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Crossing Borders The Public Defender’s
SE IA TO ES E S ID GU ES L UA TN NN WI RT PE M EX THE MAGAZINE OF THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION NOVEMBER 2013 / $4 PLUS EARN MCLE CREDIT Real Estate in Probate page 27 The Public Defender’s Centennial page 68 CDA Protection for ISPs page 13 Limiting Consumer Class Actions page 32 The iPad at Trial page 64 Crossing Borders Los Angeles lawyer Jeff Dasteel and Natalia de la Parra Ferreiro discuss the risks that foreign attorneys face when representing clients in arbitrations in California page 18 • • • • • • R i g o ro us st an d ard s Ta i l o red se r vi c e Prom p t t u rn aro u n d Fre e i ni ti al c o n su lt at i o n s Fre e res u m e bo o k Rea s ona ble r at e s L O C A L O F F I C E Pro/Consul Inc. 1945 Palo Verde Avenue, Suite 200 Long Beach, CA 90815-3443 (562) 799-0116 • Fax (562) 799-8821 Hours of Operation: 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. [email protected] • ExpertInfo.com When there’s a lot to lose, we have a lot to offer. EXCLUSIVELY FAMILY LAW. THE ONLY NETWORK AN ATTORNEY NEEDS Your best referrals come from other lawyers. We host business development meetings exclusively for attorneys. With TEN, you can develop 50, 75, 100 or more of your peers as effective referral sources. Annual Membership: $450* New Members: 10% Discount through November 30 Become a member today at: www.TENesquire.com Discount Code: LALAW Over 20 monthly meetings, including: • Downtown LA • Sherman Oaks Specialty Groups • Pasadena • Encino • 2 Women’s Groups • Century City • Woodland Hills • Litigators Group • Hollywood • Westlake Village • Wine Tasting Group • Westwood • Beverly Hills • Business Lawyers • Ventura • Burbank • New Lawyers Group • Santa Clarita • Tarzana • Hiking Lawyers • Glendale • Golfing Lawyers www.tenesquire.com www.fb.com/tenesquire@esquirenetwork * Members may attend any or all meetings subject to space availability by RSVPing to the moderator. F E AT U R E S 18 Crossing Borders BY JEFF DASTEEL AND NATALIA DE LA PARRA FERREIRO Foreign attorneys who represent parties in arbitrations in California risk criminal liability and nonpayment of fees 27 The Properties of Preemption BY RICHARD S. CONN The Probate Code’s mechanism for notice to creditors may provide protection against federal preemption Plus: Earn MCLE credit. MCLE Test No. 229 appears on page 29. 32 Questionable Classes BY KENNETH K. LEE California attorneys defending against dubious consumer class actions may seek removal to federal court 39 Special Section Semiannual Guide to Expert Witnesses Los Angeles Lawyer D E PA RT M E N T S the magazine of the Los Angeles County Bar Association November 2013 9 Barristers Tips Strategies for success in professional networking 64 Computer Counselor How to use an iPad to manage and present trial exhibits BY TIFFANY J. HOWARD BY HEATHER E. STERN 10 Practice Tips The fraud exception to the parol evidence rule after Riverisland 68 Closing Argument Honoring 100 years of the Los Angeles public defender BY RYAN J. BARNCASTLE AND KENNETH E. MOORE BY ALAN H. SIMON 13 Practice Tips The CDA as a safe harbor for interactive computer service providers 66 Index to Advertisers Volume 36, No. 8 COVER PHOTOGRAPH: TOM KELLER BY SHELLY ROSENFELD LOS ANGELES LAWYER (ISSN 0162-2900) is published monthly, except for a combined issue in July/August, by the Los Angeles County Bar Association, 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles, CA 90017 (213) 896-6503. Periodicals postage paid at Los Angeles, CA and additional mailing offices. Annual subscription price of $14 included in the Association membership dues. Nonmember subscriptions: $28 annually; single copy price: $4 plus handling. Address changes must be submitted six weeks in advance of next issue date. POSTMASTER: Address Service Requested. Send address changes to Los Angeles Lawyer, P. O. Box 55020, Los Angeles CA 90055. 67 CLE Preview Judge Michael D. Marcus (Ret.) • “Daily Journal” Top 50 California Neutrals 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011 & 2012 • Super Lawyer, Dipute Resolution 2008-2013 VISIT US ON THE INTERNET AT www.lacba.org/lalawyer E-MAIL CAN BE SENT TO [email protected] EDITORIAL BOARD Chair Available to Mediate, Artitrate & Referee Disputes Including: • Employment • Legal Malpractice • Business/commerican • Real Property • Person Injury • Medical Malpractice Century City | Downtown LA | Orange County (310) 201-0010 [email protected] www.marcusmediation.com AMERICAN LANGUAGE SERVICES TRANSLATING & INTERPRETING ALL LANGUAGES CERTIFIED PROFESSIONALS LEGAL CORPORATE TRANSCRIPTIONS EXPERT WITNESS TESTIMONY NATIONWIDE OFFICES WORLDWIDE COVERAGE Making the World a Little Smaller ESTABLISHED 1985 ~ EXCELLENT RATES DINA SPEVACK 310.829.0741 x 303 800.951.5020 alsglobal.net PAUL S. MARKS Articles Coordinator MARY E. KELLY JERROLD ABELES (PAST CHAIR) K. LUCY ATWOOD ETHEL W. BENNETT SCOTT BOYER ERIC BROWN CAROLINE BUSSIN PATRICIA H. COMBS CHAD C. COOMBS (PAST CHAIR) HON. MICHELLE WILLIAMS COURT ELIZABETH L. CROOKE BEN M. DAVIDSON GORDON K. ENG DONNA FORD STUART R. FRAENKEL CHRISTY GARGALIS MICHAEL A. GEIBELSON (PAST CHAIR) CHRISTINE D. GILLE SHARON GLANCZ TED M. HANDEL JEFFREY A. HARTWICK STEVEN HECHT (PAST CHAIR) JOSHUA S. HODAS JOHN C. KEITH ERIC KINGSLEY KATHERINE KINSEY JENNIFER W LELAND STEPHANIE LEWIS SANDRA MENDELL AMY MESSIGIAN MICHELLE MICHAELS COMM. ELIZABETH MUNISOGLU PAUL OBICO CARMELA PAGAY AMANDA PAWLYK DENNIS L. PEREZ (IMMEDIATE PAST CHAIR) GREGG A. RAPOPORT GARY RASKIN (PAST CHAIR) JACQUELINE M. REAL-SALAS (PAST CHAIR) A. JOEL RICHLIN DAVID SCHNIDER (PAST CHAIR) NANCY L. SCHROEDER STEVEN SCHWARTZ HEATHER STERN KENNETH W. SWENSON (PAST CHAIR) MATTHEW D. TAGGART DAMON THAYER THOMAS H. VIDAL ALEX M. WEINGARTEN STAFF Publisher and Editor (in memoriam) SAMUEL LIPSMAN Editor ERIC HOWARD Art Director LES SECHLER Director of Design and Production PATRICE HUGHES Advertising Director LINDA BEKAS Administrative Coordinator MATTY JALLOW BABY Copyright © 2013 by the Los Angeles County Bar Association. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Printed by R. R. Donnelley, Liberty, MO. Member Business Publications Audit of Circulation (BPA). The opinions and positions stated in signed material are those of the authors and not by the fact of publication necessarily those of the Association or its members. All manuscripts are carefully considered by the Editorial Board. Letters to the editor are subject to editing. 4 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 OF FFIC E S L AW O IES S EL R T . F N NS E P RACT IC ALIS O EF E INAL D W. C OM A CRIM IE S S L L A IS ON T R L A . W WW 3 990-2 03 18) ONE (8 5 31 T ELEP H 8) 990-5 81 ( E IL F A C S IM 300 S U IT E VARD, B OU LE A R U T EN 15 300 V 91403 K S , CA AN OA M R S HE 1 0 ,2 0 1 3 F eb ru ary st ri k e rder, t h i rd t o u m n i g n p ec i ali z i b le asset n i nv alu a at t orney s a e s n e n e fe b e e d c ri m i nal rap h s h av o’ s p olyg sl. I am a s rc e a ri m T i r n T o i s Ali s t , J ac k ri ng h er M y nam e es. Wi t h ou t a dou b of m u rde s d a e c s u g c c ru a and d ent al i n h o was c e. as i nst ru m oodm an w w G h s p i o ra L g m y p rac t i l es. oly c ia t h e c h arg m arc o’ s p enni s offi ll ri T a T f A k o T c l S a a J s U ed m e and a di sm i s rep resent su lt ed i n m i t t h e c ri re m inth e o h c I rec ent ly c i t h o n w one nam e rney e di d o h t ly t S n . A o d t s c n i a ri t b h u s eD is rap h , t h ere and ex p eri enc e i s ns wi t h t h e a p olyg k a t sm , t n neg ot i at i o e li ys ali k e. eac fessi onali v ro a p h , o y t t se at t orne r n li i e fe b h i t e d e d h re d c w n er lev el of c u t ors a r I c onsi d is t of p rose arc o. H i s c m e p ri Wh enev e s T . N ot only re k m c e i a h h J t – re rs e o n d o rn i a t and g a di c at ed ly p u t , I c onv ersa ork i ng , de and si m p i n t h e fi eld w d rs rd a le a e e h y ll a e ra s a u np v er t welv ith .H ei arc o for o leasu re t o work w m ri T r. M ri t y. b solu t e p rk ed wi t h and i nt eg h e i s an a s , n I h av e wo o ld i e t a fi c e fi h st i n t ed q u ali h eth eb e nq u est i on u h t i w l a n p rofessi o T o wh om nc ern, i t m ay c o Warm reg ards, essl Ali son T ri JACK TRIMARCO POLYGRAPH, INC. When you need to impress someone with the truth... 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LOS ANGELES LAWYER IS THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles CA 90017-2553 Telephone 213.627.2727 / www.lacba.org LACBA OFFICERS President PATRICIA EGAN DAEHNKE President-Elect LINDA L. CURTIS Senior Vice President PAUL R. KIESEL Vice President MARGARET P. STEVENS Treasurer MICHAEL K. LINDSEY Assistant Vice President BRIAN S. CURREY Assistant Vice President CHRISTINE C. GOODMAN Assistant Vice President SAJAN KASHYAP Immediate Past President RICHARD J. BURDGE JR. Chief Executive Officer/Secretary SALLY SUCHIL Associate Executive Director/Chief Financial Officer BRUCE BERRA Associate Executive Director/General Counsel W. CLARK BROWN BOARD OF TRUSTEES HARRY W. R. CHAMBERLAIN BRIAN K. CONDON DUNCAN W. CRABTREE-IRELAND DANIEL M. CROWLEY REBECCA A. DELFINO ANTHONY DE LOS REYES HOWARD S. FISHER RICHARD B. GOETZ JACQUELINE J. HARDING MARK A. KRESSEL DEVON MYERS JUAN A. RAMOS DAVID K. REINERT DIANA K. RODGERS JENNIFER S. ROMANO HARVEY I. SAFERSTEIN SUSAN KOEHLER SULLIVAN TERESA TRACY SULLIVAN BRENDA E. SUTTON-WILLS DAVID A. TILEM AFFILIATED BAR ASSOCIATIONS BEVERLY HILLS BAR ASSOCIATION CENTURY CITY BAR ASSOCIATION CULVER MARINA BAR ASSOCIATION GLENDALE BAR ASSOCIATION IRANIAN AMERICAN LAWYERS ASSOCIATION ITALIAN AMERICAN LAWYERS ASSOCIATION JAPANESE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION JOHN M. LANGSTON BAR ASSOCIATION KOREAN AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LESBIAN AND GAY LAWYERS ASSOCIATION OF LOS ANGELES MEXICAN AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION PASADENA BAR ASSOCIATION SAN FERNANDO VALLEY BAR ASSOCIATION SAN GABRIEL VALLEY BAR ASSOCIATION SANTA CLARITA VALLEY BAR ASSOCIATION SANTA MONICA BAR ASSOCIATION SOUTH BAY BAR ASSOCIATION SOUTHEAST DISTRICT BAR ASSOCIATION SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CHINESE LAWYERS ASSOCIATION WHITTIER BAR ASSOCIATION WOMEN LAWYERS ASSOCIATION OF LOS ANGELES 6 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 ADR FOR THE WORLD’S MOST INTRACTABLE DISPUTES BUSINESS • EMPLOYMENT • INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY FRANCHISE • INTERNATIONAL DEEP Subject Matter Knowledge EFFICIENT Party Driven Process FIERCELY Fair and Impartial SUPERB Judicial Temperament “...Holmes is unsurpassed at customizing the parties' chosen resolution process to ensure speed, economy and justice”—Russell Fransen, Esq., The Business Legal Group • Large Complex Case Panel, American Arbitration Association (AAA) National Roster of Neutrals • International Panel, International Center for Dispute Resolution (ICDR) • Board of Directors, College of Commercial Arbitrators (CCA) • Board of Directors, California Dispute Resolution Council (CDRC) • Mediation Practice Director, Resolute Systems, LLC • Fellow, California Academy of Distinguished Neutrals • President and Executive Director, Neutrals Diversity Aliance THE HOLMES LAW FIRM To schedule your Mediation, Arbitration or other ADR process with Reg Holmes, please contact: For American Arbitration Association administered matters: Michael R. Powell ([email protected]) A t the approach of the holiday season, it is fitting that we lawyers consider the legal aspects of holidays in California. California law relating to holidays is a patchwork codified in the Civil Code, the Code of Civil Procedure, and the Government Code. Government Code 6700 lists the official holidays in California, Code of Civil Procedure Section 135 lists the “judicial” holidays, and Civil Code Sections 12a and 12b relate to how holidays are considered when computing time for legal acts. The law has its quirks. For example, while Sections 135 and 12a treat all of Saturday as a holiday, under the Government Code Saturday is a holiday only from noon to midnight. Good Friday is also listed as an official state holiday under Government Code 6700, but only from noon to 3 P.M. Strangely, under Civil Code Section 7.1(o) banks get to treat Good Friday as a holiday from noon to closing—yet another instance of the legislature’s currying favor with powerful financial interests. Perhaps the issue is moot, since back in 1976 in Mandel v. Hodges, the California appellate court ruled that treating Good Friday as a holiday was unconstitutional as an excessive entanglement with religion. Still, one wonders why Good Friday remains listed as an official holiday since Government Code Section 6700 and Civil Code Section 7.1 have been amended in other respects after Mandel, but no one deleted “Good Friday.” In case you were wondering, Christmas gets a pass as a legally recognized holiday since, as the U.S. Supreme Court stated in Lynch v. Donnelly, the holiday “contains both secular and sectarian elements.” Martin Luther King Day has its quirks too. Government Code Section 6700(c) makes the third Monday in January the official state holiday—this year, it was January 21. But Government Code Section 6709 requires the governor to proclaim every January 15 as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Day. So, most years we will get two King days, unless the third Monday in January of a particular year happens to be January 15. The Government Code requires the governor to make proclamations for other days that are not quite legal holidays. These days of commemoration reveal conflicting visions of who we are as a people. For example, September 28 of each year is Cabrillo Day in California. Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo was the first European to lay eyes on San Diego harbor. Some—including the Library of Congress Web site—say he “discovered” California. Before that, he was one of Cortez’s conquistadors. However, Friar Bartolome de las Casas, who witnessed and chronicled the early years of Spanish colonization of Central America and strove to end the abuse of natives, wrote of Cabrillo that “he broke up homes,” taking the indigenous women and girls and “giving them to the soldiers and sailors in order to keep them satisfied and to bring them into his fleet.” Ironically, the day before Cabrillo Day this year was Native American Day in California, a day of commemoration mandated by Government Code Section 6712. Some California legislators want to replace Columbus Day— an official California holiday every second Monday in October—with Native American Day, yet Cabrillo Day remains intact. California’s newest day of commemoration, first proclaimed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2010, is Ed Roberts Day. If you are unsure who Ed Roberts was, I would urge you to look him up. I think you will agree that his life is worthy of commemoration. ■ For independently administrated matters: [email protected] For Resolute Systems, LLC administered matters: Mike Weinzerl ([email protected] 1.877.FAIR.ADR (1.877.324.7237) www.theholmeslawfirm.com California • Chicagoland • New York Metro • Atlanta 8 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 Paul S. Marks is the chair of the Editorial Board of Los Angeles Lawyer magazine and a partner with Neufeld Marks, a boutique law firm located in Little Tokyo. He serves as a commissioner on the California Commission on Access to Justice. barristers tips BY TIFFANY J. HOWARD Strategies for Success in Professional Networking WHETHER A LIFE-OF-THE-PARTY extrovert or a couch potato intro- ular post, it is helpful to enter the recipient’s information into your vert, everyone would like to know how to take the work out of net- contact list and to include a photo to keep your memory of the perworking. Since it continues to be one of the best means to obtain clients son fresh. Use the Internet to find photographs. Nearly every lawyer and referrals, however, networking remains vitally important to new has a page or something similar on a Web site that comes with a photo. and experienced attorneys alike. A step-by-step strategy is advanta- Microsoft Outlook has a photo box with which you can attach the geous to preparing a case for trial or undertaking a corporate merger, photo to the contact. This procedure makes it much easier to remember faces and names, and a photo serves to identify the person later and it can make networking look easy, even if it still takes work. When at a gathering, the first step is to find people who are when you reach out to him or her again. As a third step, before the alone. Even if one enjoys approaching and talking to small groups of next gathering, when it is important to remember names, review a conpeople, it is much easier to relate with one person than with two or tact list with photos. This will help to avoid the embarrassing situamore. A basketball analogy may help. When passing, it is counterproductive to throw the ball to a teammate who is guarded by opposWhether you are referring an expert witness or a plumber, help ing players. Finding the open player—or in this case, the open lawyer—tends to achieve greater success. It is less challenging to engage people make connections. Establish relationships among your in conversation with one person at a time. Even if one enjoys juggling dialogue with multiple people, talking to one person allows for friends, family, and coworkers. Any time you hear someone say, a more focused discussion. This can be preferable to dividing one’s attention among several people, or worse, competing for attention. “I need a…” be prepared to seize the opportunity to assist. Once engaged in conversation, start with the fundamentals. Make an introduction and mention the name of the firm for which you work. After that, ask where the other person works and in what area of law tion of having to look at a person’s name tag or ask again for somehe or she specializes. Make small talk. This is not a deposition or a one’s name. witness interview, but it is nonetheless a good opportunity to obtain basic personal and professional information. Sometimes, after exchang- Everyday Networking ing the initial pleasantries, it may be difficult to know in which Networking does not need to occur only within the confines of direction to take the conversation, but because networking is about preestablished events. Whether you are referring an expert witness or building relationships, it is important to remain genuine. Therefore, a plumber, help people make connections. Establish relationships if the other person happens to mention anything that piques an among your friends, family, and coworkers. Any time you hear someinterest, start a discussion about that topic. From a hobby to children, one say, “I need a…” be prepared to seize the opportunity to assist. most people have a subject that they like to discuss. It helps to ask Your associates will come to you as a trusted wealth of knowledge, open-ended questions since these tend to elicit more information and possibly they will recommend you as an attorney within their own about the other person than yes-no questions. When parting, it is network. On a similar note, strike up a conversation with the person important to remember to exchange business cards. in front of you in line at the grocery store. Or the next time you dine As a second step, once the other person’s basic information is in at a restaurant alone, sit at the counter in order to talk to the person hand, follow up with an e-mail. In the message, try to include a spe- next to you. A valuable contact or client could materialize out of even cific detail from the initial conversation. Precise particulars will turn the most random conversation. the e-mail from an exercise in how to copy and paste into a personal With a plan in mind, networking can become a pleasurable and contact. Send an e-mail immediately after the event or first thing the profitable experience. Every new contact may have a client, colnext morning. Reaching out right away makes the right impression. league, or associate who needs a lawyer who specializes in your field To make an especially good impression, it can be preferable to send of law. Alternatively, the contact may have expertise that can contribute a handwritten note rather than e-mail. Taking the time to prepare a to your practice. Whatever one’s age or experience, networking is indiscommunication by hand always demonstrates greater consideration. pensable for obtaining new business. ■ The recipient will remember someone better after receiving a personal note card in the mail. Tiffany J. Howard is an associate at Kiesel Law in Beverly Hills, where she After establishing a first written contact, either by e-mail or reg- focuses on class actions and litigating wrongful death cases. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 9 practice tips BY RYAN J. BARNCASTLE AND KENNETH E. MOORE The Fraud Exception to the Parol Evidence Rule after Riverisland THE PAROL EVIDENCE RULE, subject to certain exceptions, limits the interpretation of a contract to its “four corners” and excludes such extrinsic evidence as oral statements that conflict with the terms of the signed writing. The parol evidence rule and its exceptions are codified in California in Code of Civil Procedure section 1856. One well-established exception is fraud in the inducement of the agreement, but in 1935 the California Supreme Court, in Bank of America v. Pendergrass,1 held that the alleged false promise was inadmissible if it was directly at variance with what was in the written contract. Since then, with regard to allegations of false promises, parties to written contracts have been able to rely on the signed agreement as a defense. However, earlier this year the supreme court reversed course and retired the Pendergrass rule. The court’s decision in Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. FresnoMadera Production Credit Association2 overruled this long-standing principle of law and may not only increase and prolong litigation but also may reshape the procedures for entering into valid and enforceable written agreements. By overruling Pendergrass, the supreme court opened the door to challenges of written contracts with evidence of oral statements that conflict with the promises of performance set forth in the executed agreements. The significance of Riverisland is corroborated by the subsequent court of appeal decision in Julius Castle Restaurant, Inc. v. James Frederick Payne,3 which gave Riverisland an expansive interpretation. From a transactional standpoint, henceforth, parties that enter into sophisticated contractual arrangements need to exercise greater caution in executing agreements. From a litigation standpoint, Riverisland and its progeny will tend to make it harder to dispose of fraud claims on the pleadings. The two cases do explicitly leave the door open to pretrial challenges to a plaintiff’s justifiable reliance on promises that are at odds with those stated in the written contract, but it is nonetheless hard to underestimate the possible impact the two cases will have on the formation and enforcement of contracts in California. RICHARD EWING The Parol Evidence Rule The parol evidence rule prohibits the introduction of any extrinsic evidence to alter, vary, or add to the terms of a written agreement.4 Under the rule, the terms of a writing intended by the parties as a final and integrated expression of their agreement cannot be contradicted by extrinsic evidence, including prior oral statements or contemporaneous oral agreements.5 The rule is a longstanding, well-known principle that promotes fairness and predictability by encouraging parties to specify the entirety of their agreements in writing.6 As the court in Riverisland stated, “[W]hen the parties put all the terms of their agreement in writing, the writing becomes the agreement, and the written terms supersede statements made during negotiations.”7 The parol evidence rule “is based on the assumption that written evidence is more accurate than human memory and the fear that fraud or unintentional invention by witnesses interested in the outcome of the litigation will mislead the finder of facts.”8 Moreover, by limiting a dispute to the applicable written agreement, California courts benefit from reduced 10 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 litigation. As the supreme court has noted, the parol evidence rule also protects the integrity of written contracts by making their terms the exclusive evidence of the parties’ agreement.9 Nevertheless, the parol evidence rule does not always exclude extrinsic evidence, including oral agreements. Specifically, Code of Civil Procedure Section 1856(f) states that “where the validity of the agreement is the fact in dispute, this section does not exclude evidence relevant to that issue.”10 As the Riverisland court noted, “This provision rests on the principle that the parol evidence rule, intended to protect the terms of a valid written contract, should not bar evidence challenging the validity of the agreement itself.”11 The court added, “Evidence to prove that the instrument is void or voidable for mistake, fraud, duress, undue influence, illegality, alteration, lack of consideration, or another invalidating cause is admissible as such evidence. This evidence does not contradict the terms of an effective integration, because it shows that a purported instrument has no legal effect.”12 It is an established exception to the parol evidence rule that a party Ryan J. Barncastle and Kenneth E. Moore are partners with Stuart|Moore, a transactional law firm that specializes in the representation of financial institutions, real estate businesses, emerging growth companies, and private equity investment firms. may present extrinsic evidence to show that the agreement was tainted by fraud. 13 However, despite this broad categorical exception, Pendergrass restricted for nearly 80 years the applicability of the fraud exception to cases of alleged promissory fraud—that is, cases in which the alleged misrepresentation is not of an existing fact but instead a promise to act (or refrain from acting) in a certain way in the future. Pendergrass The court in Pendergrass restricted the applicability of the fraud exception as a means to introduce extrinsic evidence by holding that “evidence offered to prove fraud must tend to establish some independent fact or representation, some fraud in the procurement of the instrument or some breach of confidence concerning its use, and not a promise directly at variance with the promise of the writing.”14 Thus, according to the Pendergrass court, evidence of promissory fraud based on oral agreements that conflicted with the terms of the written agreement was not admissible under the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule. This restriction, while not directly overturned, was attacked and criticized by many California courts.15 As the court in Riverisland noted, “The primary ground of attack on Pendergrass has been that it is inconsistent with the broad principle, reflected in Code of Civil Procedure Section 1856, that a contract may be invalidated by a showing of fraud.”16 Another court has observed that “One noted impact of the Pendergrass holding was that the parol evidence rule effectively immunized against liability for both prior and contemporaneous statements at variance with the written contract, and it implied that the alleged wrongdoer is innocent of fraud.”17 In overruling Pendergrass, the court in Riverisland abandoned this strict limitation. Riverisland In Riverisland, the plaintiffs defaulted under the terms of a loan obtained from defendant Fresno-Madera Production Credit Association (FMPCA).18 The plaintiffs and FMPCA agreed to a forbearance agreement whereby FMPCA agreed that it would refrain from taking enforcement action for three months.19 In exchange, the plaintiffs agreed to make payments and pledged eight separate parcels of real property as additional collateral. The plaintiffs initialed pages bearing the legal description of each piece of property that was being pledged; however, the plaintiffs did not read the agreement but simply signed it at the locations tabbed for signature. The plaintiffs alleged that they did not know that the document they were signing contained terms that differed from the terms that they had discussed with FMPCA’s executives.20 The plaintiffs alleged that FMPCA’s vice president met with them two weeks prior to the execution of the agreement and told them that FMPCA would extend the loan agreement for two years and that two pieces of property were all that was needed for collateral. Moreover, the plaintiffs alleged that these assurances were repeated at the execution of the forbearance agreement. Although the plaintiffs defaulted under the terms of the forbearance agreement, causing FMPCA to initiate foreclosure proceedings, they ultimately repaid the loan, and FMPCA dismissed the foreclosure action. Despite this resolution, the alleged misrepresentations of FMPCA’s officer concerning the terms of the agreement were the basis for the plaintiffs’ action for fraud and negligent misrepresentation.21 FMPCA moved for summary judgment, arguing that any evidence contrary to the terms of the written agreement was to be excluded pursuant to the parol evidence rule.22 The trial court agreed and, citing Pendergrass, ruled that the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule does not allow parol evidence of promises that are at odds with the terms of the written agreement.23 The court of appeal reversed, and the supreme court affirmed the reversal, referring to Pendergrass as an “aberration” and stating that such a restriction on the fraud exception was inconsistent with the statute and settled case law.24 The court noted that “although a written instrument may supersede prior negotiations and understandings leading up to it, fraud may always be shown to defeat the effect of an agreement.”25 In overturning Pendergrass, the Riversland court added that Pendergrass “failed to account for the fundamental principle that fraud undermines the essential validity of the parties’ agreement.”26 The court continued, “When fraud is proven, it cannot be maintained that the parties freely entered into an agreement reflecting a meeting of the minds.”27 In affirming the court of appeal’s reversal of a summary judgment based on the exclusion of the oral statements by FMPCA’s representatives, the court opined, “the parol evidence rule should not be used as a shield to prevent the proof of fraud.”28 Thus, it is now established law in California that, even in cases of promissory fraud, extrinsic evidence that differs from the terms of a written agreement may be admitted to support a cause of action for fraud. Riverisland is a recent case that has not yet been widely cited by other courts. Nevertheless, in Julius Castle Restaurant the court of appeal affirmed a trial court’s admission of parol evidence in connection with alleged fraud relating to a lease agreement, citing Riverisland.29 Specifically, the court noted that Riverisland established that oral statements that conflicted with the lease terms were admissible under the statutory exception for fraud found in Section 1856(g).30 The court in Julius Castle Restaurant looked back to the Riverisland decision and provided more direction for parties making contracts in a post-Riverisland world.31 The Julius Castle Restaurant court rejected claims by the defendants that Riverisland requires that the circumstances of each case and the bargaining power and sophistication of the parties to be considered in determining whether or not to admit extrinsic evidence concerning fraud.32 In deciding not to limit the application of Riverisland by excluding sophisticated parties the court observed, “[O]ur high court sought the opposite result, namely, to create certainty and consistency by eliminating altogether the judicially created exception to section 1856, subdivision (g).”33 The court similarly rejected the notion that Riverisland should only be applied to “contracts of adhesion where there is a disparity in bargaining power,” stating that the Riverisland court “did not limit its holding to contracts of adhesion and we decline to read such a limitation into the decision.” In short, the court was clear and adamant in declining “to carve out an exception to the Riverisland holding that the court itself did not endorse.”34 While the court declined to carve out exceptions, it did provide some guidance to those seeking to dispose of claims that previously would have been subject to the Pendergrass rule. The key, the court indicated, lies in “addressing the heightened burden of proving fraud in a civil action” and, in particular, in focusing on the “justifiable reliance element of fraud.” As the court stated, “Among the questions to ask are: What are the plausible reasons for the alleged discrepancy between the claimed oral promises and the signed writing? Is there compatibility between the oral representations and the written document? What is the evidence relating to whether the document was read and considered before signing?”35 Since these questions generally implicate issues of fact, pretrial battles over promissory fraud claims that once would have been subject to Pendergrass will likely shift from pleadings to summary judgment. After Riverisland As a result of Riverisland and its progeny, companies that routinely enter into commercial contracts with their customers, vendors, clients, and strategic partners must be more careful than before. Precontractual negotiations, discussions, and other oral stateLos Angeles Lawyer November 2013 11 ments are made in connection with all written agreements. The key to making deals after Riverisland is to ensure that the terms of the arrangement are documented in a written contract that is the complete integration of the agreement and that there is no need to introduce oral statements or other extrinsic evidence. Practitioners with clients seeking to avoid fallout from Riverisland ought to advise them to take significant steps to avoid misunderstandings, confusion, and ambiguity regarding deal terms, thereby decreasing the risk that a court may undercut the enforceability of a written contract. To mitigate risk, it is rec- ommended that attorneys and clients take the following precautionary measures: 1) develop a systematic process with respect to preparing written agreements to document and accurately reflect deal terms, 2) limit the number of company representatives that are responsible for explaining and discussing agreements with customers, 3) provide all parties with multiple opportunities for consultation with professional advisers and include written representations in the agreement to that effect, 4) provide the client or customer with execution versions of all written contracts well in advance of any scheduled signings, 5) avoid “take it or leave it” sales pressure tactics, 6) require that key contract provisions be initialed, 7) be sure that all contract agreement provisions clearly represent the terms of the deal, 8) include a clear and understandable discussion of an integration clause that puts the other party on notice that the written contract constitutes the final terms of the deal and that prior oral discussions that may conflict with the terms of the written document are not a part of the final agreement, 9) to the extent resources allow, have more than one employee present during all contract discussions and negotiations, and 10) strenuously advise that all parties read the written contract. These precautionary measures, if properly implemented, will provide clients with added reassurance that they can rely on the terms of their written agreements. ■ 1 Bank of Am.v. Pendergrass, 4 Cal. 2d 258 (1935). Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Prod. Credit Ass’n, 55 Cal. 4th 1169 (2013). 3 Julius Castle Rest., Inc., et al. v. James Frederick Payne, et al., 216 Cal. App. 4th 1423 (2013). 4 Id. at 1439 (citing Casa Herrera, Inc. v. Beydoun, 32 Cal. 4th 336, 343 (2004)). 5 Julius Castle, 216 Cal. App. 4th at 1439 (citing Singh v. Southland Stone, U.S.A., Inc., 186 Cal. App. 4th 338, 352 (2010)). 6 Julius Castle, 216 Cal. App. 4th at 1439. 7 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1174. 8 Julius Castle, 216 Cal. App. 4th at 1439. 9 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1171-72. 10 See CODE CIV. PROC. §1856(f). 11 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1174 (emphasis in original). 12 Id. at 1174-75 (citing 2 WITKIN, CAL. EVIDENCE §97, DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE 242 (5th ed. 2012)). 13 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1172; CODE CIV. PROC. §1856(g). 14 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1172 (citing Bank of Am.v. Pendergrass, 4 Cal. 2d 258, 263 (1935)). 15 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1172, 1176-77. 16 Id. at 1176. 17 Julius Castle, 216 Cal. App. 4th at 1440 (citing Casa Herrera, Inc. v. Beydoun, 32 Cal. 4th 336, 347 (2004)) (emphasis in original). 18 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1172. 19 Id. at 1172-73. 20 Id. at 1173. 21 Id. 22 Id. 23 Id. (citing Bank of Am.v. Pendergrass, 4 Cal. 2d 258, 258 (1935)). 24 Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Prod. Credit Ass’n, 55 Cal. 4th 1169, 1181-82 (2013). 25 Id. at 1181 (citing Fleury v. Ramacciotti, 8 Cal. 2d 660, 662 (1937)). 26 Riverisland, 55 Cal. 4th at 1182. 27 Id. 28 Id. at 1182 (citing Ferguson v. Koch, 204 Cal. 342, 347 (1928)). 29 Julius Castle Rest., Inc., et al. v. James Frederick Payne, et al., 216 Cal. App. 4th 1423, 1439-40, 1441 (2013). 30 Id. at 1439-40. 31 Id. at 1441. 32 Id. 33 Id. at 1442. 34 Id. 35 Id. 2 Have You Heard? DOUBLETREE HAS A NEW STATE OF THE ART WAR ROOM Now you can achieve a new level of comfort and productivity at the DoubleTree By Hilton Los Angeles Downtown. Our state of the art new venue is the ideal spot for everything from depositions to war rooms to board meetings. Featuring high tech tools to ease the work at hand and a welcoming ambiance at an all inclusive price. Make your reservation by December 31, 2013 and earn Triple Hilton HHonors points. Where the little things mean everything.™ DOUBLETREE BY HILTON LOS ANGELES DOWNTOWN 120 South Los Angeles Street, CA 90012 T (213) 629 1200 LosAngelesDowntown.DoubleTree.com Restrictions may apply. May not be combined with any other offer. Hilton HHonors membership, earning of Points & Miles and redemption of points are subject to HHonors Terms and Conditions. ©2013 Hilton Worldwide. 12 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 practice tips BY SHELLY ROSENFELD The CDA as a Safe Harbor for Interactive Computer Service Providers WHEN CECILIA BARNES BROKE UP WITH HER BOYFRIEND, he went “post-all,” posting Barnes’s personal information, including nude photos, in Yahoo profiles that he created without her permission. As the court in Barnes v. Yahoo! observed, “The profiles contained…solicitation…to engage in sexual intercourse.”1 “The ex-boyfriend then conducted discussions in Yahoo’s online ‘chat rooms,’ posing as Barnes and directing male correspondents to the fraudulent profiles he had created.”2 The profiles included Barnes’s contact information, including her work address and phone number. “Before long, men whom Barnes did not know were peppering her office with emails, phone calls, and personal visits, all in the expectation of sex.”3 In this situation, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) would protect Yahoo from having to remove the content.4 The CDA protects interactive computer services such as Yahoo from liability when they publish a third party’s statements. The act establishes that interactive computer services providers are immune from liability regarding information provided to them by third parties.5 In April 2013, a false tweet from a hacked Associated Press Twitter account stated that the White House had been attacked and the president was injured.6 This actually led to a dip in the stock market.7 A Pew Research Center report found that a quarter of Americans and more than half of 18- to 29-year-olds got their news about the April 2013 Boston Marathon Bombing and its aftermath from social media.8 Twitter is most likely protected from a third party’s posts because of Section 230(c) of the CDA. Recent cases interpreting the CDA help explain the broad immunity afforded interactive service providers and what steps providers should take to avoid losing that immunity. Section 230(c)(1) of the CDA offers service providers broad protection by precluding courts from treating them as publishers of the information on their sites: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”9 The statute defines an interactive computer service as “any information service, system, or access software provider that provides or enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server, including specifically a service or system that provides access to the Internet and such systems operated or services offered by libraries or educational institutions.”10 Examples of immunized interactive computer service providers include Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, and Reddit. While Congress immunized providers of computer services, it did not seek to prevent tort liability for those who actually provide or write the content. The CDA defines a nonimmunized information content provider as “any person or entity that is responsible, in whole or in part, for the creation or development of information provided through the Internet or any other interactive computer service.”11 This may include a person who posts an allegedly defamatory comment on a Web site or a reporter who publishes a news story online. One of the first cases to interpret the CDA came in the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing. In Zeran v. America Online, Inc., just days after the Oklahoma City Bombing in 1995, a message appeared on an AOL Bulletin Board advertising, “‘Naughty Oklahoma T-Shirts[]’”12 with slogans such as “‘Visit Oklahoma…. It’s a BLAST!!!,’” “‘Putting the kids to bed…Oklahoma 1995,’” and “‘McVeigh for President 1996.’”13 Interested parties were told to call Kenneth M. Zeran, whose phone number was provided. Zeran had nothing to do with the ad. Zeran received many angry phone calls, including death threats. Since he ran his business out of his home, he could not change his phone number. Zeran contacted AOL, which removed the offending post. The message returned with additional slogans. In addition to filing a separate suit against a radio station that aired the contents of the message, Zeran sued AOL seeking to hold it liable for the defamatory postings of a third party. AOL asserted Section 230 as an affirmative defense. Zeran claimed that he was unable to find the person who posted the messages since AOL “fail[ed] to maintain adequate records of its users.”14 Interpreting the CDA, the Fourth Circuit refused to subject computer service providers to distributor liability, holding that Section 230 of the statute preempted Zeran’s defamation claims and that AOL could not be held liable as the “publisher.”15 The court also held that AOL could not be held liable based on the fact that it had received “notice” of defamatory material because, in creating the immunity in Section 230, Congress “made a policy choice…not to deter harmful online speech through the separate route of imposing tort liability on companies that serve as intermediaries for other parties’ potentially injurious messages.”16 Imposing this type of liability for defamation, the court explained, would create an impossible burden for computer service providers who: would face potential liability each time they receive notice of a potentially defamatory statement—from any party, concerning any message. Each notification would require a careful yet rapid investigation of the circumstances surrounding the posted information, a legal judgment concerning the information’s defamatory character, and an on-the-spot editorial decision whether to risk liability by allowing the continued publication of that information. Although this might be feasible for the traditional print publisher, the sheer number of postings on interactive computer services would create an impossible burden in the Internet context.17 Moreover, from a public policy perspective, the court was concerned about a chilling effect against the First Amendment since service providers would tend to err on the side of caution and remove messages once they receive a notification, regardless of whether they were actually defamatory. Anyone who disagreed with someone’s unpopular message could contact AOL, and service providers such as AOL would be incentivized to remove the objectionable statement in order to avoid liability. Finally, the court was concerned that disShelly Rosenfeld is an associate in the Los Angeles office of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith who specializes in intellectual property, technology, and entertainment law. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 13 tributor-based liability would lead to less self-regulation by service providers since “[a]ny efforts by a service provider to investigate and screen material posted on its service would only lead to notice of potentially defamatory material more frequently and thereby create a stronger basis for liability.”18 Courts have given wide latitude to computer service providers who have some involvement with the authors of defamatory material before considering the providers themselves “publishers.” In Carafano v. Metrosplash.com, Inc.,19 a Ninth Circuit case, a man in Berlin created a fake profile on a dating Web site for a Star Trek actress, Chase Masterson (her legal name is Christianne Carafano), with her photo and home address.20 As a result of the profile created on Match.com, Masterson “found a highly threatening and sexually explicit fax that also threatened her son.”21 Masterson contacted the site to remove the profile, but Matchmaker.com did not remove the profile immediately, stating ironically that only profile creators can authorize the removal of a profile. The profile was eventually removed, and Masterson sued Matchmaker.com for several causes of action, including invasion of privacy and defamation. The company asserted the affirmative defense that under “[Section] 230(c)…so long as a third party willingly provides the essential published content, the interactive service provider receives full immunity regardless of the specific editing or selection process.”22 Although some information in Carafano’s profile was entered in response to questions posed by the site, most of the content, such as personal details, was up to the profile creator. “Matchmaker was not responsible, even in part, for associating certain multiple choice responses with a set of physical characteristics, a group of essay answers, and a photograph.”23 Although the user provided Carafano’s address and other details through the Web site, they were “transmitted unaltered to profile viewers.”24 Matchmaker.com did not have a role in editing the responses entered. “Similarly, the profile directly reproduced the most sexually suggestive comments in the essay section, none of which bore more than a tenuous relationship to the actual questions asked.”25 Since a user created the content, the user rather than the interactive computer service was responsible for the content. Matchmaker.com therefore “did not play a significant role in creating, developing or ‘transforming’ the relevant information.”26 The court held that the dating Web site was not an information content provider but rather an interactive computer service since it allowed the public to post information on its Web site. Therefore, the court held that Section 230(c) provided a safe harbor to Matchmaker.com. 14 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 More recently, in 2011, a woman sued the dating Web site Match.com after she met and dated a serial murderer through the site who later attacked her. In Beckman v. Match.com, the court held that Match.com would not be subject to liability since it was protected by Section 230.27 The court applied the act’s three-part test for whether immunity applies to a Web site operator: “(1) it is an ‘interactive computer services’ provider; (2) it is not an ‘information content provider’ with respect to the conduct at issue; and (3) the plaintiff seeks to hold the website operator liable on account of information originating from a third-party user of its services.”28 Although the pair met through the site, the content originated from third parties who entered the profiles, not from the site. Thus, Match.com was not an information content provider. Rather, the site was a provider of interactive computer services. “The fact that a website may have created certain features that enabled a user to post the content in question is irrelevant.”29 In other words, Match.com was a passive forum where users could communicate and thus could not be held responsible for what happens as a result of the information exchange. In another case, Okeke v. Cars.com,30 a user who paid for a truck but never received it sued Cars.com, the source site, based on three negligence theories that the site: “failed to ensure the legitimacy of users’ listings or advertisements;…failed to post adequate and proper notices and/or warnings to users about responding to listings or advertisements on the website; and…failed to promptly remove a listing after receiving notification that the listing was fraudulent.”31 The New York state court held that Cars.com was an interactive computer service under Section 230 and thus immune from liability since it was a forum in which consumers could make purchases. The court also held that the content originated with the users; thus, Cars.com was not an information content provider. Finally, the court held that under the CDA a site such as Cars.com is immune from the “traditional editorial functions of a publisher…such as deciding whether to publish, withdraw, postpone or alter content.”32 Thus, Cars.com is protected from being responsible for factchecking postings to ensure they are accurate. Section 230 immunity has even applied when an interactive computer service, AOL, had a contract and paid the author of the alleged defamatory statements who even reserved the right to edit his reports. In Blumenthal v. Drudge,33 Matt Drudge’s site, the Drudge Report, published a story alleging that Sidney Blumenthal, an assistant to President Clinton, had physically abused his wife, Jacqueline Jordan Blumenthal, who also worked at the White House.34 When the article was published, Drudge had a licensing agreement with AOL whereby AOL members received the Drudge Report, and every month AOL paid Drudge a “‘royalty payment’ of $3,000.”35 The court noted that to the extent that AOL contributed information to the story, as in the case where two or more authors contribute to an article, the CDA would not be a safe harbor. However, the court found that AOL did not create the information in the Drudge Report and that the information was posted “without any substantive or editorial involvement by AOL.”36 However, unlike the other CDA cases explored in this article, this was not just an anonymous individual with a rogue comment posted on a message board. AOL entered into a contract with Drudge and “promoted it to its subscribers and potential subscribers as a reason to subscribe.”37 Moreover, AOL reserved the right to remove or to ask Drudge to remove any material that it determined violated its terms of service. The contract allowed AOL to “‘require reasonable changes to…content, to the extent such content will, in AOL’s good faith judgment, adversely affect operations of the AOL network.’”38 As the plaintiffs asked, “Why should AOL be permitted to tout someone as a gossip columnist or rumor monger who will make such rumors and gossip ‘instantly accessible’ to AOL subscribers, and then claim immunity when that person, as might be anticipated, defames another?”39 The court was sympathetic to plaintiffs’ argument but rejected it based on the broad language of the statute. The court explained, “If it were writing on a clean slate, this Court would agree with plaintiffs.”40 While the court saw AOL’s role much more like a publisher than a common carrier with no liability for what is spoken over its wires “[b]ecause it has the right to exercise editorial control over those with whom it contracts and whose words it disseminates, it would seem only fair to hold AOL to the liability standards applied to a publisher or, at least, like a book store owner or library, to the liability standards applied to a distributor.”41 But the court could not reach its decision in a vacuum and therefore had to accede to the CDA, which immunizes interactive service providers even when they take “an active, even aggressive role in making available content prepared by others.”42 Thus, contemporary Drudges, bloggers paid by a Web site, would thus still face liability under Section 230(c)(1), but their sponsoring Web site likely would not. Limitations to CDA Protections In Fair Housing Council v. Roommates .com,43 the court held that the CDA did not apply as a safe harbor to an interactive online provider who had a questionnaire alleged to have violated the Fair Housing Act (FHA). However, the provider, Roommates.com, was immune under the CDA for its “Additional Comments” section of the questionnaire because this was an open-ended essay. Roommates.com offered searchable listings for people looking for housing. In order to use the Web site, a user was required to create a profile by answering the Web site’s queries. The questions were basic, but “[e]ach subscriber must also describe his preferences in roommates with respect to the same three criteria: sex, sexual orientation and whether they will bring children to the household.”44 Two Fair Housing Councils sued the company that owned Roommates.com, claiming that the site violated the FHA and the equivalent California law, which “prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, marital status” and other protected groups.45 If the Web site operator creates content, “or is ‘responsible, in whole or in part’ for creating or developing content, the website is also a content provider.”46 The court held that since Roommates.com created the questions and answer choices, it was the “‘information content provider’ as to the question and could claim no immunity for posting them on its website, or for forcing subscribers to answer them as a condition of using its services.”47 Although the case took a bold approach in carving out an area where Section 230(c) did not apply, the court was careful to show its decision was consistent with the statute, noting that “close cases…must be resolved in favor of immunity, lest we cut the heart out of section 230 by forcing websites to face death by ten thousand duck-bites.”48 The court compared the “Additional Comments” section to search engines since “both involve a generic text prompt with no direct encouragement to perform illegal searches or to publish illegal content.”49 If a Web site operator “passively displays content that is created entirely by third parties, then it is only a service provider with respect to that content.”50 This was the function that Roommates.com served with respect to the “Additional Comments” section, because it did not edit the comments before the publication nor even instruct users what content should be included in that section.51 While this case is significant in that it shows that courts are willing to take a closer look at the boundaries of Section 230(c), the decision does not alter cyberspace. Most Web sites do not involve questionnaires but rather open-ended sections where people can express their thoughts. Thus, social media sites still have broad immunity for what is published online. Another limitation on the CDA can occur when a computer service provider promises to take action in response to defamatory material on its Web site. In Barnes v. Yahoo! the plaintiff contacted Yahoo to take the false profile down and followed Yahoo’s policies of mailing to Yahoo a copy of her photo ID with a signed statement requesting the profiles be removed. After no response from Yahoo for a month, Barnes mailed a letter requesting removal of the profiles and, a month later, sent two letters requesting that the profile be removed. Finally, a day before a local TV news story would air Barnes’s story, Yahoo agreed to remove the profile. In fact, Yahoo’s Director of Communications notified Barnes that “she would ‘personally walk the statements over to the division responsible for stopping unauthorized profiles and they would take care of it.’”52 Yet, it was not until Barnes sued the company that Yahoo took down the profiles.53 In its defense, Yahoo asserted protection under Section 230(c) of the CDA. And, consistent with other cases in which the statute was applied, the Ninth Circuit held that since plaintiff’s claim of “negligent undertaking was premised on treating defendant as a ‘publisher’ of the unauthorized profiles,” Section 230(c)(1) did preclude liability.54 However, the Ninth Circuit also noted that “insofar as Barnes alleges a breach of contract claim under the theory of promissory estoppel, subsection 230(c)(1) of the Act does not preclude her cause of action.”55 The promissory estoppel claim “derives not from defendant’s publishing conduct, but from defendant’s ‘manifest intention to be legally obligated to do something….’”56 This legal duty is distinct from the act of publishing, and thus falls outside of the protections offered by Section 230(c)(1). On remand, the District Court of Oregon considered Barnes’s amended complaint alleging breach of contract based upon promissory estoppel and rejected Yahoo’s motion to dismiss. The elements of promissory estoppel under Oregon law are “1) a promise; 2) which the promisor could reasonably foresee inducing the sort of conduct which occurred; 3) actual reliance on the promise; 4) resulting in a substantial change in the promisee’s position.”57 As to the first prong, Barnes asserted that Yahoo promised to remove the profiles. The court reasoned that the second prong was met because Yahoo’s Communications director, in saying she “would personally walk the statements over to the division responsible for stopping unauthorized profiles and they would take care of it,… intended for plaintiff to react to the promise by calling the reporter and diffusing the story” before it appeared on TV.58 After all, Yahoo knew about the story, since the reporter also called Yahoo for comment. For the third prong, despite the fact that Barnes never used “the term ‘reliance,’ one can infer that plaintiff called the reporter, JUDGE LAWRENCE W. CRISPO (RETIRED) Arbitrator Mediator Referee 213.926.6665 www.judgecrispo.com VIGOROUS STATE BAR DEFENSE JAMES R. DIFRANK A PROFESSIONAL LAW CORP. TEL 562.789.7734 www.BarDefense.net E-MAIL [email protected] ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Disciplinary Defense Reinstatements/Admissions Malpractice Defense Bankruptcy Criminal Defense Representation within the State of California FORMER: State Bar Sr. Prosecutor Sr. State Bar Court Counsel Home of Sir Winston Pictured Above Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 15 TRUST DEED FORECLOSURES “Industry Specialists For Over 25 years” t Witkin & Eisinger we specialize in the Non-Judicial Foreclosure of obligations secured by real property or real and personal property (mixed collateral). When your clients needs a foreclosure done professionally and at the lowest possible cost, please call us at: A 1-800-950-6522 We have always offered free advice to all attorneys. & WITKIN EISINGER , LLC RICHARD G. WITKIN, ESQ. ✦ CAROLE EISINGER READY TO RETIRE? We are a long established, boutique Trusts and Estates firm handling Estate Planning, Trust Administration, Probate, Tax Planning and Business Law, looking to grow its business through relationship with a Pasadena or other So. Cal. Practitioner with a similar practice, who is looking to downsize or retire. E-mail [email protected] or call Jo Ann 626.792.2910 EMPLOYMENT LAW REFERRALS Paying Highest Referral Fees (Per State Bar Rules) Honored to receive regular employment referrals from over 100 of Californiaʼs finest attorneys Stephen Danz & Associates 877.789.9707 Main office located in Los Angeles and nearby offices in Pasadena, Orange County, Inland Empire & San Diego Stephen Danz, Senior Partner 11661 San Vicente Boulevard, Suite 500, Los Angeles, CA 90049 Does LACBA have your current e-mail address? The Los Angeles County Bar Association is your resource for information delivered via e-mail on a number of subjects that impact your practice. Update your records online at www.lacba.org/myaccount or call Member Services at 213.896.6560. 16 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 informing [the reporter] defendant was indeed going to remove the profiles, in reliance on defendant’s promise to plaintiff that it would remove the profiles.”59 For the fourth prong, the court noted that despite the fact that the profiles were on the Web both before and after the alleged promise and reliance at issue in the case, “plaintiff’s position could have nonetheless substantially changed in that the profiles remained on the web longer than they would have absent plaintiff’s reliance.”60 Finally, the court held that “strangers viewed the profiles and subsequently contacted plaintiff after the profiles would have been removed by defendant (had plaintiff not called the reporter).”61 Barnes demonstrates that a plaintiff can potentially circumvent the CDA’s broad protections if the interactive service provider promises to remove content. However, had Yahoo never promised to remove the content, Barnes would not have been able to assert the breach of contract claim. Thus, although the Internet may no longer be described as “new and burgeoning,”62 courts would likely still reject a notice-liability framework. Interactive computer service sites present opportunities not only for the evolution of technology but also of the law. Zeran described an internet that was “burgeoning”63 in 1997, but more than a decade later in Roommates.com the court said that “the Internet has outgrown its swaddling clothes and no longer needs to be so gently coddled.”64 Nevertheless, as courts have continued to apply the CDA, in order for an interactive computer service provider to be found liable and not shielded by the CDA, it would either have to appear to elicit the objectionable information or, potentially, to make a promise to remove the offending material and then break that promise. It is noteworthy in this context that Barnes had the leverage of an impending news story depicting her experience. Thus, it is important to keep a close look at how the law can continue to incentivize interactive computer services to promote the free exchange of ideas without the costly price of defamation and invasion of privacy suits. As the law currently stands, the CDA will continue to pose a challenge to victims of online revenge postings who turn to the courts for help. ■ 1 Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc., 570 F. 3d, 1096 (9th Cir. Or. 2009). 2 Id. at 1098. 3 Id. 4 47 U.S.C.S. §230. 5 Id. 6 Molly Wood, Twitter needs to deal with the twitter accuracy problem, CNET, Apr. 23, 2013, http://news .cnet.com/8301-31322_3-57580996-256/twitter-needs -to-deal-with-the-twitter-accuracy-problem/. 7 Heather Kelly, The power of one wrong tweet, CNN, Apr. 24, 2013, http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/23/tech /social-media/tweet-ripple-effect. 8 Laura Petrecca, After bombings, social media informs (and misinforms), USA TODAY, Apr. 23, 2013, http://www .usatoday.com/story/news/2013/04/23/social-media -boston-marathon-bombings/2106701/. 9 47 U.S.C. §230(c)(1). 10 47 U.S.C. §230(f)(2). 11 47 U.S.C. §230(f)(3). 12 Zeran v. America Online, Inc., 129 F. 3d 327, 329 (4th Cir. Va. 1997). 13 Zeran v. America Online, 958 F. Supp. 1124, 1127 n.3 (E.D. Va. 1997). 14 Zeran, 129 F. 3d at 329 n.1. 15 Id. at 332. 16 Id. 17 Id. at 333. 18 Id. 19 Carafano v. Metrosplash.com, Inc., 339 F. 3d 1119 (9th Cir. 2003). 20 Id. at 1121. 21 Id. 22 Id. at 1124. 23 Id. 24 Carafano v. Metrosplash.com, Inc., 339 F. 3d 1119, 1125 (9th Cir. 2003). 25 Id. 26 Id. 27 Beckman v. Match.com, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78339 (D. Nev. May 29, 2013). 28 Id. at *8. 29 Id. at *9. 30 Okeke v Cars.com, 2013 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2250 (N.Y. Civ. Ct. May 28, 2013). 31 Id. at *4. 32 Id. at *8-9. 33 Blumenthal v. Drudge, 992 F. Supp. 44 (D.D.C. 1998). 34 Id. at 46. 35 Id. at 47. 36 Id. at 50. 37 Id. 38 Id. at 51. 39 Blumenthal v. Drudge, 992 F. Supp. 44, 51 (D.D.C. 1998). 40 Id. at 51. 41 Id. 42 Id. 43 Fair Hous. Council v. Roommates.com, LLC, 521 F. 3d 1157, 1163 (9th Cir. 2008). 44 Id. at 1161. 45 Id. at 1162. 46 Id. 47 Id. at 1164. 48 Id. at 1174. 49 Fair Hous. Council v. Roommates.com, LLC, 521 F. 3d 1157, 1175 (2008). 50 Id. at 1162. 51 Id. at 1173-74. 52 Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc., 570 F. 3d 1096, 1099 (9th Cir. Or. 2009). 53 Id. 54 Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116274, at *7 (D. Or. Dec. 8, 2009) (referring to the 9th Cir. decision). 55 Barnes, 570 F. 3d, at 1109. 56 Barnes, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116274, at *7 (internal citations omitted). 57 Id. at *5. 58 Id. at *10, *11 n.4. 59 Id. at *10-11. 60 Id. at *13. 61 Id. 62 Zeran v. America Online, Inc., 129 F. 3d 327, 330 (4th Cir. Va. 1197). 63 Id. 64 Fair Hous. Council v. Roommates.com, LLC, 521 F. 3d 1157, 1175 (2008). ERISA Does LACBA have your current e-mail address? LAWYERS LONG TERM DISABILITY, LONG TERM CARE, HEALTH, EATING DISORDER, AND LIFE INSURANCE CLAIMS The Los Angeles County Bar Association is your resource for information delivered via e-mail on a number of subjects that impact your practice. 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Let Us Help You Overcome the Hurdles in Your Estate Disputes Estate Mediation Probates, Trusts & Estates LA County Volunteer Probate Mediator of the Year 2010, 2011, 2012 CALL (626) 584-8000 or visit us online www.woodardmediation.com GREG DAVID DERIN - MEDIATOR & ARBITRATOR HONESTY • FAIRNESS • COMMITMENT • CREATIVITY • EXCELLENCE AREAS OF EXPERTISE: • Entertainment and Intellectual Property • Employment • Contract and Business Torts • Real Property • Corporate and Partnership “Power Mediator” - The Hollywood Reporter, ADR SuperLawyerTM Faculty - Harvard Negotiation Institute (2004-2012) Fellow - Chartered Institute of Arbitrators 310.552.1062 ■ www.derin.com 1925 CENTURY PARK EAST, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90067 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 17 by JEFF DASTEEL and NATALIA DE LA PARRA FERREIRO CROSSING BORDERS The legislature should allow parties in international arbitrations in California to choose their preferred attorneys 18 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 attorneys licensed to practice law in the United States. The result is that, unlike all other major international arbitration jurisdictions in the world, non-U.S. attorneys are not authorized to represent parties in international arbitrations held in this state. In addition, because the out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program was established under California’s domestic arbitration law, it is questionable whether the program extends to international arbitrations, which are governed by the California International Arbitration and Conciliation Act. The California State Bar’s implementation of the program is ambiguous on this point. California’s Business and Professional Code makes it a misdemeanor for an individual who is not an active member of the State Bar to practice law in California.2 In Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court,3 the California Su- preme Court determined that California’s attorney licensing requirement applies to representation in arbitration proceedings held in California: We decline Birbrower’s invitation to craft an arbitration exception to section 6125’s prohibition of the unlicensed practice of law in this state. Any exception for arbitration is best left to the Legislature, which has the authority to determine qualifications for admission to the State Bar and to decide what constitutes the practice of law.4 Jeff Dasteel is an arbitrator, mediator, and adjunct professor of law at UCLA Law School, where he teaches international commercial arbitration. Natalia de la Parra Ferreiro specialized in international and comparative law at UCLA School of Law and is a legal intern in the California Department of Justice. AMANE KANEKO A FUNDAMENTAL FEATURE of private arbitration is a party’s autonomy to design an arbitration procedure suitable for resolving the dispute. A key procedural issue associated with party autonomy is the right to choose one’s representatives. Most arbitration rules expressly provide for freedom of representation without regard to whether the representative is an attorney licensed to practice law in the jurisdiction where the arbitration takes place (or anywhere else).1 However, in California, except with respect to limited statutory exceptions, party representatives to arbitrations either must be attorneys licensed to practice law in California or outof-state attorneys who have completed a required certificate and have gained the approval of the arbitral tribunal before which they wish to appear. The out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel certification process is available only to The attorneys in the Birbrower case did not actually participate in a California-based arbitration because the matter settled after having filed the arbitration demand but before any hearings took place. The California Supreme Court’s dicta nonetheless were read to prohibit out-of-state attorneys from representing parties in arbitrations in California unless they satisfy the statutory requirements. The Legislative Response In response to the supreme court’s decision in Birbrower, the state legislature enacted Code of Civil Procedure Section 1282.4(b), which provides a procedure so that “an attorney admitted to the bar of any other state may represent the parties in the course of, or in connection with, an arbitration proceeding in this state.” The procedure requires the completion of a certificate to be filed with the arbitrator, opposing counsel, and the State Bar within a reasonable period after the out-ofstate attorney indicates an intent to appear in the California arbitration.5 The State Bar receives about 800 certificates each year, reflecting a nontrivial level of compliance.6 The California Rules of Court also were revised to reflect the creation of the Out-ofstate Attorney Arbitration Counsel program.7 Under Rule of Court 9.43, an out-of-state attorney is eligible for the program if the attorney is: (1) Not a member of the State Bar of California but who is a member in good standing of and eligible to practice before the bar of any United States court or the highest court in any state, territory, or insular possession of the United States, and who has been retained to appear in the course of, or in connection with, an arbitration proceeding in this state; (2) Has served a certificate in accordance with the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure section 1282.4 on the arbitrator, the arbitrators, or the arbitral forum, the State Bar of California, and all other parties and counsel in the arbitration whose addresses are known to the attorney; and (3) Whose appearance has been approved by the arbitrator, the arbitrators, or the arbitral forum.8 The arbitrator’s decision to approve the out-of-state attorney’s certificate appears to be discretionary. Based on the information provided in the certificate, “The arbitrator, arbitrators, or arbitral forum may approve the attorney’s appearance if the attorney has complied with subdivision (d).”9 The outof-state attorney must certify, among other things, that “the attorney is not regularly engaged in substantial business, professional, or other activities in the State of California” 20 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 and “If the attorney has made repeated appearances, the certificate shall reflect the special circumstances that warrant the approval of the attorney’s appearance in the arbitration.”10 The statute provides that “[i]n the absence of special circumstances, repeated appearances shall be grounds for disapproval of the appearance and disqualification from serving as an attorney in the arbitration in which the certificate was filed.”11 Accordingly, at a minimum, the arbitrator must make a determination that the out-of-state attorney meets the requirements to participate in the program, including, apparently, a factual finding that special circumstances warrant approval in the event of repeated appearances in California arbitrations. It is unclear what recourse, if any, an out-of-state attorney has if the arbitral tribunal denies an application for a certificate. Consequences for Failure to Comply Attorneys or other persons who represent parties in California-based arbitrations when they either are not licensed to practice law in California or have not obtained an approved out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel certificate violate Business and Professions Code Section 6125 and are guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of $1,000.12 Under the Birbrower rule, the attorney who fails to comply with the out-ofstate attorney arbitration counsel certification program also is not entitled to recover any fees for work performed while in California.13 In addition to the possibility of criminal sanctions against the unlicensed attorney, there are potentially two other categories of arbitration participants who may be vulnerable to discipline. First, to the extent the out-of-jurisdiction attorney has retained licensed co-counsel in the California arbitration, which is required by Section 1282.4(c)(11), the licensed counsel of record may be subject to discipline under the California Rules of Professional Conduct 1300, which provides that “a member shall not aid any person or entity in the unauthorized practice of law.” A second category of arbitration participant who may be vulnerable under Rule 1300 is the arbitrator. If the arbitrator knowingly permits an unlicensed attorney or other person to represent a party in a Californiabased arbitration without completion of the out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel certificate, the arbitrator, if he or she is a member of the State Bar, also may be subject to Rule 1-300 if the arbitrator does not act under Section 1284.2(d) to disqualify the unlicensed attorney from participating in the arbitration.14 In that regard, it is not clear whether an arbitrator has the affirmative obligation to determine whether all party representatives appearing before the arbitral tribunal either are licensed to practice law in California or have completed an appropriate certificate. It appears that no cases or attorney general opinions address this issue, but it is probably best practice for arbitrators in California to confirm that, absent an exception to either the Birbrower rule or the outof-state attorney arbitration counsel program, the attorneys who appear before them in a California arbitration either are licensed in California or have completed the appropriate out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel application.15 Because the licensing requirements for the California State Bar are designed to protect parties from being represented in legal matters by persons not qualified to do so, in the event an out-of-state attorney fails to obtain the arbitrator’s approval of an out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel certificate, there is the potential risk that any arbitration award adverse to unlicensed attorney’s client may be set aside. No California cases address this issue, but, in an analogous case, an unlicensed attorney represented a party in a court proceeding. The court of appeal set aside the judgment adverse to that party.16 On the other hand, in two unpublished opinions, the court of appeal has refused to set aside arbitration awards in which the prevailing party’s attorney failed to timely comply with the Out-of-State Attorney Arbitration Counsel Certification program.17 Statutory Exceptions There are statutory exceptions to the requirements that party representatives in arbitration comply with Business and Professions Code Section 6125, Code of Civil Procedure Section 1282.4, and California Rule of Court 9.43. They are: 1) in an arbitration under a collective barging agreement, parties may be represented by any person, regardless of whether that person is licensed to practice law in California,18 2) any person, whether or not a licensed attorney, may represent an injured employee under the workers’ compensation statutes,19 3) an out-of-state attorney needs no certification and may engage in party representation with respect to arbitration proceedings held outside California,20 and 4) in international conciliation (a form of mediation) parties may be represented by the person of their choice.21 The Birbrower court understood this last provision to be an exception to Section 6125.22 Other than these limited statutory exceptions, the Birbrower rule, as modified by the out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel certification program, applies to all arbitrations conducted in California. When the statutory exceptions to the Birbrower rule are screened against the legislature’s response to Birbrower, there remain two significant lacunae, whether intended or not, that limit a party’s right to select its attorney representative in arbitration. The first concerns out-of-state attorneys representing parties in international arbitrations that are based in California. The legislature’s response to the Birbrower rule does not appear to apply to arbitrations subject to California’s International Arbitration and Conciliation Act.23 That act applies to the following types of arbitrations: (a) The parties to an arbitration or conciliation agreement have, at the time of the conclusion of that agreement, their places of business in different states. (b) One of the following places is situated outside the state in which the parties have their places of business: (i) The place of arbitration or conciliation if determined in, or pursuant to, the arbitration or conciliation agreement. (ii) Any place where a substantial part of the obligations of the commercial relationship is to be performed. (iii) The place with which the subject matter of the dispute is most closely connected. (c) The parties have expressly agreed that the subject matter of the arbitration or conciliation agreement relates to commercial interests in more than one state. (d) The subject matter of the arbitration or conciliation agreement is otherwise related to commercial interests in more than one state.24 Once it is determined that an arbitration proceeding is subject to the International Arbitration and Conciliation Act, Code of Civil Procedures Section 1297.17 makes clear that “this title supersedes Sections 1280 to 1284.2, inclusive, with respect to international commercial arbitration and conciliation.” The necessary implication is that Section 1282.4’s out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program (which is part of the exclusion of Sections 1280 to 1284.2) not only has not been included in the International Arbitration and Conciliation Act but has been affirmatively excluded from its provisions. This conclusion is reinforced by the International Arbitration and Con- ciliation Act’s limited exclusion from Business and Professions Code Section 6125 for conciliation proceedings. The limited exclusion applicable to conciliation proceedings by necessary implication does not apply to international arbitrations. Accordingly, under the current statute, out-of-state attorneys have no means to gain an exception to Section 6125 when attempting to represent a party in an international arbitration held in California. The inability of an out-of-state attorney to represent parties in an international arbitration in California probably is the unintended byproduct of the legislature’s confusion over program. Rule 9.43 does not on its face distinguish between domestic and international arbitration, nor does it require applicants to show they are seeking to represent a party solely in a domestic arbitration. It appears that the State Bar makes no distinction between domestic and international arbitrations under the out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program. The implication is that the State Bar may consider Rule 9.43 to include both domestic and international arbitrations.26 The State Bar considers the applications submitted under the program to be private and not subject to review by the pub- the Birbrower court’s comments on the provisions of California’s International Arbitration and Conciliation Act. It is likely that the legislature did not realize that Code of Civil Procedure Section 1297.351, cited by the Birbrower Court as a statutory exception to Section 6125 of the Business and Professions Code, applies only to conciliation proceedings (mediation) and not to international arbitrations as well.25 There is no obvious policy reason to create an out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program for domestic arbitrations but not for international ones. Nonetheless, unless the state legislature extends the out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program to international arbitrations, as a matter of statute, only attorneys licensed in California may provide such representation. Confusion over representation in international arbitration continued when State Bar Rule 9.43 was adopted to implement the lic. Accordingly, it has not been possible to determine whether any certificates submitted to the State Bar relate to arbitrations governed by the California International Arbitration and Conciliation Act. The second issue that limits a party to arbitration in choosing an attorney relates to attorneys licensed to practice outside the United States. The out-of-state attorney arbitration counsel program created by Section 1282.4 applies only to attorneys who are members “in good standing of and eligible to practice before the bar of any United States court or the highest court in any state, territory, or insular possession of the United States.”27 This definition necessarily excludes from the program attorneys who are not licensed to practice in the United States but are licensed to practice in a non-U.S. jurisdiction. An attorney licensed to practice in a foreign country is limited to two options to Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 21 practice law in California. First, the attorney may qualify for, take, and pass the California bar exam. This is not a practical option for the kind of transitory representation expected in arbitrations. Second, the foreign attorney may apply to become a registered foreign legal consultant under California Rule of Court 9.44. However, even if the registration is successful, the foreign attorney is barred from representing a party as an advocate in proceedings or practicing law other than to advise on the law of the jurisdiction where the foreign attorney is licensed. This option does not permit full participation in arbitration. The result is that there is no practical means for a foreign attorney to represent a party in a domestic or international arbitration seated in California. The exclusion of foreign attorneys from the arbitration counsel program appears to be intentional, and the reason to exclude probably proceeds from the same justifications for the limitations applied to foreign attorneys generally. California has an interest in restricting foreign attorneys to their area of legal expertise, which presumably is the law of the country where they are licensed. The presumption for a domestic arbitration held in California is that it proceeds, at least procedurally, under California law. In contrast to domestic arbitrations, the restriction on foreign attorneys engaged in the representation of parties in international arbitrations seated in California makes little sense. If the rationale is based on the legislature’s general exclusion of foreign attorneys from practicing law in California, it proceeds from a misunderstanding of how international arbitration generally operates. The location of an international arbitration frequently is selected for its lack of relationship to the parties so that the international dispute is resolved in a neutral territory. Further, the substantive law of the dispute frequently is unrelated to the seat of the arbitration, but rather is the law of one or the other party’s home jurisdiction or international law (e.g., the United Nations Convention on the International Sale of Goods). International arbitrations are most frequently conducted under common international arbitration rule sets (e.g., UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, ICC Rules of Arbitration, AAA’s international arbitration rules) that require specialists in those rule sets and not in the local arbitration procedures of the seat. All major international commercial arbitration jurisdictions (of which California is not yet one) have recognized that freedom of choice in the selection of representatives for international arbitrations trumps local restrictions on who may engage in the practice of law. These major international arbitration jurisdictions permit foreign attorneys, including those 22 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 licensed to practice in California, to represent parties in international arbitrations held in their jurisdictions.28 There is no compelling rationale to require that an attorney be licensed to practice law in California when arbitrating a dispute under the substantive law of another country using an international arbitration rule set. Nor is there any reason to believe that a licensed California attorney has any special or greater knowledge of international arbitration rule sets or the foreign law that may be applicable to the California-based international arbitration. Parties to international arbitrations are not protected by the California licensing rule. California simply becomes a venue inhospitable to international arbitration proceedings. Nonlegislative Solutions Most international arbitrations held in California involve at least one party located outside California. As the law currently stands under the Birbrower rule and the legislature’s limited modification of that rule, a party located outside California does not have the right under California law to use its regular arbitration counsel to represent it in California-based proceedings. There are two potential nonlegislative solutions to this problem. First, the parties to the international or domestic arbitration simply can agree to change the venue of the arbitration to a jurisdiction (virtually anywhere outside California) that permits freedom of representation in arbitrations. As noted above, the Birbrower rule only applies to arbitrations held in California, and there is a statutory exception to the Birbrower rule for out-of-state attorneys who render legal services in California for an arbitration held outside California.29 California has nothing to say about a party representative acting outside California with regard to an arbitration held outside California. This solution, however, has two basic problems. First, it requires the agreement of all parties to the arbitration to change venue from what may be agreed in the arbitration agreement. Such an agreement may not be forthcoming for a number of reasons, including that an out-of-state forum may be inconvenient to one of the parties. Second, this solution does not solve the problem of a foreign attorney (as distinguished from an outof-state attorney) rendering legal services in California with regard to an arbitration held outside California. In that case, the foreign attorney would be required to apply to become a foreign legal consultant under California Bar Rule 9.44. Even then, the scope of permitted activities may be too limited, especially if, for example, an attorney arbitration specialist licensed to practice law in the United Kingdom wished to perform legal services in California for an arbitration governed by the substantive law of France. In that event, the foreign legal consultant provisions of California law likely prohibit that attorney from rendering legal services in California. Preemption is an alternative nonlegislative way to allow choice of counsel in an arbitration proceeding. The Birbrower court ruled that California’s attorney licensing requirements were not preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act.30 Relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Volt Information Sciences, Inc. v. Leland Stanford Junior University, the court determined that there was no conflict between federal and state law on this issue and that the parties’ agreement expressly adopted California procedural and substantive law.31 However, as noted by the dissent in Birbrower, the majority’s broad proclamation regarding lack of preemption may be overstated. The Birbrower dissent noted that California’s attorney licensing rules should not apply if a treaty specifically permits parties to choose by whom they want to be represented. Justice Joyce Kennard’s dissent cited as an example the Inter-American Convention on International Arbitration: For instance, the Rules of Procedure of the Inter-American Commercial Arbitration Commission, article IV provides: “The parties may be represented or assisted by persons of their choice.” By federal law, this rule applies in all arbitrations between a United States citizen and a citizen of another signatory to the Inter-American Convention on International Commercial Arbitration, unless the arbitrating parties have expressly provided otherwise.32 Preemption is possible, but not certain. As acknowledged by the language quoted above, the Inter-American Convention’s default rule permitting parties to select representatives of their choice does not preempt California’s Birbrower rule if the parties have elected to be governed by California’s rules of procedure, something permitted by Article 3 of the Inter-American Convention.33 In that event, the parties would be required to comply with California rules of procedure regarding attorney representation. Accordingly, for preemption of the Birbrower rule to work under the Inter-American Convention, the parties by selecting California as the seat of the arbitration must not be deemed to have selected the procedural law of California as the procedural law of the arbitration. To avoid the inference that they have selected the procedural law of California, the parties may expressly designate that their arbitration agreement is governed by Chapter 3 of the A successful legal career begins with membership in the Los Angeles County Bar Association California Attorneys trust us for the latest news, best practices, networking, and practice area discounts. • Daily EBriefs (Case Summaries) We are proud to provide quality publications • Continuing Legal Education and digital media that our members rely on to • Los Angeles Lawyer Magazine build their practices. • Searchable Civil Register Our practice area sections engage our members • Judicial Council Forms with valuable continuing legal education, • Lawyer Referral Service networking events, newsletters, social media, and online practice-related discussion forums. • Center for Civic Mediation • Domestic Violence Project • Immigration Legal Assistance Project • AIDS Legal Services Project Join or renew today! www.lacba.org / 213.896.6560 • LACBA Job Board • Veterans Pro Bono Project and so much more! Federal Arbitration Act, including Section 306, which incorporates by reference the Rules of Procedure of the Inter-American International Arbitration Commission or the Federal Arbitration Act.34 Even if the Inter-American Convention is found to offer limited preemption protection, it only applies to international arbitrations governed by that particular treaty. In that regard, the Federal Arbitration Act provides that if the majority of the parties to the arbitration agreement are citizens of a nation that is both a party to the Inter-American Convention and a member of the Organization of American States, the Inter-American Convention will apply. If those requirements are not met, Chapter 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act concerning implementation of the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral awards applies. The New York Convention has a much broader application to international arbitrations held in the United States. However, the New York Convention does not have a default rule set for the conduct of proceedings in the same manner as the Inter-American Convention. Instead, it generally is recognized that an arbitration covered by the New York Convention is procedurally governed by the laws of the jurisdiction where the arbitration takes place or under the law of which the arbitration award is made.35 In that regard, the parties make the selection of the applicable procedural law either by reference in the parties’ arbitration agreement or by designation of the seat of the arbitration. When an arbitration subject to the New York Convention is held in California, it is possible for the parties to designate California’s procedural rules as the rules of procedure or for those rules to be deemed the governing rules by reason of California’s designation as the seat of the arbitration. The New York Convention is implemented in the Federal Arbitration Act through Chapter 2 and, for those arbitrations seated in the United States, those portions of Chapter 1 that do not conflict with Chapter 2 or the New York Convention.36 However, there is nothing in Chapters 1 or 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act that expressly conflicts with and therefore preempts the Birbrower rule.37 In addition to the possibility of preemption under the Inter-American Convention, international investment treaties are another significant possible source of preemption. The United States is a party to the International Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). Under the Rules of that Convention, “Each party may be represented or assisted by agents, counsel or advocates.”38 As with the Inter-American Convention, parties arbitrating disputes under 24 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 ICSID rely on its rule set unless the parties otherwise agree.39 Thus, assuming the parties have not otherwise agreed, the ICSID rule on party representation has the power of an international treaty and, therefore, should preempt California state law. Even in the absence of the ICSID rule set, the terms of ICSID likely preclude application of Section 6125. Articles 21 and 22 of the Convention grant the parties’ representatives immunity from legal process in connection with their actions in the performance of their duties with respect to any ICSID arbitration in which they participate.40 Finally, the United States is a party to quite a few bilateral investment treaties. To the extent those treaties permit the parties to select arbitration rule sets for the resolution of their disputes that provide for free choice in the selection of party representatives, those treaties may also preempt California’s Birbrower rule. For example, the bilateral investment treaty between the United States and Argentina permits the parties to select the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, which provide, in Article 5, that “Each party may be represented or assisted by persons chosen by it.” On the other hand, as with the Inter-American treaty, if the parties to the arbitration elect, or are deemed to have elected, to be governed by California’s rules of arbitration procedure, then the parties must comply with California’s attorney representation rules. The Legislative Solution Since the statutory exceptions and nonstatutory means to avoid the Birbrower Rule do not provide a completely satisfactory answer to California’s prohibition against foreign or out-of-state attorneys acting as counsel in international arbitrations seated in California, a legislative solution is the best and clearest response. Toward that end, legislative solutions are being sought.41 On May 10, 2013, the board of trustees of the California State Bar approved a resolution endorsing a legislative solution to the international arbitration problem: RESOLVED, that upon the recommendation of the Stakeholder Relations Committee, the Board of Trustees endorses amendments to California’s international arbitration and conciliation statute to add language to Title 9.3 of the California Code of Civil Procedure and amendments to other authorities as necessary to expressly state in an international commercial conciliation or arbitration proceeding, the person representing a party to the conciliation or arbitration is not required to be a licensed member of the State Bar, consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in Birbrower, Montal- bano, Condon & Frank v. Superior Court…and it is FURTHER RESOLVED, that upon the recommendation of the Stakeholder Relations Committee, the Board of Trustees endorses and promotes California as a favored venue for international arbitration and conciliation proceedings.42 While there may be good reasons not to permit foreign attorneys to represent parties in California-based domestic arbitrations, there is no good reason to prohibit out-of-state attorneys or foreign attorneys from representing parties in international arbitrations held in California. Instead, the out-of-state arbitration counsel program either should be extended to cover international arbitrations and to foreign attorneys representing parties in international arbitrations or, as suggested by the State Bar Board of Trustees, the exception from Section 6125 for international conciliation in the California International Arbitration and Conciliation Act as recognized by Birbrower should be extended to international arbitration. However, until the California legislature affirmatively acts to permit nonCalifornia attorneys to represent parties in international arbitration, parties must either accept application of the Birbrower rule or rely on nonlegislative solutions with the attendant risks and limitations. ■ 1 See, e.g., Commercial Rules of the Am. Arb. Ass’n, R. 24; UNCITRAL Arb. Rules, Art. 5; ICC Arb. Rules, R. 26(4). 2 BUS. & PROF. CODE §6125. 3 Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court, 17 Cal. 4th 119 (Cal. 1998), cert denied, 525 U.S. 920 (1998) 4 Id. at 133-34. 5 C ODE C IV . P ROC . §1282.4(c). The State Bar of California requires completion of the Certificate of Out-of-State Attorney Arbitration Counsel form, available at http://admissions.calbar.ca.gov/LinkClick .aspx?fileticket=GyMRIC7tGa4%3d&tabid=766. Once approved by the arbitrator, the form must be submitted to the California State Bar with a $50 filing fee for each arbitration. See http://admissions.calbar.ca.gov /Requirements/OutofStateAttorneyArbitrationCounsel OSAAC/FAQ.aspx. 6 According to an e-mail from the State Bar dated July 15, 2013, the State Bar received 800 certificates in 2009, 734 in 2011, and 780 in 2012. Data were not available for 2010. 7 See R. of Ct. 9.43. 8 Although not stated in Rule 9.43, Section 1282.4(c)(6) requires that the out-of-state attorney not be a “resident of the state of California.” 9 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(c)(6) (emphasis added). 10 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(c). 11 Id. 12 BUS. & PROF. CODE §6126. 13 In Birbrower, the supreme court relied on Hardy v. San Fernando Valley Chamber of Commerce, 99 Cal. App. 2d 572, 576 (1950). 14 Code of Civil Procedure Section 1282.4(d) provides, “Failure to timely file and serve the certificate described in subdivision (c) shall be grounds for disapproval of the appearance and disqualification from serving as an attorney in the arbitration in which the certificate was filed.” 15 The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) arbitration rules provide guidelines for compliance with Section 1282.4, including a requirement that out-of-state attorneys complete the required certification form for approval. See http://www.finra.org /ArbitrationAndMediation/Arbitration/Rules/Rule Guidance/NoticestoParties/P125353. In contrast, the American Arbitration Association (AAA) has no written guidelines regarding the participation of out-of-state attorneys in California arbitrations. Indeed, AAA Commercial Arbitration Rule 24 expressly permits any party to be represented by “counsel or other authorized representative.” Although the rule is contrary to mandatory California law for California-based arbitrations, AAA administrators do not take responsibility for compliance. Instead, compliance is left to the parties and the arbitral tribunal.. 16 Russell v. Dopp, 36 Cal. App. 4th 765 (1995). 17 North by Northwest Prod. v. First Look Studios, No. B219503, 2010 WL 4056851 (Cal. App. Oct. 18, 2010); Gerowitz v. Noll, No. G030308, 2003 WL 1711279 (Cal. App. Mar. 8, 2003). 18 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(h). 19 CODE CIV. PROC. §§1282.4(i), 1282.4(j)(4). 20 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(g). 21 CODE CIV. PROC. §1297.351. 22 Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court, 17 Cal. 4th 119, 130, 131 (1998). 23 CODE CIV. PROC. §§1297.11-1297.432. 24 CODE CIV. PROC. §1297.13. 25 Some confusion is understandable because the California Supreme Court stated in Birbrower that “[t]he Legislature has recognized an exception to section 6125 in international disputes resolved in California under the state’s rules for arbitration and con- ciliation of international commercial disputes.” Birbrower, 17 Cal. 4th at 130-31. This statement itself does not limit the exception to international conciliation proceedings. However, the very next sentence in Birbrower notes that the exception is limited to conciliation proceedings. 26 Rule 9.43 does not distinguish between international and domestic arbitration, but it references Code of Civil Procedure §1282.4 as the source of the authority for the program and makes no mention of the International Arbitration and Conciliation Act. 27 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(c). 28 See, e.g., London international arbitration, United Kingdom Arbitration Act 1996, §36; Paris international arbitration, http://www.parisarbitration.com/faq .php; Swiss international arbitration, Swiss Arbitration Association, http://www.arbitration-ch.org/pages/en /arbitration-in-switzerland/switzerland-is-arbitration -friendly/index.html; Singapore international arbitration, Singapore International Arbitration Centre, http://www .siac.org.sg/index.php?option=com_content&view =article&id=47&Itemid=65; Hong Kong international arbitration, Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre, http://www.hkiac.org/index.php/en/arbitration/why -hong-kong; and David D. Caron & Leah D. Harhay, A Call to Action: Turning the Golden State into a Golden Opportunity for International Arbitration, 28 BERKELEY J. INT’L L. 497, 502-504 (2010) [hereinafter Caron & Harhay]. 29 CODE CIV. PROC. §1282.4(g). 30 Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court, 17 Cal. 4th 119, 134-35 (1998). 31 Volt Info. Sciences v. Leland Stanford Jr. U., 489 U.S. 468, 477 (1989). 32 Birbrower, 17 Cal. 4th 119, at 146 (Kennard, J. dissenting) (citations omitted). 33 Inter-American Convention on International Commercial Arbitration art. 3, June 9, 1978, 1438 U.N.T.S. 245. 34 9 U.S.C. §306. 35 See Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, 330 U.N.T.S. 38, Article V, §§1(d), (e). 36 9 U.S.C. §208. 37 Parties who elect to be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act are electing to be governed by the federal common law on arbitration. See Buckeye Check Cashing, Inc. v. John Cardegna et al., 546 U.S. 440 (2006). See also Stephen Smerek & Daniel Whang, Preemption and the Federal Arbitration Act: What Law Will Govern Your Agreement to Arbitrate?, NEWSLETTER OF THE ABA SECTION OF BUSINESS LAW COMMITTEE ON CORPORATE COUNSEL (Mar. 2006), available at http://apps.americanbar.org/buslaw/committees/CL240000pub/newsletter/200603/home.shtml. However, there is no clear statement of federal common law on arbitration that grants parties the unfettered right to choose their representatives. 38 ICSID, Abritration (Additional Facility) Rules, Art. 26(1). 39 Id., Art. 44. 40 But see id., Art. 1. 41 See Caron & Harhay, supra note 28; see also Yuval Miller & M. Anderson Berry, Opening Up to International Arbitration, THE DAILY JOURNAL, Jan. 11, 2010, at 7; Paul M. Lurie & Carl F. Ingwalson, Arbitration and the Unauthorized Practice of Law, 27 CONSTR. LAWYER 14 (2007); Richard A. Eastman, Birbrower, Montalbo, Condon & Frank v. Superior Court, 94 AM. J. INT’L. L. 400 (2010). 42 Resolution of the Board of Trustees of the State Bar of California, May 10, 2013. NORIEGA CHIROPRACTIC CLINICS, INC. JESS T. NORIEGA, D.C. Is proud to announce the opening of our Lynwood location SERVICING: SOUTHGATE • BELLFLOWER • CUDAHY • NORTH LONG BEACH • WATTS LYNWOOD HEALTH CENTER 11123 LONG BEACH BLVD. LYNWOOD, CA 90262 HUNTINGTON PARK HEALTH CENTER ONTARIO HEALTH SERVICES (310) 604-6940 3033 E. Florence Ave. Huntington Park, CA 90255 (323) 582-8401 602B N. Euclid Ave. Ontario, CA 91764 (909) 395-5598 WHITTIER HEALTH SERVICES MONTEBELLO HEALTH CENTER SOUTH CENTRAL HEALTH CENTER 13019 Bailey Ave. Suite F Whittier, CA 90601 (562) 698-2411 HIGHLAND PARK HEALTH CENTER 604 North Monetebllo Blvd., Montebello, CA 90640 (323) 726-8818 4721 S. Broadway Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90037 (323) 234-3100 5421 N. Figueroa St. Highland Park, CA 90042 (323) 478-9771 1 • 800 • NORIEGA Personal Injury cases accepted on lien basis. 1•800•667•4342 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 25 Meet your mandatory CLE requirements for 2014 2014 CLE-in-a-Box The easiest and most convenient way to meet your CLE requirements with the best content available. N e w CLE BOX G S $ 5 0 SAV I N CLE BUNDLE 25-Hour Audio Pack 6-Hour Required Subjects Audio Pack LACBA Member Price: $224 LACBA Member Price: $149 Nonmember Price: $274 Nonmember Price: $199 Available as a CD set or on-demand • Free Ground Shipping within the continental United States The 25-hour audio pack includes the CLE Bundle Required Subjects. To order, go to www.lacba.org/clebox or call Member Services at 800.456.0416 The State Bar of California deadline for mandatory CLE requirements is February 3, 2014 for attorneys whose last names begin with N-Z . MCLE ARTICLE AND SELF-ASSESSMENT TEST By reading this article and answering the accompanying test questions, you can earn one MCLE credit. To apply for credit, please follow the instructions on the test answer sheet on page 29. by Richard S. Conn The Properties of Preemption CERCLA may preempt state laws barring claims on the real property interests of heirs TWO CALIFORNIA STATUTES promote the policy of certainty and finality in the transfer of property interests to the lawful successors in interest of a person who dies. One is an expedited statute of limitations applicable to claims that could have been asserted against the decedent before death.1 The other policy is embodied in the Probate Code’s so-called nonclaim statutes, which require the decedent’s creditors, on actual or constructive notice of estate administration, to timely file and prosecute claims.2 A competing policy legitimates the interest of creditors in obtaining satisfaction of bona fide claims from the assets of the decedent before they pass to heirs or beneficiaries. Frequently, creditors have an interest in claims that arise from a decedent’s ownership of real property. When representing the administrators and trustees of estates with real property, practitioners may consider the potential liabilities unique to real estate but may be inclined to discount them and rely on statutes of limitation or repose. For example, unwary practitioners may think that the one-year statute of limitation found in Section 366.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which runs from the date of death of a decedent, and the 120-day claims filing requirements of Probate Code Sections 9100 (probate estates) and 19100 (applicable to trusts, when invoked by the trustee) adequately protect an estate from liability. Unfortunately, the law provides no such assurance. The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) provides the fedRichard S. Conn is a partner in the Los Angeles office of Musick, Peeler & Garrett. He specializes in business, real estate, probate, and trust litigation. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 27 eral government statutory authority to recover response costs and to compel owners, operators, and other potentially responsible parties to clean up environmental contamination of real property.3 An owner of real property is presumptively a potentially responsible party, unless the owner can prove entitlement to the status of innocent landowner. In general, this requires a showing that an unrelated party was the sole cause of the contamination and damage and that the landowner guarded against the foreseeable acts and omissions of the responsible party.4 Potentially responsible parties other than landowners and operators include those who transport or the death or dissolution of an original responsible party. CERCLA is not limited to establishing federal liability for specified damages and cleanup costs. Under 42 USC Section 9658, state statutes of limitation respecting recovery of damages for environmental torts may be extended. As the code states, “[I]f the applicable limitations period for such action (as specified in the State statute of limitations or under common law) provides a commencement date which is earlier than the federally required commencement date, such period shall commence at the federally required commencement date in lieu of the date spec- contingent at the time of the decedent’s death. While the opinion may be limited to claims arising in contract, certain language in the opinion is sufficiently broad to apply to any circumstance in which the claimant could not have sued the decedent for injuries sustained at the time of death. In the case of claims for contribution under CERCLA, if the contribution expenditures are incurred after the decedent’s death, Dacey raises the prospect that Section 366.2 will not bar a claim asserted against an administrator or trustee more than one year after the decedent’s death. The application of the nonclaim statutes is subject to less doubt. Dacey, for example, In Dacey v. Taraday, the court of appeal found that the administrator of an estate could not invoke the bar of Section 366.2 against a contract claim that was still contingent at the time of the decedent's death. dispose of hazardous materials.5 Under Section 9607(a), CERCLA liability includes: A. All costs of removal or remedial action incurred by the United States Government or a State or an Indian tribe not inconsistent with the national contingency plan; B. Any other necessary costs of response incurred by any other person consistent with the national contingency plan; C. Damages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources, including the reasonable costs of assessing such injury, destruction, or loss resulting from such a release; and D. The costs of any health assessment or health effects study carried out under section 9604(i) of this title. Notably, in addition to empowering the government to enforce removal and remediation of contaminants, CERCLA creates causes of action in favor of private parties, including for contribution and damages. Statutes of limitation vary depending on whether the action is for contribution or for costs of responding to contamination, and whether funds have been expended for a removal action or a remedial action, some being three years and others six years.6 Of material consequence, the various statutory periods may run from the date of a judgment, a court-approved settlement, an administrative order, or from completion of work. The limitations periods may span decades after the contamination is caused or discovered. A viable claim for contribution or response costs may be timely asserted under a CERCLA statute of limitations years after 28 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 ified in such State statute.” Thus, in addition to providing federal remedies, CERCLA potentially has a significant effect on rights under state law. For example, in Angeles Chemical Company Inc. v. Spencer & Jones, the court of appeal held that California’s 10-year statute of limitation for construction defect claims was preempted. Negligence and breach-of-contract claims were therefore viable even though more than 10 years had passed since the occurrence that gave rise to liability.7 One Year or More? California’s one-year statute of limitation respecting postdeath lawsuits provides: If a person against whom an action may be brought on a liability of the person, whether arising in contract, tort, or otherwise, and whether accrued or not accrued, dies before the expiration of the applicable limitations period, and the cause of action survives, an action may be commenced within one year after the date of death, and the limitations period that would have been applicable does not apply.8 This language would appear sufficiently broad to bar claims for contribution and damage to natural resources, whether accruing before or after the decedent’s death. A number of decisions have applied Section 366.2 to bar claims.9 However, the general application of these decisions has been called into question by the more recent holding in Dacey v. Taraday.10 In Dacey, the court of appeal found that the administrator of an estate could not invoke the bar of Section 366.2 against a contract claim that was still recognizes that the statutes are clearly intended to apply to claims that may be unaccrued, unliquidated, or contingent.11 However, the nonclaim statutes may prove a double-edged sword. In order to benefit from their protection, an administrator-trustee must serve notice of administration, including the right to file a claim, on “all known or reasonably ascertainable creditors of the decedent.”12 Any creditor not served may seek leave of court to file a claim within 60 days after the creditor “has actual knowledge of the administration of the estate.” Similarly, the creditor may seek leave of court to file a claim if the creditor “had no knowledge of the facts reasonably giving rise to the existence of a claim more than 30 days prior to the time for filing a claim” and files its petition for leave to file a claim within 60 days after the creditor has actual knowledge of facts reasonably giving rise to the claim and of the administration of the estate.13 While the nonclaim statutes appear to provide better protection under California law than Section 366.2, they require effective notice to potential environmental claimants and are not a certain bar to liability. In sum, an administrator or trustee who relies on Section 366.2 risks exposure to environmental claims that accrue after the decedent’s death. The nonclaim statutes do not provide sure protection against the risk of claims by parties who were not notified or were not aware of facts disclosing that a claim had accrued. Moreover, issues of liability do not terminate on the distribution of assets to beneficiaries. To the extent that a distribution is made by a trustee without satisfaction of subsisting indebtedness, the dis- MCLE Test No. 229 The Los Angeles County Bar Association certifies that this activity has been approved for Minimum Continuing Legal Education credit by the State Bar of California in the amount of 1 hour. 1. Under California law, a creditor of a deceased person generally has one year from the date of death to bring an action against the deceased person’s successors. True. False. 12. Two U.S. courts of appeal have held that CERCLA provisions that extend state statutes of limitations for environmental torts were intended to apply equally to statutes of repose. True. False. 2. A nonclaim statute relieves a creditor of the obligation to file a claim in a probate proceeding. True. False. 13. In order for a probate administrator to be protected by California’s nonclaim statutes, he or she must serve notice of the right to file a claim on all known or reasonably ascertainable creditors. True. False. 3. “CERCLA” refers to the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act. True. False. 4. An owner of real property is presumptively a potentially responsible party under CERCLA unless the owner can prove entitlement to innocent landowner status. True. False. 5. CERCLA only creates rights in the U.S. government, a state, or an Indian tribe and does not affect the rights of private parties against one another. True. False. 14. A creditor who is not timely served with notice of the right to file a probate claim must file a claim within six months of learning of the administration of the estate. True. False. 15. If a creditor does not have knowledge of facts reasonably giving rise to a claim as of 30 days prior to the expiration of the claims filing period, and therefore omits filing a claim, the creditor is forever barred from pursuing recovery. True. False. 6. Code of Civil Procedure Section 366.2 bars actions for breach of contract brought more than one year after the death of a contracting party, even if the breach had not occurred prior to the date of death. True. False. 16. The court in Witko v. Beekhuis held that any state statute of limitation running from the date of a responsible party’s death will be unaffected by CERCLA. True. False. 7. Federal statutes always preempt state statutes addressing the same subject matter. True. False. 17. An administrator of a probate estate may rely on Code of Civil Procedure Section 366.2 to protect against all claims for damages based on environmental torts committed by the decedent. True. False. 8. Federal courts have uniformly held that the CERCLA statutes of limitation preempt state nonclaim statutes. True. False. 9. Statutes of repose differ from statutes of limitation in that statutes of repose may bar a suit before a cause of action has accrued. True. False. 10. CERCLA may extend the statute of limitation for actions under state law to recover damages for environmental torts. True. False. 11. California’s 10-year statute of limitations for construction defects may be extended by CERCLA. True. False. 18. Federal statutes will only preempt state statutes on the same subject matter when Congress has expressed a plain intent to preempt state law. True. False. 19. A court may infer preemption from federal regulation that is sufficiently comprehensive to leave no room for state regulation. True. False. 20. Federal law may be deemed to preempt state law to the extent it actually conflicts with federal law. True. False. MCLE Answer Sheet #229 THE PROPERTIES OF PREEMPTION Name Law Firm/Organization Address City State/Zip E-mail Phone State Bar # INSTRUCTIONS FOR OBTAINING MCLE CREDITS 1. Study the MCLE article in this issue. 2. Answer the test questions opposite by marking the appropriate boxes below. Each question has only one answer. Photocopies of this answer sheet may be submitted; however, this form should not be enlarged or reduced. 3. Mail the answer sheet and the $20 testing fee ($25 for non-LACBA members) to: Los Angeles Lawyer MCLE Test P.O. Box 55020 Los Angeles, CA 90055 Make checks payable to Los Angeles Lawyer. 4. Within six weeks, Los Angeles Lawyer will return your test with the correct answers, a rationale for the correct answers, and a certificate verifying the MCLE credit you earned through this self-assessment activity. 5. For future reference, please retain the MCLE test materials returned to you. ANSWERS Mark your answers to the test by checking the appropriate boxes below. Each question has only one answer. 1. ■ True ■ False 2. ■ True ■ False 3. ■ True ■ False 4. ■ True ■ False 5. ■ True ■ False 6. ■ True ■ False 7. ■ True ■ False 8. ■ True ■ False 9. ■ True ■ False 10. ■ True ■ False 11. ■ True ■ False 12. ■ True ■ False 13. ■ True ■ False 14. ■ True ■ False 15. ■ True ■ False 16. ■ True ■ False 17. ■ True ■ False 18. ■ True ■ False 19. ■ True ■ False 20. ■ True ■ False Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 29 tributees are liable for payment on a pro rata basis.14 Patchwork as the California protections may be, do they override CERCLA statutes of limitation? While a number of reported federal decisions have addressed whether specific statute of limitation provisions in CERCLA preempt state law, they reach conflicting results. The outcome appears in part to depend on the specific cause of action and statute of limitation at issue. Without respect to federal preemption, California statutes of limitation for damage to real property may range from as short as three years for negligently caused harm to 10 years for construction defects.15 The leading federal decision relating to CERCLA’s three-year statute of limitations for contribution actions is Witco Corporation v. Beekhuis.16 In Witco, the court of appeal considered whether Delaware’s eight-month probate nonclaim filing statute insulated the executor of a probate estate and derivative trusts from claims for contribution for environmental cleanup. Witco Corporation had owned the land in question from 1972 to 1977, been aware of the environmental issues since at least 1985, and entered into a cleanup consent decree with the EPA in 1992. The decedent, Beekhuis, had owned and operated a corporation that had merged into a Witco subsidiary, eventually constituting Witco, an owner of the contaminated property. Beekhuis was presumably deemed a potentially responsible party because of his operation of the predecessor entity and his actions as an officer of Witco. Beekhuis and his insurer had allegedly been placed on notice of their liability in 1988. The court in Witco cited language from California Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Guerra as setting forth the applicable standard for a finding of federal preemption: In determining whether a state statute is pre-empted by federal law and therefore invalid under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, our sole task is to ascertain the intent of Congress. Federal law may supersede state law in several different ways. First, when acting within constitutional limits, Congress is empowered to preempt state law by so stating in express terms. Second, congressional intent to preempt state law in a particular area may be inferred where the scheme of federal regulation is sufficiently comprehensive to make reasonable the inference that Congress “left no room” for supplementary state regulation.…As a third alternative, those areas where Congress has not completely displaced state regulation, fed30 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 eral law may nonetheless pre-empt state law to the extent it actually conflicts with federal law. Such a conflict occurs either because “compliance with both federal and state regulations is a physical impossibility,” or because the state law stands “as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”17 The Witco court noted that three federal district courts have found that the CERCLA statute of limitations affirmatively preempted state nonclaim statutes on the ground that preemption is necessary to implement the overriding federal policy that those who are responsible for improper disposal of chemical poisons should bear the expense of cleanup.18 Nevertheless, the Witco court proceeded to reach a contrary result on four grounds. First, the court found nothing in CERCLA to indicate congressional intent to preempt state law governing claims against decedent’s estates, which is an area traditionally reserved to state law. Second, the court found a justifiable inference that Congress intended to leave state law respecting decedent’s estates unchanged. This reasoning is based on inclusion of an innocent landowner defense in Section 9607(b)(3). Third, the court found that after the running of the eight-month nonclaim period, an executor lacks capacity to be sued, and that state law on capacity is determinative under Rule 17(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Last, the court found that for pragmatic reasons (i.e. certainty governing the descent of property) Congress could not have intended to preempt state nonclaim statutes. Witco is cited with approval in Marsh v. Rosenbloom, which rejects a claim that CERCLA preempted Delaware’s statute barring claims against a corporation that are made more than three years after completion of the corporation’s dissolution. Another case, Boyle v. County of Kern, holds that filing of a federal civil rights complaint within the claim filing period does not satisfy the nonclaim statute filing requirement.19 McDonald v. Sun Oil Company In the context of claims for contribution, Witco makes a strong argument against federal preemption of state nonclaim statutes. This provides some reassurance to a probate practitioner, but several contrary federal decisions leave the issue unsettled. Further, the Ninth Circuit’s decision in McDonald v. Sun Oil Company puts Witco into some doubt.20 In particular, it is doubtful that Witco can be extended to Section 366.2, which is not specifically tied to administration of estates and would not support Witco’s argument regarding an executor’s lack of capacity to be sued. In McDonald, the court considered whether Section 9658 preempts an Oregon statute of repose that limits the right to bring suit without respect to knowledge of accrual of a claim.21 Specifically, the court found that the Oregon statute that precluded action for negligent injury to a person or property more than 10 years from the date of the act or omission complained of was preempted by Section 9658. The court found in favor of pre- Ruling on Preemption Federal courts are frequently called upon to determine whether a federal statute preempts a parallel state statute. When doing so, courts typically consider three factors. First, if Congress has expressed a plain intent to preempt state law pertaining to a subject matter governed by the supremacy clause of the U.S. Constitution, this is dispositive. Second, in the absence of a clearly expressed intent, the court may infer preemption from federal regulation that is sufficiently comprehensive to leave no room for state regulation. Third, federal law may be deemed to preempt state law to the extent it actually conflicts with federal law.1 Some recent decisions reflect the range of judicial reasoning on preemption. In In re Western States Wholesale Natural Gas Antitrust Litigation,2 the court held that the federal Natural Gas Act was not intended to preempt state police power to enforce state antitrust laws on retail sales of natural gas. In Movsesian v. Victoria Versicherung AG,3 the court held that a California statute vesting state courts with jurisdiction over insurance actions by Armenian Genocide victims and extending statutes of limitation for victims’ claims was preempted by the U.S. Constitution’s grant of exclusive authority in foreign affairs to the federal government. In Castro v. Collecto Inc.,4 the court held that a four-year statute of limitation under Texas law was not conflict-preempted by a two-year limit in the Federal Communications Act, as applied to a claim respecting unlawful collection practices relating —R.S.C. to cellular phone bills.— 1 California Fed. Sav. and Loan Ass’n v. Guerra, 479 U.S. 272, 280-81 (1987). re W. States Wholesale Natural Gas Antitrust Litig., 715 F. 3d 716 (9th Cir. 2013). 3 Movsesian v. Victoria Versicherung AG, 670 F. 3d 1067 (9th Cir. 2011). 4 Castro v. Collecto Inc., 634 F. 3d 779 (5th Cir. 2011). 2 In emption notwithstanding a relatively minor injury to the plaintiff in the form of $70,000 in cleanup costs. The court in McDonald explicitly rejected an argument that, as a statute of repose rather than a statute of limitation, the Oregon statute was not intended to be preempted. In holding that Section 9658 was intended to apply to both statutes of repose and statutes of limitation, the court defined statutes of limitation and repose: Statutes of limitations and repose are distinct legal concepts with distinct effects. “A statute of limitations requires a lawsuit to be filed within a specified period of time after a legal right has been violated….On the other hand, statutes of repose are designed to bar actions after a specified period of time has run from the occurrence of some event other than the injury which gave rise to the claim.” Statutes of limitations preclude[ ] the plaintiff from proceeding….A statute of repose, however…can bar a suit even before the cause of action could have accrued.…In proper circumstances, it can be said to destroy the right itself. It is not concerned with the plaintiff’s diligence; it is concerned with the defendant’s peace.22 In reaching this result, the court in McDonald explicitly rejected a contrary finding by the Fifth Circuit in Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Company v. Poole Chemical Company23 that Section 9658 was not intended to apply to statutes of repose. The holding in McDonald has subsequently been followed by the Fourth Circuit in Waldburger v. CTS Corporation,24 a case decided on similar facts. McDonald is noteworthy because Section 366.2 and the nonclaim statutes are arguably statutes of repose. It is entirely conceivable that, if asked to rule on the issue of preemption pursuant to Section 9658 as applied to the California statutes, the Ninth Circuit could reach a contrary result. Nevertheless, McDonald at least may be cited as dicta to support the proposition that California state law negligence claims predicated on release of pollutants are not barred by Section 366.2 or the nonclaim statutes and that pursuant to Probate Code Section 9658, the claims are governed by a hybrid federal-state statute of limitation that runs from the date of discovery. Further, the willingness of the McDonald court to treat CERCLA preemption of statutes of repose in a manner identical to statutes of limitation raises a question as to whether the Ninth Circuit would reach a result contrary to Witco regarding claims of contribution for costs of removal or remedial action. Practitioners representing administrators of decedents’ estates routinely rely on Section 366.2 and the nonclaim statutes in providing their clients assurance that money or assets may be safely distributed without concern for later claims. Unfortunately, CERCLA casts a cloud over the ability of any executor or trustee to distribute real property with assurance that all viable claims have been satisfied or are barred. Moreover, even purely personal liabilities of the decedent may survive. That being said, it is clear that, for trustees, use of the notice to creditors mechanism set forth in Sections 19100 et seq. potentially provides significant protection. Use of this procedure would appear far preferable to passive reliance on the one-year statute of limitations of Section 366.2. ■ 1 CODE CIV. PROC. §366.2. CODE §§9000 et seq. (probate estates); PROB. CODE §§19000 et seq. (trust estates). 3 42 U.S.C.A. §§9601-9675. 4 PCS Nitrogen Inc. v. Ashley II of Charleston LLC, 714 F. 3d 161 (4th Cir. 2013). 5 For a discussion of whether executors and trustees will be treated as innocent landowners, see United States v. Newmont USA Ltd., 504 F. Supp. 2d 1050, 1067 (E.D. Wash. 2007) (noting 42 U.S.C.A. §9607). 6 See 42 U.S.C.A. §9607, §9613. 7 Angeles Chem. Co. Inc. v. Spencer & Jones, 44 Cal. App. 4th 112 (1996). 8 CODE CIV. PROC. §366.2(a). 9 See Bradley v. Breen, 73 Cal. App. 4th 798 (1999); Dawes v. Rich, 60 Cal. App. 4th 24, 32-36 (1997); cf. Battuello v. Battuello, 64 Cal. App. 4th 842 (1998). 10 Dacey v. Taraday, 196 Cal. App. 4th 962, 984-87 (2011). 11 Id. at 983; PROB. CODE §9000; CODE CIV. PROC. §§338(b), 337.15. 12 PROB. CODE §9050. 13 PROB. CODE §9103. 14 PROB. CODE §§19103(d), 19400 et seq. 15 CODE CIV. PROC. §§338(b), 337.15. 16 Witco Corp. v. Beekhuis, 38 F. 3d 682 (1994); 42 U.S.C.A. §9613(g)(3). 17 Witco Corp. v. Beekhuis, 38 F. 3d 682, 687 (1994) (quoting California Fed. Sav. and Loan Ass’n v. Guerra, 479 U.S. 272, 280-81 (1987)). See also Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 373 U.S. 132, 142143 (1963); Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67 (1941); Michigan Canners & Freezers Ass’n, Inc. v. Agricultural Mktg. and Bargaining Bd., 467 U.S. 461, 478 (1984); Fidelity Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. De la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141, 156 (1982); but see Maryland v. Louisiana, 451 U.S. 725, 746 (1981); see also 42 U.S.C. §9613(g)(3). 18 See Freudenberg-NOK Gen. P’ship v. Thomopoulos, 1991 WL 325290, at *2 (D. N.H. 1991); Soo Line R.R. Co. v. B.J. Carney & Co., 797 F. Supp. 1472 (D. Minn. 1992); Steego Corp. v. Ravenal, 830 F. Supp. 42 (D. Mass. 1993). 19 Marsh v. Rosenbloom, 499 F. 3d 165 (2nd Cir. 2007); Boyle v. County of Kern, No. 1:2003cv05162 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 7, 2003). 20 McDonald v. Sun Oil Co., 548 F. 3d 774 (2008). 21 See 42 U.S.C. §9658(a)(1). 22 McDonald, 548 F. 3d at 779-80 (citing Underwood Cotton Co., Inc. v. Hyundai, 288 F. 3d 405, 408-09 (9th Cir. 2002)). 23 Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Poole Chem. Co., 419 F. 3d 355, 363 (5th Cir. 2005). 24 Waldburger v. CTS Corp., 2013 WL 3455775 (4th Cir. 2013). 2 PROB. Statement of Ownership, Management and Circulation UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE (Required by 39 USC 3685) 1. 2. 3. 4. Publication Title: Los Angeles Lawyer Publication Number: 01622900 Filing Date: September 18, 2013 Issue Frequency: Monthly (Except combined July/August) 5. Number of Issues Published Annually: 11 6. Annual Subscription Price: $14.00 members; $28.00 nonmembers 7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication: Los Angeles Lawyer, 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles, CA 90017-2553 8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarters or General Business Office of Publisher: Los Angeles Lawyer, 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles, CA 90017-2553 9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing Editor: Publisher: Samuel L. Lipsman, Los Angeles Lawyer, 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles, CA 90017-2553. Editor: Samuel L. Lipsman, Los Angeles Lawyer, 1055 West 7th Street, Suite 2700, Los Angeles, CA 90017-2553. 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Paid Circulation (1) Mailed Outside-County 24,059 21,643 Paid Subscriptions stated on PS Form 3541 (2) Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions stated on 0 0 PS Form 3541 (3) Paid Distribution Outside 0 0 the Mails (4) Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail through 0 0 the USPS 24,059 21,643 c. Total Paid Distribution d. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (1) Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies 106 included on PS Form 3541 106 (3) Free of Nominal Rate Copies 130 111 Mailed at Other Classes e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution f. Total Distribution g. Copies Not Distributed h. Total i. Percent Paid 217 21,860 1,489 23,349 99% 236 24,295 1,055 25,350 99% 16. This Statement of Ownership will be printed in the November 2013 issue of this publication. 17. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner: Samuel L. Lipsman, Publisher. Date: 9/18/13. I certify that all informa tion furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or information requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (including multiple damages and civil penalties). Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 31 by Kenneth K. Lee Questionable CLASSES false advertising class actions have shown less favor to plaintiffs 32 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 IN RECENT YEARS, California has become a haven for consumer class action lawsuits. This surge in class action complaints led the American Tort Reform Foundation to dub the Golden State as America’s number one “judicial hellhole.”1 Many factors account for this spike in consumer class actions. One key reason has been several high-profile proplaintiff decisions that the Ninth Circuit and the California Supreme Court have issued in the past five years. The pendulum, however, may finally have begun swinging the other way. Judges in California, especially federal judges, have taken a more skeptical view of many consumer class action lawsuits.2 They have narrowly interpreted the proplaintiff decisions and have shown a willingness to apply common sense in dismissing many of the more dubious class action lawsuits at the pleading stage. Over the past several years, the plaintiffs’ bar has challenged a wide swath of business practices, ranging from the sending of unauthorized text message advertisements to covert tracking of Internet web-surfing information, but most consumer class action lawsuits in California are still based on advertising. In a typical class action suit, plaintiffs’ lawyers allege that companies have deceived consumers through false and misleading advertisements or packaging on the product. For example, Ferrero, the company that makes Nutella spread, was hit with a class action lawsuit alleging that it had misleadingly marketed its chocolate spread as “healthful.” According to the complaint, Ferrero engaged in an ad campaign of “images and videos of wholesome families and happy, healthy children enjoying Nutella for breakfast before going to school.”3 Despite the relatively scant evidence of wrongdoing, the company recently entered into a $3 million settlement.4 Companies as diverse as Dell and Diamond Foods have recently settled multimillion dollar false advertising lawsuits filed in California.5 This recent wave of consumer class action lawsuits can be attributed to several interrelated factors. First, California’s consumer protection laws—the Unfair Competition Kenneth K. Lee is a partner at Jenner & Block’s Los Angeles office and has defended numerous consumer class action lawsuits in California and elsewhere. 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Visit www.NADN.org SmartPhone Link Ernest C. Brown (800) 832-6946 Law, the Consumer Legal Remedies Act, and the False Advertising Law—are generally considered to be more advantageous to plaintiffs than similar laws of many other states. For example, California, unlike many of the other states, does not have a scienter requirement for false advertising claims. Moreover, many California courts have construed these statutes broadly in favor of plaintiffs, even though the plain language of California’s statutes is not markedly different from the laws of other states. Some California courts, for instance, have held that there is no need particular, has been a boon to the plaintiffs’ bar because it contains language that can be construed as making it difficult for a defendant to prevail on a Rule 12(b) motion.8 Specifically, some have read the opinion as precluding a dismissal on the pleadings even if a product’s packaging accurately discloses all ingredients. The Ninth Circuit reversed the dismissal of a lawsuit challenging the packaging of Gerber’s Fruit Juice Snacks. Although the ingredient list accurately disclosed all the ingredients, the court held that the packaging was potentially deceptive because it depicted to show reliance or damages by unnamed members of the proposed class.6 More recently, the California Supreme Court eroded the statutory standing requirement for false advertising claims. In Kwikset Corporation v. Superior Court, the plaintiff bought a lockset that was labeled with the words “Made in the U.S.A” but a small fraction of the parts was made elsewhere. 7 Although there was no allegation that the lockset was defective, the plaintiff brought a putative class action lawsuit against the maker of the lockset. The maker argued that the plaintiff had suffered no real harm because the lockset performed as advertised and as one would reasonably expect from a lockset. Nonetheless, the California Supreme Court held that labeling does matter and that the plaintiff had suffered a sufficient injury to pursue the lawsuit. The Ninth Circuit has also played a role in making California a haven for plaintiffs’ lawyers. Its Williams v. Gerber decision, in a picture of a fruit that was not contained in the product. The Ninth Circuit thus held that there was a factual issue that would need to be decided at a later stage.9 Moreover, the Class Action Fairness Act (CAFA) may have had the unintended effect of encouraging a different form of forumshopping—not by state but by federal circuit. Concerned by plaintiffs’ lawyers who were forum-shopping for state courts that are notorious for certifying classes even in dubious cases, Congress passed CAFA in 2005, making it easier for defendants to remove cases to federal courts.10 Under CAFA, there is no longer a requirement for “complete diversity” (none of the plaintiffs can be from the same state as any of the defendants). Rather, “minimal diversity” (at least one plaintiff is from a state different from one defendant) is sufficient to confer federal jurisdiction as long as the proposed class has more than 100 members and the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million.11 36 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 The effect of the CAFA has served to neutralize many proplaintiff forums. For example, in Texas state court judges are often more likely to favor class action plaintiffs than federal judges, many of whom have a more probusiness bent. On the other hand, the plaintiff’s bar views California’s federal bench as more consumer-friendly, especially because California federal judges must decide cases under the penumbra of some of the Ninth Circuit’s more proplaintiff opinions. Indeed, one plaintiffs’ lawyer who is handling over 30 food labeling cases in the Northern District of California told a legal newspaper, “The law is more favorable here in than in any other jurisdictions that we’ve looked at.”12 Finally, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion has made false advertising claims more enticing to plaintiffs’ lawyers.13 In Concepcion, the plaintiffs brought a putative class action suit against AT&T, alleging that it had falsely advertised its phones as “free” when in fact it had charged a sales tax on the full price of the phones.14 Relying on an arbitration provision in the AT&T service agreement that barred class actions, AT&T moved to compel the case to arbitration. The district court and the Ninth Circuit held that the arbitration provision was unconscionable and thus unenforceable, but the U.S. Supreme Court reversed and upheld the validity of such arbitration provisions.15 The Concepcion decision significantly reduced the power of class action lawsuits because companies can now insert arbitration provisions that bar class actions into their contracts with consumers. For most consumer goods involving claims of false advertisements, however, no written contracts (and thus no arbitration provisions) are implicated. Accordingly, many plaintiffs’ lawyers have focused their attention on products that are sold without formal contracts. A High Burden for Dismissal If false advertising cases can survive a motion to dismiss, settlement leverage increases dramatically. Furthermore, if a class is certified, a substantial class settlement becomes more likely regardless of the merits of the case. While a class action can be a useful and necessary device to remedy certain wrongs, a large number of the recent false advertising suits arguably lack merit. They are essentially lawyer-manufactured lawsuits in which there has been no real harm to the consumers, and the supposedly misleading statement is in reality marketing fluff that no reasonable consumer would believe. The Nutella case is a prime example. Notwithstanding the television ads, it seems highly unlikely that most consumers believed that a hazelnut and chocolate spread is some- how healthful. Fortunately for plaintiffs’ lawyers, it is generally difficult to prevail on a motion to dismiss under California’s consumer protection laws. On the grounds that a factual issue may exist, too many judges have declined to dismiss even highly questionable class action lawsuits at the pleading stage. Further, it is comparatively cost-efficient for plaintiffs’ lawyers to pursue a false advertising case, at least compared with other class action cases. For example, false advertising lawsuits are not likely to involve expensive expert analysis as those in mass tort cases. Despite this tilted playing field, companies are not defenseless against these false advertising lawsuits. Defense counsel can and should vigorously contest these lawsuits at every stage, from motion to dismiss to class certification to summary judgment. But that does not mean that companies have to slog through years of attrition to defeat certification or prevail on summary judgment. Indeed, many judges, especially at the federal level, have become more receptive to dismissing class action lawsuits at the pleading stage, often through preemption.16 Certain industries are highly regulated by the U. S. government, and many federal statutes have broad preemption provisions that displace any state law claims. For example, the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act (NLEA) sets a uniform national standard for food labeling and prevents states from enacting any law that is “not identical” to the federal standard.17 Accordingly, many federal courts have dismissed state law claims that are inconsistent with federal law. A few years ago, many plaintiffs began filing lawsuits against food companies alleging that the statement “0g trans fat” is false and misleading because the food products purportedly had trace amounts of trans fat. FDA regulations, however, expressly permit food manufacturers to make the statement, even if there are trace amounts of trans fat.18 Common Sense Analysis When no preemption provision is available, many judges have relied on common sense to dismiss class action lawsuits based on questionable theories of liability. This increased assertiveness in disposing of class action lawsuits at the pleading stage is in keeping with the U.S. Supreme Court’s guidance in Iqbal and Twombly that federal judges must reject implausible theories.19 In Twombly, the Supreme Court—in a 7-2 decision written by Justice David Souter—affirmed the dismissal of an antitrust lawsuit because the plaintiffs had failed to allege sufficient facts that “nudged their claims across the line from conceivable to plausible.”20 The Supreme Court established this plausibility standard at the pleading stage because the court was mindful of the onerous discovery costs imposed on defendants if a baseless case is allowed to move forward.21 As the Court put it, “the threat of discovery expense will push cost-conscious defendants to settle even anemic cases.”22 The Court in Iqbal made clear that the plausibility standard applies beyond the antitrust context.23 The policy rationale underlying Iqbal and Twombly is doubly persuasive in the class action context. Unlike most civil litigation, discovery costs in class actions are borne almost exclusively by the defendant company. A named plaintiff likely will not have substantial information or documents to produce. In contrast, that named plaintiff can demand defendant companies to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to scour for internal documents. These discovery demands on defendants can be particularly onerous in today’s world of e-mail and other electronic materials. Further, the decision not to dismiss a class action case tilts the scale toward the plaintiffs greatly, given that class action cases rarely go to trial due to the enormous potential liability. The Ninth Circuit recently demonstrated the increased skepticism that federal judges are applying to class action cases. In Stuart v. Cadbury Adams, the plaintiff alleged that the statement that Trident White gum “removes stains” was misleading because the company had failed to mention that a consumer must also practice oral hygiene to maintain clean teeth.24 The district court dismissed the case, ruling that the allegations “defied common sense.” The Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal, reasoning that “[o]nly an unreasonable consumer would be confused or deceived by Cadbury’s failure to clarify that Trident White gum works only if consumers continue to brush and floss regularly.”25 The Ninth Circuit again emphasized last year that courts need not indulge fanciful class action theories. The plaintiff in Carrea v. Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream, Inc., argued that Dreyer had marketed its “original vanilla” ice cream as more nutritious than other brands.26 The Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal, holding that “it strains credulity to claim that a reasonable consumer would be misled to think that” an ice cream with “chocolate coating topped with nuts” is healthier than competing brands.27 As the California Court of Appeal has explained, a claim of false advertising can be sustained only if “it is probable that a significant portion of the general consuming public or of targeted consumers, acting reasonably in the circumstances, could be misled.”28 The court must view the challenged advertisement or packaging from the perspective of a “reasonable consumer,” not “the unwary consumer” or “a least sophisticated consumer.”29 These Ninth Circuit decisions are particularly notable because they were decided after Williams v. Gerber. The Ninth Circuit in Williams refused to dismiss the case at the pleading stage, even though the product’s ingredient list had accurately disclosed all of the ingredients, but many federal courts in California have recognized that the holding in Williams is actually much narrower. The Ninth Circuit said that the case could not be dismissed at the pleading stage because there were alleged affirmative misrepresentations in the front of the packaging. Thus, Williams reaffirms the unremarkable proposition that a defendant cannot make a false statement in the front of the packaging and “then rely on the ingredient list to correct those misinterpretations [to] provide a shield for liability for the deception.”30 Many federal district court judges have taken note that they need not let a questionable case proceed merely because a plaintiff’s lawyer invokes the mantra that there supposedly is a factual dispute or that dismissals should supposedly be rare under California’s consumer protections laws. The recent case of Williamson v. Apple, Inc., is instructive.31 The plaintiff alleged that the iPhone’s glass casing cracked when dropped, despite Apple’s statements that it used “the same type of glass used in the windshields of helicopters and high-speed trains” and that it was “20 times stiffer and 30 times harder than plastic.”32 The plaintiff’s counsel insisted that the court should not decide this issue at the pleading stage and should let it proceed further. The court dismissed this case, noting that “it is a well-known fact of life that glass can break under impact, even glass that has been reinforced. This much is known to the ordinary, reasonable consumer.…It seems a suspension of logic to say that [Apple’s] marketing campaign…somehow erases these images from the collective experience such that the reasonable consumer could expect that glass could not break if dropped.”33 Other courts have similarly applied common sense in dismissing false advertising cases.34 Another federal court in California recently went further in indicating that industry norms and practices should be taken into account even at the pleading stage. The putative class action complaint alleged that the product Sugar in the Raw misled consumers into believing that the product contained unprocessed and unrefined sugar.35 In dismissing the complaint, the court held that “a significant portion of the general consuming public, acting reasonably, would [not] be led to believe that they are purchasing unprocessed or unrefined sugar” because the product is made of turbinado sugar, which is Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 37 “widely marketed” as “raw cane sugar,” not unprocessed and unrefined sugar.36 As one court put it in dismissing a class action complaint, allowing a questionable case to survive a Rule 12(b) motion “would require this Court to ignore all concepts of personal responsibility and common sense.”37 That court had it exactly right. Federal judges should and must serve as guardians against junk class action lawsuits. ■ 1 See http://www.judicialhellholes.org/2012-13 /california. 2 See, e.g., Henderson v. Gruma Corp., No. 10-4173, 2011 WL 1362188, at *1, *12 (C.D. Ca. April. 11, 2011) (dismissing a claim that challenged the statement 38 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 “With Garden Vegetables” on a packaged dip as misleading because dip does in fact contain dried vegetables and “does not claim a specific amount of vegetables in the product”); Red v. Kraft, No. 10-1028, 2012 WL 5504011, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 25, 2012) (ruling that it “strains credulity to imagine that a reasonable consumer will be deceived into thinking a box of crackers” has “huge amounts of vegetables simply because there are pictures of vegetables and the true phrase ‘Made with Real Vegetables’ on the box”). 3 In re Ferrero Litig., No. 3:11-CV-00205 at 27 (S.D. Cal. 2010). 4 See In re Ferrero Litig., No. 3:11-CV-00205; In re Nutella Marketing and Sales Practices Litig., No. 3:11cv-01086 (D. N.J. 2010). 5 Zeisel v. Diamond Foods, Inc., 3:10-cv-1192-JSW (N.D. Cal. 2010); Brazil v. Dell Inc., 5:07-cv-01700RMW (N.D. Cal. 2007). 6 See, e.g., Steroid Hormone Prod. Cases, 181 Cal. App. 4th 145 (2010). But see, e.g., Cohen v. DIRECTV, Inc., 178 Cal. App. 4th 966 (2009); In re Vioxx Class Cases, 180 Cal. App. 4th 116 (2009). 7 Kwikset v. Superior Ct., 51 Cal. 4th 310 (2011). 8 Williams v. Gerber Prods. Co., 552 F. 3d 934 (9th Cir. 2008). 9 Id. at 940. 10 28 U.S.C. §1332(d). 11 Id. 12 Vanessa Blum, Welcome to Food Court, THE RECORDER, Mar. 1, 2013. 13 AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, 131 S. Ct. 1740 (2011). 14 Id. at 1744. 15 Id. at 1749-54. 16 See, e.g., Young v. Johnson & Johnson, 2013 WL 191177 (3rd Cir. 2013) (“zero cholesterol” claims preempted by federal law); Yumul v. Smart Balance, 752 F. Supp. 2d 1117 (C.D. Cal. 2010) (same); Chacanaca v. Quaker Oats, 752 F. Supp. 2d 1111 (N.D. Cal. 2010) (“0g trans fat” claims preempted under federal law). 17 21 U.S.C. §343-1(a) (“no State or political subdivision of a State may directly or indirectly establish…any requirement for…labeling of food…that is not identical to the requirement[s]” set forth in the NLEA). 18 Chacanaca, 752 F. Supp. 2d at 1111. 19 See Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937 (2009); Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 127 S. Ct. 1955 (2007). 20 Id. at 1974. 21 Id. at 1967. 22 Id. (noting that “the success of judicial supervision in checking discovery abuse has been on the modest side”). 23 Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. at 1953 (noting that “Twombly expounded the pleading standard for ‘all civil actions’”). 24 Stuart v. Cadbury Adams, 458 F. App’x. 689, 69091 (9th Cir. 2011). 25 Id. at 691. 26 Carrea v. Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream, Inc., 475 F. App’x. 113, at *1 (9th Cir. 2012). 27 Id. 28 Lavie v. Procter & Gamble Co., 105 Cal. App’x. 4th 496, 508 (2003). 29 Hill v. Roll Int’l Corp., 195 Cal. App’x. 4th 1295, 1304 (2011). 30 Williams v. Gerber Prods. Co., 552 F. 3d 934, 939 (9th Cir. 2008). See also, e.g., Yumul v. Smart Balance, Inc., 733 F. Supp. 2d 1117, 1129 (C.D. Cal. 2010). 31 Williamson v. Apple, Inc., No. 11-377, 2012 WL 3835104 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 4, 2012). 32 Id. at *6. 33 Id. 34 See, e.g., McKinniss v. Sunny Delight, No. 07-02034, 2007 WL 4766525, at *4-5 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 4, 2007) (“depictions of various fruits on Defendant’s product labels are simply not deceptive as a matter of law” because a reasonable consumer understands that SunnyD is merely a fruit-flavored drink and that a reasonable “consumer can readily and accurately determine the composition and nutritional value of a product”); Sugawara v. Pepsico, Inc., No. 08-1335, 2009 WL 1439115, at *2-4 (E.D. Cal. May 21, 2009) (dismissing UCL, FAL, and CLRA claims challenging representations and images on Cap’n Crunch packaging as unlikely to deceive a reasonable consumer); Ross v. Sioux Honey Ass’n, Coop., No. 1645, 2013 WL 146367, at *11 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 14, 2013) (dismissing challenge to honey products for lack of pollen because a reasonable consumer would not necessarily expect pollen as an ingredient). 35 See Rooney v. Cumberland Packing Corp., No. 1233, 2012 WL 1512106, at *1 (S.D. Cal. Apr. 16, 2012). 36 Id. 37 Videtto v. Kellogg USA, No. 08-1324, 2009 WL 1439086, at *4 (E.D. Cal. May 21, 2009). The LOS ANGELES LAWYER Semiannual Guide to Expert Witnesses ACCIDENT ANALYSIS/ RECONSTRUCTION 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, : www .4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. 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Our areas of expertise include business interruption, loss of earnings analysis, breach of con- Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 39 tract, partnership dissolution, profits distribution, tax consequences of settlements, reconstruction of accounting records, embezzlement and fraud, contract costs, lost profits, construction claims, damage computations, and malpractice cases. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. Our practice focuses on closely held entrepreneurial firms in the following industries: construction, real estate development, equipment leasing, auto parts (wholesale and retail), manufacturing, and professional services. Honored by Construction Link as the “Best Accounting Firm for the construction industry.” Glenn M. Gelman has been appointed and served as Special Master in litigation support matters and has testified over 30 times. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. See display ad on page 44. GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected], kdolabson@gursey .com or [email protected]. Web site: www.gursey .com. Contact Naz Afshar, Keith Dolabson, or Gary Krausz. Forensic accounting and litigation support services in the areas of marital dissolution, civil litigation, business valuation and appraisal, goodwill, business disputes, malpractice, tax matters, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit assessments, insurance claims, court accounting, tracing, and entertainment industry litigation. See display ad on page 47. HARGRAVE & HARGRAVE, AN ACCOUNTANCY CORPORATION 12121 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 576-1090, fax (310) 576-1080, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.hargraveandhargrave.com. Contact Terry M. Hargrave, CPA/ABV/CFF, CFE. Forensic accounting and business valuation services for family law and civil cases. Past chair of California Society of CPAs’ Family Law Section and business valuation instructor for California CPA Education Foundation. Services include business valuations, income available for support, tracing separate property, litigation consulting, real estate litigation, mediation, fraud investigations, damage calculation, and other forensic accounting work. KRYCLER, ERVIN, TAUBMAN, AND WALHEIM 15303 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 1040, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 995-1040, fax (818) 9954124. Web site: [email protected]. Contact Michael J. Krycler. Litigation support, including forensic accounting, business appraisals, family law accounting, business and professional valuations, damages, fraud investigations, and lost earnings. Krycler, Ervin, Taubman and Walheim is a full-service accounting firm serving the legal community for more than 20 years. See display ad on page 39. DIANA G. LESGART, CPA, CFE, CVA, CFF, AN ACCOUNTANCY CORP. 22024 Lassen Street, Suite 106, Chatsworth, CA 91311, (818) 886-7140, fax (818) 886-7146, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Diana G. Lesgart, CPA, CFE, CVA, CFF. Specialized accounting and litigation support services in the areas of family law litigation, including tracing of separate and community property assets, pension plan tracing, forensic accounting, business valuations, goodwill calculation, expert testimony, cash available for support, Moore-Marsden calculations, fraud investigations, real estate analysis, community property balance sheet. Over 25 years of accounting experience with 20 years’ litigation support specialization. Appointed as Section 730 accounting expert. Ms. Lesgart’s profile can be found at http://www.jurispro.com /DianaLesgartCPA. Expert is English/Spanish bilingual. See display ad on page 48. MICHAEL D. ROSEN, CPA, PHD, ABV 3780 Kilroy Airport Way, Suite 200, Long Beach, CA 90806, (562) 256-7052, fax (562) 256-7001, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mrosencpa.com. Contact Michael D. Rosen. We are litigation consultants, forensic accountants, expert witnesses. Our mission is to tell the financial story that underlies every business litigation matter and to convey that story in a clear and concise man40 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 ner to the trier of fact. Our findings allow a realistic assessment of the case and support settlement efforts. Our work is designed to render conclusive opinions and to withstand cross-examination. We specialize in business damages (lost profits and loss in value), personal damages (lost earnings), and business valuation. SCHULZE HAYNES LOEVENGUTH & CO. 660 South Figueroa Street, Suite 1280, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 627-8280, fax (213) 627-8301, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.schulzehaynes.com. Contact Karl J. Schulze, president. Specialties: forensic business analysis and accounting, lost profits, economic damages, expert testimony, discovery assistance, business valuations, corporate recovery, financial analysis, and modeling. Member of major professional organizations, experience across a broad spectrum of industries and business issues. Degrees/licenses: CPA, CVA, CFE, ABV, PhD-Economics. See display ad on page 49. ZIVETZ, SCHWARTZ & SALTSMAN, CPAS 11900 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046, (310) 826-1040, fax (310) 826-1065. Web site: www.zsscpa.com. Contact Lester J. Schwartz, CPA/CFF, DABFE, DABFA, Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA, David L. Bass, CPA, David Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA, Sandy Green, CPA, Daljeet Kaur, CPA. Accounting experts in forensic accounting, tax issues, business valuations, and appraisals, marital dissolutions, eminent domain, insurance losses, business interruption, goodwill, economic analysis, investigative auditing, loss of earning, commercial damages, and lost profits. Expert witness testimony preparation, settlement negotiations, and consultations. See display ad on page 49. ADA/DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION HAIGHT CONSULTING 10635 Santa Monica Boulevard Suite 190, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 441-3600, fax (310) 4413610, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.shapiromedia.com, www.jshapirocpa.com. Jay Shapiro has specialized in accounting, income tax preparation, and all special financial matters impacting the entertainment and media industry for the past 30 years and has clientele ranging from private individuals to partnerships and corporate entities across all sectors on a worldwide basis. Jay will provide you with a realistic financial assessment, expert, objective analysis, and clear and concise testimony that stand up upon cross-examination. Jay has testified over 20 times in federal and state court. Jay’s financial expertise includes: tax issues, entertainment net profits, business litigation, business valuation and appraisal, forensic investigation, idea submissions, economic damages, contractual disputes, marital dissolutions, participations and royalties, and lost earning capacity. 1726 Palisades Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 454-2988, fax (310) 454-4516. Contact Marcia Haight, SPHR—CA. Human resources expert knowledgeable in both federal and California law. Twenty-five years’ corporate human resources management experience plus over 20 years as a Human Resources Compliance Consultant in California. Specializations include sexual harassment, ADA/disability discrimination, other Title VII and FEHA discrimination and harassment, retaliation, FMLA/CFRA, safety, and wrongful termination. Courtroom testimony and deposition experience. Retained 60 percent by defense, 40 percent by plaintiff. Audit employer’s actions in preventing and resolving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation issues. Assess human resources policies and practices for soundness, for comparison to prevailing practices, and for compliance. Evaluate employer responsiveness to complaints and effectiveness of employer investigations. Assist counsel via preliminary case analysis, discovery strategy, examination of documents, and expert testimony. THOMAS NECHES & COMPANY LLP HRM CONSULTING, INC. JAY SHAPIRO, CPA 633 West 5th Street, Suite 2800, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2039, (213) 624-8150, fax (213) 223-2304, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .thomasneches.com. Contact Thomas M. Neches, CPA, ABV, CVA, CFE, CFF. Accounting, financial, business valuation, and statistical analyses to assist attorneys in litigation. Expert testimony in state and federal courts. Cases: antitrust, breach of contract, fraud, intellectual property, lost business value, lost profits, wrongful death, and wrongful termination. Industries: banking, construction, entertainment, insurance, manufacturing, retail, securities, and wholesale. Credentials: certified public accountant/ accredited in business valuation, certified valuation analyst, certified fraud examiner and certified in financial forensics. Education: BA (Mathematics) UC San Diego, MS (Operations Research) UCLA. Teaching: adjunct professor, Loyola Law School. See display ad on page 57. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. 1700 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95112, (209) 728-8905, fax (209) 728-8970, e-mail: bdelima @hrmconsulting.com. Web site: www.hrmconsulting.com. Contact Beth B. De Lima, SPHR-CA. Expert witness Beth De Lima, has testified for both plaintiff and defense in the following areas: human resources standards of care, employment ADA accommodation, FEHA, FMLA, CFRA, ADA & EEOC violations. Wrongful termination, performance management, discrimination, sexual harassment, exempt analysis, labor market assessment, and vocational evaluations. She holds national and California specific certification—Senior Professional in Human Resource (SPHR-CA), certified mediator, and consulting since 1992. APPRAISAL & VALUATION FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .gursey.com. Contact Stephan Wasserman. Gursey|Schneider is an accounting firm specializing in forensic accounting, litigation support services, business valuation, and appraisal services for a variety of purposes, including marital dissolution, gift and estate planning, eminent domain, goodwill loss, business disputes, malpractice, tax matters, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit assessments, insurance claims, and entertainment industry litigation. Gursey|Schneider has over 30 years of experience as expert witnesses in litigation support. See display ad on page 47. A & E FORENSICS Steven B. Norris, AIA, PE, GE, CEG, GBC, CASp 2121 Mon el Road San Marcos, CA 92069 (877) 839-7302 HARGRAVE & HARGRAVE, AN ACCOUNTANCY CORPORATION 12121 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 576-1090, fax (310) 576-1080, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.hargraveandhargrave.com. Contact Terry M. Hargrave, CPA/ABV/CFF, CFE. Forensic accounting and business valuation services for family law and civil cases. Past chair of California Society of CPAs’ Family Law Section and business valuation instructor for California CPA Education Foundation. Services include business valuations, income available for support, tracing separate property, litigation consulting, real estate litigation, mediation, fraud investigations, damage calculation, and other forensic accounting work. ■ ■ ARCHITECTURE GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING ■ CONSTRUCTION CIVIL ENGINEERING ■ ■ ADA STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING ■ www.aeforensics.com HIGGINS, MARCUS & LOVETT, INC. 800 South Figueroa Street, Suite 710, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 617-7775, fax (213) 617-8372, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Mark C. Higgins, ASA. The firm has over 30 years of litigation support and expert testimony experience in matters involving business valuation, economic damages, intellectual property, loss of business goodwill, and lost profits. Areas of practice include business disputes, eminent domain, bankruptcy, and corporate and marital dissolution. See display ad on this page. KRYCLER, ERVIN, TAUBMAN, AND WALHEIM 15303 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 1040, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 995-1040, fax (818) 9954124. Web site: [email protected]. Contact Michael J. Krycler. Litigation support, including forensic accounting, business appraisals, family law accounting, business and professional valuations, damages, fraud investigations, and lost earnings. Krycler, Ervin, Taubman and Walheim is a full-service accounting firm serving the legal community for more than 20 years. See display ad on page 39. WARONZOF ASSOCIATES, INC. 999 North Sepulveda Boulevard, Suite 440, El Segundo, CA 90245, (310) 322-7744, fax (310) 322-7755. Web site: www.waronzof.com. Contact Timothy R. Lowe, MAI, CRE. Waronzof provides real estate and land use litigation support services including economic damages, lost profits, financial feasibility, lease dispute, property value, enterprise value, partnership interest and closely-held share value, fair compensation, lender liability, and reorganization plan feasibility. Professional staff of five with advanced degrees and training in real estate, finance, urban planning, and accounting. See display ad on page 59. ARCHITECTURE A & E FORENSICS 2121 Montiel Road, San Marcos, CA 92069, (877) 839-7302, fax (760) 480-7477, e-mail: steve @aeforensics.com. Web site: www.aeforensics .com. Steve Norris, AIA, PE, GE, HG, CEG, CASp, LEED. Architect, engineer, contractor— standard of care expert. Retained over 200 times, deposed over 100 times, and testified in trial over 20 times. Waterproofing, water intrusion, building envelope, zoning setbacks, concrete performance, path of travel, structural analysis, earthquake-fire damage, and plan analysis. Landslides, retaining wall failure, settlement, flooding, grading, septic, expansive soils, mud flows, pavement distress, ground water evaluation, and slope analysis. Cost estimates, construction management, delay analysis, and contracts. Serving all California, Hawaii, and Oklahoma. See display ad on page 41. ConfidenceAtThe Courthouse. Business litigation is increasingly complex. That is why we believe valuation issues must be addressed with the same meticulous care as legal issues. Analysis must be clear. Opinions must be defensible. Expert testimony must be thorough and articulate. HML has extensive trial experience and can provide legal counsel with a powerful resource for expert testimony and litigation support. For More Information Call 213-617-7775 Or visit us on the web at www.hmlinc.com BUSINESS VALUATION • LOSS OF GOODWILL • ECONOMIC DAMAGES • LOST PROFITS Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 41 44 Argos, Laguna Niguel, CA 92677, (949) 3638205, fax (949) 429-5972, e-mail: johndpratt @cox.net. Web site: www.argos-engineering.com. Contact John D. Pratt, PhD, PE. Litigation consulting, inspections, expert reports, patent infringement and validity analysis, deposition, and trial testimony. quacy of warnings, computer animation and simulations, construction defect, criminal defense, criminal prosecution, premises, productintegrity, product liability, product testing, warnings, and lost income calculations. Auto, bicycle, bus, chair, elevator, escalator, forklift, gate, ladder, machinery, motorcycle, press, recreational equipment, rollercoaster, slip/trip and fall, stairs, swimming pool, and truck. Litigation and claims; defense/plaintiff; educational seminars; and mediation and arbitration services. BANKING BUSINESS ADVISORS/EXPERTS@ MCSASSOCIATES FORENSISGROUP EXPERT WITNESS SERVICES SINCE 1991 AVIATION ARGOS ENGINEERING 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. BANKRUPTCY FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. BANKRUPTCY/TAX ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. BIOMECHANICS/RECONSTRUCTION/HUMAN FACTORS INSTITUTE OF RISK & SAFETY ANALYSES KENNETH A. SOLOMON, PHD, PE, POST PHD, CHIEF SCIENTIST 5324 Canoga Avenue, Woodland Hills, CA 91364, (818) 348-1133, fax (818) 348-4484, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .irsa.us. Specialized staff, broad range of consulting and expert testimony, 42 years of courtroom experience. Accident reconstruction, biomechanics, human factors, safety, accident prevention, ade- 42 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 301 North Lake Avenue, Suite 420, Pasadena, CA 91101, (800) 555-5422, (626) 795-5000, fax: (626) 795-1950, email: [email protected]. Web site: www.forensisgroup.com. Contact Mercy Steenwyk. 10,000 cases ForensisGroup has provided experts. 8,000 clients have retained experts from us. We respond in one hour or less. ForensisGroup is an expert witness services and consulting company, providing experts, expert witnesses, and consultants to law firms, insurance companies, and other public and private firms in thousands of disciplines: construction, engineering, business, accounting, intellectual property, computers, IT, medical, real estate, insurance, product liability, premises liability, safety, and others, including experts in complex and hard-to-find disciplines. Let us give you the technical advantage and competitive edge in your cases. Referrals, customized searches, and initial phone consultations are free. See display ad on page 41. ROBERT C. ROSEN Citigroup Center, 444 South Flower Street, 30th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 362-1000, fax (213) 362-1001, e-mail: robertrosen@rosen-law .com. Web site: www.rosen-law.com. Specializing in securities law, federal securities law enforcement, securities arbitration, and international securities, insider trading, NYSE, AMEX, FINRA, DOC disciplinary proceedings, broker-dealer, investment company and investment adviser matters, liability under federal and state securities laws, public and private offerings, Internet securities, and law firm liability. AV rated. Former chair, LACBA Business and Corporations Law Section. LLM, Harvard Law School. Forty years practicing securities law, 12 years with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, DC. Published author/editor of securities regulations, including multivolume treatises. See display ad on page 53. BUSINESS APPRAISAL/VALUATION ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. BRIAN LEWIS & COMPANY 10900 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 610, Los Angeles, CA 90024, (310) 475-5676, fax (310) 475-5268, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Brian Lewis, CPA, CVA. Forensic accounting, business valuations, cash spendable reports, estate, trust, and income tax services. CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www.CBIZ .com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC special- izes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. CMM, LLP 5700 Canoga Avenue, Suite 300, Woodland Hills, CA 91367, (818) 986-5070, fax (818) 986-5034, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .cmmcpas.com. Contact Scott Mowrey. Specialties: consultants who provide extensive experience, litigation support, and expert testimony regarding forensic accountants, fraud investigations, economic damages, business valuations, family law, bankruptcy, and reorganization. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFEs, MBAs. See display ad on page 45. CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan. For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .gursey.com. Contact Stephan Wasserman. Gursey|Schneider is an accounting firm specializing in forensic accounting, litigation support services, business valuation, and appraisal services for a variety of purposes, including marital dissolution, gift and estate planning, eminent domain, goodwill loss, business disputes, malpractice, tax matters, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit assessments, insurance claims, and entertainment industry litigation. Gursey|Schneider has over 30 years of experience as expert witnesses in litigation support. See display ad on page 47. HAYNIE & COMPANY, CPAS 4910 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, CA 926602119, (949) 724-1880, fax (949) 724-1889, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .hayniecpa.com. Contact Steven C. Gabrielson. Consulting and expert witness testimony in a variety of practice areas: commercial damages, ownership disputes, economic analysis, business valuation, lost profits analysis, fraud/forensic investigations, taxation, personal injury, wrongful termination, professional liability, and expert cross examination. Extensive public speaking background assists in courtroom presentations. HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD. - Internal Medicine - Geriatrics - Personal Injury - Adult Hospital Medicine - Long Term Care - Medical Malpractice - Elder Abuse - Medicare Fraud for DOJ, FBI, OIG - Toxicology/DUI as MRO - Addiction Medicine - Capacity & Estate Dispute - Legal Insanity - Hospice, End-of-Life Care - Wound Care Testified in over 200 cases and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. BOARD CERTIFICATIONS: Internal Medicine (ABIM), Geriatrics (ABIM) Hospice and Palliative Medicine (ABHPM) Addiction Medicine (ABAM), Licensed as a Medical Review Officer (MROCC), Certified Forensic Physician (CFP) CLINICAL FACULTY AT STANFORD, YALE, USC AND UCSF MEDICAL SCHOOLS HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD. JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 415.460.5532 TEL | 415.459.2774 FAX 1700 CALIFORNIA STREET, SUITE 470, SAN FRANCISCO CA 94109 http://hamptonhealthltd.com GLENN M. GELMAN & ASSOCIATES CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND BUSINESS ADVISORS HIGGINS, MARCUS & LOVETT, INC. 800 South Figueroa Street, Suite 710, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 617-7775, fax (213) 617-8372, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Mark C. Higgins, ASA. The firm has over 30 years of litigation support and expert testimony experience in matters involving business valuation, economic damages, intellectual property, loss of business goodwill, and lost profits. Areas of practice include business disputes, eminent domain, bankruptcy, and corporate and marital dissolution. See display ad on page 41. RGL FORENSICS Los Angeles Office: 800 South Figueroa Street, Suite 980, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 996-0900. Contact Alan Lurie, [email protected]. Orange County Office: 625 City Drive South, Suite 290, Orange, CA 92868, (714) 740-2100. Contact Hank Kahrs, [email protected]. RGL Forensics is an international firm of forensic financial experts exclusively dedicated to damage analysis, fraud investigation, and valuation. Serving the legal, insurance, and business communities for more than 30 years, the firm is unique in its ability to combine investigative accounting, business valuation, fraud, and forensic technology expertise. For attorneys, we discover and define financial value in transactions and civil and criminal disputes, and when necessary provide expert witness testimony in court and arbitration proceedings. For more information about RGL and its 23 offices worldwide, please visit www.rgl.com. SCHULZE HAYNES LOEVENGUTH & CO. 660 South Figueroa Street, Suite 1280, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 627-8280, fax (213) 627-8301, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.schulzehaynes.com. Contact Karl J. Schulze, president. Specialties: forensic business analysis and accounting, lost profits, economic damages, expert testimony, discovery assistance, business valuations, corporate recovery, financial analysis, and modeling. Member of major professional organizations, experience across a broad spectrum of industries and business issues. Degrees/licenses: CPA, CVA, CFE, ABV, PhD-Economics. See display ad on page 49. THOMAS NECHES & COMPANY LLP 633 West 5th Street, Suite 2800, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2039, (213) 624-8150, fax (213) 223-2304, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .thomasneches.com. Contact Thomas M. Neches, CPA, ABV, CVA, CFE, CFF. Accounting, financial, business valuation, and statistical analyses to assist attorneys in litigation. Expert testimony in state and federal courts. Cases: antitrust, breach of contract, fraud, intellectual property, lost business value, lost profits, wrongful death, and wrongful termination. Industries: banking, construction, entertainment, insurance, manufacturing, retail, securities, and wholesale. Credentials: certified public accountant/ accredited in business valuation, certified valuation analyst, certified fraud examiner and certified in financial forensics. Education: BA (Mathematics) UC San Diego, MS (Operations Research) UCLA. Teaching: adjunct professor, Loyola Law School. See display ad on page 57. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT We provide you with the professional results you need to support your case 44 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. ZIVETZ, SCHWARTZ & SALTSMAN, CPAS 11900 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046, (310) 826-1040, fax (310) 826-1065. Web site: www.zsscpa.com. Contact Lester J. Schwartz, CPA/CFF, DABFE, DABFA, Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA, David L. Bass, CPA, David Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA, Sandy Green, CPA, Daljeet Kaur, CPA. Accounting experts in forensic accounting, tax issues, business valuations, and appraisals, marital dissolutions, eminent domain, insurance losses, business interruption, goodwill, economic analysis, investigative auditing, loss of earning, commercial damages, and lost profits. Expert witness testimony preparation, settlement negotiations, and consultations. See display ad on page 49. CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL ACCIDENT RECONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC. 9121 East Tanque Verde Road, Suite 105, Tucson, AZ 85749, (800) 645-3369, e-mail: service @chemaxx.com. Web site: www.chemaxx.com. Contact Dr. Michael Fox. Comprehensive chemical accident investigation—specializing in complex industrial chemical accidents and chemical related consumer product injuries, chemical fires and explosions, chemical labeling, chemical packaging, handling and shipping, burns, warnings, labels, MSDSs, disposal, safety, EPA, OSHA, DOT, propane, natural gas, hydrogen, flammable liquids, hazardous chemicals, aerosols (hairspray, spray paint, refrigerants). DOT certified (hazardous materials shipment). Certified fire and explosion investigator, OSHA process hazard analysis team leader. PhD physical chemistry. Extensive experience in metallurgy, corrosion, and failure analysis. CIVIL LITIGATION GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.gursey .com. Contact Gary Krausz. Gursey|Schneider specializes in forensic accounting and litigation support services in the areas of civil litigation, business disputes, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit insurance claims, court accountings, fraud investigations, accounting malpractice, intellectual property, construction, government accounting, and entertainment litigation. Gursey|Schneider has over 30 years of experience as expert witnesses in accounting-related matters. See display ad on page 47. COMPOSITE & FIBERGLASS MATERIALS KARS’ ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. Testing and Research Labs, 2528 West Woodland Drive, Anaheim, CA 92801-2636, (714) 527-7100, fax (714) 527-7169, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.karslab.com. Contact Dr. Ramesh Kar, Dr. Naresh Kar, Dr. Nikhil Kar. Southern California’s premier materials/mechanical/metallurgical/structural/forensics laboratory. Registered professional engineers with 30-plus years in metallurgical/forensic/structural failure analysis. Experienced with automotive, bicycles, tires, fire, paint, plumbing, corrosion, and structural failures. We work on both plaintiff and defendant cases. Complete in-house capabilities for tests. Extensive deposition and courtroom experience (civil and criminal investigations). Principals are Fellows of American Society for Metals and Fellows, American College of Forensic Examiners. See display ad on page 61. COMPUTER FORENSICS DATACHASERS, INC. P.O. Box 2861, Riverside, CA 92516-2861, (877) DataExam, (877) 328-2392, (951) 780-7892, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .DataChasers.com. E-Discovery: Full e-discovery services…you give us the mountain, we give you the mole hill: Tiff production, de-duplication, redaction, Bates-stamped data, and electronically stored information (ESI) production. Computer forensic: full forensic computer lab. Recovering deleted text files (documents), graphics (pictures), date codes on all files, e-mail, and tracing Internet activity. Intellectual property cases, family law, employment law, probate resolution, asset verification, criminal law (prosecution or defense), etc. Litigation support, trial preparation, experienced expert witnesses, and professional courtroom displays. See display ad on page 44. CARPE DATUM TM …… SEIZE THE DATA COMPUTER FORENSICS • Recover Critical Data • E-Mail Recovery • Dates on All Files • Cell Phone Forensics FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. SETEC INVESTIGATIONS 8391 Beverly Boulevard, Suite 167, Los Angeles, CA 90036, (800) 748-5440, fax (323) 939-5481, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.setecinvestigations.com. Contact Todd Stefan. Setec Investigations offers unparalleled expertise in computer forensics and enterprise investigations providing personalized, case-specific forensic analysis and litigation support services for law firms and corporations. Setec Investigations possesses the necessary combination of technical expertise, understanding of the legal system, and specialized tools and processes enabling the discovery, collection, investigation, and production of electronic information for investigating and handling computer-related crimes or misuse. Our expertise includes computer forensics, electronic discovery, litigation support, and expert witness testimony. E-DISCOVERY • De-Duplication • Redaction • Bates Stamped Data • Electronic (ESI) Production 951.780.7892 | DataChasers.com EXPERT WITNESS — Claims Consultant EXPERIENCE q q INTEGRITY HONESTY OVER 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE as a claims adjuster, licensed in three states and qualified in state and federal courts. Expert in good faith/bad faith, standards and practices and standard in the industry. Specialties in property/casualty construction defect, fire/water, uninsured/underinsured motorist, warehouse and cargo claims. Failure to defend and/or indemnify. Litigation support, case review and evaluation claim consultation, coverage review and valuations. Appraisal, Arbitration and Claims Rep. at MSC & MMC. Contact Gene Evans at E. L. Evans Associates Phone (310) 559-4005 / Fax (310) 559-4236 / E-mail [email protected] 3 3 1 0 A I R P O R T AVENUE, S U I T E 7 , S A N T A M O N I C A , C A L I F O R N I A 9 0 4 0 5 COMPUTERS/INFORMATION SCIENCES COSGROVE COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC. 7411 Earldom Avenue, Playa del Rey, CA 90293, (310) 823-9448, fax (310) 821-4021, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .cosgrovecomputer.com. Contact John Cosgrove. John Cosgrove, PE, has over 50 years of experience in computer systems and has been a self-employed, consulting software engineer since 1970. He was a part-time lecturer in the UCLA School of Engineering and LMU graduate schools. He provided an invited article, “Software Engineering and Litigation,” for the Encyclopedia of Software Engineering. He is a Certified Forensic Consultant (CFC), holds the CDP, is a member of ACM, ACFEI, FEWA, a life senior member of IEEE Computer Society, NSPE, a Fellow of the National Academy of Forensic Engineers (an affiliate of NSPE), and a professional engineer in California. Formal education includes a BSEE from Loyola University (now LMU) and a master of engineering from UCLA. CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION DISPUTE RESOLUTION CONSULTANTS 312 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 300-2244, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.constructionDRC.com. Contact Hanns U. Baumann, SE. Expert construction forensic consultation by licensed civil, structural, geotechnical/soil, engineering and licensed general contractor with many years of professional experience in California. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 45 FORENSISGROUP EXPERT WITNESS SERVICES SINCE 1991 301 North Lake Avenue, Suite 420, Pasadena, CA 91101, (800) 555-5422, (626) 795-5000, fax: (626) 795-1950, email: [email protected]. Web site: www.forensisgroup.com. Contact Mercy Steenwyk. 10,000 cases ForensisGroup has provided experts. 8,000 clients have retained experts from us. We respond in one hour or less. ForensisGroup is an expert witness services and consulting company, providing experts, expert witnesses, and consultants to law firms, insurance companies, and other public and private firms in thousands of disciplines: construction, engineering, business, accounting, intellectual property, computers, IT, medical, real estate, insurance, product liability, premises liability, safety, and others, including experts in complex and hard-to-find disciplines. Let us give you the technical advantage and competitive edge in your cases. Referrals, customized searches, and initial phone consultations are free. See display ad on page 41. GLENN M. GELMAN & ASSOCIATES CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND BUSINESS ADVISERS 1940 East 17th Street, Santa Ana, CA 92705, (714) 667-2600, fax (714) 667-2636, e-mail: rsquar @gmgcpa.com. Web site: www.gmgcpa.com. Contact Richard M. Squar. Exclusive LA and Orange County representative for CICPAC (Construction Industry CPA/Consultants Association). This is a nationwide network of CPA firms specifically selected for their experience in and commitment to serving the construction industry. We are one of only six firms in all of California that are members of this prestigious organization. We provide these litigation support services: expert witness testimony, strategy development, document discovery, deposition assistance, computation of damages, arbitration consulting, forensic accounting, investigative auditing, rebuttal testimony, fiduciary accountings, and trial exhibit preparation. Our areas of expertise include: business interruption, loss of earnings analysis, breach of contract, partnership dissolution, profits distribution, tax consequences of settlements, reconstruction of accounting records, embezzlement and fraud, contract costs, lost profits, construction claims, and damage computations cases. Honored by Construction Link as the “Best Accounting Firm for the construction industry.” Glenn M. Gelman has been appointed and served as Special Master in litigation support matters and has testified over 30 times. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. See display ad on page 44. Air Weather & Sea Conditions, Inc. Clear, plain-language and convincing expert testimony, reports and analyses to reconstruct weather, climate, storm, and atmospheric conditions at location and time of interest. Wind and rain and ice assessments, and indications of their normalcy, unusualness and foreseeability. KGA, INC. 1409 Glenneyre Street, Suite A, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 497-6000, fax (949) 494-4893, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kgainc.com. Contact Kurt Grosz. Construction and environmental consultants since 1991. Licensed engineers and contractors. ICC building, plumbing, mechanical, concrete and accessibility inspectors. Certified professional estimators. Trial experts, arbitrators, and insurance appraisers/umpires. THE MCMULLEN COMPANY, INC. EXTENSIVE COURT EXPERIENCE 1260 Lake Boulevard, Suite 226, Davis, CA 95616, (888) 747-9857, fax (530) 757-1293, e-mail: tmc @themcmullencompany.com. Web site: www .themcmullencompany.com. Contact James F. Mc-Mullen, California State Fire Marshal (retired). Senior associates available throughout California (including Los Angeles County). Fire/ building code analysis and development, construction defects, code compliance inspections, fire origin/cause/spread investigation, fire services management/operations, fire safety-related product analysis/evaluation, and forensic expert. Jay Rosenthal CCM MEP CONSULTING & MORE, LLC Authoritative, certified data acquisition, preparation of exhibit materials, site visits and evaluations of reports for legal and insurance matters including building projects, mold, accidents, wildfires, ice, homeland security and alternative energy applications. Excellent client references provided on request. AMS CERTIFIED CONSULTING METEOROLOGIST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEATHER SPOTTER Phone 818.645.8632 or 310.454.7549 Fax 310.454.7569 E-mail [email protected] www.weatherman.org P. O. Box 512, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 46 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 5430 Trabuco Road, Suite 100, Irvine, CA 92620, (949) 246-2741, fax (949) 364-6385, e-mail: jflynn @mepcam.com. Web site: www.mepcam.com. Contact John Flynn, principal. Consulting and forensics for plumbing, mechanical (heating, ventilating, A/C) and electrical (power, lighting), energy systems, residential and commercial buildings, construction defect, cost to repair, construction and development claims; delay analysis; licensed P.E.s. Experienced testifiers. SECRETARIAT INTERNATIONAL 403 11th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90254, (213) 9158450, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.secretariat-intl.com. Contact Ted Scott. Ted Scott is a professional Civil Engineer that specializes in providing independent expert witness services relating to construction, scheduling, delay and project controls. He has worked on large-scale infrastructure and commercial projects for multinational owners, developers, contractors, lenders, insurers, and attorneys across the globe. URS 915 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 996-2598, fax (213) 996-2521, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Keith Kajiya. Expert witness for entitlement, causation damages on design, construction, and geotechnical environmental disputes. Experienced in all types of construction projects. See display ad on page 61. CONTRACTORS LICENSING (CSLB) ROBERT B. BERRIGAN, ESQ. MATHENY SEARS LINKERT & JAIME LLP 3638 American River Drive, Sacramento, CA 958645901, (916) 978-3434, fax (916) 978-3430, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mathenysears.com. Specialties: Contractor licensing issues, proper license classification to perform work, B & P section 7031 licensure issues. Contractor State License Board (CSLB) investigations and disciplinary proceedings, obtaining licenses or documents from CSLB. Experienced expert witness at trial/arbitration. Degrees/licenses: BA, JD, Commercial Pilot, SEL, MEL. CORPORATE AND SECURITIES PETILLON HIRAIDE & LOOMIS, LLP 21515 Hawthorne Boulevard, Suite 1260, Torrance, CA 90503, (310) 543-0500, fax (310) 543-0550, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .phlcorplaw.com. Contact Mark Hiraide. I served as an expert witness in the following areas: formation of corporations, partnerships, and limited liability companies, governance, fiduciary duties of officers and directors, and majority shareholders, venture and acquisition issues; violation of securities laws, legal malpractice of lawyers, and issues relating to formation of venture capital funds, and private equity funds. CORPORATE INVESTIGATIONS FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Spe- cialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. CREDIT DAMAGES EXPERT EASY CREDIT RELIEF, INC. 2625 Townsgate Road, Suite 330, Westlake Village, CA 91361, (805) 267-1118, fax (805) 2994980, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.creditdamagesexpert.com. Contact Doug Minor. Credit damages expert witness/consultant with over 25 years of experience. He has passed the required examination to receive from the CDIA a Fair Credit Reporting Act Certification and can help with credit report evaluation preparing credit damages report, including quantitative assessment, modern credit scoring types of credit damages, assessing violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), review of residential mortgage loan application forms 1003 and 1008. Modern credit scoring, unfair debt collections (FDCPA), evaluate testimony, and developing questions for deposition and trial. DENTIST JAY GROSSMAN DDS 11980 San Vicente Boulevard, Suite 507, Brentwood, CA 90049, (310) 820-0123, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .drjaydds.com. Contact Jay Grossman. Dental malpractice expert testimony. Have been deposed over 80 times; reviewed over 400 cases for both defense and plaintiff including peer review, acci- dents, and malpractice. 60% plaintiff / 40% defense. Have qualified in Superior Court over 30 times. Published and have been written about in print, radio, and TV over 116 times. Expert on issues including: standard of care, cosmetics, lasers, extractions, nerve damage, valuation, informed consent, antibiotic coverage, TMJ, orthodontics including Invisalign, sleep apnea, treatment planning, occlusion and vertical dimension, electrosurgery, abscess, resorption, implants, crowns, root canal, veneers, periodontics, and patent infringement. Licensed in 42 states to opine on standard of care, with specific license in California, Nevada, and the Northeast as well as a Florida Expert Certification. Graduated NYU 1988; Lieutenant, United States Navy 1989-91; private practice Brentwood, CA since 1991; faculty: Staff, attending—UCLA. Professor of Dental Medicine: Western University, Health Sciences College of Dental Medicine. DOCUMENT EXAMINER SANDRA L. HOMEWOOD, FORENSIC DOCUMENT EXAMINER 1132 San Marino Drive, Suite 216, Lake San Marcos, CA 92078, (760) 931-2529, fax (760) 510-8412, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Sandra L. Homewood. Highly skilled and experienced document examiner and expert witness in many complex and high-profile civil and criminal cases with fully equipped document laboratory. Specializing in handwriting and handprinting identification, handwriting of the elderly in financial elder abuse cases and will contests, and examination of altered medical and corporate records. Trained in government laboratory including specialized training by the FBI and Secret Service. Former government experience includes document examiner for the San Diego Police Department crime lab, Arizona State crime lab, and San Diego County District Attorney’s office. Currently in private, criminal, and civil practice. DOGS JILL KESSLER, GRAD. CERT., CPDT 341 North Grenola Street, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 573-9615, fax (310) 573-1304, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.jillkessler .com. Opinion, consultation, reports, evaluations in dog bites, aggression, behaviors, training, showing, breed tendencies, service and rescued dogs. Specializing in Rottweilers and pit-bull type dogs. See display ad on page 61. ECONOMIC ANALYSIS CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. ECONOMIC DAMAGES ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, con- Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 47 struction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan. For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. GLENN M. GELMAN & ASSOCIATES CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND BUSINESS ADVISERS 1940 East 17th Street, Santa Ana, CA 92705, (714) 667-2600, fax (714) 667-2636, e-mail: rsquar @gmgcpa.com. Web site: www.gmgcpa.com. Contact Richard M. Squar. Since 1983, our firm has specialized in delivering forensic accounting and litigation support services that give our clients an edge. We provide the quality and depth traditionally associated with Big Four firms with the personal attention and fee structure of a local firm. We are recognized throughout southern California for the effectiveness of our work. Areas of expertise include: business interruption, loss of earnings analysis, breach of contract, partnership dissolution, profits distribution, tax consequences of settlements, reconstruction of accounting records, embezzlement and fraud, contract costs, lost profits, construction claims, and damage computations cases. Our practice focuses on closely held entrepreneurial firms in the following industries: construction, real estate development, equipment leasing, auto parts (wholesale and retail), manufacturing, and professional services. Glenn M. Gelman has been appointed and served as Special Master in litigation support matters and has testified over 30 times. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. See display ad on page 44. 48 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.gursey .com. Contact Gary Krausz. Gursey|Schneider specializes in forensic accounting and litigation support services in the areas of civil litigation, business disputes, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit insurance claims, court accountings, fraud investigations, accounting malpractice, intellectual property, construction, government accounting, and entertainment litigation. Gursey|Schneider has over 30 years of experience as expert witnesses in accounting-related matters. See display ad on page 47. HIGGINS, MARCUS & LOVETT, INC. 800 South Figueroa Street, Suite 710, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 617-7775, fax (213) 617-8372, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Mark C. Higgins, ASA. The firm has over 30 years of litigation support and expert testimony experience in matters involving business valuation, economic damages, intellectual property, loss of business goodwill, and lost profits. Areas of practice include business disputes, eminent domain, bankruptcy, and corporate and marital dissolution. See display ad on page 41. MICHAEL D. ROSEN, CPA, PHD, ABV 3780 Kilroy Airport Way, Suite 200, Long Beach, CA 90806, (562) 256-7052, fax (562) 256-7001, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mrosencpa.com. Contact Michael D. Rosen. We are litigation consultants, forensic accountants, expert witnesses. Our mission is to tell the financial story that underlies every business litigation matter and to convey that story in a clear and concise manner to the trier of fact. Our findings allow a realistic assessment of the case and support settlement efforts. Our work is designed to render conclusive opinions and to withstand cross-examination. We specialize in business damages (lost profits and loss in value), personal damages (lost earnings), and business valuation. JAY SHAPIRO, CPA 10635 Santa Monica Boulevard Suite 190, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 441-3600, fax (310) 4413610, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.shapiromedia.com, www.jshapirocp.com. Jay Shapiro has specialized in accounting, income tax preparation, and all special financial matters impacting the entertainment and media industry for the past 30 years and has clientele ranging from private individuals to partnerships and corporate entities across all sectors on a worldwide basis. Jay will provide you with a realistic financial assessment, expert, objective analysis, and clear and concise testimony that stand up upon cross-examination. Jay has testified over 20 times in federal and state court. Jay’s financial expertise includes: tax issues, entertainment net profits, business litigation, business valuation and appraisal, forensic investigation, idea submissions, economic damages, contractual disputes, marital dissolutions, participations and royalties, and lost earning capacity. SCHULZE HAYNES LOEVENGUTH & CO. 660 South Figueroa Street, Suite 1280, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 627-8280, fax (213) 627-8301, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.schulzehaynes.com. Contact Karl J. Schulze, president. Specialties: forensic business analysis and accounting, lost profits, economic damages, expert testimony, discovery assistance, business valuations, corporate recovery, financial analysis, and modeling. Member of major professional organizations, experience across a broad spectrum of industries and business issues. Degrees/licenses: CPA, CVA, CFE, ABV, PhD-Economics. See display ad on page 49. THOMAS NECHES & COMPANY LLP 633 West 5th Street, Suite 2800, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2039, (213) 624-8150, fax (213) 223-2304, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .thomasneches.com. Contact Thomas M. Neches, CPA, ABV, CVA, CFE, CFF. Accounting, financial, business valuation, and statistical analyses to assist attorneys in litigation. Expert testimony in state and federal courts. Cases: antitrust, breach of contract, fraud, intellectual property, lost business value, lost profits, wrongful death, and wrongful termination. Industries: banking, construction, entertainment, insurance, manufacturing, retail, securities, and wholesale. Credentials: certified public accountant/ accredited in business valuation, certified valuation analyst, certified fraud examiner and certified in financial forensics. Education: BA (Mathematics) UC San Diego, MS (Operations Research) UCLA. Teaching: adjunct professor, Loyola Law School. See display ad on page 57. WARONZOF ASSOCIATES, INC. 999 North Sepulveda Boulevard, Suite 440, El Segundo, CA 90245, (310) 322-7744, fax (310) 322-7755. Web site: www.waronzof.com. Contact Timothy R. Lowe, MAI, CRE. Waronzof provides real estate and land use litigation support services including economic damages, lost profits, financial feasibility, lease dispute, property value, enterprise value, partnership interest and closely-held share value, fair compensation, lender liability, and reorganization plan feasibility. Professional staff of five with advanced degrees and training in real estate, finance, urban planning, and accounting. See display ad on page 59. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. . Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. ZIVETZ, SCHWARTZ & SALTSMAN, CPAS 11900 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046, (310) 826-1040, fax (310) 826-1065. Web site: www.zsscpa.com. Contact Lester J. Schwartz, CPA/CFF, DABFE, DABFA, Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA, David L. Bass, CPA, David Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA, Sandy Green, CPA, Daljeet Kaur, CPA. Accounting experts in forensic accounting, tax issues, business valuations, and appraisals, marital dissolutions, eminent domain, insurance losses, business interruption, goodwill, economic analysis, investigative auditing, loss of earning, commercial damages, and lost profits. Expert witness testimony preparation, settlement negotiations, and consultations. See display ad on page 49. ECONOMICS ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. CMM, LLP 5700 Canoga Avenue, Suite 300, Woodland Hills, CA 91367, (818) 986-5070, fax (818) 986-5034, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .cmmcpas.com. Contact Scott Mowrey. Specialties: consultants who provide extensive experience, litigation support, and expert testimony regarding forensic accountants, fraud investigations, economic damages, business valuations, family law, bankruptcy, and reorganization. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFEs, MBAs. See display ad on page 45. DIANA G. LESGART, CPA, CFE, CVA, CFF —An Accountancy Corporation— LITIGATION CONSULTING Certified Public Accountant FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. ELDER ABUSE HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. Certified Fraud Examiner Certified Valuation Analyst Certified in Financial Forensics TEL 818.886.7140 • FAX 818.886.7146 • E-MAIL [email protected] 22024 LASSEN STREET, SUITE 106, CHATSWORTH, CA 91311 www.jurispro.com/DianaLesgartCPA Schulze Haynes Loevenguth & Co. FORENSIC/LITIGATION EXPERTS Designations include: Certified Public Accountant (CPA) Certified in Financial Forensics (CFF) Certified Valuation Analyst/Accredited in Business Valuation (CVA/ABV) Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) ✒ ✒ ✒ • • • • Financial Forensic Analysis Expert Testimony Turnaround and Bankruptcy Business Valuation CONTACT KARL J. SCHULZE [email protected] • www.schulzehaynes.com ✒ 213.627.8280 660 SOUTH FIGUEROA STREET, SUITE 1280, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90017 Zivetz, Schwartz & Saltsman CPA’s With more than thirty years of experience as expert witnesses in testimony, pre-trial preparation, settlement negotiations, consultations and court appointed special master. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MEP CONSULTING & MORE, LLC 5430 Trabuco Road, Suite 100, Irvine, CA 92620, (949) 246-2741, fax (949) 364-6385, e-mail: jflynn @mepcam.com. Web site: www.mepcam.com. Contact John Flynn, principal. Consulting and forensics for plumbing, mechanical (heating, ventilating, A/C) and electrical (power, lighting), energy systems, residential and commercial buildings, construction defect, cost to repair, construction and development claims; delay analysis; licensed P.E.s. Experienced testifiers. ELECTRONIC DISCOVERY Some of our specialties consist of: • Forensic Accounting • Marital Dissolutions • Business Valuation and Appraisal • Lost Profits • Economic Damages • Accounting Malpractice • Employee Benefit Plans • Entertainment Entities • Financial and Economic Analysis • Shareholder Disputes • Wrongful Termination SETEC INVESTIGATIONS 8391 Beverly Boulevard, Suite 167, Los Angeles, CA 90036, (800) 748-5440, fax (323) 939-5481, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.setecinvestigations.com. Contact Todd Stefan. Setec Investigations offers unparalleled expertise in computer forensics and enterprise investigations providing personalized, case-specific forensic analysis and litigation support services for law firms and corporations. Setec Investigations possesses the necessary combination of technical expertise, understanding of the legal system, and specialized tools and processes enabling the discovery, collection, investigation, and production of electronic information for investigating and handling computer-related crimes or misuse. Our expertise Tel: (310) 826-1040 Lester J. Schwartz, CPA, CFF, DABFA, DABFE Fax: (310) 826-1065 Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA E-mail: [email protected] David L. BASS, CPA www.zsscpa.com Dave Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA 11900 W. Olympic Blvd. Sandy Green, CPA Suite 650 Daljeet Kaur, CPA Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 49 includes computer forensics, electronic discovery, litigation support, and expert witness testimony. EMBEZZLEMENT AND FRAUD ment, and vocational evaluations. She holds national and California specific certification—Senior Professional in Human Resource (SPHR-CA), certified mediator, and consulting since 1992. GLENN M. GELMAN & ASSOCIATES CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND BUSINESS ADVISERS ENDOCRINOLOGY/INTERNAL MEDICINE 1940 East 17th Street, Santa Ana, CA 92705, (714) 667-2600, fax (714) 667-2636, e-mail: rsquar @gmgcpa.com. Web site: www.gmgcpa.com. Contact Richard M. Squar. Glenn M. Gelman and Associates provides a variety of high-quality services traditionally associated with the Big Four firms along with the personal attention that is the hallmark of local firms. Our litigation support services include: embezzlement and fraud, expert witness testimony, strategy development, document discovery, deposition assistance, computation of damages, arbitration consulting, forensic accounting, investigative auditing, rebuttal testimony, fiduciary accountings, and trial exhibit preparation and reconstruction of accounting records. Our practice focuses on closely held entrepreneurial firms in the following industries: construction, real estate development, equipment leasing, auto parts (wholesale and retail), manufacturing, and professional services. Glenn M. Gelman has been appointed and served as Special Master in litigation support matters and has testified over 30 times. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. See display ad on page 44. 8920 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 635, Beverly Hills, CA 90211, e-mail: [email protected]. www .jordangeller.com. Contact Dr. Jordan Geller. Expert testimony in medical and endocrinology cases. Independent medical exams, records review, and written opinions. EMPLOYMENT/DISCRIMINATION/ HARASSMENT/RETALIATION BRIAN H. KLEINER, PHD, MBA Professor of Human Resource Management, California State University, 551 Santa Barbara Avenue, Fullerton, CA 92835, (714) 879-9705, fax (714) 8795600. Contact Brian H. Kleiner, PhD. Specialties: The evaluation of workplace policies and practices pertaining to discrimination/harassment prevention efforts (training, interactive process, reasonable accommodation), investigations, corrective actions (discipline, termination), hiring, compensation/wage and hours/ERISA, violence, OSHA, appraisal, promotion, CFRA/FMLA, retaliation, and RIFS. Experience: Former human resource manager for Ford Motor Company. Over 100 consulting clients. Trained thousands of managers. 500+ publications. Have been retained in 500+ legal cases, have given deposition testimony 200+ times and trial/arbitration testimony 65+ times. HAIGHT CONSULTING 1726 Palisades Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 454-2988, fax (310) 454-4516. Contact Marcia Haight, SPHR—CA. Human resources expert knowledgeable in both federal and California law. Twenty-five years’ corporate human resources management experience plus over 20 years as a Human Resources Compliance Consultant in California. Specializations include sexual harassment, ADA/disability discrimination, other Title VII and FEHA discrimination and harassment, retaliation, FMLA/CFRA, safety, and wrongful termination. Courtroom testimony and deposition experience. Retained 60 percent by defense, 40 percent by plaintiff. Audit employer’s actions in preventing and resolving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation issues. Assess human resources policies and practices for soundness, for comparison to prevailing practices, and for compliance. Evaluate employer responsiveness to complaints and effectiveness of employer investigations. Assist counsel via preliminary case analysis, discovery strategy, examination of documents, and expert testimony. HRM CONSULTING, INC. 1700 North First Street, Suite 120, San Jose, CA 95112, (209) 728-8905, fax (209) 728-8970, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .hrmconsulting.com. Contact Beth B. De Lima, SPHR-CA. Expert witness Beth De Lima, has testified for both plaintiff and defense in the following areas: human resources standards of care, employment ADA accommodation, FEHA, FMLA, CFRA, ADA & EEOC violations. Wrongful termination, performance management, discrimination, sexual harassment, exempt analysis, labor market assess50 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 JORDAN GELLER, M.D. ENGINEER/TRAFFIC WILLIAM KUNZMAN, PE 1111 Town and Country #34, Orange, CA 92868, (714) 973-8383, fax (714) 973-8821, e-mail: bill @traffic-engineer.com. Web site: www.traffic -engineer.com. Contact William Kunzman, PE. Traffic expert witness since 1979, both defense and plaintiff. Auto, pedestrian, bicycle, and motorcycle accidents. Largest plaintiff verdicts: 1) $12,200,000 in pedestrian accident case against Caltrans, 2) $10,300,000 in case against Los Angeles Unified School District. Largest settlement: $2,000,000 solo vehicle accident case against Caltrans. Best defense verdict: $0 while defending Caltrans and opposition sought $16,000,000. Before becoming expert witness, employed by Los Angeles County Road Department, Riverside County Road Department, city of Irvine, and Federal Highway Administration. Knowledge of governmental agency procedures, design, geometrics, signs, traffic controls, maintenance, and pedestrian protection barriers. Hundreds of cases. Undergraduate work—UCLA, graduate work—Yale University. ENGINEERING 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: 0.phil @4Xforensic.com. Web Site: www.4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. A & E FORENSICS 2121 Montiel Road, San Marcos, CA 92069, (877) 839-7302, fax (760) 480-7477, e-mail: steve @aeforensics.com. Web site: www.aeforensics .com. Steve Norris, AIA, PE, GE, HG, CEG, CASp, LEED. Architect, engineer, contractor—standard of care expert. Retained over 200 times, deposed over 100 times, and testified in trial over 20 times. Waterproofing, water intrusion, building envelope, zoning setbacks, concrete performance, path of travel, structural analysis, earthquake-fire damage, and plan analysis. Landslides, retaining wall failure, settlement, flooding, grading, septic, expansive soils, mud flows, pavement distress, ground water evaluation, and slope analysis. Cost estimates, construction management, delay analysis, and contracts. Serving all California, Hawaii, and Oklahoma. See display ad on page 41. CONSTRUCTION DISPUTE RESOLUTION CONSULTANTS 312 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 300-2244, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.constructionDRC.com. Contact Hanns U. Baumann, SE. Expert construction forensic consultation by licensed civil, structural, geotechnical/soil, engineering and licensed general contractor with many years of professional experience in California. EXPONENT 5401 McConnell Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90066, (310) 754-2700, fax (310) 754-2799, e-mail: reza@exponent .com. Web site: www.exponent.com. Contact Ali Reza. Specialties: fires and explosions, metallurgy and mechanical engineering, structural and geotechnical, accident reconstruction and analysis, human factors, risk and reliability assessment, toxicology and human health, biomechanics, electrical and semiconductors, aviation, materials science, HVAC, energy consulting, construction defect, and scheduling. THOMAS L. LISTON, PE 329 South San Antonio Road, Suite 5, Los Altos, CA 94022, (650) 948-1830, fax (650) 948-3030, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.tomlistoninc.com. Contact Tom Liston, PE. Carbon monoxide, HVAC, plumbing, fire, and explosions. SCS ENGINEERS 3900 Kilroy Airport Way, Suite 100, Long Beach, CA 90806, (562) 426-9544, fax (562) 427-0805, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .scsengineers.com. Contact Julio Nuno, VP. SCS provides expert witness services related to environment studies and engineering, water resources, solid waste and air quality and industrial hygiene and safety services. We are a 43-year old consulting firm with 66 offices across the US and over 800 employees. Our Long Beach office has more than 30 professional engineers, scientists, and subject matter experts available on short notice to serve asbestos, lead-based paint, and other specialty areas requiring expert witness services. ENGINEERING/GEOTECHNICAL COTTON, SHIRES AND ASSOCIATES, INC. Southern California branch, serving greater So. Cal. area, (805) 497-7999, fax (805) 497-7933, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .cottonshires.com. Contact Michael Phipps or Patrick O. Shires. Full service geotechnical engineering consulting firm specializing in investigation, design, arbitration, and expert witness testimony with offices in Los Gatos, Thousand Oaks, and San Andreas, California. Earth movement (settlement, soil creep, landslides, tunneling and expansive soil), foundation distress (movement and cracking of structures), drainage and grading issues (seepage through slabs, moisture intrusion, nuisance water, and ponding water in crawlspace), pavement and slab distress (cracking and separating), retaining walls (movement, cracking, and failures), pipelines, flooding and hydrology, design and construction deficiencies, aerial photo analysis; expert testimony at 77+ trials (municipal, superior, and federal), 207+ depositions, 208+ settlement conferences in California, Nevada, Hawaii, and Michigan. ENVIRONMENTAL KGA, INC. 1409 Glenneyre Street, Suite A, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 497-6000, fax (949) 494-4893, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kgainc.com. Contact Kurt Grosz. Construction and environmental consultants since 1991. Licensed engineers and contractors. ICC building, plumbing, mechanical, concrete, and accessibility inspectors. Certified professional estimators. Trial experts, arbitrators, and insurance appraisers. THE REYNOLDS GROUP P.O. Box 1996, Tustin, CA 92781-1996, (714) 730-5397, fax (714)730-6476, e-mail: edreynolds @reynolds-group.com. Website: www.reynolds-group .com. Contact Ed Reynolds, principal. An environmental consulting, contracting firm. Expertise: environmental contamination, assessment, remediation, reasonable value of construction, and related financial matters. Degrees in Civil Engineering: USC (BS), University of Houston (MS), Harvard MBA. California Registered Civil Engineer, Licensed A, B, HAZ California Contractor. Adjunct Faculty Member USC School of Engineering (Construction Management) and Member USC’s Board of Councilors. SCS ENGINEERS 3900 Kilroy Airport Way, Suite 100, Long Beach, CA 90806, (562) 426-9544, fax (562) 427-0805, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .scsengineers.com. Contact Julio Nuno, VP. SCS provides expert witness services related to environment studies and engineering, water resources, solid waste and air quality and industrial hygiene and safety services. We are a 43-year old consulting firm with 66 offices across the US and over 800 employees. Our Long Beach office has more than 30 professional engineers, scientists, and subject matter experts available on short notice to serve asbestos, lead-based paint, and other specialty areas requiring expert witness services. FORENSIC PATHOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY BURR HARTMAN, DO, PHD | BURR HARTMAN CONSULTING Forensic pathologist with PhD in chemistry. Board certified in anatomic, clinical and forensic pathology. Practice provides services for Tulare Regional Medical Center, coroner’s pathology for three sheriff-coroner departments, and consultation for Mineral King Toxicology Laboratory. Broad-based scientific background and longstanding interest in toxicology. Testified/deposed 100 times in last 4 years. Interested in technical and scientific issues encountered and not usually encountered in clinical practice. Contact Burr Hartman, DO, PhD Burr Hartman Consulting ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEER WZI INC. (ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERS) 1717 28th Street, Bakersfield, CA 93301, (661) 326-1112, fax (661) 326-6480, e-mail: mjwilson @wziinc.com. Web site: www.wziinc.com. Contact Mary Jane Wilson. BS, petroleum engineering environmental assessor #00050. Specialties include regulatory compliance, petroleum, and power generation. ESCROW ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. EXPERT REFERRAL SERVICE TASA (TECHNICAL ADVISORY SERVICE FOR ATTORNEYS) EXPERTS IN ALL CATEGORIES Contact Heather Williamson. (800) 523-2319, fax (800) 329-8272, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.TASAnet.com. The TASA Group is your timesaving, cost-effective source for superior, independent Testifying and Consulting Experts in all fields and locations. We offer over 11,000 diverse categories of expertise and hard-to-find specialties in technology, business, the arts, and sciences, including 1000+ medical areas through TASAmed. Our experienced Referral Advisers target your specific criteria and connect you with experts available to discuss your case. There is NO CHARGE for our search and referral services unless you designate or engage an expert we refer. Plaintiff/Defense; Civil/Criminal. Visit TASAnet.com, where you can search expert profiles by expertise keyword, order indispensable research reports on experts, request an expert on our online form, and discover E-discovery services & solutions. Explore TASAnet.com’s Knowledge Center to read expert-authored articles and view archived webinars for attorneys. To receive invitations to our free, expert-led webinars, register at wwws.TASAnet.com. Benefit from 57 years of TASA Group Experience. Please see our insert in this issue and display ad on page 56. TEL 559.686.4000 | FAX 559.686.9432 [email protected] EMAIL MICROCORRE DX LAB, 890 CHERRY STREET, TULARE, CALIFORNIA 93274 INSURANCE BAD FAITH EXPERT Clinton E. Miller, J.D., BCFE Author: How Insurance Companies Settle Cases 39 YEARS EXPERIENCE Qualified Trial Insurance Expert in Civil & Criminal Cases Nationwide Coverage Disputes – Customs and Practices in the Insurance Industry – Good Faith/Bad Faith Issues TEL 408.279.1034 | EMAIL [email protected] | FAX 408.279.3562 www.quikpage.com/M/millerjd/ RICHARD WEISSMAN SALTZBURG, RAY & WEISSMAN, LLP RECEIVERSHIP ACTIONS • Partnerships and Corporate Dissolutions • Government Enforcement Receivership Actions • Partition Actions/Marital Dissolution EXPERT WITNESS AMFS MEDICAL EXPERTS NATIONWIDE 6425 Christie Avenue, Suite 260, Emeryville, CA 94608, (800) 275-8903. Web site: www.AMFS. com. Medical experts for malpractice and personal injury cases. AMFS is America’s premier medical expert witness and consulting company. We are a trusted partner with the legal community and provide a superior method of retaining medical experts. For over 20 years, AMFS has provided board-certified TEL 310.481.6780 | FAX 310.481.6786 [email protected] www.srblaw.com 12121 WILSHIRE BOULEVARD, SUITE 600, LOS ANGELES CA 90025 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 51 experts in over 10,000 malpractice and personal injury cases. • Board-Certified experts in all medical specialties • Practicing physicians with legal experience • No cost attorney consultations • Record review and testimony • Independent Medical Examinations (IME) and autopsies • Essential affidavits and reporting. Discuss your case at no charge with one of our medical directors, who will identify and clarify your case issues to ensure you retain the appropriate specialists. Cost-effective initial case reviews for merit. Have your case reviewed for merit by members of our 50+ member multispecialty Physician Advisory Panel. Review and select expert CVs. Our experience, resources, and large proprietary database enable us to quickly identify and interview a large number of potential medical experts on your behalf and provide you with the CVs of those who are best suited to your case. Ask about our new expert on-call service. See display ad on page 46. EXPERT WITNESS WEB SITES EXPERT4LAW—THE LEGAL MARKETPLACE (213) 896-6561, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.expert4law.org. Contact Melissa Algaze. Still haven’t found who you’re looking for? Expert4law—The Legal Marketplace is the best online directory for finding expert witnesses, legal consultants, litigation support, lawyer-to-lawyer networking, dispute resolution professionals, and law office technology. This comprehensive online directory is the one-stop site for your legal support needs. Available 24/7/365! Brought to you by the Los Angeles County Bar Association. FAILURE ANALYSIS 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: 0.phil@ 4Xforensic.com. Web Site: www.4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. KARS’ ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. Testing and Research Labs, 2528 West Woodland Drive, Anaheim, CA 92801-2636, (714) 527-7100, fax (714) 527-7169, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.karslab.com. Contact Dr. Ramesh Kar, Dr. Naresh Kar, Dr. Nikhil Kar. Southern California’s premier materials/mechanical/metallurgical/structural/forensics laboratory. Registered professional engineers with 30-plus years in metallurgical/forensic/structural failure analysis. Experienced with automotive, bicycles, tires, fire, paint, plumbing, corrosion, and structural failures. We work on both plaintiff and defendant cases. Complete in-house capabilities for tests. Extensive deposition and courtroom experience (civil and criminal investigations). Principals are Fellows of American Society for Metals and Fellows, American College of Forensic Examiners. See display ad on page 61. KGA, INC. 1409 Glenneyre Street, Suite A, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 497-6000, fax (949) 494-4893, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kgainc.com. Contact Kurt Grosz. Construction and environmental consultants since 1991. Licensed engineers and contractors. ICC building, plumbing, mechanical, concrete and accessibility inspectors. Certified professional estimators. Trial experts, arbitrators, and insurance appraisers. FAMILY LAW BRIAN LEWIS & COMPANY 10900 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 610, Los Angeles, CA 90024, (310) 475-5676, fax (310) 475-5268, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Brian Lewis, CPA, CVA. Forensic accounting, business 52 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 valuations, cash spendable reports, estate, trust, and income tax services. CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. CMM, LLP 5700 Canoga Avenue, Suite 300, Woodland Hills, CA 91367, (818) 986-5070, fax (818) 986-5034, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .cmmcpas.com. Contact Scott Mowrey. Specialties: consultants who provide extensive experience, litigation support, and expert testimony regarding forensic accountants, fraud investigations, economic damages, business valuations, family law, bankruptcy, and reorganization. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFEs, MBAs. See display ad on page 45. ELLIOT D. FELMAN, MD 1821 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 301, Santa Monica, CA 90403, (310) 260-2525, fax (310) 260-7575, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Mary Lou Purdy. Expert review and testimony, plaintiff or defense, teaching faculty UCLA School of Medicine and Western University School of Health Sciences. Former expert reviewer for California Medical Board. GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, 20355 Hawthorne Boulevard, First Floor, Torrance, CA 90503, (310) 370-6122, fax (310) 370-6188, 19100 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 950, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 265-9900, fax (949) 265-9901, e-mail: [email protected], [email protected], or [email protected]. Web site: www.gursey.com. Contact Stephan Wasserman, Robert Watts or Tracy Katz. Forensic accounting and litigation support services in all areas relating to marital dissolution, including business valuation, tracing and apportionment of real property and assets, net spendable evaluations, determination of gross cash flow available for support, and analysis of reimbursement claims and marital standards of living. See display ad on page 47. HARGRAVE & HARGRAVE, AN ACCOUNTANCY CORPORATION 12121 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 576-1090, fax (310) 576-1080, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.hargraveandhargrave.com. Contact Terry M. Hargrave, CPA/ABV/CFF, CFE. Forensic accounting and business valuation services for family law and civil cases. Past chair of California Society of CPAs’ Family Law Section and business valuation instructor for California CPA Education Foundation. Services include business valuations, income available for support, tracing separate property, litigation consulting, real estate litigation, mediation, fraud investigations, damage calculation, and other forensic accounting work. HAYNIE & COMPANY, CPAS 4910 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, CA 926602119, (949) 724-1880, fax (949) 724-1889, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .hayniecpa.com. Contact Steven C. Gabrielson. Consulting and expert witness testimony in a variety of practice areas: commercial damages, ownership disputes, economic analysis, business valuation, lost profits analysis, fraud/forensic investigations, taxation, personal injury, wrongful termination, professional liability, and expert cross examination. Extensive public speaking background assists in courtroom presentations. KRYCLER, ERVIN, TAUBMAN, AND WALHEIM 15303 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 1040, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 995-1040, fax (818) 995- 4124. Web site: [email protected]. Contact Michael J. Krycler. Litigation support, including forensic accounting, business appraisals, family law accounting, business and professional valuations, damages, fraud investigations, and lost earnings. Krycler, Ervin, Taubman and Walheim is a full-service accounting firm serving the legal community for more than 20 years. See display ad on page 39. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. ZIVETZ, SCHWARTZ & SALTSMAN, CPAS 11900 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046, (310) 826-1040, fax (310) 826-1065. Web site: www.zsscpa.com. Contact Lester J. Schwartz, CPA/CFF, DABFE, DABFA, Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA, David L. Bass, CPA, David Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA, Sandy Green, CPA, Daljeet Kaur, CPA. Accounting experts in forensic accounting, tax issues, business valuations, and appraisals, marital dissolutions, eminent domain, insurance losses, business interruption, goodwill, economic analysis, investigative auditing, loss of earning, commercial damages, and lost profits. Expert witness testimony preparation, settlement negotiations, and consultations. See display ad on page 49. FASTENERS-LATCHES ARGOS ENGINEERING 44 Argos, Laguna Niguel, CA 92677, (949) 3638205, fax (949) 429-5972, e-mail: johndpratt@cox .net. Web site: www.argos-engineering.com. Contact John D. Pratt, PhD, PE. Litigation consulting, inspections, expert reports, patent infringement and validity analysis, deposition, and trial testimony. FEES & ETHICS JOEL MARK HATHAWAY, PERRETT, WEBSTER, POWERS, CHRISMAN & GUTIERREZ 5450 Telegraph Road, Suite 200, Ventura, CA 93003, (805) 644-7111, fax (805) 644-8396, e-mail: [email protected] Web site: www .hathawaylawfirm.com. Contact Joel Mark. Mr. Mark has had in excess of 55 matters as an expert witness in attorney malpractice cases, attorneys’ fee disputes, and cases involving issues of attorney ethics. He served 14 years on the State Bar Committee on Mandatory Fee Arbitration, a term on the State Bar Committee on Professional Responsibility and Conduct, and has been appointed as an expert consultant by the Los Angeles Superior Court. FINANCIAL ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan. For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 891-1300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. STEVEN BURRES, MD, FAACS | MEDICAL EXPERT SPECIALIZING IN EAR, NOSE & THROAT: HEARING LOSS, ALLERGY, VOICE, SINUS, ETC. COSMETIC SURGERY: FACLIFTS, EYELIDS, NOSE, LIPOSUCTION, SCAR, FACIAL INJURY, ETC. • Stanford Trained • University of Chicago-Pritzker Medical School • USC-LA County Faculty • Board Certified Facial Plastic Surgery • Board Certified Ear, Nose and Throat • American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery Frequent national speaker – Published 30 scientific papers Won two research awards – Former UCLA faculty — Over 30 years of experience — TEL 310.385.0590 / 877.784.5543 E-MAIL [email protected] FAX 323.937.1673 465 North Roxbury Drive, Suite 1012, Beverly Hills CA 90210 HAYNIE & COMPANY, CPAS 4910 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, CA 926602119, (949) 724-1880, fax (949) 724-1889, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .hayniecpa.com. Contact Steven C. Gabrielson. Consulting and expert witness testimony in a variety of practice areas: commercial damages, ownership disputes, economic analysis, business valuation, lost profits analysis, fraud/forensic investigations, taxation, personal injury, wrongful termination, professional liability, and expert cross examination. Extensive public speaking background assists in courtroom presentations. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. Securities & Business Law SEC Enforcement Defense International Business & Securities Class & Derivative Actions Insider Trading NYSE, AMEX, FINRA, DOC Disciplinary Proceedings Broker-Dealer, Investment Company & Investment Adviser Matters Liability Under Federal & State Securities Laws Internet Securities Securities Arbitration Law Firm Liability AV Rated, Former Chair, LACBA Business & Corporations Law Section, LLM Harvard Law School. 40 years practicing Securities Law, 12 years with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington D.C. Published Author of Securities Regulations, including eight volume treatise. FIRE/EXPLOSIONS Citigroup Center • 444 S. Flower Street, 30th Floor • Los Angeles, CA 90071 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: 0.phil @4Xforensic.com. Web Site: www.4Xforensic.com. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 53 Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. CHEMICAL ACCIDENT RECONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC. 9121 East Tanque Verde Road, Suite 105, Tucson, AZ 85749, (800) 645-3369, e-mail: service @chemaxx.com. Web site: www.chemaxx.com. Contact Dr. Michael Fox. Comprehensive chemical accident investigation—specializing in complex industrial chemical accidents and chemical related consumer product injuries, chemical fires and explosions, chemical labeling, chemical packaging, handling and shipping, burns, warnings, labels, MSDSs, disposal, safety, EPA, OSHA, DOT, propane, natural gas, hydrogen, flammable liquids, hazardous chemicals, aerosols (hairspray, spray paint, refrigerants). DOT certified (hazardous materials shipment). Certified fire and explosion investigator, OSHA process hazard analysis team leader. PhD physical chemistry. Extensive experience in metallurgy, corrosion, and failure analysis. THE MCMULLEN COMPANY, INC. 1260 Lake Boulevard, Suite 226, Davis, CA 95616, (888) 747-9857, fax (530) 757-1293, e-mail: tmc @themcmullencompany.com. Web site: www .themcmullencompany.com. Contact James F. Mc-Mullen, California State Fire Marshal (retired). Senior associates available throughout California (including Los Angeles County). Fire/building code analysis and development, construction defects, code compliance inspections, fire origin/cause/spread investigation, fire services management/operations, fire safety-related product analysis/evaluation, and forensic expert FOOD SAFETY/HACCP FOOD SAFETY AND HACCP COMPLIANCE 20938 De Mina Street, Woodland Hills, CA 91364, (818) 703-7147, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.foodsafetycoach.com. Contact Jeff Nelken, BS, MA. Forensic food safety expert knowledgeable in both food safety, accident prevention and hazard analysis critical control point program development. Specializes in expert witness testimony and litigation consultant in matters regarding food safety, Q.A., standards of performance, HACCP, crisis management, food-borne illness, burns, foreign object, accidents, health department representation, food spoilage, allergy, and customer complaints. Performs inspections, vendor audits, and training. Hands-on food safety consultant for restaurants, manufacturers, distributors, country clubs, schools, nursing homes, and casinos. NRA SERVSAFE certified instructor. Thirty years of food and hospitality experience. Registered as a food handler provider with the Los Angeles County Health Department. Provider # 015. Forensic food safety expert. Food safety expert for CBS, NBC, Inside Edition, and CNN. Epidemiologist consultant available—UCLA and LA County Health Dept. Free Consultation. FORENSIC ACCOUNTING CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan. For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized 54 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 8911300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. GLENN M. GELMAN & ASSOCIATES CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS AND BUSINESS ADVISERS 1940 East 17th Street, Santa Ana, CA 92705, (714) 667-2600, fax (714) 667-2636, e-mail: rsquar @gmgcpa.com. Web site: www.gmgcpa.com. Contact Richard M. Squar. Since 1983, our firm has specialized in delivering forensic accounting and litigation support services that give our clients an edge. We provide the quality and depth traditionally associated with Big Four firms with the personal attention and fee structure of a local firm. Our litigation support services include forensic accounting, investigative auditing, embezzlement and fraud, expert witness testimony, strategy development, document discovery, deposition assistance, computation of damages, arbitration consulting, rebuttal testimony, fiduciary accountings, and trial exhibit preparation and reconstruction of accounting records. Our practice focuses on closely held entrepreneurial firms in the following industries: construction, real estate development, equipment leasing, auto parts (wholesale and retail), manufacturing, and professional services Glenn M. Gelman has been appointed and served as Special Master in litigation support matters and has testified over 30 times. Our comprehensive case list is available upon request. See display ad on page 44. GURSEY/SCHNEIDER LLP 1888 Century Park East, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 552-0960, fax (310) 557-3468, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.gursey.com. Contact Gary Krausz. Gursey|Schneider specializes in forensic accounting and litigation support services in the areas of civil litigation, business disputes, bankruptcy, damage and cost-profit insurance claims, court accountings, fraud investigations, accounting malpractice, intellectual property, construction, government accounting, and entertainment litigation. Gursey|Schneider has over 30 years of experience as expert witnesses in accounting-related matters. See display ad on page 47. RGL FORENSICS Los Angeles Office: 800 South Figueroa Street, Suite 980, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 9960900. Contact Alan Lurie, [email protected]. Orange County Office: 625 City Drive South, Suite 290, Orange, CA 92868, (714) 740-2100. Contact Hank Kahrs, [email protected]. RGL Forensics is an international firm of forensic financial experts exclusively dedicated to damage analysis, fraud investigation, and valuation. Serving the legal, insurance, and business communities for more than 30 years, the firm is unique in its ability to combine investigative accounting, business valuation, fraud, and forensic technology expertise. For attorneys, we discover and define financial value in transactions and civil and criminal disputes, and when necessary provide expert witness testimony in court and arbitration proceedings. For more information about RGL and its 23 offices worldwide, please visit www.rgl.com. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. FORENSIC ANALYSIS BRIAN LEWIS & COMPANY 10900 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 610, Los Angeles, CA 90024, (310) 475-5676, fax (310) 475-5268, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Brian Lewis, CPA, CVA. Forensic accounting, business valuations, cash spendable reports, estate, trust, and income tax services. FORENSIC PATHOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY BURR HARTMAN, DO, PHD BURR HARTMAN CONSULTING Microcorre Dx Lab, 890 Cherry St, Tulare, CA 93274, (559) 686 4000, fax (559) 686 9432, email: [email protected]. Contact Burr Hartman, DO, PhD. Forensic pathologist with PhD in chemistry. Board certified in anatomic, clinical and forensic pathology. Practice provides services for Tulare Regional Med Ctr, coroner’s pathology for three sheriff-coroner departments and consultation for Mineral King Toxicology Laboratory. Broad-based scientific background and longstanding interest in toxicology. Testified/deposed 100 times in last four years. Interested in technical and scientific issues encountered and not usually encountered in clinical practice. See display ad on page 51. FRAUD INVESTIGATIONS CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. GEOLOG CONSULTING ENGINEERING 4653 Carmel Mountain Road, Suite 308-258, San Diego, CA 92130, (858) 243-4438, e-mail: [email protected]. Consulting engineering, geologist, analysis of the adverse effects of site preparation and geologic hazards on engineered structures including subcode grading, differential settlement, expansive soils, subsidence, mine and quarry blasting, pile driving, earthquakes, liquefaction, surface fault rupture and causation of ground fractures and structure cracks. GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING A & E FORENSICS 2121 Montiel Road, San Marcos, CA 92069, (877) 839-7302, fax (760) 480-7477, e-mail: steve @aeforensics.com. Web site: www.aeforensics .com. Steve Norris, AIA, PE, GE, HG, CEG, CASp, LEED. Architect, engineer, contractor— standard of care expert. Retained over 200 times, deposed over 100 times, and testified in trial over 20 times. Waterproofing, water intrusion, building envelope, zoning setbacks, concrete performance, path of travel, structural analysis, earthquake-fire damage, and plan analysis. Landslides, retaining wall failure, settlement, flooding, grading, septic, expansive soils, mud flows, pavement distress, ground water evaluation, and slope analysis. Cost estimates, construction management, delay analysis, and contracts. Serving all California, Hawaii, and Oklahoma. See display ad on page 41. Life Care Planning • • • • • JAN ROUGHAN, RN www.linc.biz LIFE CARE PLANS Comprehensive (Trial) – Mini (Mediation/ Settlement Conference) – Critique EXPERT TESTIMONY Trial – Arbitration – Mediation/Settlement VIDEO SERVICE Day in Life – Mediation/Settlement Documentary MEDICAL RECORDS Review – Chronology IME Attendance Report/Critique 114 W. COLORADO BLVD., MONROVIA, CA 91016 | 626.303.6333 EXT. 16 OR 17 CONSTRUCTION DISPUTE RESOLUTION CONSULTANTS 312 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 300-2244, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.constructionDRC.com. Contact Hanns U. Baumann, S.E. Expert construction forensic consultation by licensed civil, structural, geotechnical/soil, engineering and licensed general contractor with many years of professional experience in California. Anita Rae Shapiro SUPERIOR COURT COMMISSIONER, RET. PRIVATE DISPUTE RESOLUTION GERIATRICS PROBATE, CIVIL, FAMILY LAW PROBATE EXPERT WITNESS HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. HANDWRITING SANDRA L. HOMEWOOD, FORENSIC DOCUMENT EXAMINER 1132 San Marino Drive, Suite 216, Lake San Marcos, CA 92078, (760) 931-2529, fax (760) 5108412, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Sandra L. Homewood. Highly skilled and experienced document examiner and expert witness in many complex and high-profile civil and criminal cases with fully equipped document laboratory. Specializing in handwriting and handprinting identification, handwriting of the elderly in financial elder abuse cases and will contests, and examination of altered medical and corporate records. Trained in government laboratory, including specialized training by the FBI and Secret Service. Former government experience includes document examiner for the San Diego Police Department crime lab, Arizona State crime lab, and San Diego County District Attorney’s office. Currently in private, criminal, and civil practice. HOSPICE/PALLIATIVE MEDICINE HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases TEL/FAX: (714) 529-0415 CELL/PAGER: (714) 606-2649 E-MAIL: [email protected] http://adr-shapiro.com EVALUATION ■ TESTING ■ TREATMENT ■ Neurology and Electromyography Neurotoxicology Occupational/ Environmental Medicine CA Medical Practice Since 2000 TEL 415.381.3133 | FAX JONATHAN S. RUTCHIK, MD, MPH 415.381.3131 | E-MAIL www.neoma.com [email protected] 20 Sunnyside Avenue, Suite A-321, Mill Valley, CA 94941 Offices in San Francisco, Richmond, Petaluma, Sacramento and Eureka/Arcata Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 55 As an Expert Witness in Real Estate Litigation, Attorney LAWRENCE H. JACOBSON has consistently been on the Winning Team • Real estate and mortgage brokers’ standard of care • Lawyer malpractice in ethics, business and real estate transactions • Interpretation of real estate documents Practicing real estate law in California since 1968. Past President, Beverly Hills Bar Association. Former Vice President-Legal Affairs, California Association of Realtors. California Real Estate Broker since 1978. LAWRENCE H. JACOBSON AB, UCLA 1964, JD UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW 1967 Tel 310.271.0747 Fax 310.271.0757 email [email protected] www.lawrencejacobson.com LAW OFFICES: 9401 WILSHIRE BLVD. SUITE 1250, BEVERLY HILLS, CA 90212 for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. HUMAN FACTORS ANALYTICA SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL, INC. 9390 North Calle Buena Vista, Tucson, AZ 85704, (520) 882-5494, fax (520) 882-2067, e-mail: asi @asi-az.com. Web site: www.asi-az.com. Contact Gary M. Bakken, P.D, CPE; BSE—Mechanical Engineering, MS—Safety, PhD—Industrial Engineering (Human factors/ergonomics/biomechanics). We analyze, from an engineering perspective, human cause and effect relationships for claimed personal injury incidents using human factors, ergonomics, biomechanics, and safety principles. Areas of personal injury and product liability expertise includes accident investigation and analysis regarding driver behavior involving cars, tractortrailer, motorcycles, ATC-ATV, bicycles; falling objects, slips-trips-missteps-falls, occupational injuries, low-speed impacts, illumination, playgrounds, and warnings. HARRELL & ASSOCIATES 250 Pacific Avenue, Suite 407, Long Beach, CA 90802, (805) 549-7745, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kidsaccident.com. Contact W. A. Harrell. International reputation in human factors, accident analysis, children’s injuries/fatalities, defective warnings, shopping carts, product liability, pedestrians, recreational products/facilities, drownings, negligent caretakers, testing medical devices, slips/falls, eyewitness problems, injuries/fatalities involving the elderly, analyses of labels, signage, manuals, age discrimination analyses, vehicle accidents, farming accidents and readability analyses. INSURANCE BOARD CERTIFIED ORTHOPEDIC SURGEON MARC J. FRIEDMAN, M.D. 6815 Noble Avenue, Van Nuys, California 91405 Tel. 818.901.6600 ext. 2810 ¥ Fax: 818.901.6685 ¥ Email: [email protected] Web Site: www.scoi.com Education: Princeton University and Cornell Medical School Certi cate: Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon Memberships: Fellowship Sports Medicine Fellow American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons Fellow in the Arthroscopy Association of North America Fellow in the International Arthroscopy Association Fellow in the International Knee Society Fellow in the American Orthopedic Society of Sports Medicine ACL Study Group Certified QME, IME, AME Specialties: Sports Medicine, Arthroscopic and Reconstructive Surgery of the Knee and Shoulder, and Knee Replacement Appointments: Assistant Clinical Professor, Division of Orthopedics UCLA School of Medicine World Cup Soccer Team Physician Physician Specialist XXIII Olympiad 1984 Orthopedic Consultant–New York Knicks and Jets 1978-1985 Publications: 60 Publications including handbook for Orthopedic Surgeons on Prosthetic Ligament Reconstruction of the Knee Presentations: Lectures extensively with over 375 presentations worldwide 56 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. E.L. EVANS ASSOCIATES 3310 Airport Avenue, Suite # 7, Santa Monica, CA 90405, (310) 559-4005, fax (310) 559-4236, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Gene Evans. Good faith/bad faith. Over 45 years’ experience— claims adjuster. Standards and practices in the industry, litigation support, claims consultation, case review and evaluation, property/casualty claims, construction claims, uninsured/underinsured motorist claims, general liability, fire/water/mold claims, damage assessment, professional liability claims, appraisal under policy, arbitration, duty to defend, advertising claims, coverage applications, and suspected fraud claims. CV available on request. See display ad on page 45. INSURANCE EXPERT NETWORK, LLC 364 West Trenton Avenue, Suite 3, Morrisville, PA 19067, (215) 736-2980, fax (215) 736-2986, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.insuranceexpertnetwork.com. Contact Douglas R. Emerick. Claims, underwriting, actuary, bad faith, captives, casualty, credit, directors and officers, excess and umbrella, general liability, fidelity, health, industry standards, inland marine, insurance broker E&O, life, marine, misrepresentation, OCIP, professional liability, property, rescission, reinsurance, surety, title, workers compensation and more. Services available: The Insurance Expert Network, LLC is the premier provider of experts for insurance litigation, arbitration, and mediation. IEN has processed and placed thousands of referrals all over the United States. Attorneys who have worked with IEN know that each request for referral is meticulously reviewed by the IEN staff of insurance professionals. The experts IEN refers are all highly qualified, selected for their particular insurance expertise. For further information call (215) 736-2980 or visit www.insuranceexpertnetwork.com. LAUNIE ASSOCIATES, INC. 2627 Tunnel Ridge Lane, Santa Barbara, CA 93105, (805) 569-9175, fax (805) 687-8597, e-mail: jlaunie @cox.net. Contact Joseph J. Launie, PhD, CPCU, insurance professor, author, and consultant. Over 30 years of experience as expert witness in state and federal courts. Coauthor of books and articles on underwriting, insurance company operations, and punitive damages. Consulting, expert witness on underwriting, company and agency operations, and bad faith. CLINTON E. MILLER, JD, BCFE INSURANCE BAD FAITH EXPERT 502 Park Avenue, San Jose, CA 95110, (408) 2791034, fax (408) 279-3562, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Clint Miller. Insurance expert regarding claims, underwriting, agent and brokers errors and omissions, coverage disputes, customs and practices, and bad faith. See display ad on page 51. both personal lines and commercial property insurance claims. Has testified for insurers, insureds, and brokers. Practiced law in property insurance specialty since 1971. Also acts as Insurance Code Section 2071 appraiser, adviser, and consultant. RICHARD MASTERS INSURANCE SERVICES, INC. 35 West Main Street, #B170, Ventura, CA 93001, (805) 377-2688, fax (805) 830-0432, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Richard Masters. Forty-seven years of experience. Agent and broker standard of care. Claims handling, underwriting and claims, specialty lines, custom and practice of industry, certificate and additional insured issues. ROBERT HUGHES ASSOCIATES, INC. 508 Twilight Trail, #200, Richardson, TX 75080, (972) 980-0088, fax (972) 233-1548, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .roberthughes.com. Contact John Oakley. Founded in 1979, RHA is an international insurance and risk management consulting company based in Dallas. Our consultants’ experience in the insurance industry allows us to provide highly qualified expert witness and litigation support services. Our expertise includes property/casualty insurance, life/health insurance, Lloyd’s, London Market Research, claims handling, bad faith, decision analysis, agency management and practices, insurance laws and regulations, statistical forecasting, insurance sales and marketing practices, insurance archaeology and policy interpretation and analysis. JANICE A. RAMSAY, ESQ BARRY ZALMA, ZALMA INSURANCE CONSULTANTS 5 Saros, Irvine, CA 92603, (949) 854-9375, (949) 400-5040 (cell), fax (949) 854-0073, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Janice A. Ramsay, Esq. Experienced in testifying in depositions and at bad-faith trials as an expert in the customs and practices of the insurance industry in evaluating coverage and handling claims. Knowledgeable about 4441 Sepulveda Boulevard, Culver City, CA 90230, (310) 390-4455, fax (310) 391-5614, e-mail: zalma @zalma.com. Web site: www.zalma.com. Contact Barry Zalma. Insurance bad faith, insurance claims handling, insurance coverage, insurance fraud and consulting, internationally recognized expert, consultants and insurance author, arbitrator and blogger. Thomas Neches INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan. For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. FULCRUM INQUIRY 888 South Figueroa Street, Suite 2000, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 787-4100, fax (213) 8911300, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .fulcrum.com. Contact David Nolte. Our professionals are experienced CPAs, MBAs, ASAs, CFAs, affiliated professors, and industry specialists. Our analysis and research, combined with unique presentation techniques, have resulted in an unequaled record of successful court cases and client recoveries. Our expertise encompasses damages analysis, lost profit studies, business and intangible asset valuations, appraisals, fraud investigations, troubled company consultation, statistics, forensic economic analysis, royalty audits, strategic and market assessments, computer forensics, electronic discovery, and analysis of computerized data. Degrees/licenses: CPAs, CFAs, ASAs, PhDs, and MBAs in accounting, finance, economics, and related subjects. See display ad on back cover. • Expert testimony • Damages calculation • Forensic accounting • Business valuation • Database analysis Certified Public Accountant Accredited in Business Valuation Certified Valuation Analyst Thomas Neches & Company LLP Certified Fraud Examiner Certified in Financial Forensics voice: (213) 624-8150 e-mail: [email protected] 633 West 5th Street, Suite 2800 Los Angeles, California 90071-2039 www.thomasneches.com Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 57 WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. INTERNAL MEDICINE HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. INTERNAL MEDICINE AND RHEUMATOLOGY RICHARD N. SHAW, MD, FACP, FACR 16133 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 400, Encino, CA 91436, (818) 986-1357, fax (818) 986-9370. Contact Isis Ruiz. Workers’ compensation: AME, QME, panel QME, Superior court, PI, and product liability. LEGAL MALPRACTICE Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 362-1000, fax (213) 362-1001, e-mail: robertrosen@rosen-law .com. Web site: www.rosen-law.com. Specializing in securities law, federal securities law enforcement, securities arbitration, and international securities, insider trading, NYSE, AMEX, FINRA, DOC disciplinary proceedings, broker-dealer, investment company and investment adviser matters, liability under federal and state securities laws, public and private offerings, Internet securities, and law firm liability. AV rated. Former chair, LACBA Business and Corporations Law Section. LLM, Harvard Law School. Forty years practicing securities law, 12 years with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, DC. Published author/editor of securities regulations, including multivolume treatises. See display ad on page 53. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: 0.phil @4Xforensic.com. Web Site: www.4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. ARGOS ENGINEERING 44 Argos, Laguna Niguel, CA 92677, (949) 3638205, fax (949) 429-5972, e-mail: johndpratt @cox.net. Web site: www.argos-engineering.com. Contact John D. Pratt, PhD, PE. Litigation consulting, inspections, expert reports, patent infringement and validity analysis, deposition, and trial testimony. MEP CONSULTING & MORE, LLC 5430 Trabuco Road, Suite 100, Irvine, CA 92620, (949) 246-2741, fax (949) 364-6385, e-mail: jflynn @mepcam.com. Web site: www.mepcam.com. Contact John Flynn, principal. Consulting and forensics for plumbing, mechanical (heating, ventilating, A/C) and electrical (power, lighting), energy systems, residential and commercial buildings, construction defect, cost to repair, construction and development claims; delay analysis; licensed P.E.s. Experienced testifiers. MEDICAL LAWRENCE H. JACOBSON, ESQ. 9401 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1250, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, (310) 271-0747, fax (310) 271-0757, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .lawrencejacobson.com. Expert witness: lawyer malpractice in business and real estate transactions, standard of care for real estate brokers and mortgage brokers, and real estate document custom and usage. Practicing real estate and business law in California since 1968. See display ad on page 59. LAW OFFICES OF CHRISTOPHER ROLIN 5707 Corsa Avenue, Suite 106, Westlake Village, CA 91362, (818) 707-7065, fax (818) 735-9992, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .chrisrolin.com. Contact Christopher Rolin. Christopher Rolin is a highly effective trial attorney with over 46 years in civil litigation. He is a certified specialist in legal malpractice. His practice focuses on the applicable community standard of care for practicing attorneys in the litigation and business areas. He has been retained as an expert by both plaintiffs and defendants in legal malpractice cases. Also testifies on issues of professional ethics and fee disputes. LITIGATION ROBERT C. ROSEN Citigroup Center, 444 South Flower Street, 30th 58 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 AMFS MEDICAL EXPERTS NATIONWIDE 6425 Christie Avenue, Suite 260, Emeryville, CA 94608, (800) 275-8903. Web site: www.AMFS .com. Medical experts for malpractice and personal injury cases. AMFS is America’s premier medical expert witness and consulting company. We are a trusted partner with the legal community and provide a superior method of retaining medical experts. For over 20 years, AMFS has provided board-certified experts in over 10,000 malpractice and personal injury cases. • Board-Certified experts in all medical specialties • Practicing physicians with legal experience • No cost attorney consultations • Record review and testimony • Independent Medical Examinations (IME) and autopsies • Essential affidavits and reporting. Discuss your case at no charge with one of our medical directors, who will identify and clarify your case issues to ensure you retain the appropriate specialists. Cost-effective initial case reviews for merit. Have your case reviewed for merit by members of our 50+ member multispecialty Physician Advisory Panel. Review and select expert CVs. Our experience, resources, and large proprietary database enable us to quickly identify and interview a large number of potential medical experts on your behalf and provide you with the CVs of those who are best suited to your case. Ask about our new expert on-call service. See display ad on page 46. HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. TASAMED (A DIVISION OF THE TASA GROUP, INC.) FOR LOCAL AND NATIONAL MEDICAL EXPERTS Customized Expert Referrals in all Medical Practice Areas. (800) 659-8464, fax (800) 850-8272, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.TASAmed .com. Contact Linda Bartorillo. FIND THE TESTIFYING OR CONSULTING MEDICAL EXPERT YOU NEED quickly with one call or click to TASAmed. We refer superior, independent, experienced medical experts—including hard-to-find-specialists—for case merit reviews, testimony at deposition or trial, research, IME’s, and more in 1,000+ medical fields. Our skilled Referral Advisors • target your criteria • forward resumes for your review and • help arrange your initial telephone screening interviews with experts. • No charge unless you designate or engage an expert we refer • Plaintiff or defense • Local, regional, national referrals. • Exceptional personal service. Sample categories include anesthesiology, cardiology, dentistry, emergency medicine, forensic pathology, general surgery, hospital administration, neurology, nursing homes, OB/GYN, oncology, orthopedics, pediatrics, pharmacology, plastic surgery, psychiatry, radiology, and more. Visit TASAmed.com, where you can search expert profiles by expertise key word, order indispensable research reports on experts, request an expert on our online form, and discover E-discovery services and solutions. Please see our insert in this issue and display ad on page 56. MEDICAL/CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES HAROLD L. KARPMAN, MD, FACC, FACP Cardiovascular Medical Group of Southern California, Inc., Clinical Professor of medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA.414 North Camden Drive #1100, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, (310) 278-3400, fax (310) 887-2979. Contact Harold L. Karpman, MD, FACC, FACP. Cardiovascular diseases (cardiology and medical vascular problems), and internal medicine. Special expertise in coronary disease, valvular heart disease, arrhythmias, devices, hypertension, drug studies, product liability, bacterial endocarditis, angioplasty, CABG, etc. Expert and reviewer with 40+ years of experience. MEDICAL/DERMATOLOGY BIERMAN FORENSIC DERMATOLOGY 2080 Century Park East, #1008, Los Angeles, CA 90067, (310) 553-3567, fax (310) 553-4538, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .biermandermatology.com. Contact Stanley Bierman, MD. Dr. Bierman is an expert witness in matters relating to diagnosis and treatment of skin cancers, including melanoma. He is an acknowledged expert in legal matters relating to sexually transmitted diseases. Dr. Bierman is honorary associate professor of medicine and past president of Los Angeles Dermatologic Society. MEDICAL/NEUROLOGY JONATHAN S. RUTCHIK, MD, MPH, QME 20 Sunnyside Avenue, Suite A-321, Mill Valley, CA 94941, (415) 381-3133, fax (415) 381-3131, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.neoma.com. Jonathan S. Rutchik, MD, MPH is a physician who is board certified in both Neurology and Occupational and Environmental Medicine. He provides clinical evaluations and treatment, including electromyography, of individuals and populations with suspected neurological illness secondary to workplace injuries or chemical exposure. Services include medical record and utilization review and consulting to industrial, legal, government, pharmaceutical, and academic institutions on topics such as metals and solvents, pesticides, mold exposures, product liability, musicians’ injuries, and others. Offices in SF, Richmond, Petaluma, Sacramento, and Eureka/Arcata. See display ad on page 55. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO 110 Lomita Drive, Mill Valley, CA 94941, (415) 4653301, fax (415) 383-6919, e-mail: carmel6237 @comcast.net. Contact John Engstrom MD. Professor of neurology, 20+ years of clinical neurology experience, key words: spine neurology, myelopathy, radiculopathy, back and neck pain, neuropathy, general neurology, EMG (electromyography). MEDICAL/NEUROLOGY/PERSONAL INJURY ANDREW WOO, MD, PHD 2021 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 525-E, Santa Monica, CA 90404, (310) 829-2126, fax (310) 9988887. Contact Gail. Board-certified neurology, clinical assistant professor UCLA, personal injury, pain, carpal tunnel, spine, memory, seizure, sleep, and clinical protocols. Multiple sclerosis, migraine, and stroke. Education: AB Cornell University, MD and PhD Brown University, residency + EMG/EEG fellowship UCLA, Advisory Boards: L.A. Neurologic Society, St. John’s Sleep Lab, honors: America’s Top Physicians (Consumer Research Consul of America) 2006-2013, Who’s Who in Medicine (2001) and science/engineering (1993), international electrophysiology Young Investigator (1997), UCLA Neurology Teaching Awards (1994, 1996, 2006, 2012), American Academy Neurology Research (1991), Brown University Sigma XI (1989), and research/publications (22), lectures (>1000). MEDICAL/PHYSICAL THERAPY DR. JOYCE M. CAMPBELL, PHD, PT, EN 3336 Winlock Road, Torrance, CA 90505, (310) 5393143, e-mail: [email protected]. Over 40 years in physical therapy practice (acute, rehab and outpatient); certified electroneuromyographer, professor of PT in DPT curriculum, peer review/ expert consultant and witness since 1978 (both defense and plaintiff). Expertise/research: musculoskeletal, neuromuscular, peripheral and central nervous system disorders (CVA, TBI, SCI, CP, MS, peripheral neuropathy), and clinical applications of electrical stimulation. MEDICAL/PLASTIC AND COSMETIC RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY JOHN M. SHAMOUN, MD, FACS, INC. 360 San Miguel, Suite 406, Newport Beach, CA 92660, (949) 759-3077, fax (949) 759-5458, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.ideallook.com. Contact Yvonne. Specialties: only plastic surgeon in the United States board certified by the 1) American Board of Surgery, 2) American Board of Plastic Surgery, 3) American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, and 4) American Board of Forensic Medicine. Extensive experience in all aspects of cosmetic, plastic, and reconstructive surgery of the breast, nose, face, eye, and body. Well-published author of several textbook chapters and journal articles related to above topics. Extensive experience in medical malpractice case review, consultation, written evaluation and testimony in depositions and trial for plaintiff and defense. Articulate subspecialty consultant with up-to-date knowledge and expertise of plastic surgery literature and standards of care. Opinions supported by extensive subspecialty education, training, and experience. MEDICAL/TOXICOLOGY JONATHAN S. RUTCHIK, MD, MPH, QME 20 Sunnyside Avenue, Suite A-321, Mill Valley, CA 94941, (415) 381-3133, fax (415) 381-3131, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.neoma.com. Jonathan S. Rutchik, MD, MPH is a physician who is board certified in both Neurology and Occupational and Environmental Medicine. He provides clinical evaluations and treatment, including electromyography, of individuals and populations with suspected neurological illness secondary to workplace injuries or chemical exposure. Services include medical record and utilization review and consulting to industrial, legal, government, pharmaceutical, and academic institutions on topics such as metals and solvents, pesticides, mold exposures, product liability, musicians’ injuries, and others. Offices in SF, Richmond, Petaluma, Sacramento, and Eureka/Arcata. See display ad on page 55. MEDICAL COSMETIC SURGERY STEVEN BURRES, M.D. 465 North Roxbury Drive, Suite 1012, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, (310) 385-0590, fax (310) 937-1673, e-mail: [email protected]. Cosmetic surgery, audiology, ear nose throat, rhinoplasty, facelift, hearing loss, sinus surgery, tinnitus, hoarseness, scars, trauma, dizziness, vertigo, hair loss, liposuction, eyelids, nerve injury, and facial nerve. See display ad on page 53. MEDICAL EAR/NOSE/THROAT TASAmed Has Your Medical Expert. • Outstanding local and national Experts in more than 1,000 healthcare categories – even hard-to-find specialties • Services include prompt, customized searches, referrals, resumes, and your initial interview calls with experts • 5 decades of referral experience STEVEN BURRES, M.D. 465 North Roxbury Drive, Suite 1012, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, (310) 385-0590, fax (310) 937-1673, e-mail: [email protected]. Cosmetic surgery, audiology, ear nose throat, rhinoplasty, facelift, hearing loss, sinus surgery, tinnitus, hoarseness, scars, trauma, dizziness, vertigo, hair loss, liposuction, eyelids, nerve injury, and facial nerve. See display ad on page 53. MEDICAL FACIAL PLASTIC SURGERY 800-659-8464 www.tasamed.com [email protected] STEVEN BURRES, M.D. 465 North Roxbury Drive, Suite 1012, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, (310) 385-0590, fax (310) 937-1673, e-mail: [email protected]. Cosmetic surgery, audiology, ear nose throat, rhinoplasty, facelift, hearing loss, sinus surgery, tinnitus, hoarseness, scars, trauma, dizziness, vertigo, hair loss, liposuction, eyelids, nerve injury, and facial nerve. See display ad on page 53. MEDICAL LEGAL ROUGHAN & ASSOCIATES AT LINC, INC. 114 West Colorado Boulevard, Monrovia, CA 91016, (626) 303-6333, fax (626) 303-8080, e-mail: janr @linc.biz. Contact Jan Roughan at ext. 16. Specialties: Roughan and Associates at LINC is a case management and medical/legal consulting firm. Services/products offered include: 1) Expert Testimony, 2) Life Care Plan (LCP) Construction/LCP Critique, 3) Medical Record Organization/Summarization/Analysis, 4) Medical Bill Auditing, 5) Expert Witness Identification, 6) IME Attendance, 7) Video Services (e.g., Day In Life, Settlement Brief, IME Evaluation, NDT/PT Evaluation, etc.), 8) Questions for: Deposition/ Cross Examination, 9) Medical/Psychiatric Case Management. See display ad on page 55. MEDICAL MALPRACTICE HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and —EXPERT WITNESS— REAL ESTATE MATTERS SPECIALIST IN: • Broker Duties; Standard of Care • Disclosure Issues – Buyer/Seller • Agency Obligations • Real Estate Malpractice • Mortgage Brokerage Law • Residential & Commercial Transactions • Escrow Standard of Care • Foreclosure Related Issues • Short Sales and Loan Modifications CREDENTIALS: SUPERVISING BROKER Responsible for overseeing more than 7,500 RE transactions in major Californiabased real estate companies. GENERAL COUNSEL Legal adviser for two of nation’s largest real estate companies. ADJUNCT PROFESSOR Loyola Law School HOTLINE ATTORNEY Supervising Senior Counsel at California Association of Realtors (CAR) DRE MASTER INSTRUCTOR Author, DRE Disclosure Course. ALAN D. WALLACE, ESQ. 14011 VENTURA BLVD., STE. 406, SHERMAN OAKS CA 91423 TEL 818.501.0133 • FAX 818.905.6091 www.expertwitnessre.com [email protected] E-MAIL: Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 59 reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. METALLURGICAL AND CORROSION ENGINEER 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: 0.phil @4Xforensic.com. Web Site: www.4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. CHEMICAL ACCIDENT RECONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC. 9121 East Tanque Verde Road, Suite 105, Tucson, AZ 85749, (800) 645-3369, e-mail: service @chemaxx.com. Web site: www.chemaxx.com. Contact Dr. Michael Fox. Comprehensive chemical accident investigation—specializing in complex industrial chemical accidents and chemical related consumer product injuries, chemical fires and explosions, chemical labeling, chemical packaging, handling and shipping, burns, warnings, labels, MSDSs, disposal, safety, EPA, OSHA, DOT, propane, natural gas, hydrogen, flammable liquids, hazardous chemicals, aerosols (hairspray, spray paint, refrigerants). DOT certified (hazardous materials shipment). Certified fire and explosion investigator, OSHA process hazard analysis team leader. PhD physical chemistry. Extensive experience in metallurgy, corrosion, and failure analysis. KARS’ ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. Testing and Research Labs, 2528 West Woodland Drive, Anaheim, CA 92801-2636, (714) 527-7100, fax (714) 527-7169, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.karslab.com. Contact Dr. Ramesh Kar, Dr. Naresh Kar, Dr. Nikhil Kar. Southern California’s premier materials/mechanical/metallurgical/structural/forensics laboratory. Registered professional engineers with 30-plus years in metallurgical/forensic/structural failure analysis. Experienced with automotive, bicycles, tires, fire, paint, plumbing, corrosion, and structural failures. We work on both plaintiff and defendant cases. Complete in-house capabilities for tests. Extensive deposition and courtroom experience (civil and criminal investigations). Principals are Fellows of American Society for Metals and Fellows, American College of Forensic Examiners. See display ad on page 61. METALLURGY KARS ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. Testing and Research Labs, 2528 West Woodland Drive, Anaheim, CA 92801-2636, (714) 527-7100, fax (714) 527-7169, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.karslab.com. Contact Dr. Ramesh Kar, Dr. Naresh Kar, Dr. Nikhil Kar. Southern California’s premier materials/mechanical/metallurgical/ structural/forensics laboratory. Registered professional engineers with 30-plus years in metallurgical/ forensic/structural failure analysis. Experienced with automotive, bicycles, tires, fire, paint, plumbing, corrosion, and structural failures. We work on both plaintiff and defendant cases. Complete in-house capabilities for tests. Extensive deposition and courtroom experience (civil and criminal investigations). Principals are fellows of American Society for Metals and board-certified diplomates, American Board of Forensic Examiners. See display ad on page 61. METEOROLOGY AIR, WEATHER, AND SEA CONDITIONS, INC. P.O. Box 512, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (818) 645-8632, fax (310) 454-7569, e-mail: AirWeather @aol.com. Web site: www.weatherman.org. Con- 60 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 tact Jay Rosenthal, AMS Certified Consulting Meteorologist (CCM). Experienced and authoritative expert testimony, reports and analyses of wind, rain, storms, lightning, climatic conditions, flooding, waves, specialist in wildfires, ice, dust, auto/boat/ ship/aircraft accident reconstruction, property damage, slip and falls, construction, mold issues, homeland security applications, air pollution, transport, and risk identification. Movie industry applications, cinematography, and visual effects. Determining unusualness, normalcy, and foreseeability. Official data, site visits, clear and convincing testimony. See display ad on page 46. NURSING/SURGERY/MEDSURG MED-LINK CONSULTATION 3362 Budleigh Drive, Hacienda Heights, CA 91745, (626) 333-5110, fax (626) 968-0064, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Dorothy Pollock, RN, LNCC. Registered nurse with over 40 years of clinical experience. Nontestifying services include case analysis/for merit, chronology, translation, written reports, medical record organization. DME/IME accompaniment including CD recording and written report. Expert witness and testifying services, including affidavit, arbitration, declaration, letters, and trial. Courtroom experienced both plaintiff and defense. ORTHOPEDIC SURGEON MARC J. FRIEDMAN, MD 6815 Noble Avenue, Van Nuys, CA 91405, (818) 901-6600, fax (818) 901-6685, e-mail: mfriedman @scoi.com. Web site: www.scoi.com. Contact Vanessa Espinal, ext 2810/2910. Orthopedic shoulder and knee, consulting, and expert witness testimony. IME, AME, QME, and workers’ compensation evaluations. See display ad on page 59. RICHARD C. ROSENBERG, MD 18370 Burbank Boulevard, #614 Tarzana, CA 91356, tel (818) 996-6800, fax (818) 996-2929, e-mail [email protected]. Website: www.drrosenberg.com. Orthopedic surgery & sports medicine; Experienced in IME, QME, AME evaluations. Medical/legal reports and expert testimony. Personal injury and workers’ compensation. Satellite offices in Oxnard and Santa Ana, California. WILLIAM B. STETSON, MD 191 South Buena Vista Street, Suite 470, Burbank, CA 91505, (818) 848-3030, fax (818) 848-2228, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .sportsmedicinedr.com. Contact W. Stetson, MD. Dr. Stetson is fellowship trained in arthroscopic surgery of the shoulder, knee, elbow, and ankle. He is an Associate Clinical Professor of orthopedic surgery at the USC Keck School of Medicine. He also has extensive experience in sports medicine and orthopedic trauma. PATENTS ARGOS ENGINEERING 44 Argos, Laguna Niguel, CA 92677, (949) 3638205, fax (949) 429-5972, e-mail: johndpratt@cox .net. Web site: www.argos-engineering.com. Contact John D. Pratt, PhD, PE. Litigation consulting, inspections, expert reports, patent infringement and validity analysis, deposition, and trial testimony. PEDIATRIC EXPERT WITNESS MICHAEL WEINRAUB, MD, FAAP 515 South Flower Street, Suite 3600, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 236-3662, fax (213) 236-3663, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .michaelweinraubmd.com. Experience in general pediatrics applied to your legal questions. Contact Dr. Michael Weinraub. Board Certified Pediatrician. Child abuse and neglect, Munchausen syndrome by proxy, shaken baby syndrome (SBS), lead poisoning, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD), pediatric malpractice, childhood injury and product liability, developmental disabilities (autism), healthcare of foster children, and adoption/custody evaluation for health supervision concerns. PERSONAL INJURY KGA, INC. 1409 Glenneyre Street, Suite A, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 497-6000, fax (949) 494-4893, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kgainc.com. Contact Kurt Grosz. Construction and environmental consultants since 1991. Licensed engineers and contractors. ICC building, plumbing, mechanical, concrete and accessibility inspectors. Certified professional estimators. Trial experts, arbitrators, and insurance appraisers. WHITE, ZUCKERMAN, WARSAVSKY, LUNA & HUNT 15490 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 300, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403, (818) 981-4226, fax (818) 9814278, 4 Park Plaza, 2nd Floor, Irvine, CA 92614, (949) 219-9816, fax (949) 219-9095, e-mail: expert @wzwlh.com. Web site: www.wzwlh.com. Contact Barbara Luna. Expert witness testimony for complex litigation involving damage analyses of lost profits, unjust enrichment, reasonable royalties, lost earnings, lost value of business, forensic accounting, fraud investigation, investigative analysis of liability, and marital dissolution, and tax planning and preparation. Excellent communicators with extensive testimony experience. Prior Big Four accountants. Specialties include accounting, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business interruption, business dissolution, construction defects, delays, and cost overruns, fraud, insurance bad faith, intellectual property (including trademark, patent, and copyright infringement, and trade secrets), malpractice, marital dissolution, personal injury, product liability, real estate, securities, tax planning and preparation, IRS audit defense, tracing, unfair advertising, unfair competition, valuation of businesses, and wrongful termination. See display ad on page 43. ZIVETZ, SCHWARTZ & SALTSMAN, CPAS 11900 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90064-1046, (310) 826-1040, fax (310) 826-1065. Web site: www.zsscpa.com. Contact Lester J. Schwartz, CPA/CFF, DABFE, DABFA, Michael D. Saltsman, CPA, MBA, David L. Bass, CPA, David Dichner, CPA, ABV, CVA, Sandy Green, CPA, Daljeet Kaur, CPA. Accounting experts in forensic accounting, tax issues, business valuations, and appraisals, marital dissolutions, eminent domain, insurance losses, business interruption, goodwill, economic analysis, investigative auditing, loss of earning, commercial damages, and lost profits. Expert witness testimony preparation, settlement negotiations, and consultations. See display ad on page 49. PLASTIC AND COSMETIC RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY JEFFREY L. ROSENBERG, MD 1245 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 601, Los Angeles, CA 90017, (213) 977-0257, fax (213) 977-0501, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .jrosenbergmd.com. Contact Jackie or Judy. Plastic and reconstructive surgery, burn specialist. Diplomate, American Board of Plastic Surgery. Member, American Burn Association and American Society of Plastic Surgeons. PLASTICS KARS ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. Testing and Research Labs, 2528 West Woodland Drive, Anaheim, CA 92801-2636, (714) 527-7100, fax (714) 527-7169, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.karslab.com. Contact Dr. Ramesh Kar, Dr. Naresh Kar, Dr. Nikhil Kar. Southern California’s premier aterials/mechanical/metallurgical/ structural/forensics laboratory. Registered professional engineers with 30-plus years in metallurgical/ forensic/structural failure analysis. Experienced with automotive, bicycles, tires, fire, paint, plumbing, corrosion, and structural failures. We work on both plaintiff and defendant cases. Complete in-house capabilities for tests. Extensive deposition and courtroom experience (civil and criminal investigations). Principals are fellows of American Society for Metals and board-certified diplomates, American Board of Forensic Examiners. See display ad on page 61. PLUMBING 4X FORENSIC ENGINEERING LABORATORIES, INC. 5262 Oceanus Drive, Huntington Beach, CA 92649, (714) 450-8500, fax (714) 450-8599, e-mail: [email protected]. Web Site: www .4Xforensic.com. Contact Phil Van Herle. 4X Forensic Engineering Laboratories is a full-service forensic engineering laboratory. We provide expert witness and analytical and testing services in the following areas: fires and explosions: electrical and gas product defect investigations, thermal and fire modeling and laboratory testing, water loss: materials, corrosion and failure analysis of plumbing products, failure analysis: metallurgy, product testing, and computerized stress analysis. Accident reconstruction: automotive, trucks, construction equipment, and premises liability. Do You Have A Case Involving Dogs? • dog bites • evaluations • animal cruelty • service dogs • behavior • aggression Specializing in Rottweilers and Pit Bulls — CASE REVIEW, CONSULTATION, TESTIMONY — Jill Kessler • Dog Expert | 310-573-9615 | e-mail: [email protected] www.jillkessler.com MEP CONSULTING & MORE, LLC 5430 Trabuco Road, Suite 100, Irvine, CA 92620, (949) 246-2741, fax (949) 364-6385, e-mail: jflynn @mepcam.com. Web site: www.mepcam.com. Contact John Flynn, principal. Consulting and forensics for plumbing, mechanical (heating, ventilating, A/C) and electrical (power, lighting), energy systems, residential and commercial buildings, construction defect, cost to repair, construction and development claims; delay analysis; licensed P.E.s. Experienced testifiers. Keith Kajiya 213-996-2598 [email protected] URS is the nation’s largest engineering, consulting and construction services firm. URS specializes in the resolution of construction disputes. PODIATRY—FOOT SPECIALIST Dispute Resolution & Forensic Analysis Design/Construction Claims Environmental Claims Bid/Cost/Damage Analysis Construction Defect Analysis Delay/Acceleration/Disruption Analysis Expert Witness Testimony Insurance/Bond Claims STEVEN L. ROSENBERG, DPM 2901 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 110, Santa Monica, CA 90403, (310) 828-3336, fax (310) 8280096, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .rosenbergstevendpm.com. Expert witness, plaintiff and defense, IME, podiatric surgery, medicine, sports medicine, trauma injuries and pain management. Second opinion reports, x-ray review, and evaluations. Treating all ages, infants, children and adults. Over 29 years of experience. Technical Expertise Architecture Engineering Scheduling Construction Management Cost Estimating & Auditing Environmental Geotechnical POLYGRAPH JACK TRIMARCO & ASSOCIATES POLYGRAPH INC. 9454 Wilshire Boulevard, 6th Floor, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, (310) 247-2637, e-mail: jtrimarco@aol .com. Web site: www.jacktrimarco.com. Contact Jack Trimarco. Former manager of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s polygraph program in Los Angeles. Former Inspector General Polygraph Program—Department of Energy. Nationally known and respected polygraph expert. I have the credentials you would want when you have a client polygraphed, a case reviewed, or a motion made regarding polygraph. My unique background allows me to bring the highest levels of service and expertise to any polygraph situation. Current member of the Ethics Committee, California Association of Polygraph Examiners (CAPE). Hundreds of appearances on national TV, including Dr. Phil, Oprah, Greta, Nancy Grace, O’Reilly Factor, and Hannity and Colmes. Degrees/ licenses: BS Psychology, Certified APA, AAPP, CAPE, AAFE. See display ad on page 5. PROBATE LAW THE BEST LEGAL MINDS IN THE COUNTRY TALK TO US ¥ Metallurgical Failures ¥ Bio-Medical / Orthopedic Implants ¥ Corrosion & Welding Failures ¥ Plumbing / Piping / ABS Failures ¥ Glass & Ceramic Failures ¥ Complete In-House Laboratory ¥ Chairs / Ladders / Tires Testing & Analysis Facilities ¥ Automobile /Aerospace ¥ Expert Witnesses / Jury Verdicts Accident Investigations ¥ Licensed Professional Engineers ¥ Plastics, Composites, Fiberglass Failures ¥ Materials & Mechanical Testing HONORABLE ANITA RAE SHAPIRO Superior Court commissioner (Retired), P.O. Box 1508, Brea, CA 92822-1508, e-mail: privatejudge @adr-shapiro.com. Web site: http://adr-shapiro .com. Retired Los Angeles Superior Court commissioner (15 years) available to serve as a probate expert witness in cases involving wills and trust issues. Presided in Long Beach Probate Department five years. See display ad on page 55. Contact: Dr. Naresh Kar, Fellow ASM, Fellow ACFE Dr. Ramesh Kar, Fellow ASM, Fellow ACFE Dr. Nikhil Kar ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC. PSYCHIATRY MARIA T. LYMBERIS, MD, INC. 1500 Montana Avenue, Suite 201, Santa Monica, CA 90403, (310) 451-3152, fax (310) 310-2620, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.lymberis.com. Contact Maria T. Lymberis, MD. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, UCLA School of Medicine. Board Certified Testing & Research Labs 2528 WEST WOODLAND DRIVE, ANAHEIM, CA 92801 ■ TEL (714) 527-7100 ■ www.karslab.com ■ FAX (714) 527-7169 [email protected] ■ E-MAIL Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 61 in adult, child/adolescent psychiatry, expert consultant Medical Board of California, forensic expert for psychiatric malpractice, sexual harassment, posttraumatic stress cases, and divorce/child custody and psychiatric evaluations for: fitness for duty and competency to stand trial. Diego Police Department crime lab, Arizona State crime lab and San Diego County District Attorney’s office. Currently in private, criminal, and civil practice. REAL ESTATE ADVISORS/EXPERTS @ MCS ASSOCIATES PSYCHIATRY/PSYCHOLOGY BRIAN P. JACKS, MD 9730 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 108, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, (310) 274-0684, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Patricia Valenzuela. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry USC. Over 25 years of trial experience in child sex abuse, workers’ compensation, personal injury, malpractice, PTSD, psychopharmacology, sex harassment, bullying, discrimination, child custody, neuropsychiatry and (head injury). Board Certified: adult, 1974, child-adolescent, 1976. PSYCHOLOGY FORENSIC EXPERT STEFANIE STOLINSKY, PHD 9300 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 320, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, (310) 788-3436, e-mail: stefstol @prodigy.net. Web site: www.act-it-out.com. Contact Stefanie Stolinsky, PhD. Specialties: Adults sexually, physically, emotionally abused as children; PTSD; depression; trauma. Dr. Stolinsky has a private practice in Beverly Hills in addition to her work on television and her numerous published works. She is a recognized expert in the fields of family relations, child abuse, and PTSD. Born and raised in San Francisco, California, she is a graduate of UCLA and USC in psychology. Dr. Stolinsky has also been a lecturer at the California Graduate School in forensics, neuropsychology, and play therapy. She is the author of Act It Out: 25 Acting Exercises to Heal from Childhood Abuse, which is in its second edition from Praeclarus Press. She also has been referenced in Jane Velez-Mitchell’s book, I Want. Dr. Stolinsky is regularly called on by a number of lawyers, as well as television and radio programs to serve as an adviser on various psychological issues. PSYCHOLOGY/PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT BRIGHT MINDS JUDY HO, PHD, ABPP 12011 San Vicente Boulevard, Suite 402, Los Angeles, CA 90049, (310) 745-8887, e-mail: drjudyho@gmail .com. Web site: www.drjudyho.com. Dr. Ho provides forensic evaluations used in legal settings to document a wide variety of psychologically relevant information, including personal injury, work-related emotional injury, worker’s compensation, fitness for duty for high-stress jobs, child custody, the capacity to adequately parent a minor child, evaluation of malingering and deception, employment discrimination and harassment, and professional licensing disputes. She provides expert testimony regarding psychological testing methods, results, and conclusions. Dr. Ho has a specialty board certification through ABPP, has published empirical studies and book chapters, provides clinical consultations, and is a tenure-track faculty member at Pepperdine University Graduate School of Psychology. QUESTIONED DOCUMENTS SANDRA L. HOMEWOOD, FORENSIC DOCUMENT EXAMINER 1132 San Marino Drive, Suite 216, Lake San Marcos, CA 92078, (760) 931-2529, fax (760) 5108412, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Sandra L. Homewood. Highly skilled and experienced document examiner and expert witness in many complex and high-profile civil and criminal cases with fully equipped document laboratory. Specializing in handwriting and handprinting identification, handwriting of the elderly in financial elder abuse cases and will contests, and examination of altered medical and corporate records. Trained in government laboratory, including specialized training by the FBI and Secret Service. Former government experience includes document examiner for the San 62 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 18881 Von Karman, Suite 1175, Irvine, CA 92612, (949) 263-8700, fax (949) 263-0770, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .mcsassociates.com. Contact Norman Katz, managing partner. Nationally recognized banking, finance, insurance, and real estate consulting group (established 1973). Experienced litigation consultants/experts include senior bankers, lenders, consultants, economists, accountants, insurance underwriters/brokers. Specialties include: lending customs, practices, policies, in all types of lending (real estate, subprime, business/commercial, construction, consumer/credit card), banking operations/administration, trusts and investments, economic analysis and valuations/damages assessment, insurance claims, coverages and bad faith, real estate brokerage, appraisal, escrow, and title insurance. LAWRENCE H. JACOBSON, ESQ. 9401 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1250, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, (310) 271-0747, fax (310) 271-0757, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .lawrencejacobson.com. Expert witness: lawyer malpractice in business and real estate transactions, standard of care for real estate brokers and mortgage brokers, and real estate document custom and usage. Practicing real estate and business law in California since 1968. See display ad on page 59. ALAN D. WALLACE, ESQ. 14011 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 406, Sherman Oaks, CA 91423, (818) 501-0133, fax (818) 9056091, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Alan D. Wallace, Esq. Expert witness and litigation consulting for general real estate matters, including law, custom and practice, agency, disclosure, broker malpractice, standards of care for brokers, buyers and sellers. Broker and attorney. Involved as broker in more than 7,500 real estate transactions. Department of Real Estate master instructor and author, Adjunct Professor Loyola Law School, former CAR Hotline attorney, University Law Professor in real estate. Successfully testified in dozens of cases. See display ad on page 56. WARONZOF ASSOCIATES, INC. 999 North Sepulveda Boulevard, Suite 440, El Segundo, CA 90245, (310) 322-7744, fax (310) 322-7755. Web site: www.waronzof.com. Contact Timothy R. Lowe, MAI, CRE. Waronzof provides real estate and land use litigation support services including economic damages, lost profits, financial feasibility, lease dispute, property value, enterprise value, partnership interest and closely-held share value, fair compensation, lender liability, and reorganization plan feasibility. Professional staff of five with advanced degrees and training in real estate, finance, urban planning, and accounting. See display ad on page 59. REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL CURTIS-ROSENTHAL, INC. 5959 West Century Boulevard, Suite 1010, Los Angeles, CA 90045, (310) 215-0482, fax (310) 2153089, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.curtisrosenthal.com. Contact David Rosenthal, MAI, FRICS, or Dawn Olson, MRICS. Appraisal of commercial real estate for estate planning, eminent domain, bankruptcy, divorce, and general litigation. Accepted in local, state, and federal courts. REAL ESTATE TITLE CONSULTING PETRU CORPORATION 250 Hallock Drive, Suite 100, Santa Paula, CA 93060, (805) 933-1389, fax (805) 933-1380, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .PetruCorporation.com. Contact Tim Truwe. Incorporated in 1986, Petru Corporation is a full service land consulting company including: title searching/ research, forensic title, title engineering, oil, gas, mineral and geothermal consulting, wind and solar land consulting, regulatory/permit compliance, subdivisions, right-of-way consulting, water rights, autoCAD map drafting. Petru Corporation has provided its services on multimillion-dollar projects and matters involving court litigation. REAL ESTATE VALUATION ACCRUED FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. 2901 Pacific Coast Highway, 2nd Floor, Signal Hill, CA 90755, (562) 983-6700, fax (562) 983-1622, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .markmalantherealestateman.com. Contact Mark S. Malan, MAI, SRA, MBA. Trusts, estates, probates, divorce, commercial and residential. Mark S. Malan, MAI has been servicing Southern California with current, prospective, and historic values for over 25 years. Expert witness testimony has been honed by 15 years as a college instructor that allows as easy and credible way to inform the trier-of-fact about the issues of the matter at hand. Additional experience as a general contract and real estate investor has added credible evidence in cases of diminution in case of undisclosed defects and several types of construction losses. RECEIVER SALTZBURG, RAY & WEISSMAN, LLP 12121 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 600, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 481-6780, fax (310) 481-6707, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.srblaw.com. Contact Richard Weissman, Esq. Specializes in handling complex receivership matters, such as partnership and corporate dissolutions, including law firm dissolutions, and government enforcement receivership actions, including actions brought by the California Department of Corporations, Department of Real Estate, Commodities Future Trading Commission, and Federal Trade Commission. Nationally recognized in both the lender and litigation communities as qualified to assist in complicated and commercially sophisticated liquidations, reorganizations, and ongoing business operations. See display ad on page 51. RETALIATION HAIGHT CONSULTING 1726 Palisades Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 454-2988, fax (310) 454-4516. Contact Marcia Haight, SPHR—CA. Human resources expert knowledgeable in both federal and California law. Twenty-five years’ corporate human resources management experience plus over 20 years as a Human Resources Compliance Consultant in California. Specializations include sexual harassment, ADA/disability discrimination, other Title VII and FEHA discrimination and harassment, retaliation, FMLA/CFRA, safety, and wrongful termination. Courtroom testimony and deposition experience. Retained 60 percent by defense, 40 percent by plaintiff. Audit employer’s actions in preventing and resolving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation issues. Assess human resources policies and practices for soundness, for comparison to prevailing practices, and for compliance. Evaluate employer responsiveness to complaints and effectiveness of employer investigations. Assist counsel via preliminary case analysis, discovery strategy, examination of documents, and expert testimony. ROOFING AND WATERPROOFING KGA, INC. 1409 Glenneyre Street, Suite A, Laguna Beach, CA 92651, (949) 497-6000, fax (949) 494-4893, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.kgainc.com. Contact Kurt Grosz. Construction and environmental consultants since 1991. Licensed engineers and contractors. ICC building, plumbing, mechanical, concrete and accessibility inspectors. Certified professional estimators. Trial experts, arbitrators, and insurance appraisers. SAFETY SCS ENGINEERS 3900 Kilroy Airport Way, Suite 100, Long Beach, CA 90806, (562) 426-9544, fax (562) 427-0805, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .scsengineers.com. Contact Julio Nuno, VP. SCS provides expert witness services related to environment studies and engineering, water resources, solid waste and air quality and industrial hygiene and safety services. We are a 43-year old consulting firm with 66 offices across the US and over 800 employees. Our Long Beach office has more than 30 professional engineers, scientists, and subject matter experts available on short notice to serve asbestos, lead-based paint, and other specialty areas requiring expert witness services. SECURITIES CORNERSTONE RESEARCH 633 West Fifth Street, 31st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2005, (213) 553-2500, fax (213) 553-2699. Web site: www.cornerstone.com. Contact George G. Strong, Jr., Richard W. Dalbeck, Katie J. Galley, Elaine Harwood, Carlyn Irwin, Erin McGlogan or Ashish Pradhan.For more than twenty-five years, Cornerstone Research staff have provided economic and financial analysis in all phases of commercial litigation and regulatory proceedings. We work with a broad network of testifying experts, including prominent faculty and industry practitioners, in a distinctive collaboration. The experts with whom we work bring the specialized expertise required to meet the demands of each assignment. Our areas of specialization include intellectual property, antitrust, securities, entertainment, real estate, financial institutions, and general business litigation. MARKET CONSULTING CORPORATION (213) 627-0440, (888) 397-9867, e-mail: info @market-consulting.com. Web site: www.market -consulting.com. Contact Dr. Ronald W. Cornew. Twenty plus years as consultants in investment and trading litigation. Asset management, pension investments, securities and futures tax matters including IRS examinations, appeals, U.S. Tax Court appearances. Broker/customer disputes: stocks and bonds, options, commodity futures, currency trading, derivatives including swaps, limited partnerships, hedge funds, managed futures. Consultants to NYSE, Options Clearing Corporation, CBOT, CME, COMEX, TIAA/CREF, banks, other major clients. Arbitrator NASD (now FINRA), NYSE, AAA, NFA, mediator with NASD (now FIRNA) training. Member: Compliance and Legal Division, Securities Industry Association. ROBERT C. ROSEN Citigroup Center, 444 South Flower Street, 30th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 362-1000, fax (213) 362-1001, e-mail: robertrosen@rosen-law .com. Web site: www.rosen-law.com. Specializing in securities law, federal securities law enforcement, securities arbitration, and international securities, insider trading, NYSE, AMEX, FINRA, DOC disciplinary proceedings, broker-dealer, investment company and investment adviser matters, liability under federal and state securities laws, public and private offerings, Internet securities, and law firm liability. AV rated. Former chair, LACBA Business and Corporations Law Section. LLM, Harvard Law School. Forty years practicing securities law, 12 years with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, DC. Published author/editor of securities regulations, including multivolume treatises. See display ad on page 53. SEXUAL HARASSMENT/DISCRIMINATION HAIGHT CONSULTING 1726 Palisades Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 454-2988, fax (310) 454-4516. Contact Marcia Haight, SPHR—CA. Human resources expert knowledgeable in both federal and California law. Twenty-five years’ corporate human resources management experience plus over 20 years as a Human Resources Compliance Consultant in Califor- nia. Specializations include sexual harassment, ADA/disability discrimination, other Title VII and FEHA discrimination and harassment, retaliation, FMLA/CFRA, safety, and wrongful termination. Courtroom testimony and deposition experience. Retained 60 percent by defense, 40 percent by plaintiff. Audit employer’s actions in preventing and resolving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation issues. Assess human resources policies and practices for soundness, for comparison to prevailing practices, and for compliance. Evaluate employer responsiveness to complaints and effectiveness of employer investigations. Assist counsel via preliminary case analysis, discovery strategy, examination of documents, and expert testimony. HRM CONSULTING, INC. 1700 North First Street, Suite 120, San Jose, CA 95112, (209) 728-8905, fax (209) 728-8970, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www.hrmconsulting.com. Contact Beth B. De Lima, SPHR-CA. Expert witness Beth De Lima, has testified for both plaintiff and defense in the following areas: human resources standards of care, employment ADA accommodation, FEHA, FMLA, CFRA, ADA & EEOC violations. Wrongful termination, performance management, discrimination, sexual harassment, exempt analysis, labor market assessment, and vocational evaluations. She holds national and California specific certification—Senior Professional in Human Resource (SPHR-CA), certified mediator, and consulting since 1992. TITLE SEARCHING/REPORTS PETRU CORPORATION 250 Hallock Drive, Suite 100, Santa Paula, CA 93060, (805) 933-1389, fax (805) 933-1380, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: www .PetruCorporation.com. Contact Tim Truwe. Incorporated in 1986, Petru Corporation is a full service land consulting company including title searching/ research, forensic title, title engineering, oil, gas, mineral and geothermal consulting, wind and solar land consulting, regulatory/permit compliance, subdivisions, right-of-way consulting, water rights, autoCAD map drafting. Petru Corporation has provided its services on multimillion-dollar projects and matters involving court litigation. TOXICOLOGY HAMPTON HEALTH, LTD JOHN H. FULLERTON, MD, MRO, CMD, CFP, FACP, AGSF, FAAHPM 1700 California Street, Suite 470, San Francisco, CA 94109, (415) 460-5532, fax (415) 459-2774, e-mail: [email protected]. Web site: hamptonhealthltd.com. Contact Kate McElroy, PA-C. Services available: board certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, hospice, palliative medicine, addiction medicine, and home health; licensed medical review officer. Expertise: Medicare fraud cases for the government, toxicology/DUI, elder abuse including criminal defense of lay caregivers accused of homicide of demented relatives during end-of-life phase. Hospital, ambulatory/outpatient, PI, medical malpractice, and LTC. Medical/hospice directorships. Testified over 200 times and reviewed more than 1,000 cases in the last 13 years. See display ad on page 44. PRINCETON-SOMERSET GROUP, INC. 4 Carroll Drive, Hillsborough, NJ 08844, (800) 5978836, (908) 369-6890, fax (908) 369-6881. Web site: www.PrincetonSomerset.com. Contact Dr. Dennis Stainken. Expert witness, toxicology, health issues, chemical exposure, mold issues, worker exposure, contamination issues, causation assessment, property damage/contamination and remediation, sewage, gasoline and oil issues and age determination, petroleum releases, chemicals/products, risk assessment, indoor air quality/health effects, toxic tort evaluation, chemistry, site assessment, regulatory issues, environmental toxicology, environmental issues, and wetland/ecological. Services nationwide. Thirty-plus years of industrial and government experience in pollution under NPDES, CERCLA, RCRA, SDWA and CWA. Former federal and state regulator, professor, consultant, industrial research. Seventyfive plus publications. TRAFFIC ENGINEERING WILLIAM KUNZMAN, PE 1111 Town and Country #34, Orange, CA 92868, (714) 973-8383, fax (714) 973-8821, e-mail: bill @traffic-engineer.com. Web site: www.traffic -engineer.com. Contact William Kunzman, PE. Traffic expert witness since 1979, both defense and plaintiff. Auto, pedestrian, bicycle, and motorcycle accidents. Largest plaintiff verdicts: 1) $12,200,000 in pedestrian accident case against Caltrans, 2) $10,300,000 in case against Los Angeles Unified School District. Largest settlement: $2,000,000 solo vehicle accident case against Caltrans. Best defense verdict: $0 while defending Caltrans and opposition sought $16,000,000. Before becoming expert witness, employed by Los Angeles County Road Department, Riverside County Road Department, city of Irvine, and Federal Highway Administration. Knowledge of governmental agency procedures, design, geometrics, signs, traffic controls, maintenance, and pedestrian protection barriers. Hundreds of cases. Undergraduate work—UCLA, graduate work—Yale University. TRANSACTIONAL DUE DILIGENCE CBIZ & MAYER HOFFMAN MCCANN PC 10474 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025, (310) 268-2000, fax (310) 2682001, e-mail: [email protected]. Contact Coral Hansen. Web site: www.MHM-PC.com, www .CBIZ.com. CBIZ & Mayer Hoffman McCann PC specializes in fraud investigations, forensic accounting, business litigation, commercial damage and lost profits computations, business valuation and appraisal, transactional due diligence, family limited partnerships, business interruption, and family law. We provide experienced expert testimony and tax controversy representation. WASTEWATER JOHN SHAW CONSULTING, LLC Tel: (530) 550-1576, e-mail: [email protected]. Website: www.shaweng.com. Contact John Shaw, PE. Water/wastewater/sewer industry—unique combination of operations and engineering background. Sanitary engineering including water (potable) and wastewater (industrial and domestic) treatment, conveyance, hydraulics, storage, reuse, master planning, operations, maintenance, and expert witness and forensic (mode of failure and standard of care analysis, engineering analysis, product suitability and construction defect issues). Wastewater treatment plants, disposal/reuse facilities, sewage lift station design, sewer collection systems, and sludge treatment. Water treatment plants, pipelines, and swimming pools. WRONGFUL TERMINATION HAIGHT CONSULTING 1726 Palisades Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272, (310) 454-2988, fax (310) 454-4516. Contact Marcia Haight, SPHR—CA. Human resources expert knowledgeable in both federal and California law. Twenty-five years’ corporate human resources management experience plus over 20 years as a Human Resources Compliance Consultant in California. Specializations include sexual harassment, ADA/disability discrimination, other Title VII and FEHA discrimination and harassment, retaliation, FMLA/CFRA, safety, and wrongful termination. Courtroom testimony and deposition experience. Retained 60 percent by defense, 40 percent by plaintiff. Audit employer’s actions in preventing and resolving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation issues. Assess human resources policies and practices for soundness, for comparison to prevailing practices, and for compliance. Evaluate employer responsiveness to complaints and effectiveness of employer investigations. Assist counsel via preliminary case analysis, discovery strategy, examination of documents, and expert testimony. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 63 computer counselor BY HEATHER E. STERN How to Use an iPad to Manage and Present Trial Exhibits IN ONE FORM OR ANOTHER, technology has permeated and improved out the nuisance of repeated mouse clicks. Further, thanks to its virtually every aspect of both my personal and my professional life. flash memory and efficient operating system, the iPad has the beneUntil recently, however, I had not yet had an opportunity to experi- fit of being always on, so it is ready to use in the blink of an eye. ence what happens when technology does the same with trial practice. Compare that to the multiminute boot-up we are all accustomed to In a recent case, opposing counsel hired a trial presentation ven- with the PC. Even launching apps on the iPad typically happens in dor. If you are thinking Elmo, which I did when opposing counsel first mere seconds instead of the tortoiselike launch of its counterparts. While, at times, the display on the monitors lagged, my underproposed the idea, you can imagine my surprise when I found out that the vendor would be bringing 10 computer monitors into the con- standing is that the lag is a function not of the application but instead ference room where the matter was being heard—one for the judge, of the connection, which in my case was VGA rather than HDMI. another for the witness, and the six lawyers in the room would share Neither the app nor the iPad ever crashed or had any fatal errors durthe rest. For what purpose? All the trial exhibits— and there were over 2,000—had been imaged I could zoom in on all or part of the document, highlight, and loaded into a software program on opposing counsel’s laptop computer. Whenever he wanted to examine a witness about a particuunderline, or circle parts of it, create a cutout that popped out of lar document, his associate would call up the document on the laptop and it instantaneously appeared on the monitors in front of everyone. the screen at the viewer, or even use my finger to create a laser Then, at his direction, she would manipulate the exhibit—highlighting key language, blowing up small but critical text, or electronically pointer on the screen to direct the viewer’s attention. displaying the exhibit next to another for comparison—so as to complement and emphasize the lawyer’s examination of the witness. Contrary to my expectations, it was not distracting. Instead, it was ing trial, unlike opposing counsel’s Windows-based laptop. In the rare effective and sped the examination along smoothly. event of a crash, relaunching the app and returning to where you left So, of course, I had to master this technique myself. Opposing coun- off takes seconds, in contrast to the cumbersome, time-consuming, sel was using Trial Director software on a Windows-based laptop, but, and therefore frustrating crashes experienced on a laptop. In my after some quick research, I decided to try an application called experience, iPad app crashes, besides being rare, are less likely to result TrialPad for the iPad (version 3.0.11). It worked like a charm. So, here in data loss than is the case with a laptop. I also appreciated the lightis what you need to know. weight nature of the iPad when I was carrying it to and from trial along Capabilities. As far as I could tell, the TrialPad app had virtually with several heavy boxes. the same capabilities as the competing software used by opposing counCost. The application costs only $89.99. In addition, we used an sel. For any given exhibit, I could zoom in on all or part of the doc- iPad 4 with 128 gigabytes of memory and a VGA adapter that also ument, highlight, underline, or circle parts of it, create a cutout that contained a power cable input, so the device could be simultaneously popped out of the screen at the viewer, or even use my finger to cre- plugged in for power and connected to the monitors. The vendor ate a laser pointer on the screen to direct the viewer’s attention. I could charged the parties a collective total of $1,000 per week for the setup, rental, and takedown of the 10 computer monitors. also display two different exhibits side by side. Dependency on Internet Connection. There are other iPad trial apps Display Flexibility. My vendor’s setup tethered the iPad to the monitors with a cable. This was not problematic for us, but it may pose in which the trial exhibits are stored in the cloud and accessed and logistical issues depending upon the room configuration. If tethering displayed via an Internet connection to that cloud-based database. I is a problem, it may be possible to attain greater flexibility by utiliz- was reluctant to use those applications because I was told that the Wiing an Apple TV and a Wi-Fi network to take advantage of the Fi Internet connection at my trial’s location was not reliable. With iPad’s native wireless display capabilities. The Apple TV serves as an TrialPad for iPad, in contrast, the trial exhibits are loaded onto the intermediary between the iPad and the display by routing the data in iPad itself and accessed and displayed in the application without the real time over the Wi-Fi network. With this alternate setup, you can need for an Internet connection. Thus, the location’s unreliable conmove about the room while manipulating documents live on screen. Heather E. Stern is a partner with the law firm of Kralik & Jacobs LLP, where Ease of Use. The functions were easy and intuitive to use—just like the iPhone or iPad in general—all at the touch of a finger and with- she handles lender liability defense and real estate-related litigation. 64 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 nection was not a problem. It is worth noting, however, that in order to load the trial exhibits onto the iPad in the first place, we used an Internet connection from our office computers to upload the exhibits to a Dropbox account and then we used the iPad’s Internet connection at a location with more reliable Wi-Fi-to download the exhibits from Dropbox to the iPad. Limitations. The content of the exhibits is not searchable via the application. Even though the documents that we had loaded were, in their native form, OCR-searchable PDF files, the TrialPad application did not have a way to search the content of the exhibits, only the file names. To correct this issue, we additionally loaded all the exhibits into a free iPad application called Documents by Readdle, which does feature content searching as one of its main functions. Although Documents could not display and manipulate the exhibits for presentation purposes as TrialPad does, it proved a useful backup application for searching content to locate a trial exhibit. Transcripts. I also used the iPad to display written deposition transcripts electronically on the same bank of computer monitors for impeachment and other purposes. However, the application I used for this purpose was not TrialPad but TranscriptPad (version 1.5). TranscriptPad, which uses text, rather than PDF, files of deposition transcripts, allows a user to run key word searches within one or more transcript files in order to locate and then display the desired testimony. The testimony can also be highlighted or flagged; otherwise, the application is fairly limited in the options offered for manipulating what is displayed. The transcript can also be set to automatically scroll downward on the screen at a predetermined speed so that large portions of text can be read by everyone at once. Because the input is an unformatted text file, the display lacks the look and feel of an original deposition transcript. In order to show the original transcript in all of its formatted glory, you can use a PDF image of the transcript and display it using TrialPad just as you would display a trial exhibit. However, because TrialPad does not allow a file to be searched for content, it is necessary to know in advance the pages of the transcript that you plan to display. My trial did not feature any videotaped deposition testimony and therefore I cannot offer any advice on features relating to displaying media files. The bottom line is that whatever we needed to be able to do, there seemed to be an application for it, and each one was easy to use. My experience was wholeheartedly positive, and I encourage attorneys to check out the iPad as an excellent option for trial presentation. ■ REFER CLIENTS WITH CONFIDENCE! HAVE A PAYING CLIENT OUTSIDE OF YOUR LEGAL EXPERTISE? Refer to the Los Angeles County Bar Association Lawyer Referral Service. All LRIS lawyers are vetted for experience, insurance, and good standing. Los Angeles County Bar Association LAWYER REFERRAL & INFORMATION SERVICE (213) 243-1525 LACBA SmartLaw smartlaw.org LOS ANGELES COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION LACBA.org State Bar of California and American Bar Association Certified Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 65 A & E Forensic, p. 41 Higgins, Marcus & Lovett, Inc., p. 41 Jonathan S. 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Jacobson, Esq., p. 56 Anita Rae Shapiro, p. 55 Tel. 800-275-8903 www.amfs.com Tel. 310-271-0747 www.lawrencejacobson.com Tel. 714-529-0415 www.adr-shapiro.com The California Academy of Distinguished Neutrals, p. 34, 35 James R. DiFrank, PLC, p. 15 Stephen Danz & Associates, p. 16 Tel. 310-341-3879 www.CaliforniaNeutrals.org Tel. 562-789-7734 www.bardefense.net e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 877-789-9707 www.employmentattorneyca.com CMM, LLP, p. 45 Kantor & Kantor, LLP, p. 17 T & J Judgment Enforcers, p. 6 Tel. 818-986-5070 e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 877-783-8686 www.kantorlaw.net Tel. 213-986-6020 www.TJJudgments.com Lawrence W. Crispo, p. 15 KARS Advanced Materials, Inc., p. 61 TASA, Technical Advisory Service for Attorneys, p. 11, 59 Tel. 213-926-6665 e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 714-892-8987 www.karslab.com Tel. 800-523-2319 www.tasanet.com DataChasers.com, p. 45 Krycler, Ervin, Taubman & Walheim, p. 39 The Esquire Network (“TEN”), p 2 Tel. 951-780-7892 www.datachasers.com Tel. 818-995-1040 www.ketw.com Tel. 818-268-5929 e-mail: [email protected] Greg David Derin, p. 17 LawBiz Management, p. 6 Thomas Neches & Company, p. 57 Tel. 310-552-1062 www.derin.com Tel. 800-837-5880 www.lawbiz.com e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 213-624-8150 www.thomasneches.com DoubleTree by Hilton Los Angeles Downtown, p. 12 Lawyers’ Mutual Insurance Co., p. 7 URS, p. 61 Tel 213-629-1200 www.DoubleTreeLADowntown.com Tel. 800-252-2045 www.lawyersmutual.com Tel. 213-996-2555 www.urscorp.com E. L. Evans & Associates, p. 45 Diana G. Lesgart, An Accountancy Corp., p. 49 Law Offices of Alan D. 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Gelman & Associates, p. 44 Noriega Clinics, p. 25 Woodard Mediation, p. 17 Tel. 714-667-2600 e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 213-716-3744 Tel. 626-584-8000 www.woodardmediation.com Gursey, Schneider & Company, p. 47 Pro/Consul, Inc., Inside Front Cover Zivetz, Schwartz & Saltsman, p. 49 Tel. 310-552-0960 www.gursey.com Tel. 800-392-1119 www.expertinfo.com Tel. 310-826-1040 www.zsscpa.com Hampton Health, Ltd., John H. Fullerton, MD, p. 44 Rosen & Associates, PC, p. 53 Tel. 415-460-5532 e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 213-362-1000 www.rosen-law.com Burr Hartman DO, PHD, Burr Hartman Consulting, p. 51 Roughan & Associates at LINC, p. 55 Tel.559-686-4000 e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 626-303-6333 x16 e-mail: [email protected] 66 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 TAP: Deposition Skills Workshop ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, Trial Advocacy and the Litigation Section will host a workshop to provide instruction on how to take and defend depositions in California state court actions. The first part of the program will be a lecture covering the rules relating to oral depositions as well as how to “pin down” the deponent, defend a deposition, use deposition testimony in trial, and develop a deposition strategy. The second part is a workshop in which participants practice taking and defending the deposition of a plaintiff in a civil action for negligence and receive constructive feedback. Participants receive a deposition outline that organizes the deposition process for ease of reference. Course materials will be distributed via e-mail prior to the first class, so a correct e-mail address is needed at the time of registration. The program will take place at the Los Angeles County Bar Association, 1055 West 7th Street, 27th floor, Downtown. Parking is available at 1055 West 7th and nearby lots. On-site registration begins at 1 P.M., with the workshop continuing from 1:30 to 5:30. The registration code number is 011862. $250—CLE+ member $350—LACBA member $500—all others 3.75 CLE hours Federal Practice in the Central District ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, the Litigation Section will present Southern California’s signature event on practicing law in federal district court. Highlights include a candid two-part panel in which local district and magistrate judges reveal likes and dislikes and what it takes to win at critical junctures of a case. In addition, the event will include the judges’ report card on the Patent Pilot Program. Three years after this program began, the district judges most involved in the Patent Pilot Program will report on its progress and prognosticate on the future of TAP: Evidence Skills Workshop ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, Trial Advocacy and the Litigation Section will host the evidence skills workshop, which is based on the premise that the best way to learn the rules of evidence is to argue them in an evidentiary hearing. In this workshop, participants argue the admissibility of evidence in 21 different evidentiary vignettes based on a breach-of-employment-contract fact pattern. No preparation is necessary for this unique program. Within five minutes participants are on their feet arguing the admissibility of evidence. The evidentiary vignettes include witness competency, foundations for exhibits, chain of custody, authenticity, relevance, undue prejudice, the secondary evidence rule, the better evidence rule, the reliability of scientific evidence, nonhearsay, hearsay, party admissions, prior inconsistent deposition testimony, business records, judicial notice, lay opinion, expert qualifications, expert opinion, and cross-examination of experts on treatises. Written course materials will be distributed via e-mail prior to the first class. Please provide a correct e-mail address at the time of registration. The program will take place at the Los Angeles County Bar Association, 1055 West 7th Street, 27th floor, Downtown. Parking is available at 1055 West 7th and nearby lots. On-site registration will begin at 8:00 A.M., with the program continuing from 8:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. The registration code number is 011973. $250—CLE+ member $350—LACBA member $500—all others 3.75 CLE hours patent litigation in the Central District. On-site registration will begin at 3:30 P.M., with the program continuing from 4 to 6:30, followed by a meal and reception. The event will take place at the Hilton DoubleTree Hotel, 120 South Los Angeles Street, Downtown. Valet parking is available for $10. The prices below include the reception. The registration code number is 012134. $65—CLE+ member $160—Litigation Section member $185—LACBA member $220—all others 2.5 CLE hours The Los Angeles County Bar Association is a State Bar of California MCLE approved provider. To register for the programs listed on this page, please call the Member Service Department at (213) 896-6560 or visit the Association Web site at http://calendar.lacba.org, where you will find a full listing of this month’s Association programs. Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 67 closing argument BY ALAN H. SIMON Honoring 100 Years of the Los Angeles Public Defender are charged, in the Superior Court, with the commission of any IT IS A WELL-KNOWN ADMONITION: “You have the right to the contempt, misdemeanor, felony or other offense. He shall also, presence of an attorney before and during questioning, and if you canupon request, give counsel and advice to such persons, in and not afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you free of charge.” about any charge against them upon which he is conducting the This warning only dates back to the 1960s, but the concept of prodefence, and he shall prosecute all appeals to a higher court or viding defense attorneys who are paid by the state can be traced back courts, of any person who has been convicted upon any such to the Roman Empire, when the papal government appointed a paucharge, where, in his opinion, such appeal will, or might reaperus procurator to act as counsel for indigents. In the late 1400s in sonably be expected to, result in a reversal or modification of Spain an advocate for the poor was provided at public expense. In the judgment of conviction. the early years of the twentieth century, Los Angeles judges commonly He shall also, upon request, prosecute actions for the colappointed what were called jail lawyers, attorneys who made themselves available by hanging around the courts. Clara Shortridge Foltz, who served as the first woman prosecutor for the Los Angeles Clara Shortridge Foltz, the first woman prosecutor for Los Angeles County district attorney in 1911, provided the rationale for public support of defendants in her description of how defense in criminal cases was County, provided the rationale for public support of defendants. handled at the time: In criminal trials, as at present conducted, counsel for the defense is an lection of wages and other demands of persons who are not absolute essential to the just examination of a case. The unforfinancially able to employ counsel, in cases in which the sum tunate prisoner is not denied counsel; he is told that he may supinvolved does not exceed $100, and in which, in the judgment ply himself with this essential to justice if he wishes, and if he of the Public Defender, the claims urged are valid and enforcepleads poverty and announces himself a pauper it is the duty able in the courts. of the court to appoint counsel for him. He shall also, upon request, defend such persons in all civil Now, without detracting from the able men who somelitigation in which, in his judgment, they are being persecuted times do offer their services in behalf of a penniless prisoner, the or unjustly harassed. rule is that the court appointees are wholly unable to cope with In June 1915, the Los Angeles City Council created the City Police the public prosecutor. Those whose ability commands a law pracCourt Defender and appointed James H. Pope to handle the defense tice are seldom chosen. The appointees come from the failures in misdemeanor cases. The City Public Defender handled Municipal of the profession who hang about the courts for a stray fee from Court filings, including felony preliminary hearings, while the County the unfortunate, or youths just admitted to the bar and anxious Public Defender handled felony cases in Superior Court. The City Public for practical experience. They have no money to spend in a Defender merged into the County Public Defender Department in 1965. proper investigation of the case and come to trial wholly In 1993 the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors appointed Bruce unequipped either in ability, skill or preparation to cope with Hoffman to head a new Alternate Public Defender Office to represent the man hired by the state to marshall the evidence for the proscriminal defendants in cases in which a conflict of interest prevented ecution. This system works untold evil. This dismal state of affairs moved Los Angeles County voters in the public defender from undertaking the representation. Today, Los Angeles County Public Defender Ronald L. Brown heads 1913 to approve a county charter that created the Office of the Public Defender, a law firm to be paid for by the public. The charter was rat- a law office of 1,100-plus attorneys, paralegals, investigators, social ified by the California Legislature, and in January 1914 the nation’s workers, secretaries, and administrative staff. The office provides first public defense law firm paid for by taxpayers opened its doors on superior, cost-effective representation and is an innovative, award-winthe 11th floor of the old Hall of Records on Broadway, just west of ning national leader in defense advocacy on behalf of adults and chilwhere the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center now stands. dren in the criminal, juvenile, and mental health justice systems. The public defender is proud of its 100 years and its status as the Walton J. Wood was the first appointed public defender, and his preeminent publicly funded criminal defense office in the United States. entire original staff consisted of four deputies and a secretary. The charter spelled out the scope of the public defender’s duties, Its lawyers and staff strive to exemplify the public defender’s motto: “To enrich lives through effective and caring service.” ■ which included representation in some civil matters: Upon request by the defendant or upon order of the Court, the Public Defender shall defend, without expense to them, all Now retired, Alan H. Simon was a bureau chief of the law office of the Los persons who are not financially able to employ counsel and who Angeles County Public Defender. 68 Los Angeles Lawyer November 2013 The financial advisor you use can affect the ultimate result. 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