Tomatoes Extraordinaire v. Berkley CA4/1 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 3/20/15 Tomatoes Extraordinaire v. Berkley 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    TOMATOES EXTRAORDINAIRE, INC.,                                      D065768
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. 37-2010-00085115-
    CU-BC-CTL)
    WILLIAM BERKLEY,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Timothy
    B. Taylor, Judge. Affirmed.
    Paul Marion Grinvalsky for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Casey Gerry Schenk Francavilla Blatt & Penfield and Jeremy Robinson for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    Tomatoes Extraordinaire, Inc., doing business as Specialty Produce (Specialty)
    obtained a judgment against William Berkley. After this court reversed the judgment on
    appeal, the trial court entered judgment in Berkley's favor and ordered Specialty to pay
    attorney fees incurred by Berkley. Specialty argues Berkley was not entitled to an award
    of contractual attorney fees. We reject this contention and affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The underlying litigation in this case was addressed in a prior appeal to this court.
    (Tomatoes Extraordinaire, Inc. v. Berkley (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 317
     (Tomatoes I).)1
    Specialty, a produce seller, supplied produce to a restaurant, Jack's La Jolla (Jack's).
    Jack's failed to pay for the produce and then went out of business. Specialty filed an
    action against Jack's, as well as Jack's controlling officer Berkley, to recover the monies
    owed for the produce. Specialty alleged that Berkley was personally liable for Jack's
    debts under two theories: (1) Berkley had provided a personal guarantee to Specialty by
    signing a "Guaranty Agreement," and (2) Jack's was a dealer within the meaning of the
    Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, 1930 (PACA; 7 U.S.C. § 499a et seq.) and
    hence Berkley was subject to the PACA law permitting imposition of personal liability
    on corporate officers. (Tomatoes I, supra, at p. 320.)
    In the proceedings before the trial court, Specialty obtained a $44,624.91 judgment
    against both Jack's and Berkley.2 Concerning Berkley's personal liability, the trial court
    rejected Specialty's personal guarantee claim (finding Berkley had not signed or
    authorized the signing of the Guaranty Agreement), but ruled in Specialty's favor on its
    PACA personal liability claim. (Tomatoes I, supra, 214 Cal.App.4th at pp. 320-321.)
    1      We grant Berkley's unopposed motion requesting that we take judicial notice of
    the appellate record in Tomatoes I.
    2      Jack's did not make an appearance and incurred a default judgment.
    2
    The trial court's $44,624.91 judgment against Jack's and Berkley included $7,000
    for attorney fees incurred by Specialty for the trial-level litigation. The court ordered
    Jack's and Berkley to pay these fees based on the attorney fees provision in various
    contractual documents between Specialty and Jack's, including a document entitled
    "REFERENCES," the Guaranty Agreement, and invoices from Specialty (collectively,
    the Specialty/Jack's contractual documents).3
    Berkley represented himself at trial, but after the judgment was entered against
    him, he retained counsel to assist with a new trial motion and to file an appeal
    challenging the court's imposition of personal liability on him under PACA. (Tomatoes I,
    supra, 214 Cal.App.4th at p. 321 & fn. 2.) To support his challenge to the judgment,
    Berkley raised an issue of statutory interpretation, contending that Specialty did not
    establish that Jack's was a produce dealer within the meaning of PACA, and hence
    PACA's personal liability principles were inapplicable. His new trial motion was
    unsuccessful, but he prevailed on appeal to this court based on our interpretation of the
    3       The References document states: "In the event that formal collection efforts are
    instituted on any invoice arising from this application, the undersigned hereby agree(s) to
    pay all reasonable collection costs, including but not limited to attorneys' fees and court
    costs arising from the collection process."
    The invoice states: "If legal action is taken to collect a past due account, buyer
    agrees to pay all collections costs and/or all reasonable attorney fees."
    The Guaranty Agreement states: "Should collection proceedings be instituted by
    Specialty Produce, Inc., concerning accounts covered by this GUARANTY
    AGREEMENT, GUARANTOR (S) hereby agree(s) to be responsible for payment of all
    reasonable collection costs, attorney fees and court costs incurred in said collection
    proceedings whether or not litigation is instituted. Further, should any other legal dispute
    arise among the parties, Specialty Produce, Inc., CLIENT and/or GUARANTOR (S), the
    prevailing party shall be entitled to attorney fees and costs."
    3
    PACA statute. We reversed the judgment, and ordered Specialty to pay Berkley's costs
    on appeal. (Tomatoes I, at pp. 320, 328.)
    After reversal of the judgment on appeal, Berkley filed a motion before the trial
    court for the attorney fees he incurred to reverse the judgment. Berkley noted that he had
    been ordered to pay contractual attorney fees to Specialty at the trial level when Specialty
    prevailed, and asserted that he now was entitled to contractual attorney fees because he
    had succeeded in reversing the judgment in favor of Specialty. Berkley's counsel
    provided a summation of the fees incurred by Berkley to challenge the PACA personal
    liability judgment against him. These fees included (1) charges for the unsuccessful new
    trial motion based on the PACA issue, which counsel stated formed the basis for the
    appeal and (2) charges for the appeal based on the PACA issue. Because Berkley
    represented himself at trial, no attorney fees were requested for Berkley's successful
    litigation of the Guaranty Agreement issue at trial.4
    The court ruled that Berkley was entitled to contractual attorney fees for the fees
    he incurred in reversing the judgment, and ordered that Specialty pay $14,725 for
    Berkley's fees. Even though Berkley's fee request was based on fees incurred for the new
    4       Even though Berkley prevailed on the Guaranty Agreement issue at trial, he was
    not deemed a prevailing party and was ordered to pay contractual attorney fees because
    he was held liable for the contractual obligations under PACA. (See Douglas E.
    Barnhart, Inc. v. CMC Fabricators, Inc. (2012) 
    211 Cal.App.4th 230
    , 239-242.) Once
    the PACA issue was resolved in his favor on appeal, he was a prevailing party in the
    litigation and was eligible to request all reasonable fees incurred at the trial and appellate
    level. (Douglas, supra, at p. 250.) However, in the attorney fees motion filed after
    reversal on appeal, his counsel did not seek fees for the earlier litigation of the Guaranty
    Agreement issue, apparently because Berkley represented himself at trial and incurred no
    fees. (See Trope v. Katz (1995) 
    11 Cal.4th 274
    , 280.)
    4
    trial motion and appeal concerning the PACA issue, the trial court stated that the fee
    award was based on the Guaranty Agreement issue. The court cited the attorney fees
    provision in the Guaranty Agreement, and stated Berkley proved he did not sign the
    Guaranty Agreement and hence he prevailed on this claim.
    DISCUSSION
    Absent a statute or contractual provision authorizing an award of attorney fees,
    each party to a lawsuit generally must pay his or her own attorney fees. (Cargill, Inc. v.
    Souza (2011) 
    201 Cal.App.4th 962
    , 966 (Cargill).) The parties do not dispute that PACA
    does not contain an attorney fees provision applicable to this case, and that any award of
    attorney fees in this case requires contractual authorization.
    The record shows that there is an attorney fees provision in the Specialty/Jack's
    contractual documents, and that pursuant to these contractual documents Berkley was
    ordered to pay attorney fees to Specialty when Specialty prevailed at the trial court level
    on its PACA personal liability claim against Berkley. Nevertheless, Specialty argues that
    even though Berkley succeeded on appeal in reversing the personal liability PACA
    judgment in favor of Specialty, Berkley is not entitled to the fees he incurred to obtain the
    reversal because he is not a party to the Specialty/Jack's contractual documents.
    Specialty also notes the trial court awarded the attorney fees to Berkley based on the
    attorney fees provision in the Guaranty Agreement and the fact that Berkley prevailed on
    the personal liability claim derived from this agreement. Specialty asserts this could not
    provide a proper basis for the fee award because the issue of liability under the Guaranty
    Agreement was resolved at trial in Berkley's favor and was not at issue on appeal, and
    5
    further Berkley incurred no fees when litigating this issue because he represented himself
    at trial. Specialty does not challenge the amount of fees awarded.
    As we shall explain, Specialty's allegations against Berkley under PACA law
    sought to make Berkley personally liable for Jack's contractual obligations to Specialty
    that were set forth in the Jack's/Specialty contractual documents. Thus, even though
    Jack's (not Berkley) was the signatory in the Jack's/Specialty contractual relationship,
    Berkley was alleged under PACA to be "standing in the shoes" of Jack's for purposes of
    the contractual obligations, which included the obligation to pay attorney fees.
    Accordingly, Berkley, who became the prevailing party on appeal, is entitled to attorney
    fees as provided for in the Jack's/Specialty contractual documents. The fact that the trial
    court's written decision narrowly references the Guarantee Agreement and Berkley's
    success on the guarantee issue, without referencing Berkley's success on the PACA issue
    on appeal and the contractual documents as a whole, does not defeat Berkley's right to
    attorney fees as the prevailing party.
    Where a contract provides for an award of attorney fees in an action on the
    contract, the reciprocity provisions of Civil Code section 1717 allow for recovery of fees
    by whichever party prevails in an action on the contract, regardless of whether the
    contract specifies that party. (Cargill, supra, 201 Cal.App.4th at p. 966.) Absent
    contractual language indicating otherwise, a contract providing for attorney fees to be
    awarded to a contracting party does not typically apply to a nonsignatory party. (Id. at
    pp. 966, 968-970.) However, the contractual attorney fees provision may properly apply
    to a nonsignatory party if the litigation involves circumstances in which "the
    6
    nonsignatory party 'stands in the shoes of a party to the contract.' " (Id. at p. 966;
    California Wholesale Material Supply, Inc. v. Norm Wilson & Sons, Inc. (2002) 
    96 Cal.App.4th 598
    , 605-606 (California Wholesale).)
    For example, when the litigation involves a claim that a nonsignatory party is an
    assignee or guarantor of the contract containing the attorney fees provision, the
    contractual attorney fees provision properly extends to the assignee or guarantor who is
    bound by the terms of the contract. (California Wholesale, supra, 96 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    605-606, 608; Niederer v. Ferreira (1987) 
    189 Cal.App.3d 1485
    , 1505-1506.) This
    principle applies even if the instrument inserting the nonsignatory party into the
    contractual relationship does not contain an attorney fees provision. (Niederer, supra, at
    pp. 1505-1506.) As explained in Niederer, "the guaranty and the note [containing the
    attorney fee provision] 'must be construed to be but one instrument, constituting a single
    contract, upon which the liability of the guarantor, to the extent of its obligation, [is]
    commensurate with that of the maker of the note.' " [Citations.] [¶] . . . [¶] While the
    terms of the guaranty do not specifically provide for payment of attorneys' fees in the
    event of a suit on the guaranty, the guaranty does, in essence, provide the guarantors will
    'perform' the underlying contract or make payment on the note in accordance with its
    terms in the event of default. Therefore, . . . defendant, as guarantor, agreed to pay
    attorneys' fees, as provided in the note, if there was a suit against him on the guaranty."
    (Ibid.)
    In the litigation underlying Tomatoes I, Specialty alleged that Berkley was
    individually liable for Jack's contractual obligations under PACA personal liability
    7
    principles. Under the PACA provisions, a corporate officer who controls the assets of a
    produce buyer holds the assets in trust for the payment of the produce seller, and the
    failure to pay the seller can result in the imposition of personal liability on the corporate
    officer. (Weis-Buy Services, Inc. v. Paglia (3d Cir. 2005) 
    411 F.3d 415
    , 421; Sunkist
    Growers, Inc. v. Fisher (9th Cir. 1997) 
    104 F.3d 280
    , 282-283.) In this circumstance, the
    corporate officer is personally responsible for satisfying the produce buyer's contractual
    obligations to the produce seller. Thus, if Berkley was held personally liable under
    PACA, it was because he was obligated to pay the amounts owed by Jack's to Specialty
    under their contractual agreements. It follows that the attorney fees provision in the
    Specialty/Jack's contractual documents extended to Berkley as a party "standing in the
    shoes" of the contracting party for purposes of the contractual obligations.
    Consistent with this, at the conclusion of the original trial when Specialty
    prevailed on its PACA allegation against Berkley, the trial court ordered Berkley to pay
    attorney fees to Specialty based on the attorney fees provision in the Specialty/Jack's
    contractual documents even though Berkley was a nonsignatory party. On appeal,
    Berkley succeeded in reversing the PACA liability ruling, and the trial court thereafter
    ordered Specialty to pay contractual attorney fees to Berkley. It is well established that
    when a signatory party (i.e., Specialty) is entitled to contractual attorney fees when
    prevailing in an action against a nonsignatory party (i.e., Berkley), the nonsignatory party
    is likewise entitled to fees in the event the nonsignatory party prevails. (California
    Wholesale, supra, 96 Cal.App.4th at p. 608.) This is the situation here.
    8
    Contrary to Specialty's assertion, the fact that the PACA personal liability claim
    alleged against Berkley arose by operation of the PACA law rather than through the
    express terms of a contract executed by the parties does not alter the applicability of the
    contractual attorney fees provision to Berkley.5 Imposition of PACA personal liability is
    premised on the assumption that a controlling officer of a qualifying PACA produce
    buyer is aware that the contractual relationship with a produce seller is governed by the
    PACA laws. (See Golman-Hayden Co., Inc. v. Fresh Source Produce, Inc. (5th Cir.
    2000) 
    217 F.3d 348
    , 351.) In this circumstance, the PACA laws are implicitly
    incorporated into the contractual agreements and the corporate officer's personal liability
    under PACA is part of the contractual relationship. (See Swenson v. File (1970) 
    3 Cal.3d 389
    , 393 [" ' "laws in existence when an agreement is made, which laws the parties are
    presumed to know and to have had in mind, necessarily enter into the contract and form a
    part of it, without any stipulation to that effect, as if they were expressly referred to and
    incorporated" ' "].) Accordingly, absent some indication that the parties had a contrary
    intent, the nonsignatory corporate officer being held individually liable is deemed to have
    agreed to be bound by the attorney fees provision in the contract. (See, e.g., E. Armata,
    Inc. v. Platinum Funding Corp. (S.D.N.Y. 1995) 
    887 F.Supp. 590
    , 594-595 [attorney fees
    provision in contract between PACA produce buyer and seller applied to nonsignatory
    5       The Jack's/Specialty contractual documents include references to the PACA
    statutory trust in favor of the seller, but they do not expressly refer to a controlling
    officer's personal liability under PACA.
    9
    party who took over buyer's accounts and who was on constructive notice of its liability
    under PACA statute].)
    Moreover, the record does not reflect that during the underlying trial Specialty's
    contract claims were segregated from its PACA claims so as to render Berkley's alleged
    liability under PACA distinct from his alleged liability under the contract. If this had
    been done, Specialty would not have been entitled to an award of contractual attorney
    fees against Berkley when it prevailed solely on the PACA claim. Because the case was
    pursued against Blakely in a manner that incorporated the PACA claim into the contract
    claim, Specialty's attempt to separate the claims for purposes of attorney fees at this
    juncture is unavailing.
    Finally, Berkley's right to attorney fees is not defeated by the fact that the trial
    court premised its award on the attorney fees provision in the Guaranty Agreement and
    Berkley's trial-level success on the personal guarantee issue at a time when he was
    representing himself and incurred no fees. We affirm a judgment if it is legally correct
    even if for reasons different from the trial court's reasons. (ASP Properties Group, L.P.
    v. Fard, Inc. (2005) 
    133 Cal.App.4th 1257
    , 1268.) Berkley's counsel requested fees
    based on the PACA issue, and supported his request with a delineation of the hours spent
    litigating this issue during the new trial motion and appeal. Although the trial court
    referred to the personal guarantee issue in its written decision, the fees it actually
    awarded were based on the PACA issue.
    We also reject Specialty's assertions that (1) Berkley's request for fees was
    untimely because he did not seek them when he prevailed at the original trial on the
    10
    personal guarantee issue, and (2) the trial court should have denied his fee request on
    equitable principles. Berkley was not found to be a prevailing party when he prevailed
    on the personal guarantee issue because he was found liable under PACA, and in any
    event he did not incur fees on the personal guarantee issue because he represented
    himself at trial. (See fn. 4, ante.) Thus, he had no basis to request fees at the conclusion
    of the original trial, and there is no untimeliness issue. Further, Specialty has not
    presented any argument establishing the trial court was required to deny fees on equitable
    grounds. (See Nelson v. Kerzner (E.D.Pa. 1953) 
    110 F.Supp. 949
    , 950-951 [PACA
    produce seller may be liable for buyer's attorney fees when buyer is prevailing party];
    EnPalm, LLC v. Teitler (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 770
    , 774-775 & fn. 5 [although trial
    court may reduce contractual attorney fees based on finding that prevailing party engaged
    in unnecessary litigation, court may not reduce fees based on its views on merits of case
    or antipathy toward party].)
    Berkley was properly awarded contractual attorney fees as the prevailing party
    after reversal of the judgment in favor of Specialty on appeal. He is also entitled to file a
    request for fees in the trial court for defending the instant appeal pursued by Specialty.
    (See Douglas E. Barnhart, Inc. v. CMC Fabricators, Inc., supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    250-251.)
    11
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Appellant to pay respondent's costs on appeal.
    HALLER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    NARES, J.
    12