuances are rarely granted_ The Court sets firm trial dates and will not change them except for emergencies.” Id. The defendants filed an answer on May 17, thus starting the clock under the district judge’s standing order.
Martel initiated discovery immediately after bringing the suit. Because he did not know the identities of seven of the eight deputies who had subdued him, he served the county with interrogatories accompanying the complaint. These interrogatories sought the names of all of the possible defendants. The county responded on May 24, although Martel claimed that it had not provided the names of all of the defendants and had misidentified one.
At a mandatory status conference on June 24, the district judge scheduled the pretrial conference for August 26, and the trial for August 27, just over three months after the defendants filed their answer. As his trial preparation continued, Martel eventually discovered the names of all eight of the deputies involved in his ease. Accordingly, on July 22 and August 12, he filed amended complaints, and eventually named seven additional deputies as defendants. Although he promptly served these new defendants with interrogatories and requests for admission, the responses to these requests were not due until after the August 27 trial date.
Because more time was necessary to complete essential discovery, Martel moved for a continuance on August 22. In addition to pointing out that the new defendants’ responses to discovery requests were due only after the scheduled trial date, Martel’s counsel claimed that the original defendants had not been cooperative in discovery. He stated that a motion to compel was pending and that it would likely not be heard until after the trial date. He also stated that he had been unable to depose any of the defendants because he was a sole practitioner and had been in trial nearly continuously since late May. The district judge denied the motion. Pursuant to the district judge’s order, trial began on August 27, although Martel had not had an opportunity to depose any of the defendants. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants. Because the jury determined that he had suffered no constitutional injury, the district judge dismissed Martel’s Monell
II.
A.
The decision to grant or deny a continuance lies within the district judge’s discretion. However, this discretion “is not without limits.” Rios-Berrios v. I.N.S., 776 F.2d 859, 862-63 (9th Cir. 1985). In determining whether a district judge has abused his or her discretion in refusing to grant a continuance, our precedents require us to consider four factors: the appellant’s diligence in attempting to prepare his ease for the originally-scheduled trial date; the likelihood that the grant of a continuance would have resolved the problem which led the appellant to seek a continuance; the inconvenience a continuance would have caused the court and the opposing party; and the extent to which the appellant might have suffered harm as a result of the district court’s denial. United States v. 2.61 Acres of Land, 791 F.2d 666, 671 (9th Cir. 1985) (citing United States v. Flynt, 756 F.2d 1352, 1358 (9th Cir. 1985)). Although all of the Flynt factors must be weighed against one another, we will not reverse absent a showing of prejudice. See id.
We conclude that the district judge abused his discretion in denying Martel a continuance and that this error requires reversal. Two of the Flynt factors clearly support our conclusion and require no extended discus
In denying the continuance, the district judge focused principally on the first Flynt factor: the extent of Martel’s diligence in preparing for the scheduled trial date. In doing so, the judge ignored both the facts of this case and the realities facing individual plaintiffs in modern litigation. At the hearing on the motion for a continuance, the judge claimed that Martel’s counsel was “very, very slow in getting a handle on this case.” This statement apparently referred to the attorney’s representation that he had calculated the exact amount of Martel’s medical expenses for the first time earlier that afternoon. Yet, whether or not Martel’s attorney was slow in calculating the damages (and we do not mean to suggest that he was), this issue was simply irrelevant to Martel’s request for a continuance. Martel did not seek the continuance in order to evaluate evidence, such as the medical bills, which were already in his possession. By the time the judge heard the motion, Martel’s counsel had already performed the necessary damage calculations, and there was no need to delay for this purpose. Rather, Martel sought the continuance in order to obtain information which was in the defendants’ possession, and which the defendants were obliged to provide in discovery.
Although the district judge also asserted that Martel had “not initiated discovery,” the record shows this characterization to be incorrect. At the time Martel served his original complaint, he served the defendants whose identities he knew with interrogatories and requests for admission. He also filed timely requests for document production. As he began to learn the identities of the other individual defendants and add their names to the complaint, Martel served them with discovery requests as well. Through no fault of Martel’s, his motion to compel was not scheduled to be heard until after the trial date, and the responses of seven defendants to his discovery requests were not due until after trial either. To be sure, Martel had not deposed any of the defendants, but this was not the result of any lack of diligence on his part. Instead, it was the result of his attorney’s quite busy trial schedule. As his attorney explained in a declaration in support of Martel’s motion for a continuance:
I have been unable to depose any of the defendants in large part due to the fact that I have been in trial in this Court between May 21, 1991 to June 25th, the Superior Court between July 8 and July 26th and in a municipal criminal ease last week [8/13 to 8/16] I started a 1987 civil case that had been continued 5 times before Judge Marshall today and this is expected to go to the jury September 6.
Declaration of Thomas E. Beck, August 21, 1991, at 5 (brackets in original).
Finally, we must consider the fourth Flynt factor, “the extent to which the appellant might have suffered harm as a result of the district court’s denial.” Flynt, 756 F.2d at 1359. In this ease, the issue is easily resolved. The district judge’s refusal to grant a continuance prevented Martel from deposing any of the defendants. The decision to force Martel to trial before he had received written discovery from seven of the defendants, and before he had deposed any of them, affected every aspect of the trial.
An examination of our decision in United States v. Lane, 765 F.2d 1376, 1379 (9th Cir. 1985), makes clear that Martel has shown sufficient prejudice to warrant reversal. In Lane, a criminal defendant appealed the district court’s refusal to grant more than a four-day continuance so that he could complete his trial preparation. We held that Lane had failed to show actual prejudice, for
In this case, Martel has shown precisely the elements of prejudice which we found lacking in Lane. First, unlike the district judge in Lane the district judge here did not grant Martel any continuance — even one of four days — to complete his trial preparation. Not only did Martel never have any opportunity to review the government witnesses’ statements prior to trial, he never even had the opportunity to obtain any statements. Second, and most important, Martel has “specified which witnesses his ... attorney would have interviewed [and] which documents and exhibits he would have examined.” Had the district judge granted the continuance, Martel would have deposed all of the individual defendants, and he would have examined the interrogatories and requests for admission which had been served on the seven new defendants but which would not come due until after the August 27 trial date. Although we do not know what kind of case Martel actually put on at trial, we do know that his preparation for that trial was manifestly prejudiced. That is clearly sufficient to meet the Lane requirement.
We conclude that the district judge abused his discretion by adhering to the “rocket docket” policy in the face of Martel’s request for time to complete discovery. Cf. Ungar v. Sarafite, 376 U.S. 575, 589, 84 S.Ct. 841, 849-50, 11 L.Ed.2d 921 (1964) (stating that “a myopic insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay” can constitute an abuse of discretion). Because the denial of meaningful discovery clearly prejudiced Martel, we reverse and remand for a new trial following a sufficient discovery period.
While we sympathize with the district court’s attempt, to control its docket, and believe that district judges must have wide discretion to do so, in this instance the strict policy of rushing cases to trial within three months of the filing of the first answer severely prejudices the ability of parties to prepare their cases, and often falls most heavily on those of limited means. We agree with the Fourth Circuit’s admonition issued nearly three decades ago: “Delay should be avoided to the extent that it is unnecessary or unreasonable but adequate time must be allowed for discovery of the facts and assembly of the proof.” Freehill v. Lewis, 355 F.2d 46, 48 (4th Cir. 1966).
B.
There is another, independent basis for our conclusion that this ease must be reversed. By setting the pretrial conference for approximately three months after the filing of the first answer, and setting the trial for the day after the conference, the district court violated the Local Rules of the Central District of California. These local rules provide for a specified minimum period (of over four months) between the service of the first answer and the pretrial conference. The district judge’s standing order that “COUNSEL SHOULD EXPECT TO GO TO TRIAL WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF THE FILING OF THE FIRST ANSWER” conflicts squarely with the local rules.
C.D.Cal.Local Rule (Civil) 6.1 states that the parties are to hold an early meeting “[wjithin twenty (20) days after service of the answer by the first answering defendant.” C.D.Cal.Local Rule (Civil) 6.2 requires submission of a report to the court “[w]ithin fourteen (14) days after the Early Meeting.” The district court may send notice of the pretrial conference “no earlier than sixty (60) days after the Joint Report of Early Meeting required by Local Rule 6 is due to be filed with the Court.” C.D.Cal.Local Rule (Civil) 9.2 (emphasis added). The same rule states that “[t]he Pre-Trial Conference shall be set for a date no earlier than sixty (60) days after the mailing of such notice.” Id. (emphasis added). These rules appear to provide for a minimum of 154 days between service of the first answer and the pre-trial conference. Even assuming the district judge had the authority to waive the Early
Moreover, when a district judge’s standing orders conflict with local rules, the judge violates the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as well. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 83, which authorizes local rules, district judges “may regulate their practices in any manner not inconsistent with these [Fed.R.Civ.P.] rules or those of the district in which they act.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 83; see also C.D.Cal.Local Rule (Civil) 30.3 (“If no parallel or analogy exists, then the Court may proceed in any lawful manner not inconsistent with these rules and the F.R.Civ.P.”). This portion of Rule 83 was amended in 1985 “to make certain that standing orders are not inconsistent with the Federal Rules or any local district court rules.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 83 1985 amendment advisory committee’s note. The amendment was designed to preclude arbitrary action by individual judges in derogation of the rights afforded litigants by local court rules.
III.
Because Martel failed to file a trial transcript in this court, the defendants argue that we must dismiss his appeal for violation of Fed.R.App.P. 10(b)(2). Martel did not violate Rule 10(b)(2) which states:
If the appellant intends to urge on appeal that a finding or conclusion is unsupported by the evidence or is contrary to the evidence, the appellant shall include in the record a transcript of all evidence relevant to such findings or conclusion.
By its terms, Rule 10(b)(2) does not impose a general obligation on all appellants to file a trial transcript in the court of appeals. It only imposes an obligation to file relevant excerpts from the transcript where resolution of the appellant’s specific claims of error requires an examination of those particular parts of the transcript. Moreover, the rule on its face applies only where an appellant is challenging a specific finding or conclusion. Here, Martel is objecting to the very fact that the trial was held at the time it was, not to particular acts or omissions in its course.
Our cases have made clear that Rule 10(b)(2) does not impose a general obligation on appellants to furnish copies of transcripts. See, e.g., Syncom Capital Corp. v. Wade, 924
Because Rule 10(b)(2) only requires an appellant to provide us with those portions of the transcript which are relevant to his claim of error, it imposes no obligation on him to provide us with any part of the transcript if “the error complained of on appeal” is “fully apparent on the face of the record on appeal.” United States v. Mills, 597 F.2d 693, 698 (9th Cir. 1979). Martel’s appeal is exactly the kind of case in which an appellant need not file a transcript, for the error of which he complains — the district court’s denial of any continuance — is “fully apparent on the face of the record.” Moreover, not only is the district court’s error fully apparent even without a trial transcript, the prejudicial effect of that error is fully apparent as well.
We also deny the defendants’ request for sanctions and attorneys’ fees. The request borders on the frivolous, for Martel’s appeal clearly has merit. Sanctions are ah extraordinary remedy. Cf. Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 43-46, 111 S.Ct. 2123, 2132-33, 115 L.Ed.2d 27 (1991) (stating that the court’s inherent power “to fashion an appropriate sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial process” must “be exercised with restraint and discretion”). They will not be granted — nor should they be sought— as a matter of routine. Moreover, a party should not seek sanctions when, as in this case, its adversary’s position is clearly not frivolous. Parties who improperly seek sanctions, particularly repeat offenders, risk being subjected to sanctions themselves.
V.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for a new trial following a sufficient period for discovery. Because the district court’s dismissal of Martel’s Monell claims was predicated on the jury’s verdict, the district court is instructed to reinstate those claims as well.
. See Monell v. Department of Social Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 98 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978).
. We emphasize that this is not a case where the district court's error cut off only a comparatively insignificant amount of discoveiy. Martel had no opportunity to depose any of the defendants, and his requests for written discovery of the seven defendants added in his amended complaints would not come due until after trial.
. One of the district judge's standing orders purports to waive the early meeting report requirement. This is apparently a sua sponte action by the judge. See Order of May 31, 1991, at 1-2. However, Local Rule 9.11, which provides the procedures for waiver of the pretrial rules, appears by its terms to allow such waivers only if the parties request them. We need not determine whether the district judge validly waived the pretrial rules, however, because the 101-day interval between service of the answer and the pretrial conference in this case would have violated the local rules even if the district judge’s purported waiver were effective.
. This is not a case where a district judge exercised his discretion to determine that, under all of the circumstances, a departure from the local rules would be "so slight and unimportant that the sensible treatment is to overlook [it]." Allen v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 342 F.2d 951, 954 (9th Cir. 1965). Rather, it is a case where a district judge’s standing order, enforced in every case, violates the local rules. This is precisely the situation the drafters of the 1985 amendment to Rule 83 sought to reach.
. See also Southwest Administrators, Inc. v. Lopez, 781 F.2d 1378, 1379-80 (9th Cir. 1986) (dismissing appeal where appellant challenged district court's findings of fact but failed to provide any part of the trial transcript); cf. In re Ashley, 903 F.2d 599, 603 n. 1 (9th Cir. 1990) (refusing to consider whether an affidavit of nonservice undermined the district court's finding that a witness was unavailable where the appellant failed to include the affidavit in the record before the court of appeals); Portland Feminist Women's Health Center v. Advocates for Life, Inc., 877 F.2d 787, 789-90 (9th Cir. 1989) (refusing to consider claim in appeal from contempt citation that district court erred in finding that appellants acted in concert with named defendants and had actual knowledge of the injunction they violated where appellants failed to provide a transcript of the contempt hearing).
. Because the harm resulting from the district court's error in this case is clear even without consulting the trial transcript, we need not consider whether Rule 10(b)(2) requires an appellant to provide portions of the transcript when the district court’s error is apparent on the face of the record, but the prejudicial effect is not. We note, however, that under the plain language of Rule 10(b)(2) the appellant is only required to include a transcript of evidence relevant to the specific "finding or conclusion” he is challenging, and that Martel furnished us with a transcript of the hearing at which the continuance was denied. We also need not consider whether any other provision might under some circumstances require an appellant to provide us with a trial transcript for the sole purpose of demonstrating prejudice.
.We note that, had the defendants determined that portions of the trial transcript would have negated Martel’s claim of error or prejudice, Rule 10(b)(3) provided them with the opportunity to file these portions with the court. We also note that, if a court considers it necessary to consult a portion of the transcript which the parties have not included in the record on appeal, it can order the parties, under Rule 10(e), to provide the court with that part of the transcript.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
It is the law of our circuit that when a district court denies a continuance sought for the purpose of obtaining additional discovery, the complaining party must show actual and substantial prejudice to obtain a reversal on appeal.
While the majority purports to apply this standard, its analysis and conclusions make clear that it considers a denial of “meaningful discovery” to be presumptively prejudicial, regardless of what happens at trial. Majority Opinion at 732. In effect, the majority buys Martel’s argument that the denial of a continuance for the purpose of conducting further discovery was “inherently prejudicial.” Appellant’s Reply Brief at 11. In holding that Martel suffered “actual and substantial prejudice,” the majority relies primarily on its own speculation about what might have happened at trial, without any showing from Martel as to how the discovery he was denied would have changed his presentation or the outcome at trial. “What might have been discovered had a continuance been granted is inadequate to establish prejudice.” United States v. Hernandez, 608 F.2d 741, 746 (9th Cir. 1979).
In cases denying continuances, prejudice is measured in terms of the impact on the outcome of trial. See, e.g., United States v. Flynt, 756 F.2d 1352, 1362 (1985) (finding prejudice because the defendant was “not allowed to put forward the only defense he had”). Cf. United States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 506, 103 S.Ct. 1974, 1979, 76 L.Ed.2d 96 (1983) (holding that trial court error is harmless (i.e. not prejudicial) when “there is no reasonable possibility that the [error] complained of might have contributed to the conviction”). A complaining party must specify the prejudice inflicted by the denial of a continuance. See, e.g., United States v. Mitchell, 744 F.2d 701, 704-5 (9th Cir. 1984) (finding no prejudice where defendant did not, inter alia “specify what defense theories his counsel might have explored”); United States v. Lane, 765 F.2d 1376 (9th Cir. 1985) (same).
In Butcher’s Union Local No. 498 v. SDC Investment, 788 F.2d 535, 540 (9th Cir. 1986), we refused to find prejudice when the plaintiffs stated only that they “believe[d]” that discovery would enable them to demonstrate the court’s personal jurisdiction over the defendants, but did not specify what theory of jurisdiction they intended to pursue. “This speculation,” the court held, “does not satisfy the requirement that they make ‘the clearest showing’ of actual and substantial prejudice.” Id. (quoting Data Disc, 557 F.2d at 1285 n. 1).
Here, Martel makes no stronger showing to support his claim of prejudice. In fact, in his opening brief on appeal, Martel tells us nothing about the trial evidence, his theory of the case, or why additional discovery might conceivably have changed the jury verdict. Instead, he relies on statements such as this: “Denial of the motions to continue the trial and pre-trial were indisputably prejudicial. The adverse verdict alone is proof of that_” Appellant’s Reply Brief at 11 (emphasis added).
My colleagues go astray by focussing on the impact of a denial of discovery on the discovery process. They offer nothing more than conjecture about the possible impact on the jury’s verdict.
On appeal, the burden is on Martel to make a showing of a reasonable likelihood that the denial of further discovery caused him “actual and substantial prejudice.” Sablan, 856 F.2d at 1321. He cannot carry that burden without telling us at least something about what happened at trial. Unfortunately for him, he chooses to tell us nothing about the trial evidence, nor the specific issues of fact in dispute, nor has he given any reason to believe that additional discovery might have changed the outcome at the trial. By failing to tell us anything about the trial, or to provide us with a trial transcript or even portions thereof, Martel fails to carry his burden of showing even a reasonable possibility that additional discovery would have changed the result of the trial. We know nothing about the kind of case Martel actually put on at trial because he has told us nothing.
Nonetheless, the majority excuses Martel from his burden of showing some likelihood that the outcome of trial would have been affected by the denial of further discovery, and instead relies on its own conjecture about what the trial might have been like. Giving only lip service to the law of the circuit, the majority basically adopts a structural rule that dispenses with the requirement that the defendant show trial prejudice in eases of a denial of a continuance sought for the purpose of conducting additional discovery.
“Structural” rules that presume prejudice from trial court error are the exception, not the rule. Generally, parties are required to show that trial court error was in fact preju
Finally, the majority’s reliance on United States v. Lane, 765 F.2d 1376 (9th Cir. 1985), as setting the standard of prejudice, is misplaced. See Majority Opinion at 735-736. In Lane, we held that the defendant failed to show actual prejudice because he “ha[d] not specified which witnesses his defense attorney would have interviewed, which documents and exhibits he was unable to examine, or what defenses he might have explored.” Id. The majority cites Lane as authority that Martel has carried his burden of showing prejudice simply by identifying witnesses he wanted to depose and documents he wanted to examine. But the majority overreads Lane. Lane merely holds that in failing to specify any witnesses, documents or theories he would have pursued on discovery, he failed to make the required showing of prejudice. Lane cannot be read as authority for the logically different proposition that Martel carried his burden of showing prejudice merely by identifying some witnesses he wanted to depose and some documents he wanted to examine. In other words, making a better case than the defendant made in Lane is a necessary, but certainly not a sufficient condition to making the showing of prejudice required to get a new trial. Lane tells us only what constitutes an insufficient showing of prejudice; it is not authority that Martel made a sufficient showing.
In sum, Martel has failed to carry his burden of showing trial prejudice because he has failed to make any showing that the outcome might have been different had he been given an opportunity for further discovery. He tells us nothing about the trial except that he lost. He makes the preposterous argument that the “adverse verdict alone is proof’ that the denial of the continuance was prejudicial. Appellant’s Reply Brief at 11. That, of course, is not and cannot be the law. If it was, every trial court error would per se be prejudicial to the losing party.
Nonetheless, my colleagues bail Martel out by engaging in baseless speculation about what might have happened at trial had he been given time for additional discovery. In effect, the majority has created a structural rule that presumes prejudice whenever there is a denial of “meaningful discovery” — a standard the majority infuses with no content. I dissent.
ORDER
Nov. 14, 1994
Upon the vote of a majority of nonreeused regular active judges of this court, it is ordered that this case be reheard by the en banc court pursuant to Circuit Rule 35-3.
. Because I believe Martel has failed to make the required showing of actual prejudice, I do not address whether the district court abused its discretion in denying Martel’s motion for a continuance.
. In this case, as in Sabían, "a continuance was sought for the purposes of conducting discovery, and hence its denial was effectively a denial of discovery.” 856 F.2d at 1321. See also United States v. Lane, 765 F.2d 1376, 1379 (9th Cir. 1985) (movant must show actual prejudice before a denial of a motion for continuance will be reversed); United States v. Mitchell, 744 F.2d 701, 705 (9th Cir. 1984) (same).
. Incidentally, Martel was not denied all discovery. In fact, from May 17, when the defendants filed their answer, until the trial on August 27, Martel conducted substantial discovery, which yielded answers to interrogatories and documents. He did not, however, take a single deposition even though he knew the identity of 6 of the 7 deputies involved in the incident as of June 24 when he was given notice of an August 27 trial date; by August 2, he knew the identity of the final deputy.
. The factual issue they are referring to concerns the amount of force utilized by the defendants.
. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 61 (“[N]o error or defect in any ruling ... is ground for ... setting aside a verdict ... unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice. The court at every stage of the proceeding must disregard any error or defect in the proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”).
. The majority makes no attempt to give content to its "meaningful discovery” standard. Instead, it muddies up the legal waters by employing an elastic, vague, and ultimately meaningless phrase that will be the source of vexatious litigation in the future.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Angel MARTEL v. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, Sherman Block, Sheriff of Los Angeles County, Elias Cuevas, Harry DeLong, Richard Mariadiaga, Mark Shaugnessy, Herb Howland, Jeffrey Lammers, Margarito Robles, and Frank Yanes
- Cited By
- 11 cases
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