Accordingly, we order Winebow to show cause in writing, within 14 days after the filing of this memorandum disposition, why the court should not award attorneys’ fees to Franz Haas under Rule 38 because Winebow’s arguments were frivolous, including why any award of attorneys’ fees should not be imposed jointly and severally on Winebow and its counsel
Friday, March 27, 2026
9th Cir. OSC re sanctions
LASC to renumber departments
| Superior Court of Los Angeles County to Introduce New Department Numbering System at Stanley Mosk Courthouse for Improved Navigation New Department Numbering System Will Formally Be Introduced May 4, 2026; Wayfinding Updates Align With Court’s Strategic Plan to Improve Navigation, Access and User Experience On May 4, 2026, the Superior Court of Los Angeles County will unveil a new department numbering system at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse designed to streamline navigation and enhance the court user experience, Presiding Judge Sergio C. Tapia II announced today. The updated department numbering system is intended to make it easier for court users to locate departments within the courthouse intuitively. Under the new numbering system, the department (or courtroom) number will match the room number, with the first number of each department number corresponding to the floor on which the courtroom is located, providing clearer and more intuitive wayfinding throughout the courthouse. Court users can locate the Stanley Mosk Courthouse’s new renumbering system here on the Court’s website. “This new renumbering system at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse is a practical step toward improving navigation in one of the busiest courthouses in the nation,” Presiding Judge Tapia said. “By making it easier to locate courtrooms and key areas throughout the courthouse, we are enhancing accessibility, increasing efficiency, and improving the overall experience for the public we serve.” As part of the rollout, the Court has created a dedicated webpage on its website with detailed information about the new department numbers at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse. The current department numbering structure reflects the historical unification of municipal and superior courts following the passage of Proposition 220 in 1998. While this approach preserved continuity at the time, department numbers today often do not align logically with courtroom locations, creating confusion for court users. The new department numbers are part of a broader effort to improve wayfinding within the Stanley Mosk Courthouse. In addition to the updated numbering system, the Court has introduced digital displays in front of every courtroom alongside major destinations such as the Self-Help Center and various Clerk’s Offices, featuring dynamic, department-specific information. These displays are designed to help court users more easily locate their destinations and receive real-time updates on courtroom activity. In addition to the Stanley Mosk Courthouse, the Court has also installed digital signage at the Pomona Courthouse, the Compton Courthouse, and the Michael D. Antonovich Antelope Valley Courthouse, with plans to expand the renumbering initiative to all 36 courthouses across Los Angeles County. This initiative aligns with the Court’s 2025–2028 Strategic Plan, which prioritizes expanding access to justice, improving user experience, and supporting operational efficiency for all court users. Additional updates and information will be made available on the Court’s website as the phased rollout continues. About the Superior Court of Los Angeles County -- The largest trial court in the nation, the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, serves a population of almost 10 million in 36 courthouses with a jurisdiction covering over 4,000 square miles that includes 88 cities, 140 unincorporated areas and dozens of law enforcement agencies. The Court is steadfast in its mission to serve our community by providing equal access to justice through the fair, timely and effective resolution of all cases. |
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Appellate tidbits
Today's DJ has James Wagstaffe's article The High Court is upending decades of settled law -- The Supreme Court is increasingly willing to hear cases that overturn long-established precedents, reshaping constitutional and legal norms with little warning.
At bottom, therefore, we are living in an age where courts often take up cases aimed at reversing decades or more of established law when in earlier times it would simply be unthinkable even to hear such a challenge.
Bloomberg Law has Judicial Conduct Panel Denies Newman’s Reinstatement Bid -- A panel of seven appellate and district court judges rejected Judge Pauline Newman’s effort to regain her position on the Federal Circuit, where the 98-year-old jurist was suspended by her colleagues.
The judge has been fighting her suspension on two tracks. Administratively, the conference’s Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability reviews disciplinary decisions by judicial councils for the 12 federal appellate courts. And in the courts, she petitioned the US Supreme Court to hear her case in mid March.Law360 has Judicial Conference Backs Latest Judge Newman Suspension
Law.com has Preparing for the Universe at Oral Argument by David Fine, head of the appellate practice at K&L Gates. His headings are: Preparing to Concede; Having Key Points at My Fingertips; Arriving at the Argument Bullet Points; Compiling the Binder; Testing the Argument; Lining Up for Final Approach; Cringing for Good Cause
And here's an unpub from 4/3 about a motion to tax appellate costs -- you don't see many cases addressing this issue!Tuesday, March 24, 2026
RIP J. Wiener (1931-2026)

Former Associate Justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Division One, Howard B. Wiener passed on March 20, 2026.
Former Associate Justice Howard B. Wiener of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Division One, passed away on March 20, 2026. Justice Wiener was born in Providence, Rhode Island on February 1, 1931, attending public schools there. He graduated from Brown University in 1952 with a bachelor of arts degree in philosophy. Three years later, he obtained his law degree from Harvard University Law School.
Following graduation from law school, Justice Wiener and his wife Joan moved to California, where he served as a law clerk to U.S. District Court Judge Benjamin Harrison in Los Angeles from 1955 to 1956. He was admitted to the California Bar in January 1956. During the next 20 years, he practiced law in a small firm in West Covina, handling all types of cases. He was also active in the legal community, serving as President of the Pomona Valley Bar Association in 1968, on the Board of Trustees of the Los Angeles County Bar Association from 1969 to 1971, and on the State Bar Board of Governors from 1972 to 1975 (Vice President, 1974-1975).
On July 25, 1975, Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr. appointed him to the San Bernardino County Superior Court. Roughly three years later in May 1978, the Governor selected him to be an Associate Justice on Division One of the Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District in San Diego. Over the next 15 years, Justice Wiener became known for clear and thoughtful opinions that adapted and applied legal principles to compassionately serve the interests of people from all walks of life.
Despite practicing law in Los Angeles and the Inland Empire, Justice Wiener quickly became active in the San Diego legal community, serving as President of the William B. Enright American Inn of Court from 1991 to 1993 and later as one of its four distinguished emeritus members. In 2018 he was honored by all five San Diego Inn of Court chapters with the second-ever lifetime achievement award. A vocal advocate for education at every level and a mentor for many younger lawyers, Justice Wiener was an adjunct professor at the University of San Diego (USD) School of Law (1979-1986) and California Western School of Law (1986-1994), teaching professional responsibility and appellate advocacy respectively. He also served as Chair of the Board of Visitors at USD Law School. In 1982 he obtained a Master of Laws Degree in judicial process from the University of Virginia Law School.
Justice Wiener retired from the Court on December 31, 1993. Beginning in 1994, he was actively engaged in private dispute resolution, serving in more than 1,700 cases as a mediator, arbitrator and private judge. He is co-author with Jon B. Eisenberg and Ellis J. Horvitz of the California Civil Practice Guide, Civil Appeals and Writs, published by The Rutter Group. In 2007, he was interviewed for the California Appellate Courts Legacy Project. The interview is available at California Appellate Court Legacy Project | District Courts of Appeal. Justice Wiener was preceded by his wife Joan, and is survived by his son Daniel, daughters Anne and Carrie, five grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.
CA appellate vacancies article
Last Friday's Recorder had With All Eyes on California's Supreme Court Vacancy, 2 Appellate Seats Go Unfilled for Years -- Gov. Gavin Newsom's office won't say if he's waiting to fill vacancies on the the state's San Francisco and Sacramento courts of appeal with administration lawyers.
For more than five months, California’s judiciary has waited for Gov. Gavin Newsom to make what will likely be the last Supreme Court justice appointment of his administration.
But beyond the political parlor game of who the probable 2028 presidential candidate will pick for the high court and why, Newsom has left two other important judicial vacancies sit unfilled for years with no clear explanation why.
Division Four of the First District Court of Appeal in San Francisco has been without a fourth confirmed justice since Tracie Brown was elevated from associate justice to divisional presiding justice in April 2023. Similarly, the associate justice seat Laurie Earl vacated when she became presiding justice of the Third District Court of Appeal in July 2023 remains empty.
AI Sanctions & Warnings! $10K in Oregon for bad AOB
Law360 has Ore. Atty Sanctioned $10K For Brief With Fabricated Citations
An Oregon appellate court has ordered an attorney to pay $10,000 for filing an opening brief containing fabricated case citations, quotations that "do not exist anywhere in Oregon case law" and other inaccuracies, according to an opinion. -- The case is Henry Doiban et al. v. Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission, case number A181982, in the Court of Appeals of the State of Oregon.
And here in California, don't miss Sheerer v. Panas published by 1/4:
As an in propria persona litigant, Panas submitted a respondent’s brief that attributes quotes to published cases in which no such quote appears and to cases that do not exist, and Panas’s nonmanufactured authorities do not discuss the topics for which they are cited. His brief also does not conform to the California Rules of Court (hereinafter Rules) regarding its contents, formatting, and directive to provide support for factual assertions with citations to the record. (See Rule 8.204.) In a declaration submitted to this court, Panas explained the fabrications were due to his use of a generative artificial intelligence (AI) tool to write the brief. ....
We partially publish this opinion to extend that warning to in propria persona litigants.
MetNews article is Pro Pers Are Held to Same Standard as Lawyers in Using AI
Law360 has Where Calif. State Courts Landed On Generative AI Use Rules. This article has a nifty interactive map showing what each county has done.
SD State of the Appellate Courts (4/6)
The Appellate Practice Section of the SDCBA and the San Diego Appellate Inn of Court are jointly presenting the Annual State of the Appellate Courts on Monday, April 6, 2026, from 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. at the SDCBA Bar Center, 330 A Street, San Diego, CA 92101. This signature annual program will feature two distinguished Inn members:
• Senior Circuit Judge M. Margaret McKeown, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
1.0 CLE credit is available, including Appellate Specialization credit, at very low cost — provided by the San Diego Appellate Inn of Court. Questions can be submitted for consideration by emailing Pauline Villanueva at pev@adi-sandiego.com by April 1, 2026.
Following the program, the evening continues with the Appellate Judicial Reception, a wonderful opportunity to connect with colleagues and spend time with members of the appellate bench. This event is sponsored by Complex Appellate Litigation Group.
Register here.
Monday, March 23, 2026
RIP Bob Gerstein
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
J.VanDyke's 'vulgar' dissent
- VanDyke already faced criticism for a YouTube video dissent in a Second Amendment case challenging California's ban on large-capacity magazines, in which he filmed himself handling several handguns to explain their mechanics. Duncan v. Bonta, 133 F.4th 852, 872 (9th Cir. 2025)
- In another case, VanDyke wrote a sarcastic solo dissent to a habeas petition accusing Senior Judge William A. Fletcher of inserting "binding dicta" and embarking on a "bizarre and gratuitous frolic."
Sanctions dodged
Counsel admonished, but not sanctioned (by 2/4) in this unpub:
The court may impose sanctions, as relevant here, for taking a frivolous appeal or appealing solely to cause delay or for “committing any other unreasonable violation” of the California Rules of Court. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.276(a)(1), (4).) It is undisputed that the Staubers’ opening brief violated rule 8.204(a)(1)(C), as it failed to “support any reference to a matter in the record by a citation to the volume and page number of the record where the matter appears.” Rather than proper citations to the clerk’s or reporter’s transcripts, the Staubers cited to lines in their Notice of Designation of Record, confusingly designated as “AA” and “RA.”’ The brief contained no explanation of this designation, and none of the citations included a specific page number.
We issued an order to show cause and the Staubers filed a response, explaining that they did not receive the clerk’s transcript in time to cite to it in their opening brief. The Staubers also did not seek to re-file their opening brief with correct citations once they received the record or after plaintiff raised an objection. While this conduct was certainly ill-advised and in clear violation of the rules, resulting in extra work for both the court and plaintiff’s counsel, we do not find it so egregious as to justify sanctions. (See Huschke v. Slater (2008) 168 Cal. App. 4th 1153, 1162 [“not every violation of a procedural rule is properly sanctionable”].)
We agree with plaintiff that the Staubers violated the court rules and principles of appellate review by failing to provide “a summary of significant facts” in their opening brief. [] The Staubers’ response during oral argument that a more fulsome discussion of the evidence was not needed because they challenged the validity of the contracts is not well-taken. The Staubers raised multiple substantial evidence arguments on appeal and were therefore required to provide a complete summary of the relevant evidence. We admonish them, and their counsel, for failing to do so. However, we do not find that arguments raised were frivolous and we decline to impose sanctions under these circumstances.
Friday, March 13, 2026
SCOTUS rules update article
Law360 has What To Know About Supreme Court's New Recusal Rules
- First, the court revised various existing disclosure rules to provide that parties must now provide the stock ticker symbols of parties involved in the case.
- Second, the rules now impose additional duties on respondents to supplement disclosures of involved parties at both the certiorari stage and the merits stage. In a brief in opposition to certiorari, the respondent is newly required to "identify any parties to the proceeding that were not identified in the petition" — "along with their respective stock ticker symbols."
- Third, in a change that does not relate directly to recusals, but does reflect the court's increasing embrace of technology, the court will now consider a document timely filed if it is filed electronically on the filing deadline — in contrast to the previous rule, which tied timeliness to paper filings.
Dissent at the 9th Cir.
Read The Volokh Conspiracy's post about the Olympus Spa opinions titled: Judge VanDyke: "This is a case about swinging dicks." The post excerpts the key passages from the various opinions.
- Before: McKEOWN, GOULD, and LEE, Circuit Judges. Opinion by Judge MCKEOWN
- Dissent by Judge LEE
- Statement Respecting the Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge MCKEOWN
- Additional Statement Respecting the Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge MCKEOWN
- Statement Respecting the Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge OWENS
- Dissent from Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge VANDYKE
- Dissent from Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge TUNG
- Dissent from Denial of Rehearing En Banc by Judge COLLINS
Thursday, March 12, 2026
1st DCA pro tem update
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
"Supreme Court Advocacy Project"
The Judicial Conference of the United States, the federal judiciary's policymaking body, authorized the creation of the Supreme Court Advocacy Project during its biannual meeting Tuesday, Geremy Kamens, the federal public defender for the Eastern District of Virginia, told Law360. The project, which will initially be supported by Kamens' office, will eventually become its own entity that will provide resources and training materials for public defenders and court-appointed attorneys representing clients before the high court. ....
About 25 years ago, Kamens and other appellate lawyers and public defenders realized there was a need for a support structure for defense attorneys seeking Supreme Court review, so they developed the all-volunteer organization Defender Supreme Court Resource and Assistance Panel, which would reach out to attorneys in cases where the justices had granted certiorari and help them prepare for oral arguments by running moot courts and providing litigation assistance.
The project announced Tuesday, also known as SCAP, is a more formalized version of the volunteer organization, Kamens said.
Law360 also has Dems Confront Roberts At Wide-Ranging Judiciary Gathering
The federal judiciary's top administrator voiced "serious and urgent concerns" Tuesday regarding threats of retribution against judges, a warning that coincided with a judicial gathering where Democrats discussed security fears and controversial U.S. Supreme Court rulings.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Cautionary note re advocacy
This unpub from 4/3 today denies a motion for appellate sanctions, but contains a cautionary note:
we caution appellate counsel not to overstate or misrepresent the record under the cloak of effective advocacy because it, at the very least, violates court rules. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(C).)
Appellate sanctions were denied by 2/2 in an unpub today here. Do there seem to be more sanctions motions these days?
U.S. Courts has issued a press release discussing the plan to replace the aging CM/ECF system in district, appellate, and bankruptcy courts: Judges Outline Accelerated Modernization of Case Management System:
The new system will replace the Case Management/Electronic Case Files system (CM/ECF) that the courts have relied on for nearly three decades to manage heavy caseloads and carry out court operations. It is used by litigants to file cases and related documents, and it provides the public with access to over 1 billion court records.
It is anticipated that the district courts will be the first to start implementing aspects of the new case management system within the next year, followed by appellate and bankruptcy courts. The timeline for completion is two to three years sooner than originally expected.
Traynor 2026 winners!
The 57th Annual Roger J. Traynor California Moot Court Competition took place by Zoom this weekend and the winner was Berkeley. Ten law schools sent teams this year; 13 members of the bench and bar served as judges, not including the 3 justices for the final round: Justices Bendix, Stratton and Perren (ret.). More details here.
Beds on communication & reading the room
Retired Justice Bedsworth's latest column is out: Bedsworth: Listening to Old Folks -- I find that the less people know about me, the more willing they are to listen to me. Mostly these are law students or young lawyers. I encourage them to work hard on their communication skills with old people because they're going to spend much of their career trying to communicate with old people.
This is a lesson I learned in my first months on the Court of Appeal: Don't just do what you'd planned; pay attention and do what the situation calls for.
Monday, March 9, 2026
Congrats to Kent Richland, ALHOF!
CLA has announced that the 2026 inductee to the Appellate Lawyer Hall of Fame (ALHOF) will be Kent Richland, founding partner and currently partner emeritus of Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland LLP. The award will be bestowed on Thursday evening, May 14 at the CLA Appellate Summit in San Francisco (May 14-15).
Kent Richland has been an appellate lawyer since he graduated from UCLA Law School in 1971. In 1983, Kent was one of the founding partners of Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland LLP. Kent has been lead appellate counsel in hundreds of appeals. He has argued in state and federal appellate courts across the country, including many high-profile cases in both the California Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. He gained national prominence in 2006 for his United States Supreme Court argument in Marshall v. Marshall, in which he successfully represented the late Anna Nicole Smith.
Kent is a frequent lecturer and author on appellate law topics and is co-author, with Presiding Justice J. Anthony Kline of the California Court of Appeal, of West’s California Litigation Forms B Civil Appeals and Writs. He has served as president of the California Academy of Appellate Lawyers and multiple terms as president of the California Supreme Court Historical Society. He was selected as a Fellow of the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers, the American Bar Foundation and the Litigation Counsel of America.
Among the honors he has received are the California Lawyer Magazine’s California Lawyer of the Year (CLAY) award in 2007, 2011 and 2019, Best Lawyers®’ Los Angeles Appellate Lawyer of the Year Award in 2015, multiple years’ recognition by the Los Angeles Daily Journal as one of the top 100 lawyers in California, multiple years’ recognition as one of the top 100 Southern California Super Lawyers and recognition by Chambers USA as one of five “Band One” appellate lawyers in California.
Stare decisis amicus brief
Law.com has Nearly 200 Ex-Judges Tell Supreme Court: Your Unreasoned Emergency Orders Are Not Binding -- More than 175 former federal and state judges signed an amicus brief responding to the Trump administration's argument that lower courts are "flouting" the Supreme Court's unexplained emergency orders.
The notion that lower courts must treat the Supreme Court's orders on its emergency docket as binding precedent is fairly new and not universally accepted. Often, these orders are issued on tight timelines, or as Justice Amy Coney Barrett once put it, “on a short fuse without benefit of full briefing and oral argument.”
Only recently has the Supreme Court indicated that an emergency order "squarely controlled" the outcome of another case. "Although our interim orders are not conclusive as to the merits, they inform how a court should exercise its equitable discretion in like cases," the court wrote in July 2025.
The following month, Justice Neil Gorsuch made headlines by suggesting that district courts were defying the court's emergency orders. "Lower court judges may sometimes disagree with this Court’s decisions, but they are never free to defy them," he wrote in a partial concurrence joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh in August 2025.
On Thursday, the former judges told the Supreme Court that such unexplained orders should not be considered "binding" on other district courts in different cases.