Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 8/24/23 Armstrong v. Wudue CA1/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
    certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been
    certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    OLIVER ARMSTRONG,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    A165634
    v.
    SHUMET WUDUE,                                                 (City and County of San
    Francisco Super. Ct.
    Defendant and Respondent.
    No. CGC-19-576657)
    Plaintiff and appellant Oliver Armstrong (plaintiff) appeals from the
    trial court’s judgment dismissing defendant and respondent Shumet Wudue
    (defendant) following the grant of defendant’s motion to strike substitution of
    defendant’s name for a Doe defendant. We reverse.
    BACKGROUND
    According to the allegations in plaintiff’s complaint, he suffered a
    serious head injury during a robbery in the Mission neighborhood of San
    Francisco in July 2018. Before the robbery, he was left in a dangerous area
    at night by a taxi cab driver who demanded money in excess of the regular
    fare to drive plaintiff home to Berkeley. Shortly thereafter, he was attacked
    and robbed.
    1
    Plaintiff reported the incident to the San Francisco Police Department
    (SFPD). On August 8, 2018, an SFPD sergeant sent plaintiff an e-mail
    attaching a blurry image of plaintiff and stating, “Can you confirm if this is
    you?” The SFPD’s investigation log states, “Sent victim an image of him
    getting [out] of the cab. Victim confirmed it was him.” The photograph
    displays plaintiff but not the taxi in which plaintiff was a passenger.
    In June 2019, plaintiff filed the present action against Flywheel Taxi,
    DeSoto Cab Company, Inc., and Does 1-20. Plaintiff alleged causes of action
    for negligence, false imprisonment, conversion, and intentional
    misrepresentation/fraud. Plaintiff later dismissed Flywheel and DeSoto from
    the case.
    In March 2020, plaintiff subpoenaed the SFPD, requesting documents
    and videos related to the investigation of the July 2018 assault and robbery.
    The SFPD certified no records were available and, in response to subsequent
    efforts by plaintiff, produced only some photographs.
    In November 2020, plaintiff filed an amendment substituting Big Dog
    City Corporation dba Yellow Cab of San Francisco (Yellow Cab) for one of the
    Doe defendants.1 In August 2021, Yellow Cab responded to a special
    interrogatory asking it to “identify the drivers of any and all of
    DEFENDANTS’ cabs that picked up any fares” from specific GPS coordinates
    on July 18, 2018 between 12:01 a.m. and 2:30 a.m. According to plaintiff, the
    coordinates are where plaintiff was picked up the night of the robbery.
    Yellow Cab responded, “None within stated parameters. Within a roughly
    one block radius: Ramon Lomibao[,] David Nguyen, and Shumet Wudue.”
    When asked for the name of the person who holds the medallion for the taxi
    1 Plaintiff also named an individual as a defendant, but that individual
    was subsequently dismissed.
    2
    that picked up plaintiff, Yellow Cab responded, “Responding party has no
    information from which it might formulate an answer to this interrogatory.”
    A dispatch log produced by Yellow Cab in October 2021 provided cab
    numbers for various drivers, including defendant, whose cab number was
    identified as number 525. That cab does not appear on the San Francisco
    Municipal Transportation Agency’s (SFMTA) spreadsheet of taxi rides the
    evening of the incident.
    In a November 2021 deposition of an SFPD officer, the deponent
    suggested plaintiff might contact the SFPD’s Southern Station to obtain more
    records. In March 2022, plaintiff again subpoenaed the SFPD, requesting,
    among other things, all “photographs and video” gathered in investigating
    the 2018 assault and robbery. On April 12, 2022, plaintiff received a number
    of videos and records from the SFPD. One video shows plaintiff exiting
    Yellow Cab number 525. Both plaintiff and his counsel averred that April
    2022 was the first time they saw an image of plaintiff exiting that cab.
    The next day, April 13, 2022, plaintiff submitted to the court an
    amendment to the complaint substituting defendant Wudue, driver of cab
    number 525, for one of the Doe defendants (Doe Substitution). The trial court
    accepted the amendment on April 15 and the court filed it on April 20.
    On April 21, 2022, plaintiff requested a trial continuance by stipulation
    with defendant Yellow Cab. The Presiding Judge of the trial court granted
    continuance of the trial to August 29. The order stated, “No further
    continuances” and “This is the last continuance.”
    Defendant was served with the lawsuit on April 27, 2022; his attorney
    had been provided the Doe Substitution two weeks before.
    In June 2022, defendant moved to strike the Doe Substitution.
    Defendant argued plaintiff unreasonably delayed naming him, and that he
    3
    suffered prejudice from the delay because the Presiding Judge stated there
    would be no further continuances. The motion asserted appellant received an
    image showing cab number 525 from the SFPD in August 2018, and included
    a screenshot from a video showing the cab number. In a declaration that
    accompanied the motion, defendant’s counsel explained he had created the
    “screen capture” from a video produced by the SFPD in 2022. The declaration
    stated, “I do not represent that the screen capture is identical to the one sent
    to [plaintiff] . . . . However, I have viewed the entire video – also produced by
    the SFPD – and can represent to the court that the taxi is in a station[a]ry
    position when [plaintiff] gets out of the vehicle and the unit number would be
    visible on any possible screen capture from the video which depicted him
    getting out of the cab.”
    Plaintiff opposed the motion to strike, arguing he was ignorant of
    defendant’s involvement until April 2022, and providing evidence the
    screenshot he received in 2018 did not include an image of cab number 525.
    Plaintiff specifically averred in his declaration that he did not know the
    number of the cab that picked him up until he saw the video produced by the
    SFPD in April 2022. Plaintiff also argued he was diligent in trying to
    identify defendant and accommodating in arranging discovery with
    defendant. Plaintiff argued a trial continuance would be appropriate to
    address any concerns about fairness to defendant.
    Following receipt of defendant’s reply and a hearing, the trial court
    granted the motion to strike. The court’s July 2022 order stated,
    “[Defendant’s] identity has long been available to plaintiff through videos and
    Yellow Cab records. As early as August 2018, police reported that they ‘[s]ent
    victim [plaintiff] an image of him getting out of the cab. Victim confirmed it
    was him.’ Whether [defendant’s] cab number, 525, was visible is disputed. In
    4
    any event, it is undisputed that, in August 2021, Yellow Cab discovery
    responses named [defendant] as one of three cab drivers in the relevant area
    and provided a dispatch log stating [defendant’s] name and cab number.
    Prejudice to Wudue is obvious. Trial is next month and discovery is closed.”
    On July 5, 2022, the trial court issued a judgment dismissing
    defendant. The present appeal followed. The court vacated the August trial
    date due to the pendency of the present appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    Code of Civil Procedure section 4742 “allows a plaintiff who is ignorant
    of a defendant’s identity to commence suit—before the statute of limitations
    runs—by using a fictitious name for that defendant and then amending her
    complaint when the defendant’s true name is discovered. [Citations.] If the
    statute’s requirements are satisfied, the amendment relates back and the
    substituted defendant is considered to have been a party from the action’s
    start.” (Hahn v. New York Air Brake LLC (2022) 
    77 Cal.App.5th 895
    , 897–
    898 (Hahn).)
    In determining whether substituting a named defendant for a Doe
    defendant is proper, “The test is whether, at the time the complaint was filed,
    the plaintiff ‘ “was ignorant of the facts giving [her] a cause of action against
    the person.” ’ [Citation.] The focus is on the facts that the plaintiff knew, not
    on whether the plaintiff subjectively knew she had a cause of action based on
    those facts. [Citation.] While the plaintiff’s ignorance must be genuine, and
    2 All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil
    Procedure. Section 474 provides in part, “When the plaintiff is ignorant of
    the name of a defendant, he must state that fact in the complaint, . . . and
    such defendant may be designated in any pleading or proceeding by any
    name, and when his true name is discovered, the pleading or proceeding must
    be amended accordingly . . .”
    5
    the plaintiff cannot claim ignorance simply because she did not know all the
    details of the person’s involvement, the plaintiff is not barred from invoking
    section 474 merely because she suspected the person of wrongdoing based on
    an incomplete set of facts.” (Hahn, supra, 77 Cal.App.5th at pp. 899–900; see
    also Fuller v. Tucker (2000) 
    84 Cal.App.4th 1163
    , 1172 (Fuller) [“ ‘[s]ection
    474 allows a plaintiff in good faith to delay suing particular persons as
    named defendants until [plaintiff] has knowledge of sufficient facts to cause a
    reasonable person to believe liability is probable’ ”].) The burden is on the
    defendant to prove the plaintiff “knew facts giving rise to a cause of action”
    against the defendant. (Fuller, at p. 1173.)
    The issue in the present case is whether plaintiff should have named
    defendant when he learned defendant’s name and the possibility that he
    drove the subject cab in late 2021, rather than whether plaintiff should have
    named defendant in the complaint in 2018. In these circumstances, the rule
    is that “unreasonable delay in filing an amendment after actually acquiring”
    knowledge of the identity of a person against whom the plaintiff has a claim
    “can bar a plaintiff’s resort to the fictitious name procedure.” (Barrows v.
    American Motors Corp. (1983) 
    144 Cal.App.3d 1
    , 8 (Barrows); accord A.N. v.
    County of Los Angeles (2009) 
    171 Cal.App.4th 1058
    , 1065–1067 (A.N.).) In
    order to prevail on a claim of unreasonable delay, a defendant must show
    “specific prejudice . . . from the delay between the [time the evidence was
    developed] and the filing of the amended complaint” substituting the
    defendant for a Doe defendant. (Barrows, at p. 10; accord A.N., at pp. 1066–
    1067.)
    Thus, defendant’s challenge to the Doe Substitution is “an evidence-
    based motion, which argues that . . . plaintiff ‘unreasonable delayed’ his . . .
    filing.” (A.N., supra, 171 Cal.App.4th at p. 1067.) We review the trial court’s
    6
    ruling for an abuse of discretion. (Ibid.) “A trial court abuses its discretion
    when it relies on improper criteria” or if it “relies on a fact wholly
    unsupported by the evidence.” (Waterwood Enterprises, LLC v. City of Long
    Beach (2020) 
    58 Cal.App.5th 955
    , 966.)
    In the present case, defendant argues plaintiff was “aware of
    [defendant’s] identity and the facts giving rise to a cause of action against
    [defendant] at least six to eight months before [plaintiff] filed the April 2022
    Doe amendment, if not years earlier.”3 The argument fails. First, contrary to
    defendant’s and the trial court’s assertions, there is no evidentiary dispute
    whether the image plaintiff received from the SFPD in 2018 showed
    defendant’s cab number. Plaintiff presented to the court the actual image he
    received; defendant does not dispute the image’s authenticity. The screen
    capture presented to the court by defendant’s counsel in 2022 lacked any
    evidentiary value because there was no basis to find it showed what plaintiff
    saw in 2018—indeed, defense counsel admitted he could not so represent.
    Accordingly, the evidence conclusively shows plaintiff had no knowledge of
    defendant’s involvement in 2018.
    Second, defendant fails to explain why plaintiff’s knowledge in 2021
    that defendant was one of three drivers who might have picked plaintiff up
    the night of the robbery was sufficient to state a cause of action against
    defendant.4 This court’s decision in Hahn, supra, 
    77 Cal.App.5th 895
    , an
    3 Defendant thereby concedes the same standard of knowledge applies
    when substituting a named defendant for a Doe defendant as when naming a
    Doe defendant in the first place. That is, defendant admits plaintiff was only
    required to file the Doe Substitution when plaintiff “[knew] enough facts to
    state a cause of action.” (Hahn, supra, 77 Cal.App.5th at p. 900.)
    4 It is unclear whether defendant even embraces such an argument.
    Instead, defendant asserts, “The trial court impliedly concluded that
    [plaintiff] knew who supposedly was responsible for his claims well before he
    7
    asbestos case, is contrary to any such argument. There, the decedent worked
    for the SFMTA and the plaintiffs knew prior to the complaint being filed that
    the light rail vehicles the decedent worked on were built by Boeing, that Air
    Brake designed and built the braking system, and a third company made the
    brake pads. (Id. at p. 898.) The plaintiffs sued Boeing and a number of Doe
    defendants, and substituted Air Brake for one of the Doe defendants when
    documents produced by Boeing showed Air Brake specified the use of
    asbestos in the brake pads. (Ibid.) Plaintiffs knew at the time the complaint
    was filed that Air Brake might have been responsible for the presence of
    asbestos, because “plaintiffs alleged that brake dust was the source of
    asbestos.” (Id. at p. 901.) But that was not enough to preclude reliance on
    section 474 because, “for example, [it was possible] that Air Brake designed a
    system that specified non-asbestos brake pads, but Boeing opted to install
    asbestos brake pads instead.” (Ibid.) It was proper for the plaintiffs to wait
    to name Air Brake “until they ha[d] a sufficient basis to allege that [Air
    Brake] manufactured or supplied” the asbestos to which the decedent was
    exposed. (Id. at p. 901.)
    In the present case, plaintiff acted properly by waiting to name
    defendant until he had information showing a likelihood defendant was the
    actual driver of the subject cab. Plaintiff’s knowledge that defendant was one
    of three cab drivers identified by Yellow Cab that picked up passengers in the
    relevant timeframe and area was not sufficient “ ‘to cause a reasonable
    person to believe’ ” defendant’s “ ‘liability is probable.’ ” (Fuller, supra, 84
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1172.) Based on the information possessed by plaintiff, it
    was equally probable any of the three were liable, assuming plaintiff was
    filed the Doe amendment.” As we have explained, there is no evidentiary
    support for any such implied finding.
    8
    picked up by a Yellow Cab driver at all. (See ibid. [“the plaintiff does not
    relinquish her rights under section 474 simply because she has a suspicion of
    wrongdoing arising from one or more facts she does know”].) Hahn observed,
    “If a reasonable diligence standard governed section 474, plaintiffs would be
    incentivized to routinely name any and all persons who might conceivably
    have some connection with the suit at the outset.” (Hahn, supra, 77
    Cal.App.5th at p. 900.) A rule requiring a plaintiff to substitute a named
    defendant for a Doe defendant upon learning of the possibility of liability
    would create a similar problematic incentive.
    Accordingly, the trial court’s finding that appellant had a basis to name
    defendant in 2021 is entirely lacking evidentiary support; the only evidence is
    that plaintiff first learned of defendant’s involvement when he received
    videos from the SFPD in April 2022. And, relatedly, the court also erred in
    considering prejudice resulting from a delay in filing the Doe Substitution
    between October 2021 (when plaintiff learned defendant’s cab number) and
    April 2022. Instead, the only “delay” in the present case was the one-day
    period between receipt of the videos from the SFPD on April 12 and the filing
    of the Doe Substitution on April 13—if that can be considered any delay at
    all. Defendant appropriately makes no attempt to argue that this one-day
    “delay” caused him any prejudice. Because the undisputed record shows
    there was no “unreasonable delay” (Barrows, supra, 144 Cal.App.3d at p. 8)
    in the filing of the Doe Substitution, the trial court abused its discretion in
    granting defendant’s motion to strike.5
    5 Defendant suggests plaintiff was not diligent in discovering defendant
    was the driver of the subject cab, but defendant also properly concedes “the
    relevant analysis here is not whether [plaintiff] was diligent.” (Hahn, supra,
    77 Cal.App.5th at p. 900 [section 474 imposes no “duty to exercise reasonable
    diligence”]; Sobeck & Assocs., Inc. v. B & R Invs. No. 24 (1989) 215
    9
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for
    further proceedings consistent with this decision. Plaintiff is awarded his
    costs on appeal.
    Cal.App.3d 861, 867 [“there is no requirement that the plaintiff exercise
    diligence to discover the identity of the defendant after filing the
    complaint”].) Defendant also suggests the motion to strike was appropriate
    because the Presiding Judge of the trial court had stated there would be no
    more trial continuances. But defendant cites no authority that was a proper
    basis to reject the Doe Substitution. The addition of a new party may be good
    cause for a continuance. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.1332(c)(5); see also
    Oliveros v. County of Los Angeles (2004) 
    120 Cal.App.4th 1389
    , 1395 [“When
    the two policies collide head-on, the strong public policy favoring disposition
    on the merits outweighs the competing policy favoring judicial efficiency.”].)
    Plaintiff asks this court to address evidentiary objections made below
    but not addressed by the trial court. It is unnecessary to address the
    objections to resolve the present appeal.
    10
    _________________________
    Simons, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Jackson, P. J.
    _________________________
    Chou, J.
    A165634
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A165634

Filed Date: 8/24/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/24/2023