Searles v. Archangel ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 1/22/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    QUEEN SEARLES,                         B296011
    Plaintiff and Appellant,      (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. 18PDRO01062)
    v.
    MICHAEL ARCHANGEL,
    Defendant and
    Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County, Amy Pellman, Judge. Affirmed.
    Queen Searles, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    No appearance by Defendant and Respondent.
    ___________________________
    The superior court dismissed Queen Searles’s petition for a
    civil harassment restraining order when she was unable to
    personally serve Michael Archangel with a copy of the petition
    and notice of hearing as required by Code of Civil Procedure
    section 527.6, subdivision (m).1 On appeal Searles argues the
    court erred in denying her motion to waive traditional service
    and allow her to serve Archangel through social media. Although
    we acknowledge the practical merit to Searles’s request, the
    superior court properly concluded it was obligated to follow
    section 527.6’s express requirement for personal service.
    Accordingly, we affirm the order of dismissal.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1. The Petition for Restraining Order and Initial Hearing
    Dates
    Searles, self-represented in the superior court as she is on
    appeal, filed a request for a civil harassment restraining order on
    July 23, 2018 using mandatory Judicial Council form CH-100,
    identifying Archangel as the person from whom protection was
    sought. In the lines for Archangel’s address Searles wrote,
    “None.”
    Searles alleged that, while she was in her car in a parking
    lot near a Starbucks in the Burbank Empire Center on July 14,
    2018, Archangel threatened her “us[ing] a wicked looking stick to
    perform his personal form of Martial Arts, which he calls ‘Tae
    Kan Kick Yo Ass’ or [‘]Tae Kick Yo Ass.’” Checking the section of
    the form requesting she be allowed to give less than five days’
    notice of hearing, Searles wrote, “Petitioner does not know how to
    1     Statutory references are to this code unless otherwise
    stated.
    2
    contact the Stalker, Michael (Yahziel) Archangel, coupled with
    the fact that an Empire Center Security Supervisor stated that
    the respondent is ‘smart enough to know when & how long to
    [stay] away.’ The stalker may stay away long enough to avoid
    being served prior to the scheduled court date as Petitioner told
    him that she would be filing on July 17, 2018 or as soon
    thereafter as possible. Petitioner is concerned that he may not
    come to any of the Starbucks locations where she is known to
    frequent for a while as he did in June 2018.” Searles included in
    an attachment to the petition an extended narrative of
    Archangel’s threatening conduct, as well as photographs of what
    she described as his intimidating actions and gestures.
    The court issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) on
    the same day as the petition was filed. In the portion of the TRO
    form filled out in advance by Searles, Archangel’s home address
    was listed as “unknown/homeless”; and he was described as an
    “unknown vagabond-stalker.” The order authorized service on
    Archangel by the sheriff or marshal without charge because it
    was based on a credible threat of violence or stalking. The
    hearing on Searles’s petition was scheduled for August 14, 2018.
    Searles moved for a continuance of the August 14, 2018
    hearing, stating she had been unable to serve Archangel. She
    explained, Archangel “is homeless and avoids the area when he is
    aware that someone is looking to bring charges against him.”
    The court continued the hearing to September 6, 2018 and
    ordered that the previously issued TRO would remain in effect
    until the continued hearing date. Searles again moved to
    continue the hearing on September 6, 2018 when she remained
    unable to serve Archangel. The court granted the request,
    3
    continued the hearing to September 27, 2018 and ordered the
    TRO to remain in full force and effect until the new hearing date.
    2. Searles’s Motion To Waive Traditional Service
    Together with another request to continue the hearing, on
    September 27, 2018 Searles moved to waive traditional service
    and for authorization to serve Archangel by social media.
    Specifically, stating that Archangel followed her public Facebook,
    YouTube and Twitter postings, Searles requested leave to serve
    him by simultaneously posting the documents “to the Scribd
    website and linked to Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.”
    In her supporting declaration Searles stated Archangel was
    intentionally making himself unavailable and described the
    efforts she had made to effect personal service, primarily
    requesting that employees and customers at various businesses
    where Searles had seen Archangel serve him with her papers if
    they saw him near their stores.
    In a legal memorandum Searles quoted several out-of-state
    cases in which service of process by social media had been
    permitted, including Baidoo v. Blood-Dzrako (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2015)
    
    48 Misc.3d 309
     [
    5 N.Y.S.3d 709
    ] in which a New York family law
    court authorized service of the summons in a divorce action
    through a direct message to the defendant’s Facebook account (he
    had no email address), a decision based on state statutes allowing
    a court to authorize an alternative method of service if a
    sufficient showing had been made that personal service and
    traditional substitute service would be impractical and the
    method proposed was reasonably calculated to provide the
    defendant with actual notice of the pendency of the action. In
    reaching this conclusion, the court rejected service by publication
    as a viable option, explaining, “[I]t is almost guaranteed not to
    4
    provide a defendant with notice of the action for divorce, or any
    other lawsuit for that matter.” (Id. at p. 316.) The court
    continued, “Under the circumstance presented here, service by
    Facebook, albeit novel and nontraditional, is the form of service
    that most comports with the constitutional standards of due
    process. Not only is it reasonably calculated to provide defendant
    with notice that he is being sued for divorce, but every indication
    is that it will achieve what should be the goal of every method of
    service: actually delivering the summons to him.” (Id. at p. 317.)
    Searles asserted that Archangel, like the defendant in the
    Baidoo case, could not be personally served and, because no one
    knew where he lived, he also could not be served by mail.
    Accordingly, she argued the court had discretion pursuant to
    section 413.30 to authorize service in a different manner provided
    it was reasonably calculated to give actual notice to the party to
    be served, as she asserted use of social media would be in this
    case.
    At the hearing on September 27, 2018 the court, after
    hearing Searles’s description of what she had done to date in her
    efforts to effect personal service, denied the motion to allow
    service by an alternative method and directed her to keep trying
    to serve Archangel personally, as required by section 527.6,
    subdivision (m). The court explained the Los Angeles County
    Sheriff’s Department could assist her and suggested she ask for
    help at the sheriff’s office located in the courthouse. The court
    continued the hearing to October 18, 2018 and ordered the TRO
    to remain in effect until that date.2
    2      The court on September 27, 2018 also granted Searles’s
    request for a fee waiver, which included a waiver of any sheriff’s
    fees for serving the petition.
    5
    3. Searles’s Renewed Motion and the Ultimate Dismissal of
    Her Petition Without Prejudice
    With her October 18, 2018 request to continue the hearing
    date, Searles again stated Archangel could not be personally
    served and explained the sheriff had attempted service on
    October 1, 2018 at the Starbucks where Archangel was most
    often seen, but had returned the documents marked, “Not
    Found.” The hearing was continued to November 29, 2018. The
    TRO remained in full force and effect.3
    On November 29, 2018 Searles renewed her motion for
    authorization to serve Archangel by social media, providing the
    court with a slightly modified version of the supporting
    documents she had previously filed. At the hearing the court
    denied Searles’s request to present witnesses to testify as to the
    difficulty of finding Archangel in order to personally serve him
    and denied her request for service by social media as
    unauthorized by the Code of Civil Procedure. The court stated it
    would give her one final opportunity to effect personal service on
    Archangel, continued the hearing to January 31, 2019 and
    extended the TRO through the hearing date.
    The court on January 31, 2019, noting that Archangel had
    not been personally served as required, dismissed Searles’s
    petition for a civil harassment restraining order without
    prejudice and dissolved the TRO. The court explained to Searles,
    3     On October 29, 2018 Commissioner Timothy Martella, who
    had presided over the proceedings subsequent to issuance of the
    TRO, accepted Searles’s peremptory challenge pursuant to
    section 170.6, filed October 10, 2018, and ordered the case
    reassigned to another court for the hearing on November 29,
    2018.
    6
    if she still was concerned about being harassed, she could file
    another petition and request for a TRO, adding, “If it has merit,
    then it will get granted and that will give you some more time to
    have him served. If you can’t have him served, then you can’t.”4
    DISCUSSION
    1. The Developing Law of Service by Social Media
    As discussed, in Baidoo v. Blood-Dzrako, supra, 
    48 Misc.3d 309
    , cited by Searles, a New York family law court authorized
    service of the summons and complaint in a divorce case pursuant
    to state statutes generally allowing service “in such manner as
    the court, upon motion without notice, directs,” if service is
    “impracticable” by traditional methods including personal service
    and substitute service. (
    N.Y. CPLR § 308
    (5).) Similarly, in K.A.
    v. J.L. (2016) 
    450 N.J. Super. 247
     the court approved service of a
    complaint and order to show cause via Facebook pursuant to
    rule 4:4-3(b) of the New Jersey Rules of Court, which permits the
    court to authorize an alternative method of service if the
    4     Searles on January 31, 2019 moved to vacate the orders
    entered on September 27, 2018 and November 29, 2018. As to
    the earlier order, Searles argued Commissioner Martella should
    have granted the challenge for cause she filed on October 29,
    2018, rather than her earlier filed peremptory challenge, and the
    September 27, 2018 order denying her motion to waive
    traditional service was invalid because he was biased against her.
    Any challenge to Commissioner Martella’s failure to grant her
    motion to disqualify him for cause, however, is not reviewable on
    appeal. (People v. Hull (1991) 
    1 Cal.4th 266
    , 268.) As to the later
    order, Searles contended Judge Dorothy Shuba, who presided at
    the November 29, 2018 hearing and denied her renewed motion,
    did not give her a fair hearing. The court (Judge Amy Pellman)
    did not rule on the motion before dismissing the case.
    7
    plaintiff’s good faith attempts to effect personal service are
    unsuccessful: “If service cannot be made by any of the modes
    provided by this rule, any defendant may be served as provided
    by court order, consistent with due process of law.” (See also
    WhosHere, Inc. v. Orun (E.D.Va. Feb. 20, 2014, No. 1:13-CV-
    00526-AJT-TRJ) 2014 U.S.Dist. Lexis 22084 [authorizing service
    of summons and complaint on a foreign defendant by email and
    social networking websites identified by defendant as belonging
    to him].)
    Texas has taken authorization of service of process by
    social media one step further. In 2019 the Texas Legislature
    directed that state’s supreme court to “adopt rules to provide for
    the substituted service of citation by an electronic communication
    sent to a defendant through a social media presence.” (Tex. Civ.
    Prac. & Rem. Code, § 17.033, subd. (b).) In response, the Texas
    Supreme Court on August 21, 2020 approved amendments to
    rule 106, subdivision (b), of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,
    effective December 31, 2020, to provide, “Upon motion supported
    by a statement—sworn to before a notary or made under penalty
    of perjury—listing any location where the defendant can probably
    be found and stating specifically the facts showing that service
    has been attempted under (a)(1) [personal service] or (a)(2)
    [registered or certified mail] at the location named in the
    statement but has not been successful, the court may authorize
    service: [¶] . . . [¶] (2) in any other manner, including
    electronically by social media, email, or other technology, that the
    statement or other evidence shows will be reasonably effective to
    give the defendant notice of the suit.” The rule’s comment
    explains, “Amended Rule 106(b)(2) clarifies that a court may, in
    proper circumstances, permit service of citation electronically by
    8
    social media, email, or other technology. In determining whether
    to permit electronic service of process, a court should consider
    whether the technology actually belongs to the defendant and
    whether the defendant regularly uses or recently used the
    technology.”5
    As summarized in a recent law review note, “Traditional
    methods of service of process are preferred, but are not always
    practicable. When a defendant cannot be reached through
    traditional methods, judges should use their discretion and allow
    alternative service by social media in appropriate cases. Current
    methods of alternative service, such as publication, are not
    efficient or effective. By allowing alternative service of process
    via social media in certain cases, the defendant is much more
    likely to receive actual notice in a cost-effective manner.” (Davis,
    Social Media: A Good Alternative, for Alternative Service of
    Process (2020) 52 Case Western Reserve J.Internat. Law 573.)
    Commentators who support permitting courts to authorize
    service of process through social media in appropriate
    circumstances, however, have articulated several important
    5     According to the National Center for State Courts, Texas
    was not the first state to put into its rules such a provision.
    Rule 4(e) of the Alaska Rules of Civil Procedure permits a litigant
    to serve process through posting to the court’s legal notice
    website or to a social media account once the litigant has made a
    diligent effort to serve process by certified mail/restricted
    delivery/return receipt and/or via a process server. (See NCSC,
    New Texas Rules Explicitly Permit Service of Process Via Social
    Media (Aug. 27, 2020)  [as of
    Jan. 22, 2021], archived at.)
    9
    limitations on its use. “First, the social media site itself must
    provide a platform consistent with service of process. This means
    that the site should offer a non-connected user a means of
    contacting another user through a private message. [fn. omitted.]
    The messaging feature of the site must also have the ability to
    include attachments in the message so that the summons and the
    complaint can be attached and sent in the message. . . . [¶]
    Second, because a question will likely be raised about whether
    the account belongs to the defendant, the plaintiff must make
    reasonable efforts to verify the account through corroboration of
    the information contained in it. . . . [¶] Third, in order to
    establish timeliness of notice via social media, there must be
    evidence of the defendant’s use of the site, such as status
    updates, postings on others’ walls, connecting with other users, or
    similar activity. . . . If frequency of use cannot be shown or the
    user’s account has been set to private, service would not be
    permissible.” (Knapp, #serviceofprocess @socialmedia: Accepting
    Social Media for Service of Process in the 21st Century (2014)
    74 La. L.Rev. 547, 576; see Davis, Social Media: A Good
    Alternative, for Alternative Service of Process, supra, 52 Case
    Western Reserve J.Internat. Law at pp. 590-593 [noting issues
    related to authenticity of the social media account to which
    service was directed]; Upchurch, “Hacking” Service of Process:
    Using Social Media to Provide Constitutionally Sufficient Notice
    of Process (2016) 38 U. Ark. Little Rock L.Rev. 559, 580-590
    [explaining to be constitutionally sufficient social media notice
    must be directed to the proper person, conspicuous and verifiable
    and must permit sufficient access to the summons and
    complaint].)6
    6     Notably, Searles’s motion sought leave to serve Archangel
    10
    The question before us, however, is not whether it would be
    a sound policy development to permit the superior court to
    authorize service by social media, at least in those circumstances
    where service by publication in a newspaper is now deemed
    sufficient, let alone whether it should be permitted in civil
    harassment restraining order cases, where personal service of the
    petition and notice of hearing is now required. If it were, our
    answer to the first of those questions would be a qualified yes. As
    Justice Cooper wrote in Baidoo, “[A] concept should not be
    rejected simply because it is novel or nontraditional. This is
    especially so where technology and the law intersect. In this age
    of technological enlightenment, what is for the moment
    unorthodox and unusual stands a good chance of sooner or later
    being accepted and standard, or even outdated and passé.”
    (Baidoo v. Blood-Dzraku, 
    supra,
     48 Misc.3d at pp. 313-314.)
    We encourage the Legislature and the Judicial Council,
    which have already authorized extensive use of electronic service
    of notice (see Code Civ. Proc., § 1010.6; Cal. Rules of Court,
    rule 2.251; see also Prob. Code, § 1215, subd. (c)), to consider
    developing pilot programs to test the efficacy of utilizing new
    technologies as an approved method of service of process. But as
    the superior court properly ruled in this case, current law
    requires personal service of the petition, TRO and notice of
    hearing in civil harassment restraining order cases and does not
    permit the court to approve alternative methods of service.
    by posting the petition and notice of hearing on her own social
    media platforms, not by directing it to Archangel’s sites, which
    poses different, but equally difficult, issues of verification of
    receipt (that is, of actual notice).
    11
    2. The Service Requirement in Civil Harassment
    Restraining Order Cases
    Section 527.6, subdivision (a), permits a person who has
    suffered harassment as defined in the statute to seek an ex parte
    TRO and, after notice and a hearing, a protective order
    prohibiting harassment for up to five years (frequently referred to
    as a “permanent” restraining order).7 Section 527.6,
    subdivision (g), provides a hearing must be held on the petition
    within 21 days, or, if good cause is shown, within 25 days from
    the date a TRO has been granted or denied, although
    subdivision (p)(1) authorizes the court to grant a continuance of
    the hearing on the petition on a showing of good cause.
    Subdivision (m) provides, “Upon the filing of a petition under this
    section, the respondent shall be personally served with a copy of
    the petition, temporary restraining order, if any, and notice of
    hearing of the petition. Service shall be made at least five days
    before the hearing. The court may for good cause, on motion of
    the petitioner, or on its own motion, shorten the time for service
    on the respondent.” (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.1160(c) [“The
    request for a protective order, notice of hearing, and any
    temporary restraining order, must be personally served on the
    respondent at least five days before the hearing, unless the court
    for good cause orders a shorter time. Service must be made in
    the manner provided by law for personal service of summons in
    civil actions”].)
    7     The restraining order may be renewed for a duration of no
    more than five additional years without a showing of any further
    harassment since the issuance of the original order. (§ 527.6,
    subd. (j)(1).)
    12
    3. Section 413.30 Does Not Authorize Alternative Methods
    of Service in Civil Harassment Restraining Order Cases
    Section 413.30 provides, “Where no provision is made in
    this chapter[8] or other law for the service of summons, the court
    in which the action is pending may direct that summons be
    served in a manner which is reasonably calculated to give actual
    notice to the party to be served and that proof of such service be
    made as prescribed by the court.” Searles argued in the superior
    court, and contends again on appeal, that, given her inability to
    effect personal service on a homeless respondent who was
    actively evading service by staying away from locations he
    usually visited, section 413.30 authorized the court to allow
    service by social media as an alternative that was reasonably
    calculated to give actual notice of the case to Archangel.
    8      Chapter 4 of Part 2, Title 5, of the Code of Civil Procedure,
    in which section 413.30 is located, provides for service of
    summons in civil actions. Section 413.10 states, “Except as
    otherwise provided by statute, a summons shall be served on a
    person: [¶] (a) Within this state, as provided in this chapter.”
    Sections 415.10 through 415.95, also part of the chapter, describe
    the various permissible modes of service of summons, including
    personal delivery to the person to be served (§ 415.10); under
    defined circumstances, leaving a copy with a competent person at
    the home of the person to be served and thereafter mailing copies
    to that address, generally known as “substitute service” (§ 415.20,
    subd. (b)); mail with an acknowledgement-of-receipt form to be
    signed and returned (§ 415.30); and publication in a newspaper
    “if upon affidavit it appears to the satisfaction of the court in
    which the action is pending that the party to be served cannot
    with reasonable diligence be served in another manner specified
    in this article” (§ 415.50).
    13
    Searles’s position arguably finds support in unpublished
    United States District Court opinions that have construed
    section 413.30 as authorizing alternative methods of service of a
    summons, specifically by email, when traditional methods have
    proved ineffective. For example, in Beqa Lagoon Support
    Services v. Hasselman (S.D.Cal., Oct. 26, 2020, No. 20-CV-968
    JLS (AHG)) 2020 U.S.Dist. Lexis 198751, the court, after noting
    that rule 4(e)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
    (28 U.S.C.) (rule 4(e)(1)) authorizes service of process on an
    individual within the United States in conformity with the law of
    the state in which the district court is located, ruled
    section 413.30 permitted service by email after the plaintiff’s
    attempts to effect service by personal delivery through a certified
    process server and the sheriff and by certified mail and Federal
    Express had been unsuccessful, provided the plaintiff
    demonstrated email was reasonably calculated to provide actual
    notice of the pending case. Similarly, in Twitch Interactive, Inc.
    v. Johnston (N.D.Cal., Jan. 19, 2017, No. 16-CV-03404-BLF) 2017
    U.S.Dist. Lexis 7787 the court granted the plaintiff’s motion to
    serve defendants at their email addresses pursuant to rule 4(e)(1)
    and section 413.30, finding that the plaintiff had made
    substantial efforts to personally serve the defendants with the
    summons and complaint and that service by email was
    reasonably calculated to provide actual notice. (Accord,
    Facebook, Inc. v. Banana Ads, LLC (N.D.Cal., Mar. 27, 2012,
    No. C-11-3619 YGR) 2012 U.S.Dist. Lexis 42160 [authorizing
    email service of process pursuant to rule 4(e)(1) and
    section 413.30]; see also Floyd v. Saratoga Diagnostics, Inc.
    (N.D.Cal., June 5, 2020, No. 20-CV-01520-LHK) 2020 U.S.Dist.
    Lexis 100279 [certified mail authorized as alternative method for
    14
    service of summons pursuant to rule 4(e)(1) and section 413.30
    when personal service was unsuccessful].)
    In marked contrast to these decisions, the district court in
    Federal Insurance Company v. Caldera Medical Inc. (C.D.Cal.,
    Apr. 8, 2015, No. 2:15-CV-00393-SVW-PJW) 2015 U.S.Dist.
    Lexis 187119 rejected the plaintiff’s request, made pursuant to
    rule 4(e)(1) and section 413.30, to authorize an alternative
    method of service of a summons—one not expressly authorized by
    the Code of Civil Procedure—explaining section 413.30 “permits a
    court to direct service ‘in a manner which is reasonably
    calculated to give actual notice to the party to be served’ so long
    as ‘no provision is made in this chapter or other law for the
    service of summons.’ [Citation.] The problem is that the Court
    just discussed the provisions providing for service of summons
    upon authorized agents. See Cal. Code Civ. P. § 416.90.[9] Thus,
    the Court cannot invoke Section 413.30 to circumvent
    Section 416.90.” (Accord, Oh My Green, Inc. v. Cuffe (C.D. Cal.,
    Mar. 20, 2020, No. CV-20-2509 PA PVCx) 2020 U.S.Dist. Lexis
    107056 [denying plaintiff’s request to serve defendant with the
    summons, complaint and moving papers in support of a TRO
    through email; “section 413.30 does not authorize service by
    alternative means when California law provides other methods
    for service”].)
    We agree with the analysis of the district courts that
    decided Federal Insurance Company and Oh My Green, Inc. As
    discussed, the Legislature has expressly mandated that the
    9      Section 416.90 provides, “A summons may be served on a
    person not otherwise specified in this article by delivering a copy
    of the summons and of the complaint to such person or to a
    person authorized by him to receive service of process.”
    15
    respondent in a proceeding for a civil harassment restraining
    order be provided notice of the hearing, together with a copy of
    the petition and any TRO, only through personal service.
    (§ 527.6, subd. (m).) Thus, section 413.30 is inapplicable in this
    situation: The necessary prerequisite for the court to authorize
    an alternative method of service—that “no provision is made in
    this chapter or other law for the service for summons”—is
    unsatisfied. Section 413.30 does not provide, as does, for
    example, section 308, subdivision (5), of the New York Civil
    Practice Law and Rules, that the court may order an alternative
    method of service if the procedures expressly identified by the
    Legislature prove impractical. Nor does section 527.6 state
    personal service is preferred, but other means of service may be
    employed if personal service is not feasible.
    Provisions of the Probate Code make clear that we cannot
    simply attribute to legislative oversight the absence of any
    provision authorizing the court to utilize Code of Civil Procedure
    section 413.30 if personal service in a restraining order case has
    proved unsuccessful. Probate Code section 1215 provides for
    service of notices and other papers in probate proceedings
    through delivery by mail or personal delivery (and by electronic
    delivery with consent). However, Probate Code section 1212
    expressly directs the court to section 413.30 and authorizes
    alternative methods of service if neither of those methods is
    feasible: “Unless the court dispenses with the notice, if the
    address of the person to whom a notice or other paper is required
    to be delivered pursuant to [Probate Code] Section 1215 is not
    known, notice shall be given as the court may require in the
    manner provided in Section 413.30 of the Code of Civil
    16
    Procedure.”10 The Legislature’s decision not to include a
    comparable provision for alternate forms of service in
    section 527.6 precludes our rewriting the statute to allow service
    other than by personal delivery. (See People v. Leal (2004)
    
    33 Cal.4th 999
    , 1008 [“‘It is our task to construe, not to amend,
    the statute. . . . We may not, under the guise of construction,
    rewrite the law or give the words an effect different from the
    plain and direct import of the terms used’”]; Cornette v.
    Department of Transportation (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 63
     73-74 [“[a]
    court may not rewrite a statute, either by inserting or omitting
    language, to make it conform to a presumed intent that is not
    expressed”].)
    4. Requiring Personal Service of the Notice of Hearing Did
    Not Violate Searles’s Due Process Rights
    Even if not expressly authorized by statute or court rule,
    California courts have inherent authority to facilitate an indigent
    10     The limited scope of section 413.30 is illustrated by the Law
    Revision Commission Comment to section 1250.130, enacted in
    1975, which specifies additional requirements when service by
    publication has been ordered in eminent domain proceedings.
    After noting that sections 415.10 through 415.30 generally
    provide the manner of service in an eminent domain proceeding,
    the Commission explained, where service by publication is
    ordered pursuant to section 415.50, section 1250.130 requires
    that the court also order the plaintiff to post a copy of the
    summons and complaint on the property and record a lis pendens
    to increase the likelihood interested parties will receive actual
    notice of the proceeding. Citing section 413.30 the Commission
    then suggested, “The court should by order also give appropriate
    directions as to the manner of posting, e.g., location and number
    of copies.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 19 West’s Ann. Code
    Civ. Proc. (2007 ed.) foll. § 1250.130, pp. 490-491.)
    17
    civil litigant’s equal access to the judicial system by recognizing
    exceptions to, or variations in, general procedural requirements.
    (Jameson v. Desta (2018) 
    5 Cal.5th 594
    , 605.) Thus, in Cohen v.
    Board of Supervisors (1971) 
    20 Cal.App.3d 236
    , 239, at a time
    when fee waivers in this state did not include costs for service of
    process, the court of appeal, relying on section 413.30, held
    indigent parties in family law cases whose spouses could not be
    found for personal service and who could not afford to pay costs of
    service by publication could instead serve their spouses by
    mailing to their last known addresses and posting at those
    locations, a method of service of process described by the United
    States Supreme Court in Boddie v. Connecticut (1971) 
    401 U.S. 371
     [
    91 S.Ct. 780
    , 
    28 L.Ed.2d 119
    ].11 The Cohen court explained,
    “[T]here really is no other provision made by law for service,
    because although publication is theoretically possible, practically
    there is no way of efficient publication save by the doubtful
    expedient of ordering public officials to make expenditures which
    no statute authorizes them to make. This would be a measure
    justifiable, if at all, only if it were the sole available means of
    carrying into execution the service of summons which plaintiffs,
    as indigent litigants, rightfully demand as an incident of due
    process.” (Cohen, at p. 239.)
    11     The Supreme Court in Boddie v. Connecticut, 
    supra,
    401 U.S. 371
     held the due process clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment requires states to allow an indigent party to divorce
    proceedings to litigate without payment of fees and costs.
    “[A]bsent a countervailing state interest of overriding
    significance, persons forced to settle their claims of right and
    duty through the judicial process must be given a meaningful
    opportunity to be heard.” (Id. at p. 377.)
    18
    Searles’s inability to obtain a permanent restraining order
    against Archangel, however, is not a product of her indigency.
    Searles paid no filing fee because she alleged, pursuant to
    section 527.6, subdivision (y), that Archangel had threatened
    violence against her or had acted in a manner that made her
    reasonably fear for violence. Similarly, there was no cost to
    Searles to have the sheriff’s department attempt to personally
    serve Archangel because the court granted her request for a fee
    waiver. The same difficulty Searles faced in trying to have
    Archangel personally served, a statutory prerequisite to issuance
    of a permanent restraining order, would confront any petitioner
    seeking a restraining order. There is no equal access issue here.
    Searles’s contention her inability to proceed against
    Archangel conflicts with a crime victim’s rights to justice and due
    process, as set forth in article I, section 28, subdivision (b), of the
    California Constitution, is misplaced. It may be that Archangel’s
    threatening conduct toward Searles constituted a crime. If so, he
    is subject to arrest; and, as his victim, Searles may qualify for a
    pretrial protective order pursuant to Penal Code section 136.2,
    subdivision (a), and, following a conviction, a more extended
    restraining order, valid for up to 10 years, under Penal Code
    section 646.9, subdivision (k). In seeking a civil harassment
    restraining order, however, Searles does not come within the
    scope of the victims’ rights provisions of the California
    Constitution.
    Even though her petition was ultimately dismissed,
    Searles’s rights were fully protected in this case. The superior
    court rescheduled the hearing on her request for a permanent
    restraining order multiple times, from August 14, 2018 through
    January 31, 2019, continuing the TRO she obtained against
    19
    Archangel for more than six months and providing her an
    extended opportunity to effect personal service. In addition,
    when it dismissed the petition, the court did so without prejudice,
    advising Searles that if Archangel was continuing to harass her—
    something that seems unlikely given his disappearance—she
    could file a new petition and begin the process again, including
    obtaining another TRO if one was justified. Nothing more was
    required.
    DISPOSITION
    The order dismissing the petition is affirmed. Searles is to
    bear her own costs on appeal.
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    We concur:
    SEGAL, J.
    FEUER, J.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B296011

Filed Date: 1/22/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021