DCFS Trust v. Aja Rugs CA4/1 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 12/3/15 DCFS Trust v. Aja Rugs CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    DCFS TRUST, INC.,                                                   D066981
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No.
    37-2012-00088751-CU-BC-CTL)
    AJA RUGS, INC.,
    Cross-defendant, Cross-complainant
    and Respondent;
    MOHAMED TABATABAEE.
    Defendant, Cross-defendant and
    Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Randa
    Trapp, Judge. Affirmed.
    Glenn R. Roberts for Defendant, Cross-defendant and Appellant.
    Law Offices of Steven L. Victor and Steven L. Victor for Cross-defendant, Cross-
    complainant and Respondent.
    No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Defendant and cross-defendant Mohamad Tabatabaee appeals a judgment
    following a bench trial in which the trial court found in favor of plaintiff DCFS Trust,
    Inc., and defendant and cross-complainant Aja Rugs, Inc. (Aja). On appeal, Tabatabaee
    contends the trial court erred by: (1) applying Code of Civil Procedure1 section 664.6 for
    its jurisdiction to decide this case; (2) adding a term to the settlement agreement among
    Aja and its shareholders; (3) awarding Aja more than allowed in the settlement
    agreement; (4) not protecting the interests of justice; and (5) depriving him of a full trial
    on disputed issues of fact. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Prior to 2012, Tabatabaee and Ardeschir Pourfard apparently each owned 50
    percent of the stock of Aja, which operated retail stores selling rugs and other home
    furnishings. In 2011, after disagreements between them, Aja and Pourfard filed a lawsuit
    against Tabatabaee. They settled that lawsuit by entering into a settlement agreement and
    mutual general release (Settlement Agreement), effective January 13, 2012.
    The Settlement Agreement provided that Tabatabaee and Pourfard were each to
    receive 50 percent of Aja's inventory, subject to deductions, offsets, and adjustments set
    forth in, and the accounting and procedures described in, the Settlement Agreement. It
    further provided:
    "[Pourfard] shall receive all (100%) of the shares of stock of [Aja],
    together with all furniture, fixtures, and inventory of [Aja], subject to
    1      All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise
    specified.
    2
    the deductions, offsets, and adjustments contained in this
    [Settlement] Agreement and the accounting and procedures
    described in Paragraph 20. [Tabatabaee] will retain no interest in
    [Aja] in any capacity including, but not limited to, as a shareholder,
    officer, director, employee, independent contractor, or in any other
    capacity. . . . Any shares of stock in [Aja] owned or possessed by
    [Tabatabaee] shall be transferred to [Pourfard] concurrent with
    [Tabatabaee] and [Pourfard] signing this [Settlement] Agreement."
    Paragraph 20 of the Settlement Agreement stated:
    "To effectuate the terms of this [Settlement] Agreement and the
    division of property and inventory hereunder, the parties shall reach
    a mutual agreement regarding the amounts of money, if any, which
    may be owed to [Tabatabaee] hereunder by [Aja], or [Pourfard], or
    the amount of money, if any, which may be owed to [Pourfard] or
    [Aja] by [Tabatabaee]. Said [a]greement shall be completed on or
    before 15 days from the date [Pourfard] and [Tabatabaee] sign this
    [Settlement] Agreement. If the parties are unable to reach agreement
    on the amount of money, if any, one or each may owe the other, the
    parties agree to submit this issue to Marshall Afshar at Pars
    Financial Corp., San Diego, California, and Rahim Sadegholvad for
    determination of the amounts owed hereunder.
    "If there is money owed by any party to any other party hereunder,
    the amount owed shall be paid in inventory as follows:
    "For example only: If it is determined [Tabatabaee] owes [Pourfard]
    $100,000.00 and there is $1,000,000.00 dollars in inventory,
    [Pourfard] shall select $100,000.00 of inventory on a cost of
    merchandise basis only. The parties shall then divide the remaining
    inventory equally, i.e., $450,000.00 each as they shall agree."
    Paragraph 30 of the Settlement Agreement provided that the San Diego County Superior
    Court "retains jurisdiction over the terms of the settlement, the parties, and this action
    pursuant to . . . [section] 664.6 to enforce the terms of this Settlement Agreement . . .
    until performance in full under the terms of this [S]ettlement Agreement . . . ." On May
    22, 2012, Tabatabaee and Pourfard executed an amendment to the Settlement Agreement,
    3
    pursuant to which Tabatabaee agreed to "take full responsibility of" his Mercedes 550 SL
    2011 lease agreement and "to pay all payments."
    In December 2012, DCFS filed an action against Aja and Tabatabaee, alleging
    causes of action for breach of contract and common counts arising out of their failure to
    make lease payments on the Mercedes vehicle. DCFS sought damages in the amount of
    $26,990.78.
    In February 2013, Aja filed a cross-complaint against Tabatabaee, alleging causes
    of action for breach of contract and indemnity. Aja alleged: "The parties entered into a
    Settlement Agreement, which [Tabatabaee] has breached. [Tabatabaee] assumed all
    responsibility for a 2011 Mercedes Benz 550 SL and agreed to indemnify [Aja] from all
    obligations thereon." Aja further alleged Tabatabaee breached the Settlement Agreement
    by his "[f]ailure to pay money owed to [Aja] in excess of $400,000 for inventory and
    other financial obligations, failure to return an Antique Tapestry to [Aja], and failure to
    pay other obligations to [Aja] per the Settlement Agreement and according to proof." Aja
    sought damages in excess of $400,000 according to proof, attorney fees, and costs of
    litigation.
    Before trial, Aja filed its trial brief, asserting it would show that "as a result of an
    accounting concerning Aja's business finances, Tabatabaee owes Aja over $430,000
    which, in breach of the . . . Settlement Agreement between those parties, Tabatabaee has
    refused to pay . . . ."
    4
    Following a six-day trial, the trial court filed a statement of decision (Statement of
    Decision), dated September 10, 2014, describing the evidence presented at trial, making
    findings of fact and law, and issuing its order.2 The court described Rahim
    Sadegholvad's testimony that when Tabatabaee and Pourfard divided Aja's inventory,
    each received about $600,000 to $800,000 in rugs at cost. It also described Marshall
    Afshar's testimony that he had been Aja's accountant for 20 years and in 2014 prepared a
    summary of monies disbursed by Aja to Tabatabaee and Pourfard during their business
    relationship. Tabatabaee received $1,622,703.24 and Pourfard received $792,168.14. It
    also described Pourfard's testimony that after deduction of the $400,000 in inventory
    received as collateral as part of the settlement and accounting process, Tabatabaee owed
    Aja $430,535.10. The trial court found Tabatabaee breached the Settlement Agreement
    and he owed Aja $355,535.10 based on business transactions between the parties.
    On September 10, 2015, the trial court entered judgment for DCFS against Aja
    and Tabatabaee in the amount of $22,401.63 and for Aja against Tabatabaee on its cross-
    complaint in the amount of $394, 694.15. The court further ordered that Aja could keep
    possession and ownership of all rugs in its possession on July 1, 2014. Tabatabaee timely
    filed a notice of appeal.3
    2      A reporter's transcript of the trial proceedings was not made a part of the record on
    appeal.
    3      DCFS did not file a respondent's brief in, nor did it appear at oral argument of, this
    appeal. Nevertheless, Tabatabaee does not challenge the trial court's award of $22,401.63
    in damages to DCFS.
    5
    DISCUSSION
    I
    Trial Court's Jurisdiction under Section 664.6
    Tabatabaee contends the trial court erred by applying section 664.6 for its
    jurisdiction to decide this case. He argues a section 664.6 motion to enforce a settlement
    cannot be considered in an action other than that in which the settlement was made.
    However, as Aja asserts, it did not file, nor did the trial court decide, a section
    664.6 motion when the court conducted the six-day trial and decided both DCFS's
    complaint and Aja's breach of contract cross-complaint against Tabatabaee. On the
    contrary, the court exercised its general subject matter jurisdiction when it did so. The
    San Diego County Superior Court is a court of record that has general subject matter
    jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 1; 2 Witkin, Cal.
    Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Courts, § 208, pp. 293-294.) The instant action was a general
    civil case over which the trial court had, and exercised, general subject matter
    jurisdiction. Aja's cross-complaint in DCFS's main action alleged Tabatabaee breached
    the Settlement Agreement by not paying Aja more than $400,000 for inventory and other
    financial obligations pursuant to the Settlement Agreement. Likewise, Aja's trial brief
    asserted an accounting of its finances would show Tabatabaee owed Aja over $430,000
    and he breached the Settlement Agreement by refusing to pay that amount. Following a
    lengthy trial, the trial court found Tabatabaee breached the Settlement Agreement and
    entered a judgment awarding Aja $394,694.15 against Tabatabaee on its breach of
    6
    contract cross-complaint. The record clearly shows the court exercised its general subject
    matter jurisdiction to decide Aja's breach of contract claim against Tabatabaee and did
    not decide that claim in the context of a section 664.6 motion.
    To the extent Tabatabaee cites language in the Statement of Decision referring to
    section 664.6, that language does not show the trial court did not have, or did not
    exercise, general subject matter jurisdiction to decide Aja's breach of contract cross-
    complaint against him. The Statement of Decision states: "The Settlement Agreement
    states the Court shall retain jurisdiction over the settlement to enforce its terms, pursuant
    to [section] 664.6." However, that isolated reference to the Settlement Agreement's
    provision regarding a trial court's authority to enforce the Settlement Agreement pursuant
    to section 664.6 does not persuade us the court did, in fact, rely solely on that authority in
    deciding Aja's breach of contact cross-complaint. Rather, based on Aja's breach of
    contract cross-complaint and the trial court's Statement of Decision deciding that cross-
    complaint, we conclude the court clearly exercised its general subject matter jurisdiction
    and did not rely on section 664.6 to decide this case.4
    4       In any event, to the extent the trial court's Statement of Decision cited the
    Settlement Agreement's section 664.6 language, it presumably may have done so to
    emphasize its authority to decide Aja's cross-complaint and, in so doing, at most merely
    noted its apparent duplicative or secondary jurisdiction to decide the case in addition to
    its primary general subject matter jurisdiction over breach of contract causes of action.
    7
    II
    Award of Money Damages Against Tabatabaee
    Tabatabaee contends the trial court erred by adding a term to the Settlement
    Agreement in contravention of its section 664.6 authority. He asserts the court varied
    from, and added to, the Settlement Agreement's provisions when it awarded Aja money
    damages instead of merely rug inventory. In support of his argument, he cites language
    from paragraph 20 of the Settlement Agreement, which provides in relevant part:
    "If there is money owed by any party to any other party hereunder,
    the amount owed shall be paid in inventory as follows:
    "For example only: If it is determined [Tabatabaee] owes [Pourfard]
    $100,000.00 and there is $1,000,000.00 dollars in inventory,
    [Pourfard] shall select $100,000.00 of inventory on a cost of
    merchandise basis only. The parties shall then divide the remaining
    inventory equally, i.e., $450,000.00 each as they shall agree."
    He suggests that language should be interpreted as allowing only an appropriate division
    of Aja's inventory if he owed Pourfard money.
    However, as we concluded above, the trial court exercised its general subject
    matter jurisdiction in deciding Aja's breach of contract cross-complaint and did not rely
    (at least solely) on section 664.6. Therefore, Tabatabaee's cited section 664.6 cases are
    inapplicable. In any event, we conclude the trial court properly interpreted the parties'
    mutual intent, as expressed in the Settlement Agreement, when it awarded money
    damages to Aja. Paragraph 20 of the Settlement Agreement provides the parties would
    mutually agree on, or an accounting would be made to determine, the amount Tabatabaee
    (or Pourfard) owed the other shareholder in the course of winding up their relationship
    8
    and that amount would generally be "paid" on division of Aja's inventory by giving that
    other shareholder a proportionately greater amount of its inventory. However, as Aja
    asserts, we believe the trial court properly exercised its fact-finding authority when it
    implicitly interpreted paragraph 20's language as showing the parties mutually agreed that
    if that financial reckoning between Tabatabaee and Pourfard was made after the time of
    the 50-50 or other division of Aja's inventory pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, then
    the amount Tabatabaee owed Pourfard would be paid in money (rather than pre-division
    inventory of Aja). In so doing, the trial court did not, as Tabatabaee argues, improperly
    add or supply new material terms to the parties' agreement.
    The goal of contract interpretation is to give effect to the mutual intention of the
    parties at the time of contracting. (Civ. Code, § 1636.) Furthermore, "[a] contract must
    receive such an interpretation as will make it lawful, operative, definite, reasonable, and
    capable of being carried into effect, if it can be done without violating the intention of the
    parties." (Civ. Code, § 1643.) By interpreting paragraph 20 to allow an award of money
    damages in the circumstances of this case, the trial court did not err. (Cf. County of
    Marin v. Assessment Appeals Bd. (1976) 
    64 Cal. App. 3d 319
    , 325 [a trial court should
    avoid an interpretation that will make a contract harsh, unjust, or inequitable];
    Heidlebaugh v. Miller (1954) 
    126 Cal. App. 2d 35
    , 38 ["If necessary to carry out the
    intention of a contract, words may be . . . [supplied] to make its meaning more clear."].)
    Furthermore, because Tabatabaee does not cite any evidence, disputed or undisputed, in
    the record showing that at the time of the Statement of Decision (i.e., September 10,
    9
    2014) he and Pourfard remained 50 percent shareholders of Aja (or that Tabatabaee had
    any ownership or other interest in Aja's current inventory), the court properly awarded
    Aja money damages against Tabatabaee instead of its own inventory (which, of course,
    would have not given Aja any relief).5
    III
    Award in Excess of Settlement Agreement
    Tabatabaee contends the trial court erred by awarding Aja damages in excess of
    that allowed by the Settlement Agreement. He argues the Settlement Agreement
    authorized the court to award $355,535.10 against him only by first awarding Aja that
    amount of pre-division inventory and then returning one-half of that inventory to him
    pursuant to the Settlement Agreement. He argues the court erred by awarding Aja money
    damages, and not inventory, in the amount of $355,535.10 and, in addition, by not
    awarding him one-half of that inventory pursuant to the Settlement Agreement.
    However, as we concluded above, the trial court did not err by implicitly finding
    the parties mutually agreed that their financial reckoning would be made in money, rather
    5       The Statement of Decision supports an implied finding Tabatabaee was no longer
    a shareholder in Aja and that its inventory had already been divided pursuant to the
    Settlement Agreement. The Statement of Decision described Rahim Sadegholvad's
    testimony that when Tabatabaee and Pourfard divided Aja's inventory, each received
    about $600,000 to $800,000 in rugs at cost. It also described Marshall Afshar's testimony
    that in 2014 he prepared a summary of monies disbursed by Aja to Tabatabaee and
    Pourfard during their business relationship. Tabatabaee received $1,622,703.24 and
    Pourfard received $792,168.14. It also described Pourfard's testimony that after
    deduction of the $400,000 in inventory received as collateral as part of the settlement and
    accounting process, Tabatabaee owed Aja $430,535.10.
    10
    than in Aja's inventory, if it occurred after Tabatabaee and Pourfard divided Aja's
    inventory pursuant to the Settlement Agreement and Tabatabaee no longer was a 50
    percent shareholder in Aja or had an ownership or other interest in its inventory.
    Furthermore, the court did not err by implicitly finding that at the time of the Statement
    of Decision Tabatabaee was not a shareholder in Aja and did not have any ownership or
    other interest in its current inventory. The court's award to Aja of $355,535.10 in money
    damages was not excessive, as Tabatabaee argues.
    IV
    Trial Court's Fair Administration of Justice
    Tabatabaee contends the trial court erred by not protecting the interests of justice.
    However, he has forfeited or waived that argument by not citing to the record, or making
    any substantive argument, showing the court erred in any manner in carrying out the fair
    administration of justice. Rather, he merely cites general principles of law regarding the
    administration of justice. "Where a point is merely asserted by [appellant] without any
    [substantive] argument of or authority for its proposition, it is deemed to be without
    foundation and requires no discussion." (People v. Ham (1970) 
    7 Cal. App. 3d 768
    , 783,
    disapproved on another ground in People v. Compton (1971) 
    6 Cal. 3d 55
    , 60, fn. 3.)
    "Issues do not have a life of their own: if they are not raised or supported by
    [substantive] argument or citation to authority, we consider the issues waived." (Jones v.
    Superior Court (1994) 
    26 Cal. App. 4th 92
    , 99; see Landry v. Berryessa Union School
    Dist. (1995) 
    39 Cal. App. 4th 691
    , 699-700 ["When an issue is unsupported by pertinent or
    11
    cognizable legal argument it may be deemed abandoned and discussion by the reviewing
    court is unnecessary."] Accordingly, we need not, and do not, address his contention that
    the court erred by failing to protect the interests of justice.
    V
    Section 664.6 Summary Procedures
    Tabatabaee contends the trial court deprived him of a full trial on disputed issues
    of fact by following the summary procedures of section 664.6. However, as we discussed
    above, the trial court exercised its general subject matter jurisdiction over both DCFS's
    complaint and Aja's breach of contract cross-complaint. In so doing, the court did not,
    contrary to Tabatabaee's apparent assertion, deprive him of those rights and procedures
    generally allowed litigants in civil actions, including the right to present his defense at
    trial.
    Furthermore, Tabatabaee does not cite to the record or otherwise refer to any
    specific rights or procedures he was denied showing that he was deprived of a full and
    fair trial on the disputed issues of fact in this case. He does not show the trial in this case
    was, in fact, a summary proceeding under section 664.6 and not a full trial on the
    complaint and cross-complaint. By not presenting any substantive legal argument
    showing the trial court erred in this manner, he has waived or forfeited this contention
    and we need not address its merits. (People v. 
    Ham, supra
    , 7 Cal.App.3d at p. 783; Jones
    v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 26 Cal.App.4th at p. 99; Landry v. Berryessa Union School
    
    Dist., supra
    , 39 Cal.App.4th at pp. 699-700.)
    12
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Aja is entitled to costs on appeal.
    McDONALD, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    NARES, Acting P. J.
    PRAGER, J.*
    *       Judge of the San Diego Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D066981

Filed Date: 12/3/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021