Appellate Practice,
California Courts of Appeal,
California Supreme Court,
Civil Litigation
Feb. 26, 2018
One little writ, big class action changes
Once in a rare while, the Court of Appeal will consider a writ petition that raises an issue of first impression, and publish a decisive order that creates new and binding precedent.





Ben Feuer
Chairman
California Appellate Law Group LLP
Appellate Law
96 Jessie St
San Francisco , CA 94105
Phone: (415) 649-6700
Email: ben@calapplaw.com
Northwestern Univ School of Law
Ben handles civil and business appeals in the 9th Circuit and California Courts of Appeal. He is a former 9th Circuit law clerk and co-chair of the Appellate Section of the Bar Association of San Francisco. the Daily Journal named Ben as one of the Top 40 Under 40 lawyers in California for 2018.

APPELLATE ZEALOTS
Petitions for writs of mandate are some of the trickiest devices in a California appellate litigator's bag. The briefing is often hurried, the record necessarily incomplete, and the Court of Appeal has almost plenary discretion whether to consider them at all. Nine times out of 10 the court denies the petition immediately and without explanation. The rest of the time, it chooses from an array of options ranging from denying t...
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