Licudine v. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 1/3/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    DIONNE LICUDINE,                           B286350
    Plaintiff and Appellant,           (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC499153)
    v.
    CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTER
    et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. David S. Cunningham, Judge. Affirmed.
    Howard A. Kapp, Los Angeles, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Horvitz & Levy LLP, S. Thomas Todd, and Emily V.
    Cuatto, Burbank, for Defendant and Respondent.
    ******
    A plaintiff who sues and prevails at trial is statutorily
    entitled to prejudgment interest starting from the date she
    makes a settlement offer under Code of Civil Procedure section
    998 (a so-called “998 offer”)1 as long as that offer is “valid,” and
    the subsequent verdict is “more favorable” than the rejected 998
    offer. (Civ. Code, § 3291; Elrod v. Oregon Cummins Diesel, Inc.
    (1987) 
    195 Cal.App.3d 692
    , 698 (Elrod).) A 998 offer is valid only
    if, among other things, the offeror knew that the offeree had
    reasonable access to the facts necessary to “intelligently evaluate
    the offer.” (Id. at pp. 699-700; Najera v. Huerta (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 872
    , 878 (Najera).) What factors are relevant in
    deciding whether the offeree had enough facts to evaluate the
    offer? Although courts should evaluate the totality of the facts
    (Arno v. Helient Corp. (2005) 
    130 Cal.App.4th 1019
    , 1026 (Arno)),
    we conclude that three factors are especially pertinent: (1) how
    far into the litigation the 998 offer was made; (2) the information
    available to the offeree prior to the 998 offer’s expiration; and (3)
    whether the offeree let the offeror know it lacked sufficient
    information to evaluate the offer, and how the offeror responded.
    Applying these factors in this case, we conclude that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the plaintiff’s
    998 offer was not made in good faith. We accordingly affirm the
    order denying plaintiff prejudgment interest.
    1    All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil
    Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
    2
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    I.     Facts2
    In February 2012, Dionne Licudine (plaintiff) underwent
    gallbladder removal surgery. The surgery was performed by Dr.
    Ankur Gupta under the supervision of Dr. Brenden Carroll at
    defendant Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Cedars). The surgery
    was intended to be minimally invasive, but Dr. Gupta nicked a
    vein inside the abdominal cavity and caused substantial internal
    bleeding. This necessitated a more invasive surgery that left
    plaintiff with a large scar, a month-long hospitalization and a
    chronic abdominal condition.
    II.    Procedural Background
    A.     Complaint
    On January 15, 2013, plaintiff filed a medical malpractice
    lawsuit against Cedars, Dr. Gupta, Dr. Carroll and the Regents of
    the University of California (collectively, defendants). The
    complaint was three pages long. With respect to liability,
    plaintiff alleged that the defendants’ provision of medical services
    was “below the standard of care.” With respect to damages,
    plaintiff alleged only that she (1) had suffered “personal injuries
    and related emotional distress,” (2) had incurred “medical,
    nursing, health care, hospital and medical expenses,” (3) had
    suffered a “loss of wages, profits, and earning capacity,” and (4)
    incurred “other damages and injuries to be proven but which at
    this time are unknown.” She prayed “for damages within the
    jurisdiction of the Court.”
    2     We draw these facts largely from our prior published
    opinion in Licudine v. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (2016) 
    3 Cal.App.5th 881
     (Licudine I).
    3
    It was not until May 23, 2013 that plaintiff served her
    complaint on Cedars. Cedars filed its answer on June 6, 2013,
    along with a demand for written discovery and for a statement of
    damages.
    B.     Section 998 offer
    On June 11, 2013, plaintiff mailed Cedars an “Offer to
    Compromise” pursuant to section 998. Specifically, she “offer[ed]
    to allow judgment to be taken against Cedars and in favor of the
    plaintiff in the amount of $249,999.99, plus legal costs.”
    On June 27, 2013, Cedars sent plaintiff a written
    “Objection” to the 998 offer. In its objection, Cedars noted that
    plaintiff made her 998 offer only five days after Cedars had filed
    its answer. As Cedars explained, this was “too soon for it to make
    any determination as to whether plaintiff’s [998 offer] was
    reasonable” because Cedars had “not had an opportunity to fully
    investigate this action.”
    The offer expired on July 16, 2013. (§§ 998, subd. (b)(2)
    [offer expires 30 days after it is made], 1013, subd. (a) [five
    additional days added for mailed offers].) Cedars did not accept
    the offer prior to its expiration.
    C.     First trial and appeal
    The matter proceeded to trial. A jury found Cedars liable
    for malpractice and awarded plaintiff $1,045,000 in damages.
    Both Cedars and plaintiff moved for a new trial on damages, and
    the trial court granted both motions and set the matter for a new
    damages trial. We affirmed the trial court’s orders. (Licudine I,
    supra, 
    3 Cal.App.5th 881
    .)
    D.     Damages retrial
    A jury returned a total damages award of $7,619,457,
    comprised of $5,344,557 in economic damages and $2,274,900 in
    4
    noneconomic damages.3 Pursuant to the statutory cap on
    noneconomic damages applicable in medical malpractice cases
    (Civ. Code, § 3333.2), the trial court reduced the noneconomic
    damages verdict to $250,000, yielding a total verdict of
    $5,594,557.
    E.     Request for prejudgment interest
    Plaintiff filed a memorandum of costs seeking, among other
    things, $2,335,929.20 in prejudgment interest from the date of
    her 998 offer to the date of judgment.4 Cedars filed a motion to
    strike plaintiff’s prejudgment interest request, arguing that her
    998 offer was “invalid” because it was “made so early in the
    proceedings that [Cedars] did not have a fair opportunity to
    intelligently evaluate it.” Following full briefing, the court held a
    hearing. Toward the end of the hearing, plaintiff sought to
    supplement her briefing, but the trial court denied her request.
    ~(RT 352-353)~ After further argument, the court struck
    plaintiff’s request for prejudgment interest. In so ruling, the
    court found that plaintiff’s 998 offer had been “premature”
    because Cedars had not “ha[d] an adequate opportunity to
    evaluate the damages in this case at the time of the 998 offer.”
    F.     Appeal
    Plaintiff filed this timely appeal.
    3    While the trial court miscalculated the total unreduced
    damages award as $7,619,257, this miscalculation is of no
    consequence. The court correctly calculated the total reduced
    damages award.
    4   The parties do not dispute plaintiff’s calculation of the
    amount of prejudgment interest.
    5
    DISCUSSION
    If a plaintiff makes an offer to settle a lawsuit pursuant to
    section 998 that the defendant does not accept, and if the plaintiff
    ultimately obtains a “more favorable judgment,” she is entitled to
    have the defendant pay (1) the costs of her expert witnesses
    incurred after the 998 offer was made (§ 998, subds. (b) & (d)),
    and (2) prejudgment interest at the rate of 10 percent starting
    from the date of the 998 offer (Civ. Code, § 3291; Wilson v. Wal-
    Mart Stores, Inc. (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 382
    , 392-393). However,
    a plaintiff is entitled to this additional recovery only if her 998
    offer is “valid.” (Barella v. Exchange Bank (2000) 
    84 Cal.App.4th 793
    , 799 (Barella); Chen v. Interinsurance Exchange of the
    Automobile Club (2008) 
    164 Cal.App.4th 117
    , 121.) Plaintiff
    argues that the trial court erred in ruling that her 998 offer was
    not valid. Where, as here, the underlying facts are disputed, we
    review the trial court’s ruling solely for an abuse of discretion.
    (Timed Out LLC v. 13359 Corp. (2018) 
    21 Cal.App.5th 933
    , 942
    (Timed Out).) As the appellant, plaintiff bears the burden of
    proving that the trial court abused its discretion. (Najera, supra,
    191 Cal.App.4th at p. 877.)
    I.     The Pertinent Law on the Validity of 998 Offers
    A 998 offer is valid only if it is made in “good faith.” (Elrod,
    supra, 195 Cal.App.3d at p. 698; Wear v. Calderon (1981) 
    121 Cal.App.3d 818
    , 821 (Wear); Regency Outdoor Advertising, Inc. v.
    City of Los Angeles (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 507
    , 531 (Regency)
    [assuming “good faith” is required].) A 998 offer is made in good
    faith only if the offer is “‘realistically reasonable under the
    circumstances of the particular case’” (Elrod, at p. 698, quoting
    Wear, at p. 821)—that is, if the offer “carr[ies] with it some
    reasonable prospect of acceptance” (Regency, at p. 531).
    6
    Although section 998’s text does not itself condition validity
    upon an offeror’s good faith, such a requirement is necessarily
    implied by the statute’s purpose: Section 998 is meant “to
    encourage the settlement of lawsuits prior to trial” (T.M. Cobb v.
    Superior Court (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 273
    , 280; Poster v. Southern
    California Rapid Transit Dist. (1990) 
    52 Cal.3d 266
    , 270), and it
    uses the proverbial “stick” to do so: “Accept this offer or you will
    face additional financial consequences for rejecting it.” (Elrod,
    supra, 195 Cal.App.3d at p. 699 [“Section 998 achieves its aim by
    punishing a party who fails to accept a reasonable offer from the
    other party”].) If a section 998 offer has no “reasonable prospect
    of acceptance,” an offeree will reject the offer no matter what and
    applying section 998’s punitive “stick” will do nothing to
    encourage settlement. (Elrod, at p. 699.) Applying the “stick” in
    such instances would instead encourage litigants to “game the
    system by making . . . offers they can reasonably expect the
    [offeree] will refuse,” allowing them “to benefit from a no-risk
    offer made for the sole purpose of later recovering large expert
    witness fees” and, if they are plaintiffs, prejudgment interest.
    (Vick v. DaCorsi (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 206
    , 211; Jones v.
    Dumrichob (1998) 
    63 Cal.App.4th 1258
    , 1262-1263; Elrod, at p.
    699.) The good faith requirement prevents this perversion of
    section 998. (Menees v. Andrews (2004) 
    122 Cal.App.4th 1540
    ,
    1544 [“The courts have uniformly rejected an interpretation of
    section 998 which would allow offering parties to . . . ‘game the
    system.’”]; Westamerica Bank v. MBG Industries, Inc. (2007) 
    158 Cal.App.4th 109
    , 129 [same].)
    Whether a section 998 offer has a reasonable prospect of
    acceptance is a function of two considerations, both to be
    evaluated in light of the circumstances “at the time of the offer”
    7
    and “not by virtue of hindsight.” (Burch v. Children’s Hospital of
    Orange County Thrift Stores, Inc. (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 537
    ,
    548; Fortman v. Hemco (1989) 
    211 Cal.App.3d 241
    , 264; Elrod,
    supra, 195 Cal.App.3d at p. 699.) First, was the 998 offer within
    the “range of reasonably possible results” at trial, considering all
    of the information the offeror knew or reasonably should have
    known? (Elrod, at pp. 699-700.) Second, did the offeror know
    that the offeree had sufficient information, based on what the
    offeree knew or reasonably should have known, to assess whether
    the “offer [was] a reasonable one,” such that the offeree had a
    “fair opportunity to intelligently evaluate the offer”? (Id. at p.
    699; Najera, supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 878.) These two
    considerations assess whether the offeror knew that the 998 offer
    was reasonable, first, from the offeror’s perspective and, second,
    from the offeree’s perspective. In light of this focus on the
    reasonableness of the offeror’s conduct in making the 998 offer
    (which makes sense because the issue is the validity of the offer
    in the first place), whether the offeree acted reasonably in
    rejecting that offer is irrelevant. (Arno, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1027; People ex rel. Lockyer v. Freemont General Corp., Inc.
    (2001) 
    89 Cal.App.4th 1260
    , 1270-1271.)
    In assessing whether the 998 offeror knew that the offeree
    had sufficient information to evaluate the offer (the second
    consideration), the offeree needs information bearing on the issue
    of liability as well as on the amount of damages because these are
    the issues upon which a verdict would rest and because the 998
    offer, if accepted, would be in lieu of that verdict. (Nelson v.
    Anderson (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 111
    , 135 (Nelson) [liability
    relevant]; Barba v. Perez (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 444
    , 450-451
    (Barba) [damages relevant]; see generally Aynes v. Winans (1948)
    8
    
    33 Cal.2d 206
    , 211 (dis. opn. of Carter, J.) [“The essential issues
    for the jury [are] liability and amount of damages . . .”].) In
    assessing the information available to the offeree, courts are to
    look to all of the relevant circumstances. (Arno, supra, 130
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1026.) The pertinent cases have nevertheless
    identified a number of specific circumstances to be examined.
    First, how far into the litigation was the 998 offer made?
    Although section 998 fixes no “minimum period that must elapse
    following commencement of suit for service of a valid 998 offer”
    (Barba, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 452),5 a litigant receiving a
    998 offer at the time a lawsuit is filed or soon thereafter is, as a
    general matter, less likely to have sufficient information upon
    which to evaluate that offer. (E.g., Najera, supra, 191
    Cal.App.4th at p. 875 [receiving offer at same time complaint is
    served]; cf. Whatley-Miller v. Cooper (2013) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 1103
    ,
    1113 (Whatley-Miller) [receiving offer two months after complaint
    was served].)
    Second, what information bearing on the reasonableness of
    the 998 offer was available to the offeree prior to the offer’s
    expiration? Information may be obtained (1) by virtue of prior
    litigation between the parties (Bender v. City of Los Angeles
    (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 968
    , 989 [civil lawsuit against police
    followed criminal prosecution of plaintiff resulting in acquittal]);
    (2) through pre-litigation exchanges between the parties (Barba,
    supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at pp. 450-451 [pre-litigation letter
    5      For this reason, we decline Cedars’s invitation to erect
    either a rule or a presumption that any 998 offer in a malpractice
    lawsuit is invalid if not served at least 90 days after a pre-
    litigation demand pursuant to section 364 or, absent such a
    demand, at least 90 days after the complaint was served.
    9
    explaining offeror’s medical expenses]; Aguilar v. Gostischef
    (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 475
    , 482 [same]); (3) through post-
    complaint discovery in the case (Whatley-Miller, supra, 212
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1113); or (4) by virtue of a pre-existing
    relationship between the parties that yields a “free flow of
    information” (Barba, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 450 [parties
    had “close, semi-familial relationship”]).
    Third, did the party receiving the 998 offer alert the offeror
    that it lacked sufficient information to evaluate the offer and, if
    so, how did the offeror respond? An offeree may alert the offeror
    by (1) requesting discovery, either formally or informally (Barba,
    supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at pp. 450-451); (2) asking for an
    extension of the 998 offer’s deadline (cf. Whatley-Miller, supra,
    212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1107, 1114); or (3) otherwise objecting to
    the offer (Najera, supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 875). If, after
    hearing the offeree’s concerns, the offeror’s response is less than
    forthcoming, “such obstinacy” is “potent evidence that [the] offer
    was neither reasonable nor made in good faith.” (Barba, supra,
    166 Cal.App.4th at p. 451; Najera, supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p.
    878.)
    Although the party making a 998 offer generally has the
    burden of showing that her offer is valid (Timed Out, 
    supra,
     21
    Cal.App.5th at p. 942; Barella, supra, 84 Cal.App.4th at p. 799),
    it is the 998 offeree who bears the burden of showing that an
    otherwise valid 998 offer was not made in good faith. (Elrod,
    supra, 84 Cal.App.4th at p. 700; Nelson v. Anderson (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 111
    , 134 (Nelson).)
    10
    II.    The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion In
    Finding That Plaintiff’s 998 Offer Was Not Made In Good
    Faith
    A.     Application of pertinent factors
    Plaintiff’s 998 offer to settle for $249,999.99 was
    undoubtedly within the “range of reasonably possible results” at
    trial. The jury’s $5,594,557 verdict constitutes prima facie
    evidence of such (Elrod, supra, 195 Cal.App.3d at p. 700), and
    Cedars has offered no evidence to the contrary.
    Consequently, and as the trial court properly recognized,
    whether plaintiff’s 998 offer in this case was made in good faith
    turns entirely on the second consideration bearing on good
    faith—that is, on whether Cedars had sufficient information to
    assess whether plaintiff’s $249,999.99 offer was a reasonable one.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that
    Cedars lacked sufficient information. Each of the factors
    identified in the case law support the trial court’s determination.
    As to timing, plaintiff made her 998 offer just 19 days after
    serving Cedars with her complaint and just five days after
    Cedars filed its answer.
    As to the availability of information, Cedars had very little
    information available to it on the issues of liability and the
    amount of damages prior to the date plaintiff’s 998 offer expired.
    Plaintiff’s three-page complaint was “bare bones,” as it listed no
    specifics as to the injuries she suffered or the amount of damages
    she sought. Nor was this skeletal complaint fleshed out by the
    pre-litigation notice required by section 364, which would have
    set forth the “legal basis of [her] claim and the type of loss
    sustained, including [the] specific . . . nature of injuries suffered”
    (§ 364, subds. (a) & (b)), because plaintiff never filed such a
    11
    notice.6 No depositions had been taken. But Cedars was not
    entirely bereft of information. Plaintiff had sent Cedars a letter
    the day before she made her 998 offer (1) stating that her doctors’
    negligence was “self-evident” and that her “injuries are well
    documented and far exceed the” $250,000 cap on noneconomic
    damages, and (2) attaching photographs of plaintiff before and
    after the surgery. Plaintiff also provided some written discovery
    to Cedars prior to her offer’s expiration—namely, (1) she
    forwarded to Cedars her answers to the general interrogatories
    propounded by Dr. Carroll, but submitted to the trial court only
    the cover sheet for those answers and not the answers
    themselves, and (2) she responded to Cedars’s request for
    documents on the day before her 998 offer expired. Those
    responses contained no details on the issues of liability and the
    amount of damages except (1) to indicate that plaintiff was not
    making a claim for “lost earnings” and that plaintiff’s “earning
    capacity may be affected as [she] has had to delay starting law
    school for at least two years,” (2) to tell Cedars to contact
    plaintiff’s insurance carrier to obtain her medical bills, and (3) to
    tell Cedars to look at its own records. And Cedars also had in its
    possession plaintiff’s 9,662-page medical chart, which included (1)
    the operation report noting the nicked vein and internal bleeding,
    and (2) the records indicating her extended stay and care at the
    hospital.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding
    that this information, considered in its totality, did not provide
    Cedars with sufficient information with which to evaluate the
    6      What is more, plaintiff’s attorney misrepresented to the
    trial court in a sworn affidavit that he had filed a section 364
    notice after certifying to Cedars that he had not.
    12
    reasonableness of plaintiff’s section 998 offer. On the question of
    liability, this information did not indicate which doctor (Dr.
    Gupta or Dr. Carroll) was responsible for any negligence or the
    extent to which plaintiff’s injuries were related to or exacerbated
    by any pre-existing medical conditions she might have. On the
    question of the amount of damages, this information did not
    speak at all to plaintiff’s pain and suffering, to the amount of her
    medical expenses (including any offset due to insurance), or to
    any possible loss in her earning capacity. Indeed, plaintiff’s
    response to Cedars’s request for documents indicated she was
    unsure whether she would suffer any loss of earning capacity.
    As to providing notice of the lack of sufficient information
    and any response to that notice, Cedars alerted plaintiff to its
    concern that it was “too soon for it to make any determination as
    to whether” her 998 offer was reasonable, and plaintiff never
    responded.
    Plaintiff responds that Cedars had sufficient information to
    evaluate her section 998 offer.
    As a threshold matter, she argues that any absence of
    information regarding her economic damages is of no consequence
    because her 998 offer was an offer only to settle the noneconomic
    damages portion of her case for $249,999.99, which is just below
    the statutory cap for noneconomic damages in medical
    malpractice cases. We reject this argument because it
    contradicts the plain language of the 998 offer itself, which offers
    to “allow judgment to be taken against [Cedars] . . . in the
    amount of $249,999.99” without any hint that the offer would
    settle only part of the case. Even if we were to accept plaintiff’s
    invitation to retroactively rewrite her 998 offer, Cedars still
    lacked sufficient information to make an intelligent
    13
    determination as to a reasonable amount of noneconomic
    damages for the reasons described above. What is more,
    plaintiff’s conduct in making an offer as to noneconomic damages
    that, in her counsel’s own words, was “one penny below” the
    statutory cap for such damages mere weeks after serving Cedars
    raises more than a specter of gamesmanship, which, as noted
    above, is antithetical to the legitimate operation of section 998.
    Even if we reject her retroactively narrowed reading of her
    998 offer, plaintiff continues, Cedars still had enough information
    to evaluate a global settlement offer because (1) Cedars had
    access to her 9,662-page medical chart, (2) Cedars conducted a
    peer review of the operation that provided greater information,
    (3) Cedars had the answers to Dr. Carroll’s form interrogatories,
    and (4) any shortfall of information regarding damages could not
    in any event invalidate her 998 offer because Cedars’s objection
    never used the word “damages.”
    However, none of these sources provided Cedars with
    sufficient information to evaluate plaintiff’s offer.
    Plaintiff’s medical chart, as noted above, supplied some
    information regarding liability. But it left several issues
    unaddressed, including plaintiff’s loss of earning capacity and her
    pain and suffering.
    Plaintiff provided no evidence that Cedars ever conducted a
    peer review regarding the operation. All she offers is her
    counsel’s assertion that “of course” Cedars did.7
    We cannot evaluate whether plaintiff’s answers to Dr.
    Carroll’s form interrogatories provided Cedars with sufficient
    7     Thus, the parties’ debate regarding the applicability of
    Evidence Code section 1157, the evidentiary privilege applicable
    to such peer reviews, is irrelevant.
    14
    information because those answers were never made part of the
    record in this case. Plaintiff asserts that she tried to make them
    a part of the record and that the trial court was wrong to deny
    her request to supplement her briefing with the interrogatory
    answers. Plaintiff’s request to supplement was, in effect, a
    motion to amend her pleading; as such, it was governed by
    section 473, subdivision (b). (Garcia v. Hejmadi (1997) 
    58 Cal.App.4th 674
    , 683-684 [request to supplement pleading so
    governed]; Puppo v. Larosa (1924) 
    194 Cal. 721
    , 724 [same, as to
    motion to tax costs].) The discretionary relief portion of this
    statute applicable here only permits a trial court to allow an
    amendment necessitated by an attorney’s mistake or
    inadvertence if it is an error that “‘anyone could have made’”; put
    differently, errors due to an attorney’s failure to “meet the
    professional standard of care, such as failure . . . to properly
    advance an argument” provide no basis to amend. (Zamora v.
    Clayborn Contracting Group, Inc. (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 249
    , 258.) In
    this case, plaintiff’s attorney told the trial court that he “didn’t
    see [the actual discovery responses forwarded to Cedars] as
    necessary,” and this statement confirms that the attorney’s
    decision to include the cover letter accompanying the responses
    but to omit the responses themselves was strategic and tactical
    rather than a mistake any layperson could have made.
    Plaintiff’s criticism of Cedars’s objection lacks merit
    because the plain language of that document registered a general
    objection to the timing of plaintiff’s 998 offer that applied with
    equal force to the issues of liability and to the amount of
    damages. Cedars’s purported failure to use the words “liability”
    or “damages” did not somehow narrow the scope of its otherwise
    inclusive objection.
    15
    B.     Plaintiff’s further arguments
    Plaintiff makes what boils down to three further categories
    of arguments for reversal.
    She contends that Cedars effectively waived any right to
    object to the lack of information because it never asked her to
    extend the deadline of her section 998 offer. We reject this
    contention. Although a request for a continuance is one method
    by which a section 998 offeree may put the offeror on notice that
    it lacks sufficient information to evaluate the offer, it is not the
    only method of doing so; Cedars’s objection sufficed.
    She asserts that the trial court erred in refusing to consider
    evidence that (1) Cedars’s attorney had a practice of making
    “boilerplate prematur[ity] claim[s]” to section 998 offers in other
    cases, and (2) Cedars would have rejected plaintiff’s 998 offer
    even if Cedars had possessed sufficient information to evaluate it.
    We reject each assertion. Cedars’s position regarding the timing
    of section 998 offers in other cases (and, relatedly, whether
    plaintiff was electing to disregard Cedars’s objection in this case
    in light of its position in the other cases) is neither here nor there
    because whether a party’s 998 offer is made in good faith turns
    on the particular circumstances of each case. (Arno, supra, 130
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1024.) Further, what Cedars might or might
    not have done had plaintiff’s offer been valid does not affect
    whether the offer was valid in the first place; here, it was not.
    And plaintiff posits that the trial court impermissibly
    required her to prove her good faith rather than requiring Cedars
    to prove its absence. As noted above, the law squarely places the
    burden on Cedars. (E.g., Elrod, supra, 84 Cal.App.4th at p. 700.)
    However, plaintiff’s position that the trial court shifted that
    burden is not supported by the record. At no point did the trial
    16
    court indicate that the burden rested with plaintiff, and the
    questions the court posed to plaintiff during the hearing sought
    plaintiff’s input on how to refute the points Cedars had already
    made in support of its motion.
    DISPOSITION
    The order striking plaintiff’s request for prejudgment
    interest is affirmed. Cedars is entitled to its costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION.
    ______________________, J.
    HOFFSTADT
    We concur:
    _________________________, Acting P. J.
    ASHMANN-GERST
    _________________________, J.
    CHAVEZ
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B286350

Filed Date: 1/3/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/3/2019