MANELLA, J.
Appellant Valerie O'Grady contends the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to consider her late-filed opposition to respondent Delta Airlines' motion for summary judgment. The court deemed the motion unopposed and granted summary judgment after reviewing the moving papers and determining that the facts presented met respondent's burden as moving party to negate appellant's claims. As the motion had been filed three months earlier and the court had previously continued the hearing to afford appellant additional time to respond, its decision to disregard an untimely opposition the second time the motion came on for hearing did not represent an abuse of discretion.
In August 2009, appellant Valerie O'Grady filed a complaint for wrongful termination against respondent — her former employer — and two individual co-employees.
On December 17, 2010, respondent filed a motion for summary judgment. The hearing was scheduled for March 4, 2011.
On February 28, ten days after her opposition was due, appellant filed an ex parte application for an order allowing her additional time to file and serve her opposition. Appellant stated in a declaration that on January 15, she had traveled to South America and that one of the purposes of the trip was to look for work as a flight attendant. Six days after her departure, she injured her knee, and since the injury occurred, had been in a wheelchair or on crutches and taking pain medication. Respondent opposed the request, contending it was appellant's decision to take the month-long trip to South America, not her injuries, that prevented her from preparing and timely filing the opposition. Although the court found that appellant had been given "ample notice" and "elected to take a trip to South America notwithstanding," in the interest of determining the issues on their merits, the court granted the motion. By order dated February 28, the court continued the hearing to March 30, allowed appellant until March 18 to file her opposition, and gave respondent until March 25 to file a reply. The court's order made clear it would not continue the trial date.
No opposition was filed by the March 18 due date.
When the parties arrived for the hearing on March 30, the court's tentative order stated that the court had reviewed the moving papers, that they were sufficient to shift the burden of proof to appellant, and that appellant had failed to meet that burden as she had "filed no opposition in order to raise any triable issues of material fact."
Appellant subsequently moved for reconsideration and for relief under Code of Civil Procedure section 473. The court denied the motions. Judgment was entered. This appeal followed.
Code of Civil Procedure section 437c requires a party seeking summary judgment to file the motion and supporting papers 75 days before the time appointed for the hearing. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (a).) Oppositions are due 14 days prior to the hearing, giving the party opposing 61 days to prepare and file the opposition. (Id., subd. (b)(2).) "The requirement that opposing papers be filed a reasonable time in advance of the hearing helps to ensure that the court and the parties will be familiar with the facts and the issues so that meaningful argument can take place and an informed decision rendered at the earliest convenient time." (Shadle v. City of Corona (1979) 96 Cal.App.3d 173, 178-179.) "A hearing on a motion for summary judgment cannot be satisfactorily conducted if neither the court nor the moving party is familiar with the opposing papers." (Id. at p. 178.)
A trial court's decision to disregard a late-filed opposition to a summary judgment motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Hobson v. Raychem Corp. (1999) 73 Cal.App.4th 614, 625, overruled on another ground in Colmenares v. Braemar Country Club, Inc. (2003) 29 Cal.4th 1019.) A party's neglect resulting in the untimely filing of opposition papers must be evaluated by the trial court "in light of the reasonableness of [his or her] conduct." (Kapitanski v. Von's Grocery Co. (1983) 146 Cal.App.3d 29, 33.) Due to the "drastic nature" of the summary judgment remedy, courts are generally "required to exercise their discretion and relieve the [party] from tardy opposition filings when his [or her] conduct was reasonable . . . ." (Mann v. Cracchiolo (1985) 38 Cal.3d 18, 29-30.)
Numerous courts have held that trial courts must exercise their discretion to excuse the neglect of a party who fails in his or her initial attempt to properly oppose a summary judgment motion and afford him or her an opportunity to cure the deficiencies. (See, e.g., Security Pacific Nat. Bank v. Bradley (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 89, 95 (Security Pacific) [trial court abused its discretion by failing to give opposing party opportunity to cure defective opposition containing no counterstatment of facts "where there was no showing [the party's] failure to file a responsive statement was willful or could not have been promptly corrected if given the opportunity"]; Kalivas v. Barry Controls Corp. (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 1152, 1161 (Kalivas) [trial court abused its discretion in granting summary judgment where opposing party failed to file a separate statement of facts or opposition due to mistaken belief that matter was off calendar and would not go forward until parties complied with local rule requiring that they meet and confer and prepare joint statement].) As the court in Security Pacific explained: "[G]ranting a motion for summary judgment based on a procedural error by the opposing party is equivalent to a sanction terminating the action in favor of the other party. Accordingly, the propriety of the court's order should be judged by the standards applicable to terminating sanctions. [¶] Sanctions which have the effect of granting judgment to the other party on purely procedural grounds are disfavored. [Citations.] Terminating sanctions have been held to be an abuse of discretion unless the party's violation of the procedural rule was willful [citations] or, if not willful, at least preceded by a history of abuse of pretrial procedures, or a showing less severe sanctions would not produce compliance with the procedural rule. [Citations.]" (4 Cal.App.4th at pp. 97-98, fn. omitted; accord, Kalivas, supra, at pp. 1161-1162.)
Appellant analogizes her situation to that of the parties in Security Pacific and Kalivas. She overlooks a significant difference. Although the reasons given for her failure to timely file in the first instance were far from convincing, the trial court provided her one opportunity to cure the defect by continuing the hearing for a month. As a result, appellant had more than three months from the date the motion was filed to prepare and file the opposition. It was only when the second deadline passed that the court exercised its discretion to disregard appellant's submissions. In this regard, the situation is more similar to that in Collins v. Hertz Corp. (2006) 144 Cal.App.4th 64, where the trial court "identified the specific deficiencies in the appellants' initial filings, provided their attorney with a summary of the statutes and rules governing proceedings involving motions for summary judgment, and even read him [the applicable local rule] so there would be no confusion as to what it expected when appellants resubmitted their opposition papers." (Id. at p. 74.) When appellants instead resubmitted documents that the trial court found "`utterly noncompliant with the rules,'" the Court of Appeal found no abuse of discretion in the trial court's decision to deem undisputed each entry in appellants' separate statement that failed to adhere to the prior ruling: "The trial court specified deficiencies in appellants' initial filing, identified the precise manner in which those deficiencies could be rectified, and afforded appellants ample opportunity to prepare new papers in compliance with applicable rules. Precisely this and no more was required . . . ." (Ibid.; see also Blackman v. Burrows (1987) 193 Cal.App.3d 889, 893-894 [no abuse of discretion in granting summary judgment where trial court afforded opposing party one prior opportunity to correct failure to file a separate statement].)
Here, respondent's filing of its motion for summary judgment on December 17 gave appellant 63 days to prepare and file an opposition. She filed no opposition and failed to request an extension of time to do so until the due date for the opposition had come and gone. In her belated request for a retroactive extension, she sought to blame her lapses on an elective trip abroad and an injury she suffered there. Despite its conclusion that her original default was not excusable, the court afforded appellant an additional 30 days to respond, extending the hearing date into the period needed for trial preparation. Appellant then failed to properly prepare her papers and entrusted them to a messenger to deliver, despite their failure to comply with court rules. As a result, her papers were filed several days late. This time, she attempted to blame the default on her Van Nuys court appearance. By her own admission, however, she had expected to be in hearings in Van Nuys the week her opposition was due, and she offered no compelling excuse for failing to have her papers in order by the second filing deadline.
It is undisputed that appellant did not file — and the court did not receive — the opposition on the date due. It is similarly undisputed that consideration of appellant's untimely filed submission would have required the court to continue the trial date, which it had previously indicated it would not do and which respondent's counsel noted would prejudice his client. Under these circumstances, we conclude the court was not required to excuse appellant's second failure to file a timely opposition to the motion for summary judgment. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm.
The judgment is affirmed. Respondent is awarded its costs on appeal.
EPSTEIN, P. J. SUZUKAWA, J., concurs.