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DISCOVERY CASE OUTLINE
© Richard E. Best 1998-2003 All Right Reserved

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See:
  Why Use a Referee?   
TWITTER DiscoveryRef   Discovery Referee
        Calif. Code of Civil Procedure
§§638-645.2;  California Rules of Court, Rules 3.900 et seq. 

Discovery Referees are not just for the complex litigation cases. Any case can generate crippling discovery disputes, abuses and delays. Often, the need and benefit of a referee is greater in a smaller case where the client or lawyer needs to conserve expenses. Properly used, the cost savings of a Discovery Referee should far exceed the fees.

Early use of a Discovery Referee can save time and money. It can assure that all parties obtain prompt, consistent, and knowledgeable guidance and decisions from an experienced Judge and expert. If you think there may be a discovery dispute in your case,  stipulate with opposing counsel and retain a Discovery Referee to be on call for your case should any dispute arise. Often, the mere retention of a referee will deter abuses.  If judicial guidance or decision is required, having a referee in place assures prompt access, consultation and decisions.   Prevent discovery abuses before they occur by retaining a Discovery Referee at the inception of your case.  Avoid the expenses and delays of unnecessary motions and court appearances. Obtain informal rulings before you research, brief and file a motion. Obtain “hands on” case management of discovery from the beginning. 

By stipulation, lawyers can write their own rules and procedures for resolving discovery disputes and using referees. The default procedures of discovery law may not work best for your case.

Background. The law in this area developed in phases: the historical period similar to arbitration, the modern case law of the 1980s and 90s, the legislative reforms of 2000, the rulemaking period thereafter.  Referees have been a part of the legal process for many years in many jurisdictions and statutory provisions were enacted in the 1800s. "The predecessor to section 639 appeared in California's first statutes in 1850 and was included in "An Act to Regulate Proceedings in Civil Cases." (Stats. 1850, ch. 142, § 164, pp. 442-443; cf. Stats. 1850, ch. 119, p. 275 ["An Act to Regulate Proceedings in Criminal Cases"].) The following year, the statute was amended to authorize a reference in a special proceeding and was recodified. (Stats. 1851, ch. 5, § 183, p. 79.) This new section appeared in Statutes 1851, chapter 5, entitled "An Act to Regulate Proceedings in Civil Cases," title 6, captioned Of the Trial and Judgment in Civil Actions. (Stats. 1851, at pp. 51, 73.) As established above, the current version of section 639 remains...." People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703 at page 729. The practice of refering cases for discovery purposes as well as other reasons increased and attracted attention in the 1980s and 1990s. several important court decisions occurred during that period and complaints arose as to alleged abuses. The Judicial Council reacted by appointing and task force to study the area and sponsored legislation which was enacted in 2000. Generally, the alleged abuses included routine referals by courts of normal judicial duties, referals to court favorites, inattention or lack of competence by referees, lack of attorney input, referee expansion of subject matter beyond the scope or justification for the reference, lack of judicial review, and similar abuses. 



CONTENTS

TYPES OF REFERENCES

GENERAL [CCP §638]
SPECIAL [CCP §639]
COMPARISON OF CRC RULES:  CCP §638 vs CCP §639

PROPRIETY OF REFERENCE / JUDICIAL RESPONSIBILITY & REVIEW

Justification for reference over objection
Matters trial court should decide
Court cannot abdicate judicial responsibility
Court should avoid appearance of delegating judicial functions to referees and should not routinely refer discovery matters outside of court
Exception in complex litigation requiring case management & monitoring
Court should carefully differentiate types of discovery motions that are appropriate for reference

SELECTION OF REFEREE [CCP §640]
ORDER APPOINTING REFEREE [CCP §639(d)]
OTHER MATTERS FOR CONSIDERATION FOR INCLUSION IN ORDER
FEES [CCP §639(d)(5)(6); §645.1]
ALLOCATION OF FEES
[CCP §643(c); §645.1]
REFEREE REPORT, FINDINGS & DECISION
[CCP §643]
COURT REVIEW
[CCP §644]

Consensual references [CCP §638]
Nonconsensual references [CCP §639]

RECOVERY OF LITIGATION COSTS

Judicial Council Forms    Motion, ADR-109;   Order, ADR-110;    Referee Report, ADR-111


TOP

CASES

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431
Andrews v. Superior Court (2000), 82 Cal.App.4th 779
Baker-Hoey v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2003) 111 Cal. App. 4th 592;3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 593
Bird v. Superior Court (1980), 112 Cal App3rd 595 [stat.amended]
Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506
DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279; Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)
Holt v. Kelly (1978) 20 Cal.3d 560
Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446
Jovine v. FHP, Inc.(1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506
Kajima Engineering & Construction v. Pacific Bell (2002), 103 Cal.App.4th 1397 , 127 Cal.Rptr.2d 464
Kim v. Superior Court (Palmco Corp.)
(1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 256
Korea Data Systems Co. v. Superior Court (1997)
Lu v. Superior Court(1997), 55 Cal.App.4th 1264
Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den]
Martino v. Denevi(1986), 182 Cal.Ap.3d 553
McDonald v. Superior Court(1994), 22 Cal.App.4th 364
McMillan v. Superior Court(1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246 [depublished]
People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703 , 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 323; 23 P.3d 563
People v. Superior Court(Laff)(1998), 64 Cal.App4th 414 [6/1/98][review granted]
Rockwell Int. Corp. v. Superior Court (1994), 26 Cal. App. 4th 1255
Sauer v. Superior Court(1987), 195 Cal.App.3d 213
Solorzano v. Superior Court (1993), 18 Cal.App. 4th 603
Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94; Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)
Whoop Inc. v. Dyno Productions Inc.(1998), 64Cal.App. 4th 32 [depublished]

contents TOP cases

CASE OUTLINE

TWITTER DiscoveryRef



TYPES OF REFERENCES
Historically, two types of references have long been recognized: general and special.  Under the current C.C.P provisions, the division is between a consensual reference under
C.C.P. §638 and a non-consensual reference under C.C.P. §639

GENERAL

People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703, 721, 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 323; 23 P.3d 563
" The California Constitution imposes limitations upon the power of nonjudicial officers to exercise judicial functions. 'The judicial power of this State is vested in the Supreme Court, courts of appeal, superior courts, and municipal courts.' (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 1.) To avoid an unconstitutional delegation of judicial authority, the Constitution requires the stipulation of the parties before a trial court may refer a cause to be tried by a referee. (Id., § 21; In re Edgar M. (1975) 14 Cal.3d 727, 732 [122 Cal.Rptr. 574, 537 P.2d 406].) Such a referral of the entire case, with the consent of the parties, is known as a general reference and results in a binding determination by the referee. (In re Edgar M., supra, 14 Cal.3d at p. 734; see § 638.)"

Holt v. Kelly (1978) 20 Cal.3d 560

C.C.P. §638 provides for reference by agreement of the parties for the referee to hear and determine issues. Note that, though the statutory provisions are not clear, certain provisions in C.C.P. §640 et seq appear to apply and/or have been applied to an appointment under C.C.P. §638. For example, the Judicial Council Rule 3.903 requires the court to appoint the particular referee in accord with C.C.P. §640 and C.C.P. §644(a) expressly applies to references under C.C.P. §638.

CRC Rule 3.901-3.910

C.C.P. §644(a) clarifies that "In the case of a consensual general reference pursuant to Section 638, the decision of the referee...must stand as the decision of the court...." C.C.P. §644(b) reiterates existing case law that in nonconsensual references the referee decision is only advisory and requires independent review. See below re court review.


Binding; written consent required; silence and participation without objection is not waiver

Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506,
Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431
Sauer v. Superior Court(1987), 195 Cal.App.3d 213
Jovine v. FHP, Inc.(1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506

Kim v. Superior Court (Palmco Corp.) (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 256, 259, 260-1 ["Kim consented to the appointment of Judge Blanpied based on his years of experience with the case as a referee. This specific consent cannot be expanded to encompass consent to Judge Beacom" as a Temporary Judge.]


Explicit statutory authority required to assign to referee

Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506
Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431 at p.435
Marriage of Gallis 149 Cal.App.3d 147, 150
Calif. Constitution art.Vl, sec.22 limits references to subordinate judicial duties

SPECIAL

People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703, 721, 107 Cal.Rptr.2d 323; 23 P.3d 563
"Masters and referees perform subordinate judicial duties only if their findings and recommendations are advisory and not binding until adopted by the court. (In re Perrone C. (1979) 26 Cal.3d 49, 54-55 [160 Cal.Rptr. 704, 603 P.2d 1300]; Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1986) 182 Cal.App.3d 431, 436 [227 Cal.Rptr. 460].) The court independently must review the referee's proposed findings and conclusions. (Jovine v. FHP, Inc. (1998) 64 Cal.App.4th 1506, 1522 [76 Cal.Rptr.2d 322].) If authorized by law, a superior court's referral of a particular aspect of a judicial proceeding to a special master or referee to render advisory findings and recommendations may be made with or without the consent of the parties and is known as a special reference. (Ibid.) [25 Cal.4th 722]"

Holt v. Kelly (1978) 20 Cal.3d 560

Discovery Referee
Doyle v. Superior Court (Caldwell) (1996),  50 Cal.App.4th 1878,  Footnote 1
"Our review is of the superior court's order not the special master's "orders." Discovery matters were referred to the special master in this case by means of a court order apparently pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 639, subdivision (e). This order purported to provide that the special master's decisions "will be final save for the parties [sic] appellate rights." Quoting C.C.P. § 639 (e) and then existing C.R.C. Rule 244.2(e).)
"As both... make plain, a discovery referee does not have the authority to issue court orders. Instead, the discovery referee's power is limited to "report[ing] [its] findings and making a recommendation thereon" to the superior court "with a proposed order and any recommendation for the imposition of sanctions." [Id] After the referee has submitted his or her report to the superior court, the parties may make objections to the referee's findings, recommendations and proposed orders and request a hearing in the superior court on these objections. [citing CRC]
The only logical conclusion... is that a referee can only propose or recommend orders. The superior court must decide whether to accept or reject the referee's recommendations. In this case, the special master purported to issue an "order" compelling Doyle to submit to a mental examination. Doyle filed a motion in the superior court objecting to the special master's "orders" and asking the superior court to "overrule" the special master's "orders." Both the special master and the parties proceeded improperly. The special master should have submitted his findings and recommendations to the superior court along with his proposed orders. Doyle would then have had the opportunity to object to the special master's findings, recommendations and proposed orders before the superior court decided whether to accept or reject the special master's proposed orders. If the superior court rejected Doyle's objections, it would then issue the proposed orders.
Thus, technically, our review should be of an order by the superior court compelling Doyle to submit to a mental examination and imposing sanctions. However, since the superior court's order rejecting Doyle's objections to the special master's "orders" was, in substance, a decision to accept the special master's recommendations, it is appropriate for us to treat the superior court's order as an order compelling Doyle to submit to a mental examination and imposing sanctions. We do not review the special master's "orders." "

CCP §639 et seq;     CRC Rule 3.920-3.926
Discovery Referee CCP §639(a)(5) on written motion or court's own motion CCP§639(a)
No routine appointments [CCP 639(d)(2)]:
"only when exceptional circumstances
must be specific to the circumstances of the particular
Consent to serve and certification by referee re compliance with Canon 6 & CRC prerequisite to appointment [CRC Rule 3.924] CCP §643(c) clarifies that in a CCP§639 reference the court is not bound by the referee report

CCP §644(b) reiterates existing case law that in nonconsensual refereences the referee decision is only advisory and requires independent review. See below re court review.

Independent determination by trial court required

Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506 [trial court rev'd for attempting to refer summary judgment to retired judge without consent of parties]

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431 at p. 436 [Trial Court. rev'd. after attempting to refer summary judgment and adopt findings & conclusions without hearing ]

Sauer v. Superior Court(1987), 195 Cal.App.3d 213

People v. Superior Court (Laff) (1998) review granted

Bird v. Superior Court (1980), 112 Cal App3rd 595 [stat.amended]


Advisory; may be ordered without consent of the parties

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431

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PROPRIETY OF REFERENCE /

JUDICIAL RESPONSIBILITY & REVIEW

Distinguish rule technicalities and details from Constitutional requirement re delegation of judicial authority

Kim v. Superior Court (Palmco Corp.) (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 256, p.260 Failure to comply with direction of CRC does not invalidate the appointment; consent is essential requirement. [citing Richard S. (1991) 54 Cal.3d 857 [2 Cal.Rptr.2d 2, 819 P.2d 843], In re Lamonica H. (1990) 220 Cal.App.3d 634, 644 [270 Cal.Rptr. 60] and In re Robert S. (1988) 197 Cal.App.3d 1260 [243 Cal.Rptr. 459] However, a court cannot make an appointment under CCP 639 without the consent of a party that confers powers restricted to appointment under CCP 638 e.g. the power to decide matters rather than report to court with a recommendation.

Justification for reference over objection

CCP §639 (d)(2) Order must "include... the exceptional circumstances requiring the reference which must be specific to the circumstances of the particular case. " However, the statute does not suggest what might be such exceptional circumstances prior case law should govern this issue with the exception of the Lu case..

Complex, time consuming issues

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 [Reference over objection of financial hardship rev'd; no complex, time consuming matters.  Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703, 736

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94[Sua sponte reference of all routine discovery and forcing one side to pay solely on the basis of financial status reversed] Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703, 736

Lu v. Superior Court(1997)[Referee may be appointed in complex litigation before an actual dispute. In questionable dictim, the court assumed "complex cases invariably involve complex discovery disputes" and suggested routine references as part of case management in complex litigation. The dictum in contrary to the weight of authority condemning routine references as an abdication of judicial responsibility and is contrary to the new statutory language.]

Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446 [fn.4 re appropriate for complex cases involving acrimony or requiring extraordinary expenditure of judicial time]

Privilege issues relating to numerous documents

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279;  25 Cal.4th 703, 736    Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001), 25 Cal.4th 703, 736
Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94; Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)

Depositions requiring presence of neutral party

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)
Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94 Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)

On going discovery disputes

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279; Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)
Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94 Approved in People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001)

contents TOP cases


Matters trial court should decide

Complex, unsettled legal issues or matters of first impression
Matters affecting 3rd parties

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94

Court cannot abdicate judicial responsibility
Court should avoid appearance of delegating judicial functions to referees and should not routinely refer discovery matters outside of court

Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446 [writ issued to set aside sua sponte reference in routine discovery dispute; ct app suggests tr ct should make finding of extraordinary circumstances and cannot parrot statute]

Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506 ["...the responsibility to decide cannot be delegated irrespective of the burdens imposed by the court's pending caseload." Ct Ap seems to disapprove of routine use of form order in LA for referring discovery matters to private judges paid by the parties.]

Taggares v. Superior Court
(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94 [blanket ref of routine disc disfavored; refer when necessary not merely convenient]

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den] [meaningful review and independent determination by tr.ct. required]

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court
(1986) at p. 437

Solorzano v. Superior Court
(1993) at p. 615

Rockwell Int
. at p.1269 [record must show considered and careful review of report , transcript & objections thereto]

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 at p.1284

Korea Data Systems Co.Ltd. v. Superior Court
(1997) [Ct. does not reach issues but cites Marathon & Rockwell cases regarding abdication by rubber stamping reference]

McMillan v. Superior Court
(1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246 (depublished) [ prior to 639 reference, when party raises financial issues, suggests court should determine issues such as financial condition & ability to pay of objecting party, allocation of fees, hourly amount or amount for task etc., scope and extent of references]

contents top cases

Possible exception in complex litigation requiring case management & monitoring

Lu v. Superior Court(1997)[The issue and holding was that a referee may be appointed in complex litigation before an actual dispute. In questionable dictum, the court assumed "complex cases invariably involve complex discovery disputes" and suggested routine references as part of case management in complex litigation. The dictum in contrary to the weight of authority condemning routine references as an abdication of judicial responsibility and is contrary to the new statutory language.]

Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446 [suggests some history or additional reason is required to justify references even in "complex" cases]

Court should carefully differentiate types of discovery motions that are appropriate for reference

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94

Solorzano v. Superior Court (1993) at p. 615

SELECTION OF REFEREE [C.C.P. §640]

Disclosure by Referee [CRC Rule 3.904(b), 3.924(b)]

Required by Canon 6, (D)(5)(a) and (b)
Prior relationship with parties etc.

Referee must consent to serve and certify it will comply with Canon 6 and the CRC rules;  CRC Rules 3.904, 3.924

Appointment

Must appoint person agreed upon by parties  C.C.P. §640(a)
Absent agreement, parties submit 3 names from which court selects C.C.P. §640(b)
If no nominee, court appoints
Former California judicial officer must be member of state bar [CRC Rule 3.903, 3.923]
Disqualification of Referee
Peremptory challenges, timeliness CCP 639(b): 5 days prior to hearing, 10 days after appointment

ORDER APPOINTING REFEREE [CCP §639(d)]

See  Judicial Council Forms    Motion, ADR-109;   Order, ADR-110;    Referee Report, ADR-111   http://www.lawca.com/general.php

Contents of appointment Order [CRC Rule 3.902, Rule 3.922 see table below re CRC provisions]

Reasons & justification for appointment (d)(2) CRC Rule 3.922(c), 
"exceptional circumstances requiring the reference"
"must be specific to …the particular case"
Possible reasons

Complex, time consuming issues
Privilege issues relating to numerous documents
Specialized issues requiring extra time or expertise e.g. contruction cases, e-discovery issues of technical nature
Depositions requiring presence of neutral party to facilitate or control abuses
On going discovery disputes
Inordinate consumption of time on routine discovery disputes involving the parties
Need to control discovery abuses
Need to assure and provide cost effective discovery
Part of case management program

Subject matter of reference [can be "all discovery purposes" §639(c) & (d)(3); CRC Rule 3.922(d)]
Powers as set forth in Rule 3.922(e)
Referee name, address, & telephone; [CCP 639(d)(4);  CRC Rule 3.922(b))]
Referee state bar number [CRC Rule 3.922(b))]
Maximum hourly rate and, if requested, maximum number of hours CRC Rule 3.922(f)(1)
Finding re economic inability of party not established or voluntary payment by other party [statute expressly prohibits consideration of attorney ability to pay] CRC Rule 3.922(f)(2)]
Attach or file referee certification re compliance with rules and Canon 6 and consent to srve [CRC Rule 3.924(a)]
Referee's signature re consent to serve

FINDINGS  re Discovery Referee

No party has established economic inability to pay a pro rata share of the referee fee
OR
If so, another party has voluntarily agreed to pay the additional share

[Note: Ability of counsel to pay cannot be considered]

CCP §639(d)(6):  "A court shall not appoint a referee at a cost to the parties if neither of these findings is made."


Oath of referee not required

Kajima Engineering & Construction v. Pacific Bell (2002), Cal.App.4th 2002 DJDAR 13647 [Assigned judge refered matter to retired judge for 4 day court trial; retired judge filed Statement of Decision; assigned judge entered judgement on the statement of decision; sole issue on appeal was whether referee must take oath of Temporary Judge; Held: no oath required on general reference]

contents TOP cases


FEES  [CCP 645.1]

CCP§639(d) Order appointing referee "shall include the... maximum hourly rate the referee may charge and, at the request of any party, the maximum number of hours....".

CCP §643 referee report must include total fees and recommended allocation
CCP §645.1(b) apportionment of fees by court

Court "may order the parties to pay"
"In any manner…including an apportionment …among the parties."
See Enforcement of Judgment CCP §680.230: "Judgment means…order."

Attorney not responsible for fees as such

CCP §645.1(b) amendment expressly protects counsel from any obligation to pay fees as part of "parties" obligation: "...the term 'parties' does not include parties' counsel." However, statute does not address requiring attorney to pay referee fees as a discovery sanction as suggested in the Andrews case below.
CCP §639(d)(6)(B) attorney ability to pay cannot be considered on issue of party's ability to pay

Andrews v. Superior Court (7/28/00) 82 Cal.App.4th 779 [Tr.Ct rev'd for ordering attorney to pay referee fees; court recognizes that attorney might be ordered to pay such fees as a monetary sanction if appropriate under CCP 2023 and 2031]

Taggares v. Superior Court
(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94 [court questions whether attorney advancing costs justifies requiring attorney to pay for referee]

McMillan v. Superior Court(1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246[depublished][absent agreement CCP645.1 only allows court to order parties to pay]

Attorney may be required to pay referee fees as monetary sanction

Andrews v. Superior Court (7/28/00), 82 Cal.App.4th 779 [The court rejected an order requiring an attorney to pay referee fees based on the court's inherent power or CCP128.5 but noted: "It may well be that, in a proper case, the burden of such fees could be placed on an erring attorney under the discovery statute."]

contents top cases


ALLOCATION OF FEES [CCP §645.1]

CCP §643(c) Referee report must include "the referee's recommended allocation of payment" of the referee's fees.
CCP §645.1(b) apportionment of fees by court
The statutory amendments in 2000 may have modified the case law requiring apportionment at the time of initial appointmnet.


One side can be ordered to pay all fees

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94[not if based solely on financial status]

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den] p.12591261-2 ["But for Marathon's hardball discovery tactics, these expenses would never have been incurred."]

???Court cannot defer allocation of fee issue until after referee's work is completed but must make a provisional allocation subject to later adjustment. [The statutory amendments in Y2K may have modified the case law requiring apportionment at the time of initial appointmnet.]

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94
DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 [Rev'd for not making determination; see re factors to consider]
McDonald v. Superior Court at p.370[fee allocation can't be referred to ref.]
Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den], p.1261
McMillan v. Superior Court (1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246

Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446 [tr ct cannot abdicate responsibility of determining financial hardship or allocation of fees]

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Court must consider alternatives to paid referee

Meet & confer rules etc to resolve matters inexpensively
Pro bono referee
Retired judge sitting by assignment
Retention by trial court
Reference to Muni Ct. Judge under coordination plan
Ref. within court: staff atty, law clerk, bailiff, commissioner

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94
Solorzano v. Superior Court (1993),
DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279

Court must consider financial consequences

CCP 639(d)(6) requires express findings in order appointing referee

No party has established inability to pay pro rata share
OR
If so, another party has agreed voluntarily that additional share

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94)
Solorzano v. Superior Court (1993) at p.615 [court could not require in forma pauperis plaintiff to pay private referee ]
DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 [whenever issue of economic hardship is raised, trial court must consider issue of fair & reasonable apportionment of fees before reference]
McDonald v. Superior Court [raised by renewal of mot.compel after referral but before referee commenced proceedings]
McMillan v. Superior Court (1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246

Hood v. Superior Court (1999), 72 Cal.App.4th 446 [tr ct cannot abdicate responsibility to referee to decide and make allocations; must consider declarations of party and representations of counsel unless there is reason not to do so]

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Court may only consider the ability of the party to pay fees and may not consider the ability of counsel to pay

CCP§639(d)(6)(B)


Court may not consider extent to which expenses are being advanced by counsel in determining ability of party to pay

Taggares v. Superior Court(1998), 62 Cal.App.4th 94 [language in DeBlase questioned]
DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 at p.1284

Court need not make findings or even disclose reasons for allocation of fees and is presumed to have considered all relevant factors

DeBlase v. Superior Court (1996), 41 Cal.App.4th 1279 at p. 1286


REFEREE REPORT, FINDINGS & DECISION [CCP §643]

CCP §638 report as agreed by the parties and approved by the court

Statement of decision must stand as findings of court; actual judgment is entered by court

Kajima Engineering & Construction v. Pacific Bell (2002), 103 Cal.App.4th 1397 , 127 Cal.Rptr.2d 464

Jovine v. FHP Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506


Statement of Decision by Referee within 20 days of hearing [CCP§643]

CCP §639 report

Written report and statement of decision filed with court within 20 days of submission
Serve all parties
Recommendation on the merits of any disputed issue
Total hours spent and total fees charged
Referee's recommended allocation of payment of fees

Objections served and filed within 10 days
Responses to objections within 10 days
Report is advisory [CCP §644(b)]

No provisions are set forth regarding procedures if any to present matter to court for final decisions

Waiver of objections

Martino v. Denevi(1986)[ objections in ref rpt., written obj filed, or motion]

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COURT REVIEW CCP §645

Consensual references CCP §638
CCP §644(a) clarifies that "In the case of a consensual general reference pursuant to Section 638, the decision of the referee...must stand as the decision of the court...."

Kajima Engineering & Construction v. Pacific Bell (2002), 103 Cal.App.4th 1397 , 127 Cal.Rptr.2d 464 [Assigned judge refered matter to retired judge for 4 day court trial; retired judge filed Statement of Decision; assigned judge entered judgement on the statement of decision; sole issue on appeal was whether referee must take oath of Temporary Judge; Held: no oath required on general reference]

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den]

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986), 182 Cal.App.3d 431

Whoop Inc. v. Dyno Productions Inc.(1998), [depublished] [consensual reference for determination enforced as if agreement to arbitration; suggests review consensual references like arbitration decision]

Jovine v. FHP, Inc.(1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506

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Nonconsensual references CCP §639
CCP §644(b) reiterates existing case law that in nonconsensual references the referee decision is only advisory and requires independent review.

People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703, 736  ["subject to mandatory, independent review by the trial judge before any ruling could be rendered"]

Baumohl v. FHP, Inc. (1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506 [Tr ct re'vd for improper general reference w/o consent; in discussion, court questioned the legitimacy of a recitation of the trial courts de nova review]

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den] p.1260 fn3,1261

Bird v. Superior Court(1980), 112 CA3d 595 [order cannot confer power]

McMillan v. Superior Court (1996), 50 Cal.App.4th 246

People v. Superior Court(Laff)(1998)

Jovine v. FHP, Inc.(1998), 64 Cal.App.4th 1506

Independent determination by trial court required

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993)
Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986)


Consider referee findings & objections thereto

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993)
In re Estate of Beard (1999), 71 Cal.App.4th 753Although the trial court must independently consider the referee's findings before acting, the referee's recommendations are entitled to great weight.”

Whatever manner the trial court deems appropriate

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993)

Hearing not required

Marathon National Bank v. Superior Court (1993), 19 Cal.App.4th 1256 [rehrg den] [Order provided for one in ct discretion and party requested it but none was held; aff'd; §639(e) ref; meaningful review by tr.ct. req. but not rehearing; order shows court carefully reviewed report, transcript etc.]

Aetna Life Ins.Co.v. Superior Court (1986),  at p. 436 [Independent determination by trial court required;Tr.Ct.rev'd. after attempting to refer summary judgment and adopt findings & conclusions without hearing ]

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RECOVERY OF LITIGATION COSTS 

People v. Superior Court (Laff) (2001) 25 Cal.4th 703,   Fn 15. "The Court of Appeal has held that fees of various court-appointed assistants necessary for the conduct of civil litigation constitute statutory costs awarded to the prevailing party pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1032. (E.g., Gibson v. Bobroff (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 1202, 1207-1210 [57 Cal.Rptr.2d 235] [private mediator]; Winston Square Homeowner's Assn. v. Centex West, Inc. (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 282, 292-293 [261 Cal.Rptr. 605] [special master for discovery and settlement]; Most Worshipful Lodge v. Sons etc. Lodge (1956) 140 Cal.App.2d 833, 834-835 [295 P.2d 912] [referee]; Estrin v. Fromsky (1942) 53 Cal.App.2d 253, 255 [127 P.2d 603] [accountant].)"

Referee fee not recoverable cost as a matter of right

Baker-Hoey v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2003) 111 Cal. App. 4th 592;3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 593; [Class certification denied in action for medical damages of 50-100,000 persons. Defendant sought recovery of costs ($15-31,000 each) against 8 plaintiffs. after summary judgment based on Statute of Limitations. Discovery referee fees not recoverable as a matter or right and no abuse of discretion in denial. Tr Ct apportionment of referee fees from original order followed and no costs recoverable. Aff'd; no abuse of discretion]

COMPARISON OF CRC RULES:  CCP §638 vs CCP §639

Generally, the CRC provisions do not add matters of substance and merely repeat provisions contained in the CCP. However, some additions are made as to order content, referee disclosures of conflicts or grounds for disqualification and as to a referee's consent to serve and certification of compliance with Canon 6 of the Code of Judicial Conduct and the CRC. One provision requires courts to determine fee allocations in case of hardships. The table is edited to highlight matters of significance. Consult full text of current rules on the Judicial Council webpage.


Consensual References

C.C.P. §638

Non-Consensual References

C.C.P. §639

Rule 3.900. Purposes of reference

Not to appoint mediator


See Advisory Committee Comment re permissible appointment for mediation or mandatory settlement







Rule 3.901. Application for order appointing referee

(a) Written stipulation or motion to assigned judge, PJ, or law & motion judge

(b) Contents

(1) scope: all or limited to specified issues;

(2) whether referee will be privately compensated;

(3) describe any use of court facilities or court personnel and state the reasons it would further the interests of justice;

(4) If request or stip to particular referee, submit proposed referee’s certification as required by rule 3.904(a); and

(5) proposed order

Rule 3.902. Order

filed with the clerk or entered in the minutes

must specify:

(1) name,
business address, and
telephone number

State Bar number "if ... is a member...."






(2) all issues or limited to specified issues;

(3) Whether privately compensated; and

(4) Whether the use of court facilities & personnel is authorized.



















Rule 3.903. Selection and qualifications of referee

Comply with C.C.P. §640.

Former California judicial officer must be an active or inactive member of the State Bar.



Rule 3.904. Certification and disclosure by referee

(a) Certification by referee

Before a referee begins to serve:

(1) certify in writing consents to serve as provided in the order of appointment and

is aware of and will comply with applicable provisions of canon 6 of the Code of Judicial Ethics and with the California Rules of Court; and

(2) The referee’s certification must be filed with the court.


(b) Disclosure by referee

I
(1) Any matter subject to disclosure under either canon 6D(5)(a) or 6D(5)(b) of the Code of Judicial Ethics; and

(2) Any significant personal or professional relationship the referee has or has had with a party, attorney, or law firm in the current case, including the number and nature of any other proceedings in the past 24 months in which the referee has been privately compensated by a party, attorney, law firm, or insurance company in the current case for any services. The disclosure must include privately compensated service as an attorney, expert witness, or consultant or as a judge, referee, arbitrator, mediator, settlement facilitator, or other alternative dispute resolution neutral.


Rule 3.905. Objections to the appointment

Consent to referee not waiver of objection to

particular person [§ 641]



Objection to particular person must be made with reasonable diligence and in writing. The objection must be served on all parties and the referee and filed with the court. The objection must be heard by the judge to whom the case is assigned or by the presiding judge or law and motion judge if the case has not been assigned.



Rule 3.906. Motion to withdraw stipulation

(a) Good cause requirement

must be supported by a declaration of facts establishing good cause for permitting the party to withdraw the stipulation. The following do not constitute good cause for withdrawing a stipulation:

(1) A declaration that a ruling is based on an error of fact or law.

(2) The issuance of an order for an appropriate hearing site under rule 3.910.

(b) Service, filing and hearing of motion

Notice of the motion must be served on all parties and the referee and filed with the court. The motion must be heard by the judge to whom the case is assigned or by the presiding judge or law and motion judge. If the motion is granted, the case must be transferred to the trial court docket.



Rule 3.907. Use of court facilities and court personnel

A party who has elected to use the services of a referee appointed under Code of Civil Procedure section 638 is deemed to have elected to proceed outside court facilities. Court facilities, court personnel, and summoned jurors may not be used in proceedings pending before such a referee except on a finding by the presiding judge or his or her designee that their use would further the interests of justice.



Rule 3.920. Purposes and conditions for appointment of referee

(a) See statute [CCP 639(a)(5) Discovery Referee]

(b) No references for mediation

(c) Exceptional circumstances required to appoint discovery referee [See CCP §639(d)(2)]

See Advisory Committee Comment re permissible appointment for mediation or mandatory settlement



Rule 3.921. Motion for appointment of a referee [or court's own motion CCP639(a)]

(a) Filing and contents

-specify the matter or matters to be referred

-If seek appointment of specific person, submit proposed referee’s certification per rule 3.924(a).

(b) Hearing

motion to assigned judge, PJ, or law & motion judge








Rule 3.922. Form and contents of order

(a) Written order

(b) Referee information   [1st 3 items required by CCP §639(D)(4)]

name,
business address, and

telephone number

State Bar number "if ... is a member...."

(c) Basis for reference

specify subsection of §639(a) and:

for Discovery Referee appointed per 639(a)(5)
order must state the exceptional circumstances of the particular case that require the reference. [See CCP §639(d)(2)]


(d) Subject matter and scope of reference

(1)must specify the subject matter or matters [see CCP §639(d)(3)]

(2) must state whether a discovery referee is appointed for all purposes or only for limited purposes. [ See CCP§ 639(c)]


(e) Authority of discovery referee

"the order must state that the referee is authorized to set the date, time, and place for all hearings determined by the referee to be necessary; direct the issuance of subpoenas; preside over hearings; take evidence; and rule on objections, motions, and other requests made during the course of the hearing."


(f) Referee fees; apportionment

(1) Specify the maximum hourly rate... and, if any party so requests, the maximum number of hours for which the referee may charge; [CCP 639(d)(5)]

(2) Finding re economic ability either:

(A) No party has established an economic inability to pay a pro rata share of the referee’s fee; or

(B) One or more parties has established an economic inability to pay a pro rata share of the referee’s fees and another party has agreed voluntarily to pay that additional share of the referee’s fees.

[See CCP §639(d)(6)(A). "A court shall not appoint a referee at a cost to the parties if neither of these findings is made." "(B) ...the court shall consider only the ability of the party, not the party's counsel to pay these fees." ]

(3) When the issue of economic hardship is raised before the referee begins performing services, the court must determine a fair and reasonable apportionment of reference costs.

(g) Specify the extent, if any, to which court facilities and court personnel may be used


Rule 3.923. Selection and qualification of referee

Comply with C.C.P. §640.

Former California judicial officer must be an active or inactive member of the State Bar.



Rule 3.924. Certification and disclosure by referee

(a) Certification by referee

Before a referee begins to serve:

(1) certify in writing consents to serve as provided in the order of appointment and

is aware of and will comply with applicable provisions of canon 6 of the Code of Judicial Ethics and with the California Rules of Court; and

(2) The referee’s certification must be filed with the court.


(b) Disclosure by referee


(1) Any matter subject to disclosure under subdivisions (D)(5)(a) and (D)(5)(b) of canon 6 of the Code of Judicial Ethics; and

(2) Any significant personal or professional relationship the referee has or has had with a party, attorney, or law firm in the current case, including the number and nature of any other proceedings in the past 24 months in which the referee has been privately compensated by a party, attorney, law firm, or insurance company in the current case for any services. The disclosure must include privately compensated service as an attorney, expert witness, or consultant or as a judge, referee, arbitrator, mediator, settlement facilitator, or other alternative dispute resolution neutral.


Rule 3.925. Objection to reference

Consent to reference not waiver of objection to

particular person [§ 641],

rate of compensation

apportionment compensation

Objection to particular person must be made with reasonable diligence and in writing. The objection must be heard by the judge to whom the case is assigned, or by the presiding judge or the law and motion judge.









Rule 3.926. Use of court facilities

A reference ordered under Code of Civil Procedure section 639 entitles the parties to the use of court facilities and court personnel to the extent provided in the order of reference. The proceedings may be held in a private facility, but, if so, the private facility must be open to the public as provided in rule 3.931.



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OTHER MATTERS FOR CONSIDERATION FOR INCLUSION IN ORDER

Both the statutes and CRC rules specify provisions that must or should be in the order and current provisions of each must be consulted. The Judicial Council Form should be consulted and at least used as a check list. However, counsel should consider additional provisions that will clarify obligations and that will avoid expenses and delays that may result from the existing rules. Counsel are more likely to agree at the beginning as to what modification, additions or clarifications would be most desireable. Otherwise, the advantages and benefits of a discovery referee may be greatly diminished. The following suggestion are made to encourage appropriate modifications and are not intended for verbatim inclusion in any or all cases.


The following conditions apply to this reference

The above terms and obligations for payment are provisional and may be reconsidered and modified by the court. The referee shall recommend an allocation of referee fees. Upon request of any party, the referee shall determine and report whether, the extent of and the reasons why any party is more responsible for the parties incurring costs and shall recommend an appropriate division of the costs of the reference based on that responsibility.

sanctions
fee allocation

Set forth terms of rule 244.2c-e
referee authority
report & order within 20 days
Objections within 15 days
Notice & request for hearing

All applicable provisions of statute, California Rules of Court and local rules are incorporated herein by reference as if set forth herein.

APPROVAL AS TO FORM

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PROPOSED PROCEDURE FOR REVIEW AND INDEPENDENT DETERMINATION BY COURT
COURT REVIEW OF REFEREE DETERMINATIONS

REFEREE REVIEW OF OBJECTIONS. If objection is made to the referee's decision, such objections shall, prior to submission to the court and as promptly as possible within the statutory limits, be served on the referee. The referee may decline to revise its order, may reconsider and revise its order or may schedule additional hearings to review the objections. The referee shall provide a formal written response to the objections as promptly as possible and within five business days. If there is no response or the referee declines to revise the order, the matter may be submitted for independent review. If the referee revises its recommendation, the time to commence review shall recommence in accord with the timing of the revision. If further hearings are scheduled, further proceedings shall be had before the referee as required by the referee to render its decision and the review process shall recommence in accord with the timing of the new decision.

SUBMISSION OF ORDER TO COURT. A final order from the court should be obtained as promptly as possible. Counsel and the referee are expected to stipulate to a prompt submission when formal objection will not be raised and the order can be signed without further proceedings. No order shall be submitted for signature by the court until the time to object has expired, by law or stipulation, or until all proceedings before the referee on the issues to be determined by the order have been completed, including the opportunity to review, reconsider and act upon any objections. The order should reflect the fact that the time to object has expired or has been waived and counsel have stipulated that the order may be signed without further proceedings or delay or the fact that the time to object has expired and no objections have been received. Counsel should approve such order as to form. Such order may then be signed without further proceedings by the court.

SUBMISSION TO COURT FOR REVIEW. When objection is raised to the referee's decision and the matter submitted to the court for review, the original moving party shall submit all relevant papers in a binder with appropriate tabs and should schedule the matter for hearing on the regular motion calendar. The binder should contain at least the following: the initial moving and opposing papers, the referee's decision, the objection to the referee's decisions and response thereto. The matter shall be set for hearing by the moving party on any day available on the court calendar on a date agreeable to all parties litigant or upon 5 court days notice. Should the moving party not promptly submit the relevant papers and schedule the matter for hearing any other party to the motion may do so.

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