Judge: Jon R. Takasugi, Case: 25STCV01295, Date: 2025-05-29 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 25STCV01295 Hearing Date: May 29, 2025 Dept: 17
Superior
Court of California
County of
Los Angeles
DEPARTMENT 17
TENTATIVE RULING
MARIA
ISABEL DUARTE vs. GENERAL MOTORS, LLC |
Case No.:
25STCV01295 Hearing Date: May 29, 2025 |
Defendant’s motion for a protective order is GRANTED.
On 1/7/2025, Plaintiff
Kayla Birdsall (Plaintiff) filed suit against General Motors (Defendant)
alleging violations of the Song-Beverly Law.
On 4/1/2025, Defendant
moved for a protective order.
The motion is unopposed.
Discussion
Defendant seeks a protective order for its (1) written
statement of policies and procedures used to evaluate customer requests for
restitution or replacement pursuant to “Lemon Law” claims and (2) its Warranty
policies and procedure manuals. (See Lukas Decl. ¶¶ 4-5.)
After review, the Court finds the protective order should be
granted.
“The court, for good cause shown, may make any order that
justice requires to protect any party or other person from unwarranted
annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden and expense,” including
that “a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial
information not be disclosed, or be disclosed only to specified persons or only
in a specified way.” (CCP § 2031.060(b)(5).) A party may request entry of an
order to protect its confidential and proprietary business information at any
time. (Stadish v. Sup. Ct. (Southern Calif. Gas Co.) (1999) 71
Cal.App.4th 1130, 1144 [finding that “upon a proper showing a party may – even
after it has waived its right to object to the production of documents, and has
produced most of the documents requested – seek a protective order restricting
dissemination of the documents.”].)
Here, Defendant submitted a declaration from Kimberley
Lukas, GM’s Customer Experience Manager for the Business Resource Center. Ms.
Lukas’ sworn testimony explains that the documents are not generally known
within GM or the general public, and that care is taken to maintain that
confidentiality even within GM due to their commercially sensitive nature.
(Lukas Decl. ¶¶ 7-10.)
Given that Defendant does not seek to avoid production of
these documents, but rather seeks to produce them under protection of a
protective order, the Court sees no violation of section 821.26. The Court
finds Defendant has established a good faith basis for confidential treatment
of its information. (Evid. Code § 1061.)
The Court takes Plaintiff’s non-opposition to be a
concession to the motion on the merits.
Based on the foregoing, Defendant’s motion for a protective
order is granted.
It is so
ordered.
Dated: May , 2025
Hon. Jon R. Takasugi
Judge of the Superior Court
Parties who intend to submit on
this tentative must send an email to the court at smcdept17@lacourt.org
by 4 p.m. the day prior as directed by the instructions provided on the court
website at www.lacourt.org. If a party submits on the
tentative, the party’s email must include the case number and must identify the
party submitting on the tentative. If all
parties to a motion submit, the court will adopt this tentative as the final
order. If the department does not receive an email
indicating the parties are submitting on the tentative and there are no
appearances at the hearing, the motion may be placed off calendar. For more information,
please contact the court clerk at (213) 633-0517.