Aziz Damak, representing himself, sued Satraj Hospitality LLC and Sangita and Sanjeev Khanna, who own and operate the Cozy Inn motel in Costa Mesa, alleging wage and hour, meal and rest period, retaliation, and wrongful discharge claims arising from his employment as a receptionist.
In July 2024, Damak served extensive discovery on each defendant, including interrogatories, requests for admission, and document production requests. After receiving no responses and no communication from defendants’ attorney, Hitendra Bhakta, despite repeated calls and a written 21-day notice warning that he would seek sanctions, Damak filed fifteen motions to compel in November 2024, each requesting monetary sanctions of “at least $1,000.” Defendants never opposed any of the motions, and neither Bhakta nor anyone from the defense side communicated with Damak about the outstanding discovery during the roughly ten months before the motions were heard.
The Court granted all of Damak’s motions to compel and the nonmonetary relief he requested, but denied monetary sanctions. The court recognized that the applicable Civil Discovery Act provisions made some sanction mandatory, but explained that such sanctions are limited to a party’s “reasonable expenses actually incurred.”
Because Damak was self-represented, had a fee waiver, and did not claim he had incurred any out-of-pocket expenses in bringing the motions, the court concluded it could not award any sanctions and denied that portion of his requests outright. Damak petitioned for a writ of mandate challenging that denial, arguing the court was required to award at least a nominal sanction and that the ruling undercut the deterrent purpose of the discovery sanctions scheme by letting represented parties stonewall self-represented opponents without consequence.
In the published case Damak v. Superior Court, No. G065583 (Cal. Ct. App., 4th Dist., Div. 3, July 2026) — the Court of Appeal granted Damak’s petition for writ of mandate in part and denied it in part, directing the trial court to vacate the portion of its order denying monetary sanctions and to reconsider that request.
The panel first agreed with the trial court that the Civil Discovery Act’s method-specific sanctions provisions — covering interrogatories, document production, and requests for admission — direct that sanctions be imposed under a companion provision authorizing “reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, incurred by anyone as a result” of the discovery misuse. Relying on the California Supreme Court’s decisions in Trope v. Katz (1995) 11 Cal.4th 274 and Musaelian v. Adams (2009) 45 Cal.4th 512, and the Court of Appeal’s own decision in Argaman v. Rutan (1999) 73 Cal.App.4th 1173, the court explained that a self-represented litigant, including a self-represented attorney, cannot “incur” attorney fees for his own time, and so cannot recover compensation for the hours he personally spent preparing the motions or for business opportunities forgone.
The court found Kravitz v. Superior Court (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 1015 persuasive on this point, and acknowledged that court’s own description of the resulting rule as “wholly inadequate” for self-represented litigants facing discovery abuse, since a represented opponent who never incurs identifiable costs effectively gets, in that court’s words, one free bite at ignoring discovery obligations. Damak’s reliance on Appleton v. Superior Court (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 632 did not change this outcome, the panel explained, because that case addressed only whether a sanction was mandatory in amount, not what the sanction could permissibly compensate.
The panel found, however, that the trial court’s analysis stopped short. A separate, more recently enacted provision of the Civil Discovery Act, Code of Civil Procedure section 2023.050, requires a court to impose a flat $1,000 sanction against a party or attorney — regardless of any expenses incurred by the other side — if it finds the party or attorney failed to respond in good faith to a document production request or failed to confer in a good faith attempt to resolve the dispute informally. The court explained that this provision, drawing on legislative history describing it as a “stronger . . . hammer on discovery abuse,” is aimed at deterring the offending party’s conduct rather than merely compensating the other side, and applies “notwithstanding any other law.”
Because Damak’s motions concerning document production requests were governed by a Discovery Act provision that in turn incorporates section 2023.050, and because the trial court’s order never mentioned that section or made any finding on whether defendants had responded in good faith or conferred with Damak, the panel held the trial court’s failure to even consider it was an abuse of discretion, citing City of Los Angeles v. PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP (2024) 17 Cal.5th 46. The panel emphasized that nothing in the record suggested defendants had responded in good faith or conferred with Damak about the document requests, but declined to make those factual findings itself, remanding for the trial court to consider in the first instance whether a section 2023.050 sanction was warranted.
The court closed with an extended discussion of civility, noting that attorneys owe self-represented litigants the same dignity, courtesy, and integrity due to opposing counsel and the court itself, an obligation reflected in the civility oath every California attorney must now take and annually reaffirm under California Rules of Court, rule 9.7. Citing recent decisions admonishing incivility in litigation, including Masimo Corp. v. The Vanderpool Law Firm, Inc. (2024) 101 Cal.App.5th 902 and Karton v. Ari Design & Construction, Inc. (2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 734, the panel described defendants’ ten months of silence in response to Damak’s repeated, documented attempts to follow up on outstanding discovery as falling far short of that standard, regardless of any underlying intent. The court also noted, in a footnote, that defendants’ counsel made an unsupported factual assertion at oral argument about the record that the court could not verify, and reminded counsel of an attorney’s duty of candor to the court.
