Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. v. Superior Court ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 11/14/18; Certified for Publication 11/20/18 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    WARNER BROS.                                           B289109
    ENTERTAINMENT INC.,
    Petitioner,                                      (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC500040)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    LARCO PRODUCTIONS, INC.,
    et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Elihu M. Berle,
    Judge. Petition granted.
    Irell & Manella, Steven A. Marenberg, Josh B. Gordon and
    Andrew J. Strabone for Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Kiesel Law, Paul R. Kiesel, Jeffrey A. Koncius, Nicole
    Ramirez; Boucher, Raymond P. Boucher, Shehnaz M. Bhujwala,
    Maria L. Weitz; Johnson & Johnson, Neville L. Johnson, Douglas L.
    Johnson and James T. Ryan for Real Parties in Interest.
    ____________________________________
    SUMMARY
    On March 26, 2018, the trial court in this putative class
    action filed on January 29, 2013, denied defendant’s motion to
    dismiss for failure to bring the action to trial within five years
    (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 583.310 & 583.360).1 The court then granted
    plaintiffs’ motion for trial preference, setting the case for trial
    “immediately” (on April 10, 2018). This was six days before the
    five-year period was to expire, calculated to include a disputed 43-
    day tolling period the court found applicable under section 583.340,
    subdivision (b) (hereafter, section 583.340(b)) (excluding from the
    calculation time during which “[p]rosecution or trial of the action
    was stayed or enjoined”).
    The court set the matter for trial despite these circumstances:
    Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification – the hearing of which was
    also advanced to April 10, 2018 – had not yet been decided; the
    court “[did] not believe that the reasonable diligence has been
    exercised” with respect to class certification; discovery on the merits
    of plaintiffs’ claims had not yet been permitted; and the court had
    “not yet determined the order of the trial” (but ordered the parties
    to file, by April 2, 2018, “the joint exhibit list, joint statement to be
    read to the jury, joint witness list, joint jury instruction and joint
    verdict form”).
    1    All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil
    Procedure.
    2
    We grant defendant’s petition for a writ of mandate and order
    the trial court to dismiss the entire action as required under
    sections 583.310 and 583.360. We hold that:
    An order staying responsive pleadings and outstanding
    discovery requests, while also requiring the parties to “negotiate
    and agree . . . on a case management plan” and to prepare and file a
    joint statement specifically addressing case-related issues in
    multiple areas (and also allowing the parties to informally exchange
    documents), does not “effect a complete stay of the prosecution of
    the action” within the meaning of Gaines v. Fidelity National Title
    Ins. Co. (2016) 
    62 Cal. 4th 1081
    , 1087 (Gaines), and Bruns v. E-
    Commerce Exchange, Inc. (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 717
    , 730 (Bruns).
    Consequently, the trial court erred when it concluded the five-year
    period was tolled for 43 days because of such a stay, issued at the
    outset of the case. Thus, the five-year period expired on March 2,
    2018, and dismissal of the action was mandatory.
    Alternatively, even if we assume the 43-day tolling period was
    permissible, the trial court’s order granting trial preference and
    setting the trial for April 10, 2018, the same date on which
    plaintiffs’ motion for class certification was to be heard, was a
    manifest abuse of discretion. Well-settled principles of law tell us
    that (1) generally courts “should not resolve the merits in a putative
    class action case before class certification and notice issues absent a
    compelling justification for doing so” (Fireside Bank v. Superior
    Court (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1069
    , 1083 (Fireside Bank), and (2) a class
    action is subject to dismissal under the five-year statute if the class
    issues are not decided, including notice to class members, with
    enough time “to allow even a minimally reasonable period for
    exercise by the class members of their options” (Massey v. Bank of
    America (1976) 
    56 Cal. App. 3d 29
    , 33 (Massey)). Setting a trial to
    begin one week before expiration of the five-year statute is
    3
    impermissible and would render the Fireside Bank and Massey
    principles a nullity. Nor does the “ceremonial” principle stated in
    Hartman v. Santamarina (1982) 
    30 Cal. 3d 762
    , 766 (Hartman) –
    allowing “the pro forma commencement of the trial” in order to
    “preserv[e] the right to a trial on the merits” in the face of the five-
    year statute – apply to the circumstances in this case.
    FACTS
    1.     The Complaint and Related Actions
    On January 29, 2013, Stuntman, Inc., a loan-out company for
    the services of Hal Needham, a writer and director, filed a class
    action complaint against Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
    (defendant or petitioner). The substance of the complaint was that
    defendant failed to account properly to profit participants
    (Mr. Needham and class members) for income derived from the
    distribution of motion pictures on home video formats. The
    complaint asserted defendant engaged in the systematic practice of
    accounting to and crediting profit participants based on 20 percent
    of home video revenue, while it should have done so based on
    100 percent of that revenue.
    Other named plaintiffs, represented by some of the same law
    firms representing plaintiffs in this case, filed similar lawsuits
    against other studios (Universal City Studios LLC, Paramount
    Pictures Corp., Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., and Sony
    Pictures Entertainment, Inc.).
    On February 15, 2013, Judge Elihu M. Berle issued an initial
    status conference order in the Paramount Pictures case, staying
    those proceedings pending further order of the court and setting an
    initial status conference for April 16, 2013.
    On February 28, 2013, Judge Lee Edmon (to whom this case
    was originally assigned) issued a similar order in this case.
    On March 4, 2013, the five lawsuits were related.
    4
    The parties agree that as a result of the March 4, 2013 order
    relating the cases, Judge Berle’s initial status conference order was
    entered in this case, and that the stay Judge Berle ordered lasted
    for 43 days.2
    2.    The Initial Status Conference Order
    Judge Berle’s order included the following provisions. With
    respect to the stay, the order stated:
    “To facilitate the management of this complex case
    through the development of orderly schedules for briefing and
    hearings on procedural and substantive challenges to the
    complaint, discovery, and other issues, pending further order
    of this Court, and except for service of the summons and
    complaint and as otherwise provided in this Initial Status
    Conference Order, these proceedings are stayed in their
    entirety. This stay shall preclude the filing of any responsive
    pleadings, including any answer, demurrer, motion to strike,
    or motions challenging the jurisdiction of the Court.
    However, any defendant may file a Notice of Appearance for
    purposes of identification of counsel and preparation of a
    service list. . . . This stay shall not preclude the parties from
    continuing to informally exchange documents that may assist
    the parties in their initial evaluation of the issues presented
    in this case; however, it shall stay all outstanding discovery
    requests. [¶] Nothing herein stays the time for filing an
    2     Despite this agreement, plaintiffs refer to Judge Edmon’s
    February 28, 2013 minute order, while defendant uses Judge
    Berle’s order. There are no substantive differences in these orders.
    We will use Judge Berle’s order, because the joint initial status
    conference report filed by the parties on April 8, 2013, states that it
    was submitted “pursuant to the Court’s February 15, 2013 and
    March 4, 2013 Initial Status Conference Orders.”
    5
    affidavit of prejudice pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
    Section 170.6.”
    The remainder of the order concerned what the parties were
    required to do before the initial status conference on April 16, 2013,
    while the stay of responsive pleadings and outstanding discovery
    requests was in effect. Thus:
    Counsel were ordered to meet and confer to discuss
    17 matters, “and to prepare to address these issues with this Court
    at the Initial Status Conference.”
    Plaintiffs’ counsel was ordered “to take the lead in preparing”
    a joint initial status conference report to be filed before the initial
    status conference. The order delineated the 17 matters to be
    addressed in the joint report. These included such matters as the
    service list, any issues of jurisdiction or venue, an outline of claims
    and cross-claims, a list of related litigation, a description of core
    factual and legal issues, a description of discovery completed and
    any outstanding discovery, issues regarding electronic discovery,
    whether particular documents could be voluntarily exchanged, and
    so on.
    The parties were required to set forth their positions on those
    matters separately if they could not agree. The order encouraged
    the parties “to propose, either jointly or separately, any approaches
    to case management that they believe will promote the fair and
    efficient handling of this case. The Court is particularly interested
    in identifying potentially dispositive or significant threshold issues
    which may assist in early resolution or moving the case toward
    effective ADR and/or a final disposition.”
    The parties complied with the order. They met and conferred
    on March 20, 2013. Counsel then prepared the required joint report
    6
    and submitted it on April 8, 2013.3 The 28-page report addressed
    the issues specified in the court’s February 15 order, plus five
    additional points the court specified when the cases were related on
    March 4, 2013. With respect to the voluntary exchange of
    documents, the report stated that, subject to the court’s entry of an
    appropriate protective order, the parties agreed on March 20 “to a
    voluntary exchange of certain materials.”4 On the issue of a target
    trial date, plaintiffs stated that they would be seeking to certify one
    or more classes and would “file such motions within 12 months of
    discovery being opened,” and “trial could then occur within twelve
    months of such motion practice being resolved.” (On the topic of a
    discovery cut-off date, plaintiffs stated they “anticipate that they
    can complete sufficient discovery within twelve months after the
    discovery stay is lifted to move for class certification.”)
    3.     The Substitution of Plaintiffs
    Mr. Needham died on October 25, 2013, and on November 26,
    2013, a first amended complaint substituted Larco Productions, Inc.
    and Michael Elias as named plaintiffs. The parties agree that the
    five-year statute was tolled during this 32-day period, so the
    3     When we refer to “defendants” (in the plural) in this opinion,
    the term includes the defendants in the related cases.
    4      “Specifically, defendants agreed to voluntarily produce to
    plaintiffs, subject to the attorney-client and other applicable
    privileges, the contract negotiation files, participation statements,
    and any audit reports or settlement agreements related to the
    named plaintiffs. Plaintiffs agreed [to] make a good faith effort to
    collect from their present and former representatives and to
    voluntarily produce documents related to the subject contracts,
    including negotiation files, participation statements, and any audit
    reports or settlement agreement related to the named plaintiffs.”
    7
    earliest date on which the five-year statute could have run was
    March 2, 2018.
    4.      Further Proceedings
    Following is a general description of various proceedings that
    took place as the case moved toward the class certification motion,
    as well as events after that motion.
    a.    April 16, 2013 – July 3, 2017
    December 2013: The parties had agreed to a discovery
    procedure by December 2013. (At a status conference on
    December 3, 2013, the court also ruled that merits-based discovery
    was not permitted.) The parties selected a random sampling of
    25 motion pictures for document production by defendant, which
    would form a basis for plaintiffs’ class certification motion. The
    parties refer to this as the Pioneer sample of films; notice was
    issued to putative class members under Pioneer Electronics (USA),
    Inc. v. Superior Court (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 360
    (Pioneer). Disputes
    over the Pioneer notice were finally resolved, and the court
    approved dissemination of the notice on May 14, 2014.
    May 2015: Defendant eventually produced documents related
    to the Pioneer sample on a rolling basis, with its final production on
    May 29, 2015, by which time it had produced over 69,000 pages of
    documents.
    July 2015: In a joint status conference report dated July 30,
    plaintiffs stated they anticipated taking depositions “and being able
    to file their motions . . . within 180 days after the last Pioneer
    documents are received.”5 They also reported they had proposed to
    5     After a production in May 2015, the parties conferred over
    additional documents plaintiffs sought. Defendant conducted
    additional searches and made a supplemental production later in
    May, and in July 2015 informed plaintiffs it had produced all the
    additional documents it was able to locate. Thus, in July 2015,
    8
    the studios that they would move for class certification “on the
    information and documents produced in discovery to date,” but this
    was subject to the caveat that defendants would oppose class
    certification “on the documents and information disclosed relating
    to the named Plaintiffs and the films included in the 25 Film
    Sample, only.” Defendants did not agree they were confined to the
    existing discovery record in opposing class certification. Defendants
    anticipated needing about six months from the date of filing of
    plaintiffs’ motion to complete discovery necessary for their
    oppositions.
    August 2015: At a hearing on August 27, plaintiffs’ counsel
    told the court plaintiffs would be prepared to file their class
    certification motion as to defendant “within six months from today.”
    The court then set the deadline for February 26, 2016.
    November 2015: On November 23, the court ordered
    plaintiffs to file the class certification motions by April 29, 2016.
    (Other defendants (Fox, Paramount and Sony) wanted an extension
    until that date, and no one objected. Defendant’s counsel explained:
    “Your Honor, just so that we’re clear, what we are doing in this –
    what we have all agreed to is the Warner Bros. motion that was set
    for [February 26, 2016] is now being pushed back so they are all on
    the same schedule.”)
    April 2016: On April 13, the parties stipulated to extend the
    deadline to July 28, 2016. (The stipulation states that plaintiffs –
    “in order to conclude discovery pertaining to class certification
    issues prior to filing the Motion” – requested, and defendant did not
    oppose, the 90-day extension. The stipulation also stated the
    parties in the Fox and Sony cases had stipulated to staying those
    cases through July 31, 2016, to pursue settlement discussions, so
    plaintiffs planned to file their class certification motion by January
    2016.
    9
    this extension would not “impact the other actions” or “the Court’s
    attempt to have all of the Motions for Class Certification filed on
    the same date.”)
    May – June 2016: E-mail correspondence in May and June
    2016 refers to scheduling and re-scheduling of the depositions of
    defendant’s personnel, including dates beyond the July 28 deadline
    for the class certification motion, for which the parties blamed each
    other.
    July 2016: At an informal discovery hearing on July 1,
    defense counsel suggested that all counsel (for plaintiffs, defendant,
    Fox and Sony) confer and suggest a date for plaintiffs to file their
    motion “in all of the cases like we had originally contemplated.”
    Plaintiffs’ counsel agreed with that suggestion, saying that “we
    have to . . . get Fox and Sony back on track,” and referring to
    “a reasonable schedule to allow the discovery to occur with Fox and
    Sony . . . and then to have a filing date for all three of the motions
    for class certification.”
    August 2016: On August 10, the parties submitted a joint
    report agreeing plaintiffs’ deadline for the three motions for class
    certification would be extended for six months to January 30, 2017.
    One reason cited was that plaintiffs “require[d] the additional time
    to complete discovery, including deposition discovery from
    [defendant] and discovery that, in the case of Fox and Sony, was
    held in abeyance while settlement discussions continued.” The
    court ordered the January 30, 2017 deadline.
    October 2016: On October 28, plaintiffs stated in a joint
    report that they intended to file their motion for class certification
    as to defendant by the January 30, 2017 deadline. (They stated an
    intention to do so as to Sony and Fox also, but reserved the right to
    seek additional time if the parties were unable to agree on a
    10
    settlement and if there were discovery disputes or unexpected
    delays in the discovery process.)
    November 2016: On November 4, plaintiffs in the related
    cases proposed an extension of the deadline as to Sony and Fox for
    an additional 90 days, because those parties had reached a
    tentative settlement. Counsel for plaintiffs told the court that as to
    defendant, plaintiffs “should be able to file by the current deadline.”
    Defendant suggested the motions continue to be filed
    simultaneously, and plaintiffs agreed that doing so “made sense
    from the Plaintiffs’ perspective.” The deadline was thus extended
    from January 30 to May 1, 2017.
    April 2017: In early April, plaintiffs asked defendant to agree
    to an extension to July 1, 2017. Defendant informed plaintiffs it
    would not agree to any extension, but would not oppose it either.
    On April 13, 2017, plaintiffs filed an ex parte application to extend
    the deadline. They did so because the parties in the Fox case had
    agreed to extend the deadline in that case to July 1 “in order to
    continue with settlement discussions.” Plaintiffs cited the previous
    efforts “to maintain a parallel litigation schedule and class
    certification schedule.” Plaintiffs stated that “[t]he parties, and this
    Court, will suffer irreparable harm if the deadline . . . is not
    extended to July 1, 2017, because the pattern of uniformity will be
    broken and the duplication of work and expenditure of needless
    resources which to date has sought to be, and has been, avoided,
    will be lost.” The trial court granted the application.
    b.     July 3, 2017 – March 2, 2018
    July 2017: Plaintiffs filed their motion for class certification
    on July 3, 2017 (July 1 was a Saturday). As evidentiary support,
    plaintiffs relied “on approximately 60 participations contracts that
    had been produced to them by [defendant] by May 2015,” and also
    presented deposition testimony from various representatives of
    11
    defendant.6 “[B]ased upon the agreement of the parties,” the court
    granted defendant until January 15, 2018, to file opposition to class
    certification, and gave plaintiffs until March 15, 2018, to reply. The
    court set the hearing on class certification for April 18, 2018.
    (Plaintiffs point out that defendant proposed that schedule, “which
    happened to be after March 2, 2018, the date on which [defendant]
    now contends the Five-Year-Statute expired.”)
    August – September 2017: Defendant sought documents from
    plaintiffs, and from studio defendants in the related cases, asserting
    the documents were relevant to its opposition to the class
    certification motion. Plaintiffs objected on the ground, among
    others, that the discovery was directed to the merits and merits
    discovery should be taken after class certification.
    November 2017: On November 14, 2017, the court granted
    plaintiffs’ motion to quash the discovery, and denied defendant’s
    motion to compel. The ruling was “without prejudice to defendant
    Warner Bros. seeking the documents to defend against the merits of
    the case.” As plaintiffs tell us, the court “again [found] that the
    discovery sought . . . encompassed issues related to the merits and
    was not permitted at this stage of the litigation.” (As early as
    December 2013 and April 2014, the court had stated that “discovery
    at this point [April 2014] is limited to class issues.”)
    6      According to plaintiffs, the “PMQ depositions” of defendant
    began on October 25, 2016, and ended on January 17, 2017.
    Defendant says the depositions occurred between October 25 and
    December 20, 2016, “with one deposition completed on January 17,
    2017.” In their return, plaintiffs admit the May 1, 2017 deadline
    was nearly five months after plaintiffs completed PMQ depositions
    of defendant.
    12
    The parties agree that, before January 2018, plaintiffs never
    mentioned the five-year rule to defendant or the court; nor did
    defendant raise the issue.
    5.     The Motion To Dismiss and the Motion for Trial
    Preference
    On March 2, 2018, defendant filed its motion to dismiss,
    contending the five-year deadline expired that day, or in the
    alternative that the case could not be brought to trial by a date that
    included the 43-day initial stay (by April 16, 2018). On the same
    day (March 2), plaintiffs filed a motion for an order finding the five-
    year deadline was extended, or in the alternative granting plaintiffs
    “preference for trial immediately.”
    The trial court heard both motions on March 26, 2018.
    6.     The Trial Court’s Ruling
    The court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss and granted
    plaintiffs’ motion for trial preference. Among the court’s
    conclusions were these.
    First, the court concluded the five-year statute would expire
    on April 16, 2018, because of two tolling periods.
    The 43-day initial stay came within section 583.340(b),
    excluding time during which “[p]rosecution or trial of the action was
    stayed or enjoined.” The court explained that “plaintiff could not
    advance the case, could not even require the defendant to answer
    the complaint. There was no way a case could be at issue or take
    discovery or any of the normal activities incurred during litigation.”
    “[O]bviously, the case is not even advancing if the pleadings are not
    at issue.”
    In addition, the court found the five-year statute was tolled
    for 32 days under section 583.340, subdivision (c) (excluding time
    when bringing the action to trial was “impossible, impracticable, or
    futile”) (hereafter, section 583.340(c)). This was the time between
    13
    the death of the original plaintiff and the substitution of present
    plaintiffs. The court observed these were “extraordinary
    circumstances beyond the control of the parties,” and “it was
    impossible and impractical for plaintiff to pursue the action without
    a client, without a plaintiff in this case.”
    Second, the court rejected plaintiffs’ claims that “at least
    1,035 days” should also be excluded from the computation on the
    ground it was “impossible, impracticable, or futile” to bring the
    action to trial.
    Specifically, the court rejected plaintiffs’ claim the statute
    should be tolled for 542 days based on identification of the Pioneer
    sample and the related production of documents. The court
    observed the “simple process regarding the Pioneer notice . . . is
    typical in the complex case,” and the Pioneer production “occurred
    between April 2014 and May 2015, over three years before the five-
    year deadline.”
    The court also rejected plaintiffs’ claim for exclusion of
    493 days based on “the parties’ desire to maintain a parallel track
    with the related cases.” The court concluded plaintiffs “did not
    establish they were faced with impossible or impractical choices
    between prosecuting the case and tracking the other cases. [¶] The
    fact that defendant’s counsel [sic] chose to simultaneously track
    related actions, even though the court was agreeable to that and
    thinks it was appropriate, but that does not [a]ffect the running of
    the five-year statute.”
    Third, the court rejected plaintiffs’ contention that equitable
    estoppel precluded defendant from arguing the case should be
    dismissed. (The reasons plaintiffs gave included that defendant
    “agreed to, and even advocated for, delay,” promoting
    postponements of the class certification filing deadline so the action
    could proceed on the same schedule as the related cases, and
    14
    proposing a deadline of more than six months for its opposition to
    the motion.) The court reasoned:
    “Equitable estoppel requires a party invoking estoppel to
    exercise reasonable diligence to ensure a reasonable case be brought
    to trial [within] the statutory period. Insofar as the class
    certification goes, the court does not believe that the reasonable
    diligence has been exercised with the certification earlier, and that
    does not justify or delay [sic] the tolling of the statute.”
    Fourth, the court “grant[ed] the motion of the plaintiff for
    trial preference and set the case for trial immediately.” The court
    set both the hearing on class certification and the trial for April 10,
    2018. The court ordered “all the status conference documents . . . to
    be filed with the court no later than April 2nd.” The court
    continued:
    “[T]hat includes the statement to be read to the jury, the
    exhibit list, joint exhibit list, joint statement to be read to the jury,
    joint witness list, joint jury instruction and joint verdict form. [¶]
    I have not yet determined the order of the trial, whether we would
    proceed with a non-jury phase of the trial of unfair competition
    before the other phase of the trial, but still would be under
    consideration. [¶] But the trial will be set to proceed forthwith on
    April 10 at 9:00 a.m. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . As far as counsel is
    concerned about discovery, all discovery is opened.”
    Two days later, on March 28, 2018, the court granted
    defendant’s ex parte application and stayed the case until the later
    of April 30, 2018, or this court’s ruling on defendant’s writ petition
    for review of the trial court’s orders.
    7.     Defendant’s Writ Petition
    Defendant filed its writ petition on April 2, 2018, seeking
    dismissal of the lawsuit and a written decision “clarifying that
    15
    proceeding with the lawsuit would violate the five-year rule and
    that trial preference was improperly granted.”
    We issued an order to show cause and set dates for a written
    return and reply. Our order directed the parties to address seven
    questions, in addition to any other issues they wished to address.
    These questions were whether the trial court erred in refusing to
    dismiss the case under the five-year statute; what circumstances
    tolled the five-year period; whether the court found reasonable
    diligence and excusable delay; whether the court erred in granting
    trial preference; the scope of the trial that was set for April 10,
    2018; whether defendant’s procedural rights were violated by
    setting trial despite no hearing on class certification and no merits
    discovery; and whether the court erred in deciding to empanel a
    jury before deciding class certification in view of Fireside Bank.
    As indicated at the outset, we now grant defendant’s writ
    petition.
    DISCUSSION
    1.     Dismissal Under the Five-year Statute
    a.    The applicable law
    We reiterate the applicable statutory rules for tolling the five-
    year period within which an action must be brought to trial under
    section 583.310. The time during which “[p]rosecution or trial of
    the action was stayed or enjoined” is excluded from the
    computation. (§ 583.340(b).) And, the time during which
    “[b]ringing the action to trial, for any other reason, was impossible,
    impracticable, or futile” is also excluded. (§ 583.340(c).)
    The Supreme Court explained these tolling provisions, first in
    Bruns and then in Gaines. Bruns tells us that section 583.340(b)
    “contemplates a bright-line, nondiscretionary rule that excludes
    from the time in which a plaintiff must bring a case to trial only
    that time during which all the proceedings in an action are stayed.”
    16
    
    (Bruns, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 726; see also 
    Gaines, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 1087 [“A complete stay will operate to automatically
    toll the five-year period.”].) Section 583.340(c) “gives the trial court
    discretion to exclude additional periods, including periods when
    partial stays were in place, when the court concludes that bringing
    the action to trial was ‘impossible, impracticable, or futile.’ ”
    (Bruns, at p. 726.)
    Bruns addressed “whether a stay of the ‘prosecution’ of the
    action . . . includes a stay of specific proceedings, such as a stay of
    discovery, while other aspects of the action may go forward.”
    
    (Bruns, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at pp. 721-722.) The court rejected that
    proposition, concluding “the prosecution of an action is stayed under
    subdivision (b) only when the stay encompasses all proceedings in
    the action.” (Id. at p. 722.) Section 583.340(b) “governs only
    complete stays that are ‘used to stop the prosecution of the action
    altogether.’ ” (Bruns, at p. 730; see also 
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th
    at p. 1094 [“ ‘The term “prosecution” is sufficiently comprehensive
    to include every step in an action from its commencement to its
    final determination.’ ”).]
    In this case, the question is whether an order that specifically
    stays “any responsive pleadings” and “outstanding discovery
    requests” – but requires the parties to do many other things during
    the same period – is a “complete stay[]” that “ ‘stop[s] the
    prosecution of the action altogether.’ ” Our answer, informed by the
    principles stated in Bruns and Gaines, is “no.”
    As in Gaines, “[w]e review the question de novo because it
    does not hinge on the resolution of factual questions concerning
    credibility of extrinsic evidence.” (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 1092.)
    17
    b.    Contentions and conclusions
    Plaintiffs contend the stay of responsive pleadings and
    discovery “halt[ed] prosecution of the case altogether.” The legal
    support plaintiffs offer for this conclusion consists, in its entirety, of
    (1) distinguishing the facts in Gaines from the facts here, and
    (2) pointing to a sample initial status conference order available on
    the superior court’s website, apparently updated in April 2015, that
    refers to section 583.310.7 Neither point is persuasive.
    The Gaines case involved an order “entered pursuant to the
    parties’ agreement” that struck the trial date “and ‘stayed’ the
    proceedings while the parties engaged in mediation and completed
    all outstanding discovery.” (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 1087.)
    The court found, under section 583.340(b), both that the order did
    not constitute “a stay of the ‘trial of the action’ ” (Gaines, at
    p. 1091), and that it “did not effect a complete stay of the
    prosecution of the action” (
    id. at p.
    1087). On the first point, the
    court found the order effected a stipulated continuance of the trial
    rather than a stay. (Id. at p. 1093; see 
    id. at p.
    1092 [“The long-
    standing judicial understanding of the term ‘stay’ in the context of
    the five-year statute is that it refers to those postponements that
    freeze a proceeding for an indefinite period, until the occurrence of
    an event that is usually extrinsic to the litigation and beyond the
    plaintiff’s control.”].)
    On the second point, relying on Bruns, the court concluded
    the order did not completely stay prosecution of the action. This
    was because the order required the parties to comply with
    outstanding written discovery, and so “did not ‘ “stop the
    7     Section 583.310 states the general rule that “[a]n action shall
    be brought to trial within five years after the action is commenced
    against the defendant.”
    18
    prosecution of the action altogether.” ’ ” (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th
    at p. 1094.) In addition, the submission of the action to mediation
    “constituted a ‘step in [the] action’ . . . within the meaning of
    section 583.340(b) and Bruns.”8 (Id. at p. 1095, citation omitted.)
    The Gaines facts are, of course, different from the facts in this
    case. But Gaines is merely one application of the rule. Nothing in
    Gaines confines, limits or contradicts the fundamental principle
    stated in Bruns: that section 583.340(b) “governs only complete
    stays that are ‘used to stop the prosecution of the action
    altogether.’ ” 
    (Bruns, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 730.) We find it
    8      Gaines further held the order did not create a “circumstance
    of impracticability” under section 583.340(c). (
    Gaines, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 1087.) This was because “plaintiff agreed to [the
    order], remained in control of the circumstances, and made
    meaningful progress towards resolving the case during the stay
    period.” (Ibid.)
    In this case, no issue of impossibility, impracticability or
    futility exists with respect to the 43-day stay. Plaintiffs do not
    contend otherwise, nor could they; the existence of circumstances
    making it impracticable to “[b]ring[] the action to trial, for any other
    reason” (§ 583.340(c)), has no apparent application when a lawsuit
    has just begun. (See 
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 1101 [“It would
    thus be illusory to ask if it was impracticable for [the plaintiff] to try
    the case during the period of the stay because the posture of the
    case would not have allowed for such a result.”].) And as Bruns
    tells us, “[t]he effect of a partial stay . . . can vary from stay to stay
    and from case to case. A partial stay might, or might not, make it
    ‘impossible, impracticable, or futile’ to bring the action to trial. . . .
    [W]hen the effect of a partial stay is raised by a plaintiff under
    section 583.340, the trial court must determine whether or not
    subdivision (c) applies to that partial stay.” 
    (Bruns, supra
    ,
    51 Cal.4th at p. 726.) Plaintiffs here did not raise any such claim
    with respect to the 43-day stay.
    19
    impossible to conclude that an order requiring the parties to engage
    in significant litigation-related activities can nevertheless be
    considered to have stopped prosecution of the case altogether. As
    we have seen, the parties met and conferred on March 20, 2013;
    agreed to the exchange of various documents (see fn. 4, ante);
    prepared the joint report discussing numerous topics; and
    submitted the report to the court on April 8, 2013. These are
    significant litigation activities that occurred while other litigation
    activities (responsive pleadings and discovery) were stayed.
    Equally impossible is a conclusion that this initial stage of the
    litigation, during which the parties are compelled to focus on case
    management issues, is nevertheless not a “ ‘step in [the] action’ ”
    (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 1095). On the contrary, it seems to
    us this period in the litigation is a step that contributes
    significantly to the advancement of a complex action to eventual
    resolution. The stay of responsive pleadings and formal discovery
    during this time effectively facilitates the parties’ focus on case
    management issues, including multiple issues concerning how
    discovery is to be conducted. Plainly, this is a step – an important
    step – in the action. Plaintiffs have offered us no basis to conclude
    otherwise.
    Instead, plaintiffs refer us to the form of an initial status
    conference order posted on the website of the Los Angeles Superior
    Court and denominated “4/1/15 SAMPLE.”
    ( [as of Nov. 14, 2018].) This
    sample form contains much the same language as the order entered
    in this case, and it has two additions tangentially pertinent to
    plaintiffs’ argument. According to this form of order, one of the
    topics that the joint initial status conference report must include is:
    “Whether the parties are prepared to stipulate that discovery and/or
    20
    pleading stays entered by the Court for case management purposes
    shall not be considered in determining the statutory period for
    bringing the case to trial under Code of Civil Procedure
    Section 583.310.” (Id., at p. 4, item 10.) The form of order also
    provides: “Hereafter, all management stays, including stays of
    discovery issued by the Court, shall not be considered as a stay per
    Code of Civil Procedure section 583.310 unless specifically ordered
    by the Court.”9 (Id., at p. 5.)
    We do not see how this order would assist plaintiffs, even if it
    had been entered in this proceeding, which it was not. It is a
    different (form of) order, and cannot supersede or otherwise affect
    an actual order made two years earlier. But even more to the point,
    no matter what a sample order may say, the superior court cannot
    declare whether or not the five-year statute is tolled in any way
    other than in conformance with law. If, as we have concluded, an
    order has not effected a complete stay of proceedings, a trial court’s
    declaration otherwise changes nothing.
    In sum, the order imposing a 43-day stay of responsive
    pleadings and formal discovery was not “a complete stay ‘ “used to
    stop the prosecution of the action altogether,” ’ ”and
    “[s]ection 583.340(b) is therefore inapplicable.” (
    Gaines, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 1097.) Absent any other basis for tolling the five-
    year statute for those 43 days – and plaintiffs suggest none – the
    five-year period ended on March 2, 2018, and dismissal of the action
    was mandatory.
    9    Plaintiffs rely only on the second sentence quoted in the text,
    and do not mention the first. Neither provision appears in the
    sample order cited by plaintiffs that is an exhibit in this case.
    21
    2.     The Trial Preference Ruling
    Defendant’s writ petition asserts a second basis for concluding
    the trial court was required to dismiss plaintiffs’ action under the
    five-year statute. We agree with defendant that, even if the trial
    court was correct in concluding the five-year statute would not
    expire until April 16, 2018, its order granting trial preference and
    advancing the trial date to April 10 was a manifest abuse of
    discretion.
    Several principles apply when we consider the propriety of
    trial preference in the context of a class action. In this case, in
    addition to its failure to apply the general factors that determine
    whether trial preference is appropriate, the trial court did not
    consider two important legal rules that apply to putative class
    actions. These rules, together with the court’s own findings on
    plaintiffs’ lack of reasonable diligence, require the conclusion that
    granting trial preference was an abuse of discretion.
    a.     Fireside Bank
    Fireside Bank instructs that ordinarily courts should not
    resolve the merits in a putative class action before class
    certification and notice issues, without compelling justification.
    (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083.) The reason for the
    Fireside Bank rule is the need to protect against the harms of “one-
    way intervention.” (Ibid.) One-way intervention occurs when “not-
    yet-bound absent plaintiffs may elect to stay in a class after
    favorable merits rulings but opt out after unfavorable ones.” (Id. at
    p. 1074; see 
    id. at p.
    1083 [“in dicta we have gone so far as to
    attribute to defendants a due process right to avoid one-way
    intervention”].)
    Fireside Bank summarized several rules “governing the
    parties’ and trial court’s orderly conduct of putative class action
    cases.” (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083.) These are:
    22
    “First, a defendant must actively preserve its protection
    against one-way intervention by objecting. If it fails to timely
    object, or affirmatively seeks resolution of the merits before
    certification, it will be deemed to have waived its rights.
    [Citations.] Second, the plaintiffs should seek certification before
    moving for any resolution of the merits. [Citation.] If they seek
    certification after seeking resolution of the merits then, in the
    absence of a defense waiver, they must demonstrate changed
    circumstances or other good cause justifying the belated motion
    before the trial court may consider it. [Citation.] Third, though
    trial courts generally have broad discretion to manage and order
    class affairs, in the absence of a defense waiver they should not
    resolve the merits in a putative class action case before class
    certification and notice issues absent a compelling justification for
    doing so.” (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083, fn. omitted.)
    Plaintiffs agree that these are the rules. Their principal
    contention is that Fireside Bank is inapplicable here because
    defendant “unquestionably waived [its] Fireside Bank rights when
    it sought to file, and did file on June 6, 2014, a dispositive motion
    for summary adjudication.” We reject this claim.
    Plaintiffs did not raise this contention in the trial court – and
    indeed, told the trial court in its motion for trial preference that
    without a class certification decision, it was “impossible for
    Plaintiffs to proceed with a trial as to the claims of the class.” And
    at the hearing, when the court asked plaintiffs’ counsel whether
    starting a trial before the notice period “would affect the
    defendant’s rights under Fireside Bank,” plaintiffs’ counsel replied:
    “I don’t see how, Your Honor. If we start trial before, we’re starting
    it as an individual case because Your Honor has yet to certify a
    class, so I don’t see how that would impinge upon Fireside Bank and
    23
    their right on one-way intervention. I just don’t.” There was no
    mention of waiver.
    In any event, the claim that defendant waived its Fireside
    Bank rights is inconsistent with the record and with the law.
    The record does show, as plaintiffs assert, that at a hearing
    on June 14, 2013, in a discussion of summary judgment motions,
    the court said that if defendant filed a summary judgment motion,
    “it’s only going to apply to the named plaintiffs who are in the
    lawsuit now, not to other members of the class,” and “obviously
    there’s no res judicata effect on anybody else.” Defense counsel
    replied: “We understand that, Your Honor. And we are willing to
    waive our Fireside Bank rights in this case because we think that
    it’s important – [¶] . . . [¶] . . . And so . . . I think it really makes
    sense to deal with these individual plaintiff issues first.” Based on
    that exchange, plaintiffs now say that defendant “waived its rights
    under Fireside Bank five years ago.” But the record also shows that
    defendant’s waiver was related to a single cause of action. Thus:
    When plaintiffs filed a notice of ruling for the hearing at
    which the above exchange occurred, they included a paragraph on
    the deadline for filing the motions for summary judgment or
    adjudication, and the limited discovery that was authorized relating
    to the issues defendants intended to present in support of their
    motions. The notice said nothing about the waiver. Defendants
    then filed a counter-notice of ruling correcting that paragraph. The
    counter-notice stated:
    “Based on Defendants’ willingness to waive their Fireside
    Bank protections as to certain claims if they prevail prior to
    certification of a class, the Court granted Defendants
    permission to file early summary judgment or summary
    adjudication motions against certain of the named
    Plaintiffs’ claims, without waiver of Defendants’ right to
    24
    file summary judgment or adjudication motions later in the
    case, either before or after a decision on class certification.”
    (Boldface & italics added.)
    The record shows no objection by plaintiffs to defendants’ corrected
    notice of ruling.
    Defendant then filed a summary adjudication motion
    addressed to plaintiffs’ cause of action for conversion, and the trial
    court granted the motion and dismissed that cause of action on
    October 14, 2014.
    Waiver is the intentional relinquishment or abandonment of
    a known right, and “ ‘ “always rests upon intent.” ’ ” (Lynch v.
    California Coastal Commission (2017) 3 Cal.5th 470, 475.) The
    record plainly shows defendant had no intention of waiving its
    Fireside Bank rights with respect to anything but the claims on
    which it sought summary adjudication.
    Moreover, plaintiffs misread Fireside Bank when they suggest
    that a limited waiver of the sort just described somehow amounts to
    an all-purpose waiver of a defendant’s right to protection against
    one-way intervention for all class claims. Fireside Bank did not say
    or suggest anything of the sort. Such a construction makes no
    sense; it is contrary to the very purpose of the rules against one-way
    intervention, which protect defendants from the no-win situation
    that exists when class members can opt out if a ruling on the merits
    is favorable to them and remain in the class if it is not. Fireside
    Bank itself makes the point clear, repeatedly, in its discussion of
    the scope of the rule. Thus, “the scope of any rule should be
    coextensive with its rationale,” and the scope of the Fireside Bank
    principle “depends precisely on the extent to which the ruling gives
    rise to concerns about one-way intervention.” (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1084.) “What matters is the extent to which
    a [summary adjudication or other] motion impacts the principal
    25
    legal issue or issues in a case and thereby poses for the defendants
    the risk of one-way intervention depending on its outcome.” (Id. at
    p. 1086.)
    Here, defendant’s motion for summary adjudication of
    plaintiffs’ conversion claim did not “impact[] the principal legal
    issue” – whether defendant is obligated to account to and credit
    profit participants based on 100 percent rather than 20 percent of
    home video revenue. Plaintiffs say this is “the central issue in the
    case.” Defendant has never sought a ruling on the merits of this
    issue, or any issue other than plaintiffs’ conversion claim.
    A ruling on the merits of that central issue in advance of class
    certification would plainly create an untenable risk of one-way
    intervention. Successfully seeking summary adjudication on a
    collateral claim did not waive defendant’s Fireside Bank right to
    avoid one-way intervention with respect to pending class claims.
    Next, plaintiffs contend defendant is deemed to have waived
    its Fireside Bank rights by “fail[ing] to timely object.” (Fireside
    
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083.) Plaintiffs observe that
    defendant participated in the scheduling of the class certification
    motion and “never objected nor raised the [Fireside Bank] issue
    before filing its motion to dismiss.”
    This claim is meritless. Of course a defendant “must actively
    preserve its protection against one-way intervention by objecting,”
    and “[i]f it fails to timely object . . . it will be deemed to have waived
    its rights.” (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083.) But we
    know of no basis to conclude that a defendant must “raise the issue”
    at any time before a plaintiff actually seeks a resolution of the
    merits of the case. That did not happen until plaintiffs filed their
    motion for trial preference.
    The only authority plaintiffs cite is Civil Service Employees
    Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 362
    . It does not help
    26
    them in the slightest. In that case, the plaintiff filed a motion for
    class certification and a motion for partial summary judgment of
    affirmative defenses that would “resolve the principal legal issue
    presented by the case.” (Id. at p. 369.) The defendant “simply
    contested the merits of the [partial summary judgment] motion,”
    and did not claim it was premature or should be postponed until
    absent class members had been notified of the action. (Ibid.) The
    trial court granted the partial summary judgment motion and
    certified the case as a class action. (Id. at p. 370.) Then the
    defendant sought a writ, among other things to vacate the order
    granting partial summary judgment. (Id. at p. 371.) The Court of
    Appeal held that “[b]y failing to object to the trial court’s
    determination of plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment
    prior to class notification, defendant waived any right it may have
    had to postpone such a ruling until after such notice was provided.”
    (Ibid., italics omitted.) Obviously, in the Civil Service case there
    was a motion by the plaintiff for resolution on the merits to which
    the defendant failed to object. That did not happen here.
    Plaintiffs’ final contention on this point is that there is a
    “compelling justification” for a different result because “the trial
    plan envisioned would not have resulted in one-way intervention.”
    As we discuss in part c., post, the applicable legal authorities do not
    permit the “trial plan envisioned” under the circumstances here,
    and accordingly plaintiffs’ assertion is meritless.
    b.     Massey
    The interplay between the five-year mandatory dismissal
    statute and the rule against one-way intervention – a rule that has
    existed in the courts of appeal since the 1970’s (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at pp. 1079-1080) – arose and was resolved in the
    Massey case.
    27
    In Massey, the action had been pending for more than four
    years and 10 months and a trial date had been set. At the time of
    the trial court’s order dismissing the class aspects of the case, there
    had been “no determination as to the class aspect of the case; [and]
    no notice to members of the class agreed upon, determined or
    given . . . .” 
    (Massey, supra
    , 56 Cal.App.3d at p. 32.) The trial court
    order noted that “ ‘no meaningful or effective notice to the members
    of the class prior to trial can be given.’ ” (Ibid.) The Court of
    Appeal upheld the dismissal, stating:
    “It is quite true that the full five-year period had not finally
    expired on . . . the date of the order appealed from. But it is
    undisputed that the 34 days remaining of that period was grossly
    inadequate for the giving of notice to the large and geographically
    scattered class for which plaintiff purports to act and to allow even
    a minimally reasonable period for exercise by the class members of
    their options. To go through the mere formality of fixing notice at
    that late date would have been a useless act, since dismissal,
    34 days later and before completion of any reasonable notice period,
    would have been mandatory. Hence we conclude that dismissal of
    the class aspect of the action was proper.” 
    (Massey, supra
    ,
    56 Cal.App.3d at p. 33, fn. omitted.)
    Here, the trial court calculated that the five-year period was
    to expire on April 16, 2018. So, when the court’s March 26, 2018
    ruling set the matter for trial, only 21 days remained in the five
    years. Notification to class members with a reasonable time to
    exercise their options, before expiration of the five-year period, was
    plainly an impossibility.
    The trial court ignored Massey entirely, despite defendant’s
    contention, in briefing and at the hearing, that it was directly
    applicable. Plaintiffs effectively do so as well.
    28
    In their return, plaintiffs do not dispute the Massey holding,
    but say Massey is distinguishable because they were reasonably
    diligent in seeking class certification and the plaintiff in Massey
    was not.10 This assertion is both irrelevant and contrary to fact.
    Massey did not address reasonable diligence or the lack thereof; it
    involved only the adequacy of the time remaining in the five-year
    period to give notice to the class and allow class members to
    exercise their options. Moreover, the distinction would fail in any
    event, as the trial court expressly found plaintiffs were not
    reasonably diligent, as we discuss in part d., post.
    In short, we are presented with no reason to disagree with the
    holding in Massey. Absent compelling justification (Fireside 
    Bank, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1083), a class action must be dismissed
    under the five-year statute if the class issues are not decided with
    enough time for notice to the class and a minimally reasonable
    period for class members to exercise their options before trial
    begins. The 21 days remaining in this case before the posited date
    for expiration of the five-year period is even less than the 34 days
    that were “grossly inadequate” in Massey.
    c.     Hartman
    Plaintiffs try to avoid these legal conclusions by contending
    the Fireside Bank rule does not apply because “the trial plan
    envisioned would not have resulted in one-way intervention.”
    According to plaintiffs, the trial court “has procedural mechanisms
    10    Plaintiffs observe that Massey did not involve “multiple
    related actions” that the parties sought to keep on track; the
    defendant in Massey moved for a class determination first and the
    plaintiff did so only after the defendant moved for dismissal of the
    class action aspect of the action; and in Massey the plaintiff
    requested a delay in the hearing.
    29
    at its disposal to provide more time for the parties’ preparation for a
    full trial.” They suggest the following.
    Plaintiffs plan to move in limine to bifurcate the trial and
    request a bench trial on their declaratory judgment claim, which
    they say “focuses on the central issue in the case.” They
    hypothesize that the trial court then has two options: it can swear
    the first witness and then grant a continuance so the class can be
    certified and the matter “completely tried by jury at a later time on
    the merits.” For this point, plaintiffs cite 
    Hartman, supra
    ,
    
    30 Cal. 3d 762
    . “In the alternative, the trial court could actually
    proceed to try the claim for declaratory judgment, and continue the
    remaining phases of the trial.”
    The problem with these proposals is twofold.
    First, the trial court had, or expressed, no idea of the scope of
    the trial it ordered to begin on April 10, and indeed stated that it
    had not determined the order of the trial, “whether we would
    proceed with a non-jury phase . . . before the other phase.” But the
    court ordered the parties to file, within one week, the statement to
    be read to the jury, the exhibit list, the witness list, the jury
    instructions, and the verdict form. This on its face is manifestly
    unfair to defendant, who has had no opportunity to conduct merits
    discovery, consider expert witnesses, decide whether to move for
    summary judgment, or anything else. Indeed, neither party had
    any idea what sort of “trial” they would confront on April 10.
    Second, there is no legal basis under which any of plaintiffs’
    proposals for commencing trial – only in order to continue it for the
    many months or years that will necessarily be consumed before the
    parties are actually ready for trial – can stand. Certainly, the trial
    court cannot “actually proceed to try the claim for declaratory
    judgment” with no opportunity for merits discovery. And the only
    legal precedent permitting “the pro forma commencement of the
    30
    trial” in order to “preserv[e] the right to a trial on the merits” in the
    face of the five-year statute – Hartman – does not apply to the
    circumstances in this case.
    Hartman did indeed approve a procedure for beginning a trial
    and then immediately postponing it to avoid the five-year statute.
    Hartman pointed out that “from time immemorial charades and
    fictions have played a vital role in helping courts over, around and
    under legal roadblocks which they were not quite ready to assault
    head-on.” (
    Hartman, supra
    , 30 Cal.3d at p. 766; 
    ibid. [“the pro forma
    commencement of the trial . . . plays a vital part in
    preserving the right to a trial on the merits”].)11
    The cornerstone of Hartman, however, was that overcrowded
    court dockets “demand safety valves against unjust dismissals.”
    (
    Hartman, supra
    , 30 Cal.3d at p. 766.) One such safety valve was
    11     Hartman explains that this pro forma procedure was first
    suggested in Miller & Lux, Inc. v. Superior Court (1923) 
    192 Cal. 333
    . In that case, dismissal was mandated, but the court
    “suggested that if counsel had desired to avoid the bar of the
    statute, it would have been a very simple matter, after calling the
    court’s attention to the situation, to have requested that one
    witness be sworn in the cases and then the hearing of the cases
    continued until a time which would be convenient for the court and
    the parties to the action.” (Miller & Lux, at p. 342.) The Miller &
    Lux court made this suggestion after reciting extensive facts
    showing the plaintiffs were ready for trial, but orally stipulated to
    continuances at defense counsel’s request without the necessary
    written stipulation. (Id. at pp. 335-337.) “Doubtless if objection had
    been made and the trial court’s attention called to the fact that a
    further continuance would have the effect of putting the case
    beyond the bar of the statute, the trial court would have ordered
    that the cases proceed to trial or else have exacted a written
    stipulation from the defendants extending the time of the trial.”
    (Id. at p. 342.)
    31
    “the rule that if the plaintiff has obtained a trial date within the
    five years and is prevented from actually going to trial because no
    courtroom is open, the delay is ‘on the house.’ ” (Ibid.) But,
    Hartman tells us, “the facts do not always fit [that] mold,” and that
    is why the “pro forma commencement of the trial” was so important.
    (Ibid.) The facts in Hartman demonstrated just such an “unjust
    dismissal[].”
    In Hartman, the plaintiff had obtained several trial dates, but
    the dates were continued because no judge was available; then
    because defense counsel was engaged in another case; and then
    because of serial challenges to the assigned judge, first by the
    defendant and then by the plaintiff. The final assigned trial date
    was 23 days before the fifth anniversary of the filing date, at which
    time the plaintiff’s counsel was engaged in another trial that was
    taking ‘ “considerably longer’ ” than had been estimated. (
    Hartman, supra
    , 30 Cal.3d at p. 764.) The trial court permitted the procedure
    of empaneling and swearing a jury, and continuing the matter until
    a time convenient to the court and when the trial in which the
    plaintiff’s counsel was then engaged would be finished. (Ibid.)
    These were the circumstances generating Hartman’s conclusion the
    five-year statute “may be avoided by going through certain rites
    denoting the commencement of a trial.” (Id. at p. 765; see also
    Central Mutual Ins. Co. v. Executive Motor Home Sales, Inc. (1983)
    
    143 Cal. App. 3d 791
    , 795 [“To avoid the problems of unavailable
    courtroom and/or unavailable time for lengthy trial, use of the ‘trial-
    started’ fiction is available,” citing Hartman].) 12
    12    Hartman also held that a “second and entirely independent
    reason why the dismissal was erroneous is the fact that legally five
    years had not elapsed since the filing of the complaint.” (
    Hartman, supra
    , 30 Cal.3d at p. 767.) This was because the challenges to the
    assigned judge resulted in a delay of 11 months, and that time
    32
    We cannot think that Hartman intended this “safety valve[]
    against unjust dismissals” to apply to circumstances where
    plaintiffs were never ready for trial, and where the court found
    plaintiffs did not exercise reasonable diligence in bringing the case
    to the point of class certification (see pt. d., post), a point that
    precedes a trial on the merits. In short, there is nothing “unjust”
    about a dismissal under the five-year statute in the circumstances
    of this case – quite the opposite. And that principle – the need for a
    “safety valve[] against unjust dismissal” – is, in our view, a
    precondition and the sine qua non for application of the Hartman
    procedure. Plaintiffs have cited no cases post-Hartman (or pre-
    Hartman for that matter) that suggest otherwise.
    In sum, the procedure plaintiffs suggest is, under the
    circumstances of this case, a sham to avoid the mandatory
    application of the five-year dismissal rule. We see no basis in law
    under which we may countenance a manipulation of long-standing
    legal rules on the conduct of class actions to avoid the application of
    another long-standing legal rule: mandatory dismissal after
    five years.
    d.     Trial preference principles
    Underlying plaintiffs’ opposition to application of the legal
    rules we have described is their insistence the trial court found they
    exercised reasonable diligence during the period leading up to the
    class certification motion, filed four and one-half years after the
    complaint. Both the law on reasonable diligence and the record,
    already described in the fact section, ante, show this is not so.
    should have been disregarded, so “by any reckoning, the dismissal
    was premature.” (Id. at pp. 768-769.)
    33
    i.     The law
    The factor of reasonable diligence applies both when a trial
    court is considering whether to toll the five-year statute under
    section 583.340(c) (the impossibility, impracticality or futility
    exception), and when the court is considering a motion for trial
    preference. Thus, Gaines instructs that the “ ‘ “critical factor in
    applying these [section 583.340(c)] exceptions to a given factual
    situation is whether the plaintiff exercised reasonable diligence in
    prosecuting his or her case.” ’ ” (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 1100.)
    Likewise, while a decision on trial preference rests in the
    sound discretion of the trial court, the court must consider, among
    other factors, “dilatory conduct by plaintiff,” so that a plaintiff must
    “make[] some showing of excusable delay.” (Salas v. Sears Roebuck
    & Co. (1986) 
    42 Cal. 3d 342
    , 349, 347 (Salas); see 
    id. at p.
    347
    [“although the interests of justice weigh heavily against disposing of
    litigation on procedural grounds – a policy we reaffirm – that policy
    will necessarily prevail only if a plaintiff makes some showing of
    excusable delay”].)13
    ii.   The record
    The record demonstrates the trial court expressly found that
    plaintiffs were not diligent in seeking class certification.
    13    See also section 36, subdivision (e) (“Notwithstanding any
    other provision of law, the court may in its discretion grant a
    motion for preference that is supported by a showing that satisfies
    the court that the interests of justice will be served by granting this
    preference.”). Salas tells us the discretionary standard is consistent
    with the legislative intent under this provision (then
    subdivision (d)) “to promote diligent and orderly prosecution by
    requiring plaintiffs to make some showing of excusable delay.”
    
    (Salas, supra
    , 42 Cal.3d at p. 349.)
    34
    In the trial court, plaintiffs contended the court should add
    1,035 days to the five-year rule because it was “impossible,
    impracticable, or futile to complete the class certification and notice
    process, let alone bring this action to trial.” The “specific
    circumstances” that warranted application of that exception to the
    five-year rule, they argued, included the identification of and
    production under the Pioneer sample (542 days), and the parties’
    desire to maintain a parallel track with the related cases
    (493 days).
    The trial court rejected both contentions. As already
    described, the court found the “simple process regarding the Pioneer
    notice . . . is typical in the complex case,” and the Pioneer
    production occurred “over three years before the five-year deadline.”
    And, the court stated the five-year statute should not be tolled for
    the 493 days plaintiffs attributed to maintaining the parallel track,
    stating that plaintiffs “did not establish they were faced with
    impossible or impractical choices between prosecuting the case and
    tracking the other cases.” The court expressly rejected the notion
    that plaintiffs were diligent in seeking class certification, saying
    that “[i]nsofar as the class certification goes, the court does not
    believe that the reasonable diligence has been exercised . . . .”
    iii. Plaintiffs’ diligence claims
    In their brief opposing the writ petition, plaintiffs do not
    argue that the trial court erred when it refused to toll the five-year
    statute for time spent on the Pioneer production or on maintaining
    a parallel track with the related cases.14 Nonetheless, they argue
    the trial court “found reasonable diligence and excusable delay
    when it, first, determined that the death of the original plaintiff’s
    14     In response to our question as to what circumstances tolled
    the five-year period and for what periods of time, plaintiffs cited
    only the 75 days as determined by the trial court.
    35
    principal tolled the Five-Year Statute . . . and, second, granted
    Plaintiffs’ motion for trial preference.” They also say, in the face of
    the court’s contrary finding but without mentioning it, that “there
    has been no dilatory conduct by Plaintiffs.” None of these
    contentions has merit.
    Plaintiffs are literally correct on the first point, but it does not
    help them. The trial court necessarily found plaintiffs exercised
    reasonable diligence as it applies to the 32-day period after the
    original plaintiff’s death, and no one suggests otherwise. The court
    found those 32 days were excludable because “it was impossible and
    impractical for plaintiff to pursue the action without a client,
    without a plaintiff in this case.”
    Plaintiffs say this 32-day finding “implies a finding of
    reasonable diligence.” Of course it does; as we have seen,
    reasonable diligence is the critical factor in applying the
    “impossible, impracticable, or futile” exceptions. (
    Gaines, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 1100.) But an implied finding of reasonable
    diligence necessarily applies to the period of the excuse, not to
    plaintiffs’ actions throughout the case. (See 
    id. at p.
    1101 [referring
    to conditions interfering with the plaintiff’s ability to move the case
    to trial “during the relevant period”].) Plaintiffs do not get a five-
    year free pass on diligence simply because it could not prosecute its
    case for 32 days during the first year after the complaint was filed.
    Plaintiffs’ second argument, on which it does not elaborate, is
    that the trial court’s grant of trial preference itself “demonstrates
    that the Respondent Court found reasonable diligence.” It does
    nothing of the sort. Plaintiffs’ assertion simply begs the question.
    And we cannot imply a trial court finding of reasonable diligence
    when the trial court expressly found to the contrary.
    Finally, plaintiffs assert the court’s ruling on trial preference
    should be upheld because “there has been no dilatory conduct by
    36
    Plaintiffs.” They say they “expended extraordinary efforts” and any
    delay “has been the result of the unique and complex nature of this
    case.” They cite the Pioneer process; a “lengthy and exhaustive
    discovery process as to class issues”; and they “took the depositions
    of five separate persons most qualified to testify in this action.”
    Again, these claims are contrary to the trial court’s findings.
    They are also unsupported in law. The Pioneer process, the
    discovery process, and depositions are ordinary incidents of complex
    proceedings. Just as those incidents do not demonstrate that it was
    “impossible, impracticable, or futile” to bring the matter to trial,
    they cannot demonstrate reasonable diligence prosecuting the case.
    (See 
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 1101 [delay caused by ordinary
    incidents of proceedings is not within the contemplation of the
    section 583.340(c) exceptions; plaintiffs may not “litigate piecemeal
    every period, no matter how short, in which it was literally
    impracticable to try the case”].)15
    15     Factors besides dilatory conduct apply when a court considers
    a motion for trial preference. Salas tells us the court “must
    consider the ‘total picture,’ . . . including the condition of the court
    calendar, dilatory conduct by plaintiff, prejudice to defendant of an
    accelerated trial date, and the likelihood of eventual mandatory
    dismissal if the early trial date is denied.” 
    (Salas, supra
    , 42 Cal.3d
    at p. 349.) But because “some showing of excusable delay” is a
    necessary element (id. at pp. 347, 349), we need not address the
    other elements. In any event, the other factors do not support trial
    preference either. There was no evidence of the “condition of the
    court calendar” (
    id. at p.
    349) or the rights of other litigants (
    id. at p.
    346), but there is no suggestion the court’s calendar had anything
    to do with the impending expiration of the five-year period. And it
    is incontrovertible that there would be prejudice to defendant (see
    pts. 2.a., b., & c., ante) from an accelerated trial date,
    because (for one thing) no discovery on the merits had yet been
    permitted. Indeed, only one factor supported trial preference: “the
    37
    In short, nothing the court said at the hearing supported a
    fundamental consideration in a ruling for trial preference: that
    plaintiffs are required to make “some showing of excusable delay.”
    
    (Salas, supra
    , 42 Cal.3d at p. 349.) The trial court’s own findings
    demonstrate there was no such showing, and plaintiffs have made
    no attempt to show any lack of substantial evidence to support the
    trial court’s conclusion. Indeed, plaintiffs ignore the court’s finding
    entirely.
    e.     Other considerations
    We end by addressing a point that plaintiffs mention many
    times in their brief, including in connection with their assertion of
    reasonable diligence, to justify the court’s grant of trial preference.
    As they did in the trial court, they point out that defendant
    “advocated for postponement” of the filing deadline for the class
    certification motion “on at least three separate occasions in order to
    keep this action on the same schedule as the related cases.” They
    point out that defendant proposed a deadline of six months for its
    opposition to the motion, and 60 days for plaintiffs’ reply, which
    would be after the March 2, 2018 date on which defendant contends
    the five-year statute expired. They complain that defendant
    refused to stipulate to extend the five-year deadline, despite
    agreeing to and at times advocating for delay to keep the cases on
    the same track.
    We suppose plaintiffs’ repeated assertions on this point are
    intended to suggest, sub silencio, a claim of equitable estoppel.
    (While plaintiffs in their return assert equitable estoppel as a
    likelihood of eventual mandatory dismissal if the early trial date is
    denied.” (Salas, at p. 349.) That is not sufficient to sustain a
    motion for trial preference. If it were, the mandatory five-year
    dismissal statute would be rendered irrelevant.
    38
    “second affirmative defense,” they do not mention equitable
    estoppel, or discuss the factors necessary for its application,
    anywhere in their brief.) In any event, no basis exists to estop
    defendant from relying on the five-year dismissal rule.
    First, when plaintiffs asserted equitable estoppel in the trial
    court, citing the same points we have just described, the trial court
    definitively rejected the claim. After reciting plaintiffs’ assertions
    about defendant’s conduct, the court stated that equitable estoppel
    requires the exercise of reasonable diligence to ensure a case is
    brought to trial within the statutory period, and plaintiffs did not
    exercise reasonable diligence with respect to class certification.
    Again, plaintiffs do not mention this finding or assert any basis on
    which we could reject it. And the record affirmatively supports it:
    for example, defendant’s Pioneer production was complete by the
    end of May 2015, and at a hearing on August 27, 2015, plaintiffs’
    counsel told the court plaintiffs would be prepared to file its class
    certification motion as to defendant “within six months from today.”
    Second, Gaines confirms there is no legal basis for the
    application of equitable estoppel in this case. Gaines rejected a
    contention that defendants who agreed to a partial stay were
    estopped from claiming the five-year statute was not tolled during
    that time. (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 1097.) In Gaines,
    nothing in the communications between the parties mentioned or
    suggested an intent to extend the five-year period (id. at pp. 1098-
    1099), and the court found no basis for estoppel (
    id. at p.
    1100).
    Gaines also tells us this:
    “We have long observed that ‘[s]tipulations [by the parties]
    that merely extend the time for trial within the five-year period,
    absent a showing that the parties intended otherwise, will not
    extend the five-year period.’ ” (
    Gaines, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 1092.) And: “While attempts to work cooperatively are to be
    39
    lauded, they do not absolve litigants from the obligation to
    prosecute claims within the statutory guidelines. Established case
    law advised [the plaintiff] to seek an express stipulation from the
    parties that the agreed-upon postponements would extend the five-
    year period. [Citation.] [The plaintiff] did not do so.” (Id. at
    p. 1105.) The same is true here.
    f.    Conclusion
    We find the trial court’s grant of trial preference under the
    circumstances presented to it inexplicable. The court offered no
    explanation at the hearing, and the factual considerations and
    conclusions the court stated at the hearing uniformly supported the
    opposite conclusion. So does the law.
    DISPOSITION
    The writ petition is granted. Let a peremptory writ of
    mandate issue directing the trial court to vacate its order of
    March 26, 2018, denying petitioner’s motion to dismiss the action
    and granting real parties’ motion for trial preference, and to enter a
    new and different order granting petitioner’s motion and dismissing
    the action. Costs are awarded to petitioner.
    GRIMES, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    DUNNING, J.*
    *     Judge of the Orange Superior Court, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
    Constitution.
    40
    Filed 11/20/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    WARNER BROS.                                         B289109
    ENTERTAINMENT INC.,
    Petitioner,                                   (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC500040)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS                           ORDER CERTIFYING
    ANGELES COUNTY,                                       OPINION FOR
    PUBLICATION
    Respondent;
    LARCO PRODUCTIONS, INC., et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    THE COURT:
    The opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on November
    14, 2018, was not certified for publication in the Official Reports.
    For good cause, it now appears that the opinion should be published
    in the Official Reports and it is so ordered.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    ____________________________________________________________
    BIGELOW, P. J.              GRIMES, J.         DUNNING, J. *
    *        Judge of the Orange Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.