Gilman v. Dalby ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 4/8/21 (unmodified opn. attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    KEVAN HARRY GILMAN,                                                  C066930
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                 (Super. Ct. No. 04AS03166)
    v.                                                   ORDER MODIFYING
    OPINION AND
    LENA L. DALBY et al.,                                       DENYING REHEARING
    [NO CHANGE IN
    Defendants and Respondents;                    JUDGMENT]
    TAMMY R. PHILLIPS et al.,
    Claimants and Appellants;
    ADAM C. THIEL,
    Respondent.
    * Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified
    for publication with the exception of part IV of the Discussion.
    1
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County,
    Shelleyanne Wai Ling Chang, Judge. Reversed in part and affirmed in part.
    Charles Q. Jakob for Claimants and Appellants.
    Dreyer Babich Buccola Wood Campora, Steven M. Campora and Marshall R.
    Way for Defendants and Respondents Lena L. Dalby et al.
    Kevan Harry Gilman, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Law Office of Joseph C. Maher and Joseph C. Maher II for Respondent Adam C.
    Thiel.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on March 12, 2021, be modified as
    follows:
    The last paragraph on page 20 that begins with, “Second, Appellants assert that
    Respondents, …” and ends on page 21, is to be modified to read:
    Second, Appellants assert that Respondents, even if not notified of the lien by
    mail, at least had constructive notice of the lien because an electronic version of the lien
    was available on “the case docket through the lower court’s website.” But Appellants
    offer no facts to show that to be true. The only “evidence” they offer in support is a
    portion of their motion for sanctions where they argued “[t]he court file contained
    [Appellants’] notice of liens.” But statements in motions are not evidence. (See In re
    Zeth S. (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 396
    , 413, fn. 11 [“unsworn statements of counsel are not
    evidence”].) And regardless, whether the court’s file contained the notice and whether
    the court’s website contained the notice are two very different things.
    2
    This modification does not affect the judgment.
    The petition for rehearing is denied.
    BY THE COURT:
    /s/
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    /s/
    HULL, J.
    /s/
    KRAUSE, J.
    3
    Filed 3/12/21 (unmodified opinion)
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    KEVAN HARRY GILMAN,                                                  C066930
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                 (Super. Ct. No. 04AS03166)
    v.
    LENA L. DALBY et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents;
    TAMMY R. PHILLIPS et al.,
    Claimants and Appellants;
    ADAM C. THIEL,
    Respondent.
    * Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified
    for publication with the exception of part IV of the Discussion.
    1
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County,
    Shelleyanne Wai Ling Chang, Judge. Reversed in part and affirmed in part.
    Charles Q. Jakob for Claimants and Appellants.
    Dreyer Babich Buccola Wood Campora, Steven M. Campora and Marshall R.
    Way for Defendants and Respondents Lena L. Dalby et al.
    Kevan Harry Gilman, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Law Office of Joseph C. Maher and Joseph C. Maher II for Respondent Adam C.
    Thiel.
    Code of Civil Procedure1 section 708.410 allows a party who has a money
    judgment against another to obtain a lien on that person’s right to money in a later
    lawsuit. In particular, it allows a “judgment creditor who has a money judgment against
    a judgment debtor who is a party to a pending action” to obtain a lien on “[t]he rights of
    such judgment debtor to money or property under any judgment subsequently procured in
    the action.”
    We consider here an uncommon application of this statute. The judgment
    creditors in this case obtained, per section 708.410, a lien on “[t]he rights of [the]
    judgment debtor to money or property under any judgment” in a certain lawsuit. In the
    course of that suit, the judgment debtor paid money to another party pursuant to an
    adverse judgment, but, following reversal of that judgment, the trial court ordered that
    money to be returned to the judgment debtor. We consider in this appeal whether the
    judgment creditors’ lien attached to the money ordered returned to the judgment debtor.
    Unlike the trial court, we conclude it potentially did, though we find further
    factual review is required to resolve the issue. Section 708.410 speaks broadly of a
    1        Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
    2
    judgment creditor’s ability to obtain a lien on a judgment debtor’s right “to money . . .
    under any judgment” in a lawsuit, and another statute that is part of the same statutory
    scheme defines the word “judgment” to include, relevant here, an order. Applying this
    definition to section 708.410, we find a judgment creditor may obtain a lien on a
    judgment debtor’s right “to money under any [order]” in a lawsuit, including the type of
    order in our case. Because the trial court here interpreted section 708.410 differently, we
    reverse its decision in part and remand for reconsideration.
    BACKGROUND
    Kevan Harry Gilman, for reasons that are irrelevant here, sued Lena L. Dalby, her
    law firm, and the individual members of the firm (collectively, the Dalby Respondents) in
    2004 to recover funds he believed he was owed. (Gilman v. Dalby (2009) 
    176 Cal.App.4th 606
    , 610.)
    We first considered this matter in 2009. We considered then, among other things,
    the trial court’s granting of the Dalby Respondents’ motion for summary judgment and
    its ordering Gilman to pay the Dalby Respondents $17,229.27 in attorney fees and costs.
    Although we agreed with the trial court in part, we found the evidence insufficient to
    warrant the summary adjudication of one of Gilman’s causes of action. We thus reversed
    the summary adjudication of that one cause of action and also reversed the related award
    of $17,229.27 in fees and costs. (Gilman v. Dalby, supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 620.)
    This current appeal concerns the later return of that $17,229.27 to Gilman, and it
    involves two new parties, Tammy R. Phillips and her eponymous law firm (collectively,
    Appellants), who hold outstanding money judgments against Gilman in an amount well
    over $17,229.27.
    A month after our 2009 decision, Appellants filed a notice of lien in this case
    under section 708.410. Relevant here, that statute allows “[a] judgment creditor who has
    a money judgment against a judgment debtor who is a party to a pending action or special
    proceeding [to] obtain a lien under this article, to the extent required to satisfy the
    3
    judgment creditor’s money judgment, on . . . [¶] [t]he rights of such judgment debtor to
    money or property under any judgment subsequently procured in the action or
    proceeding.” (§ 708.410, subd. (a)(2).) Based on this language, Appellants alleged in
    their notice of lien that they were entitled to “any rights to money or property under any
    judgment, order, or settlement taken by GILMAN in this action.”
    A couple months after Appellants filed their notice of lien, Gilman filed a motion
    for restitution, seeking a return of the $17,229.27 he paid to the Dalby Respondents.
    Gilman did not notify Appellants. The trial court agreed restitution was appropriate and
    thus “ordered [the Dalby Respondents] to restore the $17,229.27 to [Gilman].” After the
    Dalby Respondents paid this amount, Gilman dismissed his case against the Dalby
    Respondents without prejudice.
    Five months after Gilman’s dismissal, Appellants filed a motion to strike the
    allegedly invalid dismissal and for an order of satisfaction of lien. Relying on section
    708.440, Appellants contended their filed lien should have prevented Gilman from
    dismissing his case because, per section 708.440, judgment debtors generally may not
    dismiss their actions “without the written consent of the judgment creditor or
    authorization by order of the court.” (§ 708.440, subd. (a).) Appellants then contended
    the court should, after vacating the dismissal, order the Dalby Respondents and Gilman to
    pay them the $17,229.27. Although not entirely clear, they appeared to reason that
    Gilman should be ordered to pay at least some of this amount because he sought
    restitution for himself even though he had notice of Appellants’ lien. And, relying on
    section 708.470, they reasoned the Dalby Respondents should similarly be ordered to pay
    this amount, at least to the extent Gilman did not pay it, because they paid Gilman even
    though they too had notice of Appellants’ lien. (§ 708.470, subd. (c) [a party who,
    “having notice of the lien,” “pa[ys] an amount to the judgment debtor that was subject to
    the lien” may be liable to the creditor].) Appellants also asserted that Gilman should be
    ordered to pay for their costs of enforcement and that Gilman and his attorney, Adam C.
    4
    Thiel, should be sanctioned. Finally, unless they received their money, Appellants asked
    the court to report Gilman and Thiel to the State Bar of California.
    The trial court rejected Gilman’s several claims on October 27, 2010. It first
    questioned whether it had jurisdiction, given Gilman’s previous dismissal of the action.
    But assuming it had jurisdiction, it rejected Appellants’ claim that they had a lien on the
    $17,229.27. Appellants’ lien, the court explained, reached only money that Gilman was
    entitled to receive under a “judgment.” But the restitution order, the court concluded,
    was not a “judgment.” It reasoned the order “was not based on any right to payment in
    the action,” but only returned the parties “to the status quo.” The court also rejected
    Appellants’ request for sanctions against Gilman and Thiel and “decline[d] to report
    [Gilman] to the State Bar.”
    After the court issued its tentative decision denying Appellants’ claims, but before
    its final order, Appellants filed a memorandum of costs seeking additional payment for
    the costs of enforcement. The Dalby Respondents in response filed a motion to tax costs,
    asserting, among other things, that Appellants were not entitled to their requested costs
    because they were not the prevailing parties. Appellants opposed the motion. They
    contended the Dalby Respondents’ motion should be denied because Appellants had only
    sought enforcement costs from Gilman, not from the Dalby Respondents.
    The trial court agreed with Appellants. Because Appellants conceded they had
    neither the intention nor the right to impose the costs claimed on the Dalby Respondents,
    the court found it unnecessary to consider the merits of the Dalby Respondents’ motion.
    It thus denied the Dalby Respondents’ motion to tax on December 16, 2010. At the close
    of the order, however, the court added “that no fees or costs shall be awarded against the
    [Dalby Respondents]”—in effect largely granting the Dalby Respondents their requested
    relief.
    5
    Appellants timely appealed.2
    DISCUSSION
    I
    Appellants’ Requests for Judicial Notice
    Before turning to the merits, we consider Appellants’ three requests for judicial
    notice.
    We grant judicial notice for most of their submitted documents. These include
    several filings from Gilman’s bankruptcy proceedings (requests 1, 16, 17, 23), the
    California Law Revision Commission’s 1982 report on several judgment lien statutes
    (request 2), a 2011 report from the Administrative Office of the Courts (request 4),
    several filings from the trial court proceedings in this case (requests 6, 18, 20), Gilman’s
    discovery responses from another case (requests 7-9), the docket from the first appeal in
    this case (request 10), Appellants’ renewal of their judgments against Gilman (request
    14), several filings from Gilman’s related suit against Appellants (request 15), and the
    bankruptcy court’s docket (requests 16, 24). (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subds. (c), (d), 459,
    subd. (a).)
    We deny Appellants’ remaining requests. We deny three of their requests because
    Appellants fail to explain “why the matter is subject to judicial notice under Evidence
    Code section 451, 452, or 453.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.252 (a)(2)(C).) That
    includes a receipt (request 3), two website printouts (requests 3, 5), and, according to
    Appellants, “Gilman[’s] concession [that] Thiel was his counsel of record” (request 22).
    We deny three more of their requests because they concern irrelevant matters.
    These three requests are the Dalby Respondents’ application for an extension of time to
    file their brief on appeal (request 11), the docket from Gilman’s suit against one of his
    2      Gilman filed for bankruptcy shortly after Appellants appealed, resulting in a six-
    year stay in these proceedings that ended when Gilman’s bankruptcy petition was denied.
    6
    former attorneys (request 12), and part of a State Bar Court’s 2015 decision that
    concerned Gilman (request 19). Appellants contend the Dalby Respondents’ application
    for extension of time is relevant to show their attorney “is disorganized and busy.” But
    although the application might show their counsel was busy in August of 2017, when the
    application was filed, we do not see how that is relevant to this matter. Appellants next
    contend the docket from Gilman’s suit against his former attorney is relevant because the
    types of allegations Gilman made in that case tend to weaken his claims here. But even
    assuming that is true, we find the docket to be of little help in that regard as we cannot
    ascertain the particular types of allegations Gilman made in that case simply by
    reviewing the docket. Lastly, Appellants contend the State Bar Court’s decision is
    relevant because “[i]t corroborates Appellants’ assertion in the lower court that
    opportunities to report Gilman to the State Bar were commonplace” and shows
    “Appellants’ counsel had never threatened to report Thiel to the State Bar.” But even
    supposing opportunities to report Gilman were “commonplace,” we do not see why that
    matters to this appeal. We also fail to understand how the State Bar Court’s decision
    concerning Gilman shows Appellants’ counsel “never threatened to report Thiel to the
    State Bar.”
    We deny two more of Appellants’ requests because they seek judicial notice for an
    improper purpose—namely, for the truth of the matters asserted in the documents. This
    relates to Appellants’ application to shorten time in this matter (request 11), their
    application to add Thiel as a respondent (request 11), and three checks from Gilman’s
    wife to Lien Medical that were allegedly exhibits in Gilman’s bankruptcy case (request
    21). In seeking judicial notice of their two applications, Appellants apparently seek only
    to incorporate the arguments they made in those applications. And as to the checks,
    Appellants seek to introduce them to show Gilman’s wife sent Lien Medical checks in the
    amount of $13,000—in other words, they are relevant for the truth of the matter asserted.
    But “the truth of the matters alleged in [a document] is not the proper subject of judicial
    7
    notice” (Voris v. Lampert (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 1141
    , 1147, fn. 5), and so we deny these
    requests.
    Finally, Appellants ask that we take judicial notice of the “absence of motions in
    this court showing Appellants assigned their judgments” (request 13). Without needing
    to take judicial notice of this matter, we acknowledge that no party has filed any motion
    of that sort in this appeal.
    II
    Appellants’ Motion for Lien Satisfaction
    Turning to the merits, we consider first Appellants’ contention that the trial court
    wrongly denied their “motion for satisfaction of their liens.”
    Appellants’ argument is based principally on sections 708.410 and 680.230, both
    of which are part of the Enforcement of Judgments Law (EJL; § 680.010 et seq.).
    Section 708.410, in relevant part, provides: “A judgment creditor who has a money
    judgment against a judgment debtor who is a party to a pending action or special
    proceeding may obtain a lien . . . on . . . [¶] [t]he rights of such judgment debtor to money
    or property under any judgment subsequently procured in the action or proceeding.”
    (§ 708.410, subd. (a)(2).) Section 680.230, in turn, defines the term “judgment” to
    “mean[] a judgment, order, or decree entered in a court of this state.”
    Based on these two statutes, Appellants contend the trial court should have found
    they had a lien on Gilman’s right to the $17,229.27 under the restitution order. Unlike
    the trial court, we agree their lien could have attached to this money. But because we
    find remand appropriate to determine whether Respondents had notice of their lien,
    among other things, we reserve judgment on whether their lien actually entitled them to
    this amount.
    8
    A. Section 708.410 Applied to the Restitution Order
    Our finding that Appellants’ lien could have attached to this money readily
    follows from the statutory text. Taken together, and relevant here, sections 708.410 and
    680.230 allow judgment creditors to obtain liens on “[t]he rights of [the] judgment debtor
    to money or property under any judgment[, order, or decree] subsequently procured in the
    action or proceeding.” Relying on this authority, Appellants (judgment creditors)
    obtained a lien on the rights of Gilman (a judgment debtor) to “money or property under
    any judgment[, order, or decree] subsequently procured” in Gilman’s suit against the
    Dalby Respondents. And after they obtained this lien, the trial court issued an order
    requiring the Dalby Respondents to pay $17,229.27 to Gilman. Under the plain terms of
    sections 708.410 and 680.230, because Appellants had a lien on Gilman’s right to
    “money or property under any judgment[, order, or decree] subsequently procured in the
    action,” they thus had a lien on Gilman’s right to the money under the later issued
    restitution order—though, relevant to our discussion later, that lien would not affect “the
    rights of a party . . . until the party had notice of the lien.” (§ 708.410, subd. (c).)
    Consideration of the purposes of section 708.410 et seq. and section 680.230
    further supports this conclusion. The purpose of section 708.410 et seq., like the purpose
    of lien statutes generally, is to secure creditors’ rights to money they are owed. (See, e.g.,
    Oldham v. California Capital Fund, Inc. (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 421
    , 430 [“[o]ne
    purpose” of § 708.410 et seq. “is to establish and preserve the judgment creditor’s
    priority to the money and property the judgment debtor may receive from the pending
    action”]; Nolte v. Smith (1961) 
    189 Cal.App.2d 140
    , 144 [purpose of mechanics liens
    “ ‘is to secure to [mechanics] payment for the labor performed or material furnished’ ”].)
    And the purpose section 680.230’s broad definition of “judgment” is in part to
    “ ‘continue[] the effect of former Section 1007’ ” (Lucky United Properties Investment,
    Inc. v. Lee (2010) 
    185 Cal.App.4th 125
    , 144 (Lucky)), which provided: “ ‘Whenever an
    order for the payment of a sum of money is made by a court pursuant to the provisions of
    9
    this code, it may be enforced by execution in the same manner as if it were a judgment.’
    (Code of Civ. Proc., sec. 1007.)” (Van Cleave v. Bucher (1889) 
    79 Cal. 600
    , 603.)
    Both these purposes are furthered in interpreting section 708.410, as modified by
    section 680.230, to apply to Gilman’s right to the money under the restitution order.
    Interpreting these statutes in this manner furthers section 708.410 et seq.’s purpose of
    securing the rights of creditors (here, Appellants) to money they are owed. It also
    furthers section 680.230’s purpose of continuing the effect of a former rule that allowed
    orders to be enforced in the same manner as if they were judgments. And so, consistent
    with the statutory text, the legislative purpose, and “the well-recognized policy of the law
    to liberally construe remedial statutes designed to protect persons within their purview”
    (Viles v. State (1967) 
    66 Cal.2d 24
    , 32-33), we find Appellants’ lien could have attached
    to Gilman’s right to the $17,229.27 under the restitution order. (See also McClearen v.
    Superior Court (1955) 
    45 Cal.2d 852
    , 856 [§ 688.1, § 708.410’s predecessor, “is
    remedial in nature and should be liberally construed to give effect to the remedy which it
    authorizes”].)3
    The Dalby Respondents, Thiel, and Gilman (collectively, Respondents) offer
    several arguments in favor of a contrary reading of section 708.410, but we find none of
    their arguments persuasive.
    3       Some Courts of Appeal have broadly declared that “ ‘[t]hese judgment lien
    statutes are subject to strict construction because they are purely the creation of the
    Legislature.’ [Citations.]” (Casa Eva I Homeowners Assn. v. Ani Construction & Tile,
    Inc. (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 771
    , 778.) But these decisions appear to be focused on the
    procedural requirements of these statutes, not the scope of the statutes. (See id. at pp.
    778-779.) To the extent they speak to the scope of these statutes, however, we disagree
    with them. Again, as the California Supreme Court has often explained—including when
    considering section 708.410’s predecessor, section 688.1—“remedial statutes are to be
    liberally construed.” (Draper v. City of Los Angeles (1990) 
    52 Cal.3d 502
    , 507; see
    McClearen v. Superior Court, supra, 45 Cal.2d at p. 856 [§ 688.1 “is remedial in nature
    and should be liberally construed to give effect to the remedy which it authorizes”].)
    10
    First, they contend we have no “judgment” within the meaning of section 708.410.
    In their view, the relevant decision is our remittitur and, they suggest, a remittitur is not a
    “judgment” under the EJL. But Respondents focus on the wrong judicial act. Our earlier
    reversal of the fee award and our subsequent remittitur were not, themselves, the cause of
    the restitution award to Gilman. Our reversal, of course, tended to favor restitution. As
    courts have long recognized, when an individual is obligated by a civil judgment to pay
    money to the opposing party and that judgment is later reversed, the money should
    generally be repaid. (Schubert v. Bates (1947) 
    30 Cal.2d 785
    , 789-790.) But although
    our reversal favored restitution, it did not require it. The trial court’s later restitution
    order, based on the court’s exercise of its inherent power to order restoration, instead
    required the return of the money and is thus the relevant decision here. (See id. at p. 789
    [after an appellate court reverses a trial court’s order or judgment, the trial court has
    “inherent” authority “to order restoration”].) And that order was, per the broad definition
    of “judgment” in section 680.230, a “judgment” for purposes of the EJL.
    Second, quoting Lucky, supra, 
    185 Cal.App.4th 125
    , Respondents assert that
    “[w]hile California’s Enforcement of Judgments Law (EJL; § 680.010 et seq.) provides
    that the word ‘judgment’ means ‘a judgment, order or decree entered in a court of this
    state’ (§ 680.230), litigants do not have license to substitute the word ‘order’ everywhere
    the word ‘judgment’ appears in the EJL, regardless of the circumstances or statutory
    intent.” (Id. at pp. 143-144.) But although we accept that applying section 680.230’s
    broad definition could be problematic in some instances, Respondents never explain why
    that concern is present here.
    The court in Lucky offered the above statement about section 680.230 when
    considering the application of section 685.080—which, in relevant part, allows a
    judgment creditor to claim costs incurred enforcing a judgment but requires the creditor’s
    motion for costs to be “made before the judgment is satisfied in full.” (§ 685.080, subd.
    (a).) In particular, the court considered the following question: If a trial court issues a
    11
    judgment in favor of a party and later issues several orders adding awards of fees and
    costs to that judgment, and the indebted party then pays the awarded fees and costs from
    one of those orders, would you say “the judgment is satisfied in full” with respect to that
    one order? Or would you say the judgment is satisfied only in part, as there is only one
    judgment?
    You would say the latter, according to the Lucky court. (Lucky, supra, 185
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 131-135, 142-143.) It reasoned this conclusion was consistent with
    the purposes of sections 680.230 and 685.080. According to the court, “[t]he ostensible
    purpose of the broad definition of ‘judgment’ in section 680.230 is to permit an order
    awarding [money] to be enforced under the EJL where there is no judgment.” (Lucky, at
    p. 144.) But because “there is a judgment in the case” that allowed the prevailing party to
    collect the amounts owed him, the court found, employing that broad definition would
    not further section 680.230’s purpose. (Lucky, at p. 144.) Nor, the court added, would it
    further section 685.080’s purpose. “[T]he statutory purpose of requiring that the motion
    for enforcement costs be brought ‘before the judgment is satisfied in full’ (§ 685.080,
    subd. (a)) is to avoid a situation where a judgment debtor has paid off the entirety of what
    he believes to be his obligation in the entire case, only to be confronted later with a
    motion for yet more fees.” (Lucky, at p. 144.) But, the court concluded, “that concern
    does not arise here,” as the judgment debtor had “undisputedly refused to pay [all]
    amounts” owed under the judgment. (Ibid.; see also Hyundai Motor America v. Superior
    Court (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 418
    , 425 [reaching a similar conclusion].)
    None of that analysis, however, supports Respondents. The Lucky court ruled as it
    did based on the facts of the case and the court’s understanding of the purposes of
    sections 680.230 and 685.080. But considering our facts and the purposes of the relevant
    statutes here—sections 680.230 and 708.410—we find a different result appropriate.
    Start with the “ostensible purpose of the broad definition of ‘judgment’ in section
    680.230.” (Lucky, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at p. 144.) According to the Lucky court, that
    12
    purpose “is to permit an order awarding [money] to be enforced under the EJL where
    there is no judgment.” (Ibid.) And in Lucky, because there was a judgment and the
    prevailing party could seek to obtain all awarded money by enforcing that judgment,
    there was no need to resort to section 680.230’s broad definition of “judgment.” (Lucky,
    at p. 144.) But here, in contrast, there was no judgment that directed money to be paid to
    Gilman; there was only an order. And in the absence of a judgment, under Lucky’s logic,
    employing section 680.230’s broad definition of “judgment” would further section
    680.230’s “ostensible purpose . . . to permit an order awarding [money] to be enforced
    under the EJL where there is no judgment.” (Lucky, at p. 144.)
    Consideration of the purpose of section 708.410 et seq. also supports that
    conclusion. That statutory scheme’s purpose, again, is to secure creditors’ rights to
    money they are owed. (See Oldham v. California Capital Fund, Inc., supra, 109
    Cal.App.4th at p. 430.) And that purpose, as already discussed, is furthered by holding in
    favor of Appellants here. Unlike in Lucky, then, consideration of the purposes of the
    relevant statutory provisions does not favor a narrow reading of the term “judgment.”
    Third, Respondents contend section 708.410 is inapplicable because “there is no
    prevailing party”; the parties were simply returned to their original position.
    Respondents, in this argument, appear to believe the purpose behind the order matters. In
    their apparent view, if the order serves a restitutionary purpose, section 708.410 is
    inapplicable; but if it instead serves some nonrestitutionary purpose, then perhaps the
    statute is applicable. But nothing in section 708.410 suggests the purpose of the order
    matters. Nor does anything in the statute require the money at issue to be the winnings of
    the prevailing party. Section 708.410, as modified by section 680.230, says a judgment
    creditor may obtain a lien on the judgment debtor’s “rights . . . to money or property
    under any judgment[, order, or decree]” (italics added)—not that the creditor may obtain
    a lien on the debtor’s rights to this money, except when the money serves a restitutionary
    purpose.
    13
    Fourth, even supposing Appellants’ lien attached to the $17,229.27, the Dalby
    Respondents and Gilman assert that Appellants sought to enforce their lien too late. They
    note that Appellants sought to enforce their lien only after Gilman voluntarily dismissed
    his suit, and, for that reason, contend the trial court lacked jurisdiction to entertain
    Appellants’ enforcement effort. Assuming for now that Gilman had notice of the lien, we
    disagree. “Numerous cases,” to be sure, “categorically state the trial court ‘ “is without
    jurisdiction to act further in the action” (citation)’ once a voluntary dismissal is filed.”
    (Basinger v. Rogers & Wells (1990) 
    220 Cal.App.3d 16
    , 21.) But “like most legal
    principles stated so unequivocally, this one is inaccurate unless qualified.” (Ibid.) And
    relevant here, even after a case has been voluntarily dismissed, a trial court retains
    jurisdiction to vacate the dismissal if unlawfully entered. (See Ensher v. Ensher,
    Alexander & Barsoom, Inc. (1960) 
    187 Cal.App.2d 407
    , 410 [plaintiff’s voluntary
    dismissal that failed to comply with special procedural rules requiring the trial court’s
    consent was “ineffectual” and did not deprive the court of jurisdiction].)
    Our finding in this regard is guided principally by section 708.440. That statute
    provides that “no compromise, dismissal, settlement, or satisfaction of the pending action
    . . . may be entered into by or on behalf of the judgment debtor, without the written
    consent of the judgment creditor or authorization by order of the court.” (§ 708.440,
    subd. (a).) But to accept the Dalby Respondents and Gilman’s view, that limitation on a
    debtor’s ability to dismiss a case is effectively meaningless. After all, judgment debtors
    could always voluntarily dismiss their cases with judgment creditors finding out only
    after the fact—at which point, according to the Dalby Respondents and Gilman, it is too
    late for judgment creditors to do anything. They cannot ask the trial court for relief,
    because the court now lacks jurisdiction; and they cannot seek review from an appellate
    court either, because “[a] voluntary dismissal is a ministerial act, not a judicial act, and
    not appealable.” (H.D. Arnaiz, Ltd. v. County of San Joaquin (2002) 
    96 Cal.App.4th 1357
    , 1365.) We reject this effort to neuter section 708.440. A party who has a notice of
    14
    a lien and nonetheless attempts to dismiss his or her case in violation of section 708.440’s
    requirements has achieved, at most, an ineffective dismissal. And an ineffective
    dismissal of a case does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction. (See Ensher v. Ensher,
    Alexander & Barsoom, Inc., supra, 187 Cal.App.2d at p. 410.)
    Fifth, Thiel and Gilman contend Appellants’ notice of lien was defective because
    it failed to state “ ‘[t]he amount required to satisfy the judgment creditor’s money
    judgment at the time the notice of lien [wa]s filed in the action or proceeding.’ ”
    (§ 708.420, subd. (e).) But although Appellants declined to state the precise amount
    necessary to satisfy their liens, they at least said they were owed a minimum of
    $170,576—which far exceeds the $17,229.27 at stake here. As a result, to the extent
    Appellants erred in failing to state the exact amount necessary to satisfy their liens, we
    find this error to be irrelevant and nonprejudicial.
    Lastly, the Dalby Respondents assert that they at least should not be liable because
    “there was no collusion between [them] and [Gilman] to evade a lien.” But collusion is
    not a prerequisite to their being held liable. Per section 708.470, subdivision (c), “[i]f the
    court determines that a party (other than the judgment debtor) having notice of the lien
    created under this article has transferred property that was subject to the lien or has paid
    an amount to the judgment debtor that was subject to the lien, the court shall render
    judgment against the party in an amount equal to the lesser of the following: [¶] (1) The
    value of the judgment debtor’s interest in the property or the amount paid the judgment
    debtor[, or] [¶] (2) The amount of the judgment creditor’s lien created under this article.”
    Nothing in that language speaks of the need to find collusion before imposing liability. It
    focuses instead on whether the party “ha[d] notice of the lien”—a topic we turn to next.
    B. Remand Is Appropriate To Consider Whether Respondents Had Notice
    All that said, although we find Appellants’ lien could have attached to the
    $17,229.27, we reserve judgment on whether their lien actually entitled them to this
    15
    amount. We do so to allow the trial court to decide, in the first instance, whether
    Respondents had notice of the lien at the time Gilman recovered the $17,229.27.
    Section 708.410, subdivision (c) requires judgment creditors to “serve on all
    parties who, prior thereto, have made an appearance in the action or special proceeding a
    copy of the notice of lien and a statement of the date when the notice of lien was filed in
    the action or special proceeding.” It adds that “[s]ervice shall be made personally or by
    mail” and that “the rights of a party are not affected by the lien until the party has notice
    of the lien.”
    Although Appellants say they mailed the required notice, all Respondents contend
    they never received notice of the lien. The Dalby Respondents, for example,
    acknowledge that Appellants’ counsel said he mailed a notice of the lien to them, but they
    assert that they only received service of the notice after they paid the $17,229.27 to
    Gilman. In support, they point to the declaration of their attorney, who stated: “It is our
    policy to scan all mail as it comes in and to then save the mail electronically,” but “I was
    unable to locate any judgment lien in our file. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . If we did receive the lien, in
    the normal course of business it would have been scanned and placed into our electronic
    file and it is not there.” Thiel, Gilman’s attorney at the time, testified similarly. He, like
    the Dalby Respondents, acknowledged that Appellants’ counsel said he mailed a notice
    of lien to Gilman’s previous attorney. But, he declared, he reviewed the file of Gilman’s
    previous attorney and “[t]here was no lien in the file”; “the lien is simply [not in that file],
    and there is nothing in the file to indicate that there was ever a lien filed on the case.”
    Thiel added that Gilman too had no notice of the lien. “Gilman has advised me that [his
    former attorney] had never brought the Notice of Liens to his attention.”4
    4       Appellants, in a one-paragraph argument, suggest the trial court should have found
    at least parts of these two declarations were inadmissible. But they offer no citation to
    the record and only a generic argument that unidentified portions of one of these
    16
    So what to make of this evidence? Appellants’ counsel said he mailed copies of
    the notice of lien to the Dalby Respondents and Gilman’s prior counsel. The Dalby
    Respondents and Gilman’s subsequent counsel, however, contest that claim—or at the
    least, they contest the idea that they ever received the mailed copies of the notice of lien.
    Considering these facts, should we find Respondents had notice of Appellants’ lien? Or
    should we not? We need not decide the matter at this time. Questions of this sort are
    better left to the trier of fact in the first instance. As the court in Bear Creek Master Assn.
    v. Edwards (2005) 
    130 Cal.App.4th 1470
     explained, when one party says it mailed a
    notice, but the opposing party denies receipt, “ ‘ “ ‘[t]he trier of fact must then weigh the
    denial of receipt against the inference of receipt arising from proof of mailing and decide
    whether or not the [notice] was received.’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 1486, italics omitted.)
    But the trier of fact here never weighed the competing evidence. We thus remand to
    allow the trial court to consider this issue in the first instance.
    Although all parties offer arguments they believe sufficient to warrant a ruling in
    their favor without the need for a remand, we find none of their arguments persuasive.
    Respondents contend the trial court already found it “unclear if Respondent
    Gilman was aware (e.g., had actual notice) of the lien,” and so we should find he lacked
    the requisite notice. But whether Gilman’s prior counsel had notice of the lien, not
    whether Gilman was personally aware of the notice, is the more relevant question.
    Appellants’ counsel, again, said he served Gilman’s prior counsel with the notice of lien,
    and ordinarily that should be enough to provide notice to Gilman. Parties, after all, may
    generally satisfy notice requirements by serving notice on the opposing party’s counsel.
    declarations contained argument, hearsay, and improper statements about personal
    knowledge. To the extent Appellants had any valid argument here, we find it forfeited.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204 (a)(1)(B)-(C); Badie v. Bank of America (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 779
    , 784-785 [“When an appellant . . . asserts [a point] but fails to support it
    with reasoned argument and citations to authority, we treat the point as waived”].)
    17
    (See § 1010 [“Notices and other papers may be served upon the party or attorney in the
    manner prescribed in this chapter, when not otherwise provided by this code.”]; see also
    Freeman v. Superior Court (1955) 
    44 Cal.2d 533
    , 537-538 [courts presume that attorneys
    communicate what they learn to their clients]; Baxter v. State Teachers’ Retirement
    System (2017) 
    18 Cal.App.5th 340
    , 366 [“ ‘One who acts through an agent will be
    presumed to know all that the latter learns concerning the transaction, whether it is
    actually communicated to the principal or not.’ ”].)
    The Dalby Respondents add that they should not be punished for merely obeying
    the trial court’s order requiring them to pay the $17,229.27 to Gilman. We generally
    agree with that sentiment—parties should not be punished for following court orders.
    But there are limits to that position. Suppose, for example, a party colludes with a
    judgment debtor to obtain a court order that improperly deprives the judgment creditor of
    compensation. We would not, under those circumstances, say the court order offers that
    party absolute immunity from the judgment creditor’s later suit to recover the money. No
    party, after all, “can take advantage of his own wrong.” (Civ. Code, § 3517.) None of
    this, however, is to say that we find the Dalby Respondents did anything wrong. Our
    point only is that the merits of the Dalby Respondents’ argument here depends on the
    facts of the case. And because we find remand appropriate for further consideration of
    the facts—to determine, for example, whether Respondents had timely notice of the lien
    based on the conflicting evidence—we find this argument better addressed by the trial
    court in the first instance too.
    Lastly, at oral argument, the Dalby Respondents asserted that “it was actually
    decided by the trial court that proper notice was not given” and, given the absence of a
    18
    reporter’s transcript in this appeal, we should presume this factual finding is true.5 We
    reject the argument. To start, the Dalby Respondents never adequately raised this issue in
    their briefing. In a portion of their brief discussing the standard of review, they briefly
    noted that a reviewing court should presume that the trial court’s findings are supported
    by the evidence when no reporter’s transcript is provided. (See Redevelopment Agency v.
    Gilmore (1985) 
    38 Cal.3d 790
    , 809 [“Since the reporter’s transcript of the trial has not
    been provided, we must presume that the evidence adduced at trial supports the
    determination that plaintiff’s offer was reasonable.”]; In re Estate of Fain (1999) 
    75 Cal.App.4th 973
    , 992 [“an appellant who attacks a judgment but supplies no reporter’s
    transcript will be precluded from raising an argument as to the sufficiency of the
    evidence”].) But they never went on to explain the relevance of these principles to their
    arguments—at least, not until oral argument. We find their claim arguably forfeited as a
    result. (See Willis v. City of Carlsbad (2020) 
    48 Cal.App.5th 1104
    , 1116 [rejecting the
    respondent’s argument premised on the absence of a reporter’s transcript because it “d[id]
    not explain how the absence of a reporter’s transcript in this case makes it impossible to
    resolve the merits of [the appellant’s] challenge to the trial court’s ruling”]; see also
    Kinney v. Vaccari (1980) 
    27 Cal.3d 348
    , 356, fn. 6 [“An appellate court is not required to
    consider any point made for the first time at oral argument, and it will be deemed
    waived.”].)
    But even if their claim were not forfeited, we would still reject it. A reviewing
    court, as mentioned, generally will presume the trial court’s findings are supported by the
    evidence when no reporter’s transcript is provided. But that principle offers the Dalby
    Respondents little help here. The trial court, importantly, did not rule in their favor
    5      According to Appellants, the trial court destroyed the reporter’s transcript after
    Appellants’ filed their appeal but before the preparation of the appellate record. None of
    the Respondents disputed this claim.
    19
    because it found they were unaware of the liens. It instead ruled in their favor because it
    concluded that its earlier restitution order was not a “judgment” within the meaning of
    section 708.410—which presents a pure legal issue that we review de novo even in the
    absence of a reporter’s transcript. As one court recently explained in a case involving a
    missing reporter’s transcript, “[w]hile a record of the hearing would have been helpful to
    understand the trial court’s reasoning, it is not necessary here where our review is de
    novo and the appellate record includes the trial court’s written orders and all the
    evidentiary materials germane to [the trial court’s decision].” (Bel Air Internet, LLC v.
    Morales (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 924
    , 933.)
    Appellants similarly contend we should find in their favor without the need for a
    remand, but we find their arguments no more persuasive than Respondents’ own. First,
    they claim the Dalby Respondents’ submitted declaration “did not deny receipt” of
    Appellants’ notice of lien, and so we should find that they in fact received the notice of
    lien. We read the declaration differently, however. In it, the Dalby Respondents’
    attorney said Appellants’ lien “would have been scanned and placed into our electronic
    file” had his firm received it, but “it is not there.” In effect, then, the declarant said his
    office did not receive the lien. He might not have used those exact words, but that is the
    clear import of his words.
    Second, Appellants assert that Respondents, even if not notified of the lien by
    mail, at least had constructive notice of the lien because an electronic version of the lien
    was available on “the case docket through the lower court’s website.” But nothing in
    section 708.410 suggests that, as long as a court has an electronic case docket where the
    lien may be found, a judgment creditor can avoid the requirement that notice “be made
    personally or by mail.” We also question Appellants’ claim that a party should know a
    document is filed in a case, even if not served, because the document is available on the
    court’s website. Under that same logic, Appellants could be charged with knowing that
    Gilman filed a motion for a return of the $17,229.27 because, presumably, a copy of that
    20
    motion was available on the court’s website—which would tend to show that Appellants
    forfeited their objections by failing to timely raise them. In any event, even if this type of
    argument could have merit in some cases, we decline to find that Appellants’ lien was
    available online at the time Gilman sought restitution, as Appellants offer no facts to
    show that to be true. The only “evidence” they offer in support is a portion of their
    motion for sanctions where they argued “[t]he court file contained [Appellants’] notice of
    liens.” But statements in motions are not evidence. (See In re Zeth S. (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 396
    , 413, fn. 11 [“unsworn statements of counsel are not evidence”].) And regardless,
    whether the court’s file contained the notice and whether the court’s website contained
    the notice are two very different things.
    Next, and similarly, Appellants contend Respondents had constructive notice of
    the lien because the proof of service for one of the trial court’s minute orders, which was
    issued before Gilman sought restitution, “showed that Appellants’ counsel . . . had been
    added to the service list.” In Appellants’ view, any “reasonably prudent person” would
    have noticed the addition of this “stranger to the case,” investigated, and then discovered
    Appellants’ filed notice of lien. The Dalby Respondents counter that actual notice, not
    constructive notice, is required under section 708.410. But either way, we reject
    Appellants’ claim. We decline to fault Respondents for failing to thoroughly inspect
    every one of the court’s proofs of service for potential clues. Although Respondents
    perhaps could have discovered the lien in this fashion, we decline to find they should
    have done so.
    Finally, in their reply brief, Appellants assert that Gilman “had actual knowledge
    of the liens because his attorneys in [a different case] represented they had read the notice
    of liens in October 2009.” But because Appellants raise this argument for the first time
    in their reply brief, without good cause, we will not consider it. (See Neighbours v. Buzz
    Oates Enterprises (1990) 
    217 Cal.App.3d 325
    , 335, fn. 8.) Appellants, however, can
    certainly raise this issue on remand.
    21
    III
    Appellants’ Motion for Sanctions
    We consider next Appellants’ argument that the trial court wrongly denied their
    motion for sanctions.
    Appellants contend Gilman and Thiel should have known Gilman was not entitled
    to the $17,229.27 based on Appellants’ filed notice of lien, and they thus should be
    sanctioned for nonetheless filing a motion to recover this amount and later dismissing the
    case. Appellants ground their claim on section 128.7, subdivisions (b)(1) and (c).
    Subdivision (b)(1) of that statute provides: “By presenting to the court[] . . . [a] written
    notice of motion, or other similar paper, an attorney or unrepresented party is certifying
    that to the best of the person’s knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an
    inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, . . . [¶] [i]t is not being presented primarily
    for an improper purpose. . . .” And subdivision (c) adds: “If, after notice and a
    reasonable opportunity to respond, the court determines that subdivision (b) has been
    violated, the court may[] . . . impose an appropriate sanction.”
    The trial court, however, rejected Appellants’ request for sanctions. Starting with
    Gilman’s restitution motion, the court found Gilman did not “present[] the restitution
    motion for any improper purpose given he was simply seeking a return of money he had
    to pay [the Dalby Respondents] pursuant to an attorneys’ fees award that had been
    reversed.” And considering next Gilman’s dismissal of the case, the court found that too
    was not filed for an improper purpose, reasoning that Appellants’ lien did not even attach
    to the $17,229.27 and, in any event, neither Gilman nor Thiel knew of the lien.
    Appellants now appeal that ruling, objecting that the court relied on its mistaken ruling
    on Appellants’ motion for lien satisfaction and wrongly relied on a subjective, rather than
    an objective, standard in considering whether sanctions were appropriate.
    We agree with Appellants in part. To start, however, we limit our review to the
    claims Appellants made at the trial level. They argued then that Gilman should be
    22
    sanctioned for filing (while an unrepresented party) his restitution motion, and Thiel
    (who Gilman later retained) should be sanctioned for afterward dismissing the case. But
    Appellants now contend Gilman and Thiel should also be sanctioned for later opposing
    Appellants’ motion to vacate the dismissal of the case. We decline, however, to consider
    the merits of this new claim. “ ‘As a general rule, theories not raised in the trial court
    cannot be asserted for the first time on appeal.’ ” (Nellie Gail Ranch Owners Assn. v.
    McMullin (2016) 
    4 Cal.App.5th 982
    , 997.)
    Having addressed the scope of the issues, we now turn to the court’s finding that
    Gilman’s filing of the restitution motion was not in itself sanctionable conduct. The
    court, again, declined to sanction Gilman because it found “he was simply seeking a
    return of” the $17,229.27 that he was lawfully entitled to receive. But that ruling was
    premised on the court’s conclusion that Appellants had no right to this money. Because
    we find remand necessary to allow the court to reconsider whether Appellants had a right
    to the $17,229.27, we find remand necessary on this related ruling too.
    We turn next to the court’s finding that Thiel’s dismissal of the case was not
    sanctionable. Appellants contend the court wrongly focused on the “subjective good
    faith” of Thiel and its decision not to impose sanctions should thus be reversed. But even
    assuming the court erred in that regard, because we find Appellants have presented no
    ground for finding Thiel filed the dismissal “primarily for an improper purpose” (§ 128.7,
    subd. (b)(1)), we nonetheless decline to reverse this part of the court’s decision. (See
    D’Amico v. Board of Medical Examiners (1974) 
    11 Cal.3d 1
    , 19 [“ ‘a ruling or decision,
    itself correct in law, will not be disturbed on appeal merely because given for a wrong
    reason’ ”].)
    Appellants contend sanctions are warranted here because Thiel, although having
    notice of the lien, failed to obtain Appellants’ consent or the court’s authorization before
    dismissing Gilman’s suit. (§ 708.440, subd. (a) [no . . . dismissal . . . may be entered into
    by or on behalf of the judgment debtor, without the written consent of the judgment
    23
    creditor or authorization by order of the court”].) But even supposing Thiel had notice of
    the lien (which is questionable, see part II.B. of the Discussion above), his mere failure to
    abide by the proper procedures for dismissal is not reason enough for finding sanctions
    warranted. To find sanctions appropriate, Appellants needed to show Thiel filed the
    dismissal “primarily for an improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary
    delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation” (§ 128.7, subd. (b)(1))—not merely
    that Thiel’s filing was procedurally flawed. But rather than attempt to show Thiel filed
    the dismissal “primarily for an improper purpose,” they instead suggest it is enough that
    the dismissal was an “improper filing.” That, however, is not the standard for imposing
    sanctions under section 128.7, and we thus decline to find the trial court erred in denying
    their request for sanctions against Thiel.6
    IV
    The Dalby Respondents’ Motion to Tax Costs
    Finally, we consider Appellants’ objection to the court’s order denying the Dalby
    Respondents’ motion to tax costs.
    The Dalby Respondents filed their motion to tax costs in response to one of
    Appellants’ memorandum of costs seeking payment for the costs of enforcement. The
    Dalby Respondents asserted, among other things, that Appellants were not entitled to
    their requested costs because they were not the prevailing parties. The trial court,
    however, ultimately denied the motion in light of Appellants’ concession they had neither
    the intention nor the right to impose the costs claimed on the Dalby Respondents. But
    6      Thiel also raises one additional argument for rejecting Appellants’ claims against
    him: Appellants’ claims against him reflect an “extortive scheme.” That is so, he
    reasons, because Appellants threatened to report him to the State Bar unless his client
    paid them their money. Appellants, in response, assert that Thiel’s argument about
    extortion is itself “attempted extortion.” Because we find Appellants’ claims against
    Thiel fail for other reasons, however, we need not consider these competing claims of
    extortion.
    24
    although purporting to deny the motion, the court nonetheless added “that no fees or costs
    shall be awarded against the [Dalby Respondents]”—in effect largely granting the Dalby
    Respondents their requested relief.
    Appellants now object to the court’s order for three reasons, first focusing on the
    court’s statement “that no fees or costs shall be awarded against the [Dalby
    Respondents].” According to Appellants, this language wrongly prevents Gilman from
    obtaining costs from the Dalby Respondents; and because “[a]nything that enriches
    Gilman increases the potential for judgment satisfaction,” this language also aggrieves
    Appellants. But the court’s order had nothing to do with Gilman’s ability to obtain costs
    from the Dalby Respondents. It dealt only with Appellants’ ability to recover their costs
    from the Dalby Respondents and, with respect to that issue alone, said “no fees or costs
    shall be awarded against the [Dalby Respondents].”
    Appellants next attempt to retract their concession they had neither the intention
    nor the right to impose the costs claimed on the Dalby Respondents. At the trial level,
    Appellants asked the court in their motion to “order [their] post-judgment enforcement
    costs . . . be paid by GILMAN”—not by the Dalby Respondents or anyone else, but by
    Gilman only. In a separate declaration, their counsel again explained that Appellants did
    not seek to recover these costs “against anybody but Mr. Gilman.” And Appellants later,
    in response to the Dalby Respondents’ motion to tax costs, once more conceded they
    “ha[d] no claim against [the Dalby Respondents] for enforcement costs.” But now,
    having reconsidered the matter after reviewing new and old case law, Appellants contend
    the trial court should have found the Dalby Respondents liable for the costs of
    enforcement—even though they explicitly told the trial court repeatedly that they were
    not seeking costs from the Dalby Respondents. And to support this new claim,
    Appellants offer a questionable gloss on the facts. Although once finding the Dalby
    Respondents to be “well-respected attorneys who had nothing to gain by paying the
    wrong party,” and saying their payment to Gilman “likely reflect[ed] nothing more than
    25
    inadvertence,” Appellants now—without any evidentiary support—claim the Dalby
    Respondents had some sort of deal with Gilman and “aided and abetted a fraudulent
    transfer by Gilman.” We reject this belated effort to expand the scope of responsible
    parties. (See In re Estate of Westerman (1968) 
    68 Cal.2d 267
    , 279 [although often a
    matter of discretion, reviewing courts ordinarily will not consider issues raised for the
    first time on appeal].)
    Finally, Appellants contend the trial court should have “announced Gilman waived
    his rights to challenge” Appellants’ requests for costs and stated that Gilman could not
    represent himself while Thiel was listed as his counsel of record. But we fail to see why
    the court needed to announce these things when it denied the Dalby Respondents’ motion
    to tax costs. The court’s decision there had little to do with Gilman and noted only that it
    was not considering two documents that Gilman had lodged with the court. Because
    Appellants offer no clear explanation on why the court needed to say anything more
    about Gilman in this order, we reject their requests.7
    7      Before closing, we find it necessary to comment on Appellants’ counsel’s
    disparaging remarks about the trial court, opposing counsel, and opposing parties.
    Appellants’ counsel, for example, suggested one argument by the Dalby Respondents’
    counsel would make sense only if they were “Stupid Lawyers.” He called Gilman
    “nothing but a scofflaw.” And he called the trial court “naive” and in need of
    “school[ing].” These disparaging comments are unhelpful and unprofessional. Counsel
    should refrain from this conduct going forward.
    26
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the trial court’s denial of Appellants’ motion “for order of satisfaction
    of lien.” We also reverse the trial court’s denial of Appellants’ motion for sanctions
    against Gilman. In all other respects, we affirm. Thiel is entitled to recover his costs on
    appeal from Appellants, and the remaining parties are to bear their own costs on appeal.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
    /s/
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    /s/
    HULL, J.
    /s/
    KRAUSE, J.
    27
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C066930M

Filed Date: 4/8/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/8/2021