Motion to Compel Defendant’s deposition
TENTATIVE RULING(S) FOR July 22, 2026 Department S22 – Judge David Driscoll This court follows California Rules of Court, rule 3.1308(b) for tentative rulings. (See San Bernardino Superior Court Local Emergency Rule 8.) Tentative rulings for each law & motion will be posted on the internet (https://www.sb-court.org) by 3:00 p.m. on the court day immediately before the hearing.
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UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, THE PREVAILING PARTY IS TO GIVE NOTICE OF THE
RULING.
JONATHAN GROYON CABALLERO v. MICHAEL AGRON
On March 3, 2026, Plaintiff Jonathan Groyon Caballero filed a judicial form complaint against Defendant
Michael Agron. Plaintiff alleges causes of action for motor vehicle and negligence related to a motor vehicle
accident.
Now before the Court is Plaintiff’s motion to compel Defendant’s deposition. Plaintiff asserts that after proper
service of a deposition notice, Defendant has refused to appear for his deposition and has not served any
valid objections excusing his attendance. Instead, the only stated reason is defense counsel’s unavailability
until September 2026, which Plaintiff argues is not a proper objection.
The deposition notice was served May 11, 2026, setting the deposition for June 23, 2026. (Hong Decl. ¶ 4,
Exh. 1.) Plaintiff asserts that on May 12, 2026, Defendant served an objection, stating the date had been
unilaterally scheduled and defense counsel was unavailable. With respect to the meet and confer, Plaintiff’s
counsel states a good faith effort was made over a two week period to obtain alternative dates, with offers
of accommodation. Defense counsel refused to provide any dates of availability before September 2026.
(Hong Decl. ¶¶ 6-12 and Exh. 3.) Plaintiff argues defense counsel’s claimed unavailability does not justify
a four month delay. Plaintiff seeks sanctions.
In opposition, Defendant asserts that he has provided dates, but due to scheduling constraints, is not
available until September 2026. Defendant asserts that he has timely communicated availability and is
willing to cooperate in scheduling the deposition at the earliest mutually convenient date. He argues that
the fact the dates fall in September 2026, does not constitute noncompliance, but reflects scheduling
realities.
Defendant also states the motion is premature and that the deposition is currently scheduled for September
7, 2026. Therefore, Defendant request the motion be denied. No declaration is submitted by counsel
in support of Defendant’s contentions.
Plaintiff replies that Defendant failed to provide dates and Defendant’s only position is that defense counsel
is not available until September 2026. Plaintiff again argues “unilaterally scheduled” is not a valid objection
given the statute allows Plaintiff to set a deposition on statutory notice. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 2025.210.
2025.270.) Plaintiff also argues that defense counsel does not produce any evidence in support of
unavailability.
Code of Civil Procedure section 2025.450, subdivision (a), allows a party who served a valid deposition
notice, not the subject of a valid objection, to move for an order to compel the deposition of the individual
and production of documents when the individual fails to appear at the deposition and fails to provide the
requested documents. Under section 2025.450, subdivision (b), the motion also must be accompanied by
a meet and confer.
Sanctions shall be imposed against any party, person, or attorney who unsuccessfully makes or opposes a
motion to compel unless the Court finds that the one subject to the sanction acted with substantial
justification or other circumstances make the imposition of sanctions unjust. (Code Civ. Proc., § 2025.450,
subd. (g).)
Defense counsel’s unexplained general representation that counsel or his client will not be available to
attend a deposition of the defendant over a roughly 3 to 4 month period does not constitute sufficient
justification for refusal to be present for a properly noticed deposition, especially in light of the fact that
counsel has not submitted a sworn declaration supporting such a contention.
TENTATIVE RULING
The court grants Plaintiff’s motion compelling the deposition with attendant production of documents without
objections. The parties should be prepared to agree to a date for the deposition at the time of the hearing
and the court will order the administration of the deposition and production of documents for a date specific.
The court imposes monetary sanctions solely as against defense counsel (not defendant) for the sum of
$1,800.00 (4 hours X $450).
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