Padilla v. Shore, McKinley, Conger & Scott CA3 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • Filed 4/22/16 Padilla v. Shore, McKinley, Conger & Scott CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (San Joaquin)
    ----
    MILA S. PADILLA et al.,                                                                      C077204
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                                        (Super. Ct. No.
    39201300295881CUPNSTK)
    v.
    SHORE, MCKINLEY, CONGER & SCOTT, LLP,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    The trial court sustained without leave to amend defendant law firm’s demurrer to
    the 2013 complaint for legal malpractice filed by plaintiffs Mila S. Padilla, individually
    and as trustee of the Mila S. Padilla Separate Property Trust, and D.I.K. Tracy
    Enterprises, Inc. (plaintiffs). The court determined that plaintiff Padilla not only knew of
    the alleged malpractice six years before the complaint was filed but had suffered an
    actual injury in 2007 when she participated in litigation against her lessee/optionee and
    filed an action against the attorneys who drafted the agreement but failed to include a
    valuation method to employ when the option was exercised.1 Thus, the one-year statute
    1 The 2007 complaint was against Jerry D. Hall (now deceased) and Brown, Hall,
    Shore & McKinley, LLP, the predecessor firm to defendant and respondent Shore,
    McKinley, Conger & Scott, LLP.
    1
    of limitations was not tolled beyond 2007 and the statute of limitations barred
    prosecution of a second malpractice complaint filed six years later. (Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 340.6, subd. (a)(1).)
    Defendant insists that plaintiffs’ allegation in their 2007 complaint that the law
    firm carelessly and negligently drafted the lease “so as to prevent valuation of the fair
    market value of the property for purchase by the lessee under the option, which has
    resulted in special damages suffered by Plaintiffs in an amount in excess of the
    jurisdictional limits of this court,” constitutes a judicial admission that by 2007 they had
    incurred sufficient damages to prevent tolling of the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs
    disagree, insisting the complaint was not verified or ever served, the case was dismissed
    in the absence of any factual findings, and the boilerplate allegations were made in a
    separate lawsuit and are not binding in the current litigation.
    Notwithstanding the zeal with which the parties debate this issue, it is unnecessary
    to resolve. The judgment is affirmed, not because plaintiffs’ allegations in the 2007
    complaint constitute a “judicial admission,” but because plaintiffs suffered an actual
    injury within the meaning of section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1) of the Code of Civil
    Procedure when they participated in the litigation with the optionee and the law firm to
    vindicate their rights. (Jordache Enterprises, Inc. v. Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison
    (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 739
     (Jordache); Foxborough v. Van Atta (1994) 
    26 Cal.App.4th 217
    (Foxborough).)
    FACTS
    In 2000 defendant’s predecessor law firm prepared a real property lease, including
    an option to buy, for landlord Padilla and tenants BAPH3, Inc. (BAPH3). The lease “did
    not provide a formula or mechanism for appointed appraisers to make a consensus
    determination of fair market value of the property in the foreseeable event the parties
    disagree.” Sometime before December of 2007 BAPH3 exercised its option to purchase
    2
    the property, but in the absence of a value formula or mechanism for determining value,
    the parties became embroiled in litigation.
    On December 28, 2007, plaintiffs filed a malpractice action against defendant’s
    predecessor. In the initial complaint, plaintiffs alleged that the law firm’s negligence in
    drafting the lease and other documents prevented the valuation of the fair market value of
    the property for purchase by the lessee under the option and resulted in special damages
    suffered by plaintiffs. Specifically, “[a]s a result of Defendants’ negligence, Plaintiffs
    and Baph3, Inc. entered into protracted litigation in the Superior Court of the County of
    San Joaquin, Case No. CV032859. A judgment was entered in that action on or about
    June 8, 2012. The judgment in said action, and following settlement agreement, resulted
    in economic damage and economic losses to Plaintiffs.”
    DISCUSSION
    In reviewing the sufficiency of a complaint to state a cause of action or of an
    answer to state an affirmative defense as a matter of law, we consider the facts properly
    pleaded as admitted as well as the matters judicially noticed. (Setliff v. E. I. Du Pont de
    Nemours & Co. (1995) 
    32 Cal.App.4th 1525
    , 1533.) A demurrer is properly sustained
    when the complaint or facts judicially noticed disclose a defense, such as the statute of
    limitations, that would bar recovery. (Guardian North Bay, Inc. v. Superior Court (2001)
    
    94 Cal.App.4th 963
    , 971-972.) “ ‘A judgment of dismissal after a demurrer has been
    sustained without leave to amend will be affirmed if proper on any grounds stated in the
    demurrer, whether or not the court acted on that ground.’ [Citation.]” (Eckler v.
    Neutrogena Corp. (2015) 
    238 Cal.App.4th 433
    , 439.) Our review of the dismissal is de
    novo; our review of the trial court’s ruling denying plaintiffs the opportunity to amend is
    for an abuse of discretion. (Id. at p. 438.)
    The sole issue raised by this appeal is whether the statute of limitations bars
    plaintiffs’ attorney malpractice action. Section 340.6 of the Code of Civil Procedure
    contains the statute of limitations for legal malpractice. It states, in relevant part: “(a) An
    3
    action against an attorney for a wrongful act or omission, other than for actual fraud,
    arising in the performance of professional services shall be commenced within one year
    after the plaintiff discovers, or through the use of reasonable diligence should have
    discovered, the facts constituting the wrongful act or omission, or four years from the
    date of the wrongful act or omission, whichever occurs first. . . . [I]n no event shall the
    time for commencement of legal action exceed four years except that the period shall be
    tolled during the time that any of the following exist:
    “(1) The plaintiff has not sustained actual injury.”
    Discovery of the malpractice is not at issue. Plaintiffs had noticed the lease did
    not provide the guidance they expected in determining the value of the property at least
    by December 2007, when they filed the initial complaint. More than six years then
    passed before they filed the instant lawsuit. As a consequence, plaintiffs’ contentions on
    appeal focus not on whether plaintiffs knew or should have discovered the facts
    constituting the wrongful act or omission, but on whether the “actual injury” tolling
    provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1) applies. They
    insist they did not sustain actual injury until the lawsuit with BAPH3 was resolved and
    judgment was entered in April 2012. California courts have soundly rejected the same
    argument.
    In Foxborough, supra, 
    26 Cal.App.4th 217
    , Foxborough, a general partnership,
    owned two adjoining pieces of property. It hired David Van Atta to perform legal
    services concerning the two parcels. Van Atta was to assist in converting apartments on
    one of the parcels into condominiums, in transferring the apartments to Daon Corporation
    in a property exchange, and in securing the right to build condominiums on the smaller
    parcel that Foxborough could automatically annex to the apartments without the consent
    of Daon or the owners of the condominiums on the larger parcel. The automatic
    annexation provision was extremely important to Foxborough. Foxborough and Daon
    signed the exchange agreement in 1979. (Id. at p. 222.)
    4
    Unbeknownst to Foxborough, a regulation required that any automatic annexation
    of property to an existing condominium project must be completed within three years or
    the annexation would have to be approved by the condominium association members by
    a two-thirds majority. (Foxborough, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at p. 222.) Foxborough did
    not move forward on the development of the retained parcel until 1984, at which time it
    learned that Daon had filed documents with the county limiting Foxborough’s annexation
    rights to the three-year regulatory period. By February 1985 Foxborough knew it could
    not automatically annex its undeveloped parcel to the apartments because the three-year
    period had expired on May 8, 1983. (Id. at p. 223.) Foxborough hired Van Atta to
    pursue the appropriate legal remedy against Daon. (Ibid.) Daon did not respond to Van
    Atta’s letters. (Ibid.)
    Foxborough hired another law firm and initiated litigation against Daon in
    August 1985. Foxborough lost and judgment was entered on March 2, 1990.
    (Foxborough, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at p. 223.) Three months later, Foxborough filed a
    malpractice action against Van Atta and his former law firm, alleging that Van Atta had
    failed to advise Foxborough of the existence and effect of the regulation or to advise
    Foxborough on how automatic annexation otherwise could have been accomplished. (Id.
    at pp. 223-224.)
    Van Atta filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the statute of
    limitations barred the malpractice action. (Foxborough, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at p. 224.)
    Foxborough insisted, as plaintiffs do here, that it did not suffer actual injury as a result of
    its lawyer’s negligence until it lost the Daon litigation. (Id. at p. 225.) Not so, concluded
    the Court of Appeal.
    “In tolling the limitations period until the plaintiff has ‘sustained actual injury’
    ([Code Civ. Proc.,] § 340.6, subd. (a)(1)), the Legislature used the term ‘actual’ to focus
    inquiry on the fact of damage, and omitted qualifiers to forestall confusion over the
    5
    extent of damage needed to trigger the limitations period. [Citations.] Therefore, actual
    injury need not be defined in terms of a monetary amount. . . .
    “Thus, when malpractice results in the loss of a right, remedy, or interest, or in the
    imposition of a liability, there has been actual injury regardless of whether future events
    may affect the permanency of the injury or the amount of monetary damages eventually
    incurred.” (Foxborough, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at pp. 226-227.)
    The court found the statute of limitations had run years before the Daon litigation
    concluded because Foxborough had sustained an “actual injury” when the three-year
    regulatory period for automatic annexation expired on May 8, 1983, and Foxborough lost
    the right it had retained Van Atta to secure. “Foxborough then had to resort to the more
    onerous, expensive, and unpredictable task of obtaining annexation approval from the
    Apartments’ owners, the very situation it hired Van Atta to avoid.” (Foxborough, supra,
    26 Cal.App.4th at p. 227.) Indeed, since “the statutory scheme does not depend on the
    plaintiff’s recognizing actual injury” (ibid.), Foxborough had suffered the actual injury
    before its February 1985 discovery that the automatic annexation period had lapsed. The
    court concluded that Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1) could not
    toll the one-year limitations period that commenced with the 1985 discovery.
    (Foxborough, at p. 227.)
    Plaintiffs argue that Foxborough is factually distinguishable and reject defendant’s
    claim that plaintiffs, like Foxborough, lost the right to sell their property. Our analysis
    does not hinge on the loss of any right, remedy, or interest, although the loss of an
    automatic right to annex concededly was an important factor in Foxborough. Rather,
    Foxborough also stands for the equally important principle that actual injury can precede
    notice of the malpractice and the outcome of the measures taken to remedy the lawyer’s
    negligence. The court pointed out that Foxborough was forced to resort to the “onerous,
    expensive, and unpredictable task of obtaining annexation approval” (Foxborough, supra,
    26 Cal.App.4th at p. 227), and the undertaking of that task constituted actual injury.
    6
    Similarly, plaintiffs were forced to engage in lawsuits with BAPH3 and plaintiffs’
    lawyers, and as in Foxborough, undertaking those “onerous, expensive, and
    unpredicatable task[s]” constituted actual injury. Thus, in both cases the statute of
    limitations was not tolled once the alleged victims of their attorneys’ malpractice suffered
    actual injury.
    In Jordache, supra, 
    18 Cal.4th 739
    , the California Supreme Court addressed the
    same narrow question, as the court posed it: “When does a former client—having
    discovered the facts of its attorneys’ malpractice—sustain actual injury so as to require
    commencement of an action against the attorneys within one year?” (Id. at p. 747.) The
    Court of Appeal in Jordache held that actual injury does not occur until related litigation
    concludes. (Ibid.) The Supreme Court rejected the appellate court’s holding.
    The court explained: “Actual injury refers only to the legally cognizable damage
    necessary to assert the cause of action. . . . The inquiry necessarily is more qualitative
    than quantitative because the fact of damage, rather than the amount, is the critical
    factor.” (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 752.) “An existing injury is not contingent or
    speculative simply because future events may affect its permanency or the amount of
    monetary damages eventually incurred. [Citations.] Thus, we must distinguish between
    an actual, existing injury that might be remedied or reduced in the future, and a
    speculative or contingent injury that might or might not arise in the future.” (Id. at
    p. 754.)
    The facts in Jordache are instructive. In 1984 Jordache hired Brobeck, Phleger &
    Harrison (Brobeck) to defend it in a lawsuit and two weeks later asked its insurance
    broker for advice on insurance coverage for the action. The broker informed Jordache its
    policy provided no coverage for the pending lawsuit. Neither Jordache nor its broker
    gave the insurers notice of the lawsuit. Brobeck did not ask about Jordache’s coverage or
    otherwise investigate whether any potential for coverage might trigger the insurers’ duty
    7
    to defend. Jordache did not ask Brobeck for advice about insurance coverage.
    (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at pp. 744-745.)
    In 1987 Jordache retained a new law firm to replace Brobeck. This firm advised
    Jordache there was potential insurance coverage, and thus the new firm demanded that
    the insurers defend. In December 1987 Jordache retained yet another firm and instructed
    the firm to prosecute claims against the insurers. By this time, Jordache had discovered
    Brobeck’s alleged negligence in not notifying or advising Jordache to give notice of the
    lawsuit to its insurers. (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 745.)
    More than three years after the lawsuit was filed, the firm formally tendered a
    defense to the insurers and soon thereafter, in February 1988, filed an action against them
    seeking reimbursement of $30 million in attorney fees it had incurred in defending the
    initial action. Jordache also claimed it had lost millions of dollars in profits because the
    funds it spent on attorney fees otherwise would have been successfully invested.
    (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 745.)
    Jordache’s legal malpractice action against Brobeck was effectively filed on
    August 15, 1990. Brobeck moved for summary judgment, asserting that the one-year
    statute of limitations barred the action because Jordache had sustained actual injury by
    1987 in the form of “(1) lost profits from business investment monies diverted to defense
    costs” and “(2) forgone insurance benefits for defense costs incurred before Jordache
    tendered defense of the [underlying] action.” (Jordache, 
    supra,
     18 Cal.4th at p. 746.)
    Jordache, like plaintiffs in the instant case, argued that it did not sustain actual injury
    until it settled with one of the insurers for less than the full amount of its claim. (Ibid.)
    The Court of Appeal agreed. The Supreme Court did not.
    The court wrote: “[T]he determination of actual injury does not necessarily
    require some form of adjudication, judgment, or settlement. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . A rule
    that invariably tolls the limitations period if collateral litigation might affect damages
    conflicts with [Code of Civil Procedure] section 340.6’s terms and is inimical to its
    8
    purposes. . . . Delaying recognition of actual injury until related litigation concludes
    would give a client who has sustained actionable damages, and who is aware of the
    attorney’s error, unilateral control over the limitations period. This result would
    undermine the Legislature’s purpose in enacting a statute of limitations.” (Jordache,
    supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 755.)
    The facts before us are remarkably similar to the facts in Foxborough and
    Jordache. In all three cases, the clients sustained actual injury when they became
    involved in collateral litigation as a result of their attorneys’ alleged negligence. In
    Foxborough, the partnership “had to resort to the more onerous, expensive, and
    unpredictable task of obtaining annexation approval from the Apartments’ owners, the
    very situation it hired Van Atta to avoid.” (Foxborough, supra, 26 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 227.) The court characterized that task as an “actual injury.” (Ibid.) Our facts are
    nearly indistinguishable. Plaintiffs, like Foxborough, hired legal counsel to provide
    transactional services, expecting the documents the lawyer drafted to embody the
    essential terms of the agreement. For Foxborough, it meant assuring that development of
    the second parcel could be automatically annexed to the larger parcel. For plaintiffs, it
    meant inclusion of a valuation methodology to determine the price of the property when
    the lessee exercised the option to purchase. Both Foxborough and plaintiffs had notice
    their lawyers failed to meet their expectations, and both Foxborough and plaintiffs took
    affirmative action to remedy the harm occasioned by their lawyers’ alleged negligence.
    We conclude that once plaintiffs became embroiled in litigation with the optionee and
    sued their lawyers for malpractice, they, like Foxborough, sustained an actual injury.
    Likewise, in Jordache, the company sustained an “actual injury” when it lost
    profits from business investment monies diverted to defense costs and did not receive
    insurance benefits for defense costs incurred before it tendered the defense to its insurer.
    (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 746.) In our case, plaintiffs incurred the cost of
    litigating the valuation of the property after BAPH3 exercised its option and the cost of
    9
    prosecuting its first legal malpractice action. Thus plaintiffs, like Jordache, sustained an
    “actual injury” when they took affirmative collateral action to protect the interests their
    lawyers failed to protect. And the law is well settled that a client need not await the
    outcome of the collateral efforts to sustain an “actual injury”—the initiation of the effort
    is enough.
    It is true, as plaintiffs assert, that the determination as to whether a plaintiff has
    sustained an actual injury is generally a question of fact. (Adams v. Paul (1995)
    
    11 Cal.4th 583
    , 595-596 (conc. opn. of Kennard, J.).) When the material facts are
    undisputed, however, the trial court can resolve the matter as a question of law.
    (Jordache, 
    supra,
     18 Cal.4th at p. 751.) In this case we need look no further than the
    pleadings and the judicially noticed documents. As recounted above, plaintiffs asserted
    in their first malpractice action that as a result of defendant’s negligence, she entered into
    protracted litigation with BAPH3. As a result, by 2007 plaintiffs were involved in two
    lawsuits—one with the optionee and one against the law firm. They, like their
    counterparts in Foxborough and Jordache, were forced to take affirmative action to undo
    the harm their lawyer allegedly failed to prevent. The mere existence of the pleadings is
    sufficient to demonstrate they had sustained an actual injury as defined by statute and
    interpreted by Jordache and Foxborough, and no factual dispute remains. Under these
    circumstances, the demurrer was properly sustained.
    Plaintiffs argue the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to give them the
    opportunity to amend the complaint. A trial court does not abuse its discretion by
    sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend if it appears on the face of the complaint
    that under the applicable substantive law there is no reasonable possibility that an
    amendment could cure the complaint’s defect. (Heckendorn v. City of San Marino
    (1986) 
    42 Cal.3d 481
    , 486.) Plaintiffs bear the burden of demonstrating how they would
    amend the complaint to cure the defect. (Association of Community Organizations for
    10
    Reform Now v. Department of Industrial Relations (1995) 
    41 Cal.App.4th 298
    , 302.)
    This they have not done and cannot do.
    We point out that plaintiffs were given a prior opportunity to amend to cure the
    defect after the court sustained defendant’s first demurrer with leave to amend. But they
    faced then what they continue to face now, the insurmountable obstacle that they were
    engaged in two lawsuits in 2007 as a result of their lawyers’ alleged negligence. As
    discussed at length above, the substantive law bars their lawsuit based on the simple and
    straightforward fact they incurred actual injury when they sought to vindicate the rights
    their lawyers allegedly neglected in those lawsuits. Their appeal is predicated on the
    proposition the trial court erred in accepting allegations in their 2007 complaint as a
    judicial admission, and they utterly ignore their burden to propose a viable complaint that
    can withstand a challenge based on the statute of limitations. In the absence of a
    proposed amended complaint that overcomes the statute of limitations, we conclude the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion by terminating a lawsuit Code of Civil Procedure
    section 340.6 clearly bars.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    RAYE              , P. J.
    We concur:
    HULL                 , J.
    ROBIE                , J.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C077204

Filed Date: 4/22/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021