Judge: Curtis A. Kin, Case: 21STCV27900, Date: 2023-03-14 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 21STCV27900 Hearing Date: March 14, 2023 Dept: 72
MOTION FOR ORDER THAT THE GENUINENESS OF DOCUMENTS AND
TRUTH OF MATTERS
BE DEEMED ADMITTED
Date: 3/14/23
(8:30 AM)
Case: Family Choice Private Duty
Agency v. Kamerron Easton (21STCV27900)
TENTATIVE RULING:
Defendant/cross-complainant Kamerron Easton’s Motion for
Order that the Genuineness of Documents and Truth of Matters Be Deemed Admitted
is GRANTED IN PART.
Defendant/cross-complainant
Kamerron Easton seeks an order deeming admitted against cross-defendant Shellydale
Princess Gray the genuineness
of documents and the truth of matters set forth in Requests for Admission, Set
One. However, on February 13, 2023, before the hearing on the instant motion,
cross-defendant Gray served verified responses to Requests for Admission, Set
One. (Hahn Decl. ¶ 8 & Ex. 2.)
When “a party to whom requests for admission are directed
fails to serve a timely response,” “[t]he court shall make this order, unless
it finds that the party to whom the requests for admission have been directed
has served, before the hearing on the motion, a proposed response to the
requests for admission that is in substantial compliance with Section 2033.220.”
(CCP § 2033.280(c).) In substantial compliance with CCP § 2033.320, most
of cross-defendant’s responses either admit the matter as written in the
requests or reasonably and clearly qualified by cross-defendant, deny the
matter in the requests, or state that a reasonable inquiry concerning the
matter in the requests was made and that the known or readily obtainable
information is insufficient for cross-defendant to admit the matter.
However, with respect to Request No. 13, cross-defendant
provides the following non-sensical response that reads more like a request for
admission than an answer to one: “Admit that invoices showing the 24-hour care
scheduled for Marilyn Ashby were sometimes prepared before the timesheets were
submitted.” (Hahn Decl. ¶ 8 & Ex.
2.) Further, with respect to Request to
Admit Genuineness of Documents D-24 through D-31, cross-defendant asserted
objections without admitting, denying, or asserting a lack of sufficient
information to admit the matter, as required by CCP § 2033.320. The subject
Requests for Admission, Set One were served on December 29, 2022 by mail.
(Easton Decl. Ex. A.) Accordingly, the deadline to serve responses was February
2, 2022. (CCP § 2033.250(a) [30 days after service of requests for admission];
1013(a) [five calendar days added for mail].) As of February 7, 2023, the
filing date of the motion, no responses were served. (Easton Decl. at 2:23-24.)
Consequently, objections to the subject Requests for Admission, Set One have
been waived. (CCP § 2033.280(a).)
Accordingly, the motion is GRANTED IN PART. The matters set
forth in Request for Admission, Set One, No. 13 and the genuineness of
documents set forth in Request to Admit Genuineness of Documents D-24 through
D-31 are deemed admitted against cross-defendant Shellydale Princess Gray.
Defendant/cross-complainant Kamerron Easton’s request for
sanctions is DENIED. Even though defendant is an attorney, defendant is
self-represented and accordingly cannot recover monetary sanctions for
discovery. (Argaman v. Ratan (1999) 73 Cal.App.4th 1173, 1180 [“If an
attorney pro se litigant's time is compensated by a discovery sanction, the
time of other nonattorney pro se litigants . . . should also be compensated.
Clearly, there is no support for such a broad construction of the statute in
case authority”].) Whether defendant is appearing on behalf of himself as an
individual or as personal representative of the Estate of Marilyn Ashby,
defendant is still appearing in pro per and not as an attorney of
record.