Gearing up for trial with experts? You’re ready with your Sargon and Sanchez objections. But don’t forget Kelly: if the expert’s opinion is outside the consensus, that’s not a Sargon objection—you have to be ready with a People v. Kelly objection.
Filing an MSJ? If the court sets your hearing after your trial date, you’re entitled to get it advanced—or to have your trial continued. (Might be a backdoor strategy to continuing trial dates.)
And a trial court abused its discretion in hearing a SLAPP motion before a restraining-order motion. The SLAPP ruling meant the case was stayed and the restraining-order issue couldn’t be heard. That’s not right. Trial courts need to make sure those issues are heard with or before SLAPP motions.
Also:
- Is allowing a juror to view the trial remotely a “structural error” reversible per se?
- Are vexatious-litigation determinations appealable as injunctions?
- Are city council appointees entitled to more First Amendment protections if appointed by a majority of the council rather than a single councilmember?
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Other items discussed in the episode:
- Plan to Exclude an Expert Under Sargon? Don’t Forget Kelly, discussing Bader v. Johnson & Johnson, No. A158868 (D1d4 Dec. 23. 2022).
- A Timely MSJ Is Entitled to a Timely Hearing, Appellate Court Holds, discussing Cole v. Superior Court, No. D081299 (D4d1 Dec. 30, 2022), and Luckett.
- Vexatious Litigant Determination Is Appealable, discussing Blizzard Energy, Inc. v. Shaefers (D2d6 Nov. 29, 2022) 85 Cal.App.5th 802.
- Episode 42 discussing Luckett, and Tim’s post on *Luckett.*
- White v. Davis, No. E077320, at *1 (Cal. Ct. App. Jan. 5, 2023)
- Lathus v. City of Huntington Beach, No. 21-56197, at *1 (9th Cir. Jan. 5, 2023)
- United States v. Knight, No. 21-10197, at *1 (9th Cir. Jan. 4, 2023)
- Videos from this episode will be posted at Tim Kowal’s YouTube channel.