Park v. Nazari ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 7/25/23
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    CHOP WON PARK et al.,                         B320483
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,           (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                                    19STCV20545)
    KELLY NAZARI et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Stuart M. Rice, Judge. Affirmed.
    Law Offices of Yousef Monadjemi and Yousef Monadjemi;
    Raskin Gorham Anderson Law and Lucy Mekhael for Defendants
    and Appellants.
    Spainhour Law Group and Kevin A. Spainhour for
    Plaintiffs and Respondents.
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and
    8.1110, all but Part II.B of this opinion is certified for publication.
    After obtaining a judgment against defendants Kelly
    Nazari (Kelly) and Shariar Nazari (Shariar)1 (collectively, the
    Nazaris) in a prior case, plaintiffs Chop Won Park (Park) and
    Bonnie Nguyen (Nguyen) (collectively, plaintiffs) filed this action
    against the Nazaris, their attorney, and others for fraudulent
    transfer, quiet title, and declaratory relief. The Nazaris filed a
    special motion to strike the entire complaint pursuant to the anti-
    SLAPP statute (Code Civ. Proc.,2 § 425.16). In this appeal from
    the denial of the Nazaris’ motion, we principally consider
    whether the trial court erred in ruling the Nazaris failed to meet
    their initial burden of identifying all allegations of protected
    activity and the claims for relief supported by them. We also
    consider whether the trial court’s earlier order granting the
    Nazaris’ attorney’s anti-SLAPP motion compels the same
    outcome here.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.    Prior Litigation
    Park, Nguyen, and others formed True World, LLC (True
    World) to purchase a truck stop and land from the Nazaris and
    others in 2008. When True World failed to make monthly
    mortgage payments, the Nazaris foreclosed.
    Park and True World sued the Nazaris and others for
    (among other things) fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and
    1
    We adopt the spelling of Shariar’s name used in his
    respondent’s brief. Several alternative spellings appear in the
    record, including Shahriar, Shshriar, and Shawn.
    2
    Undesignated statutory references that follow are to the
    Code of Civil Procedure.
    breach of contract. Nguyen was a party to the litigation as a
    defendant to one of several cross claims asserted by Kelly.
    Following a jury trial, the trial court entered a judgment in
    favor of Park, True World, and Nguyen. In a prior unpublished
    opinion, the Court of Appeal reversed an award of pre-judgment
    interest, but otherwise affirmed the judgment. The trial court
    entered a second amended judgment in 2017 awarding Park
    $251,713.99 from the Nazaris and other defendants; True World
    $558,626.07 from the Nazaris and other defendants; Park
    $100,000 from Shariar; and attorney fees and costs to Park, True
    World, and Nguyen.
    B.      Plaintiffs’ Complaint for Fraudulent Transfer, Quiet
    Title, and Declaratory Relief
    Plaintiffs initiated this action against the Nazaris and
    others in 2019. As we shall discuss in more detail, they challenge
    certain transfers relating to the truck stop and the Nazaris’ home
    in Chatsworth (assets in which plaintiffs have an interest as
    judgment creditors) and they seek a declaration of their right to
    access state funds to remedy environmental issues at the truck
    stop.
    Plaintiffs allege that after the jury returned its verdict in
    the prior litigation, but before the trial court entered judgment,
    the Nazaris’ attorney in that litigation recorded liens against
    both the truck stop and the Chatsworth residence.3 The attorney,
    3
    Kelly had executed promissory notes for $100,000 (secured
    by a deed of trust on the truck stop) and $250,000 (secured by a
    deed of trust on the Chatsworth residence) for the law firm’s
    services in the prior litigation.
    3
    David G. Torres-Siegrist (Torres-Siegrist), was then a partner in
    the law firm of Carpenter, Rothans & Dumont (the law firm).
    After Torres-Siegrist recorded the liens, plaintiffs executed on the
    judgment and (once again) took title to the truck stop. Torres-
    Siegrist subsequently “transferred or assigned some of the rights
    to” the lien against the truck stop to Albert Oganesyan
    (Oganesyan), who noticed a trustee sale.
    Plaintiffs allege the promissory notes on which the liens
    were predicated were fraudulent because the Nazaris did not owe
    Torres-Siegrist or the law firm any attorney fees. They allege the
    law firm represented the Nazaris on a contingency basis,
    anticipating a percentage of any award on the Nazaris’ cross
    claims in the prior litigation. Plaintiffs further allege Oganesyan
    did not pay reasonable value for the truck stop lien and was
    “acting as a strawman on behalf of the Nazari[s] . . . .” More
    specifically, plaintiffs allege the foreclosure sale of the truck stop
    was “a ruse orchestrated by the Nazari[s] . . . to regain title to the
    [truck stop] by and through Oganesyan.”
    Plaintiffs’ complaint seeks to set aside the transfers or, at a
    minimum, obtain a determination that their title to the truck
    stop and liens against the Chatsworth residence are superior to
    the liens obtained by Torres-Siegrist and the law firm. In
    addition to their allegations regarding the liens, plaintiffs allege
    Shariar interfered with efforts to address soil contamination at
    the truck stop and obtain funding from the State Water
    Resources Control Board Underground Storage Tank Cleanup
    Fund (the Fund). In a cause of action against the Nazaris, the
    State Water Resources Control Board, and the local water board,
    plaintiffs seek, among other things, a declaration that the right to
    4
    Fund assistance runs with the land and belongs to them as
    owners in fee simple.
    C.    Torres-Siegrist’s Anti-SLAPP Motion
    We first discuss Torres-Siegrist’s anti-SLAPP motion
    because the Nazaris contend it has implications for their own
    anti-SLAPP motion.
    The trial court granted Torres-Siegrist’s motion in
    November 2019. The court determined the claims against
    Torres-Siegrist arose from protected activity because they were
    “based on the payment [he] received from his clients in exchange
    for legal services performed in another action. Broadly
    construed, the anti-SLAPP statute encompasses this activity
    because such payment is made in connection with a judicial
    proceeding.” The trial court additionally concluded plaintiffs had
    not satisfied their burden of demonstrating a probability of
    success on the merits because the evidence indicated the disputed
    transfers were not fraudulent, the fraudulent transfer claims
    were barred by the litigation privilege in any case, and the
    judgment in the prior action “did not affect title to, or possession
    of the properties at issue . . . .”
    Plaintiffs moved for reconsideration of this order and the
    trial court denied the motion. Plaintiffs then noticed an appeal
    from the trial court’s order, but this court dismissed that appeal
    as untimely.4
    4
    The Nazaris’ request that we take judicial notice of the
    order of dismissal is granted. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (a), 459,
    subd. (a).)
    5
    D.     The Nazaris’ Anti-SLAPP Motion
    The Nazaris filed their anti-SLAPP motion a few weeks
    after the trial court granted Torres-Siegrist’s anti-SLAPP motion.
    Like Torres-Siegrist, they noticed their motion “for an order
    striking each of [p]laintiff’s [c]omplaint [sic].” They argued “all of
    [p]laintiffs’ claims arise from protected activity” because
    “litigation funding decisions and any communications made in
    connection with those decisions constitute statements or writings
    ‘made in connection with an issue under consideration or review
    by a . . . judicial body’” for purposes of section 425.16, subdivision
    (e)(2). Citing allegations in the complaint concerning Torres-
    Siegrist and the law firm’s role in the prior litigation, the Nazaris
    argued “the gravamen of the suit challenges a litigation funding
    decision and the communications made in connection with that
    decision.” With respect to the merits, the Nazaris raised many of
    the same arguments the trial court discussed in its order
    granting Torres-Siegrist’s motion and contended that order was
    “entitled to collateral estoppel effect.”
    At the hearing on the Nazaris’ anti-SLAPP motion, the
    Nazaris’ attorney suggested the trial court could strike some of
    plaintiffs’ claims even if it did not strike the complaint in its
    entirety. The trial court observed the Nazaris “didn’t ask for
    that” and, when the Nazaris’ attorney suggested they “[did not]
    have to ask for that,” the trial court responded, “I’m supposed to
    guess what you want? You made a motion that asks specifically
    that the entire complaint be dismissed. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] [Y]ou
    asked me to throw out the whole case. That’s what you asked me
    for. . . . You moved to strike the entire complaint. It is only at
    this moment that you’re now asking, ‘oh, no, no, if you’re not
    6
    going to throw out the complaint, throw out certain causes of
    action.’ You did not seek that relief.”
    The foregoing exchange reflects the gist of the trial court’s
    written order denying the motion. The trial court emphasized
    that, “[t]hroughout their papers, [the Nazaris] maintained that
    the entire complaint arose from protected activity and requested
    that the Court strike the complaint in its entirety.” (Boldface
    omitted.) The Nazaris did not, however, demonstrate the
    complaint, “in its entirety, ‘arises from’ their protected
    activity . . . .” In addition to allegations concerning the transfers
    to Torres-Siegrist, the complaint seeks relief based on the
    Nazaris’ use of Oganesyan to regain ownership of the truck stop,
    on the Nazaris’ claimed interest in the truck stop and the
    Chatsworth residence, and on Shariar’s interference with efforts
    to remedy environmental issues at the truck stop. The trial court
    concluded none of this is protected activity, and collateral
    estoppel does not apply because the allegations against the
    Nazaris are “in no way limited” to those concerning Torres-
    Siegrist.
    The trial court declined the Nazaris’ belated request to
    strike a more limited set of allegations and explained that
    although “a court may grant a motion to strike individual
    allegations of protected activity within a complaint or cause of
    action,” no authority requires such an analysis “where the
    movant has taken the position that the entire complaint arises
    from protected activity and requests that the entire complaint be
    stricken.” The trial court emphasized the Nazaris’ burden to
    identify all allegations of protected activity and the claims for
    relief supported by them. The court determined it had no
    7
    “freestanding obligation . . . to cure defects in an overbroad
    motion.”
    II. DISCUSSION
    The trial court’s approach to the anti-SLAPP motion was
    correct. As our Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized, the
    moving party bears the burden “to identify what acts each
    challenged claim rests on and to show how those acts are
    protected under a statutorily defined category of protected
    activity.” (Bonni v. St. Joseph Health System (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 995
    , 1009 (Bonni), citing Wilson v. Cable News Network, Inc.
    (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 871
    , 884 (Wilson); accord Baral v. Schnitt (2016)
    
    1 Cal.5th 376
    , 396 (Baral).) Because the Nazaris moved to strike
    only the entire complaint, and did not identify in their motion
    individual claims or allegations that should be stricken even if
    the entire complaint were not, the trial court was permitted to
    deny the anti-SLAPP motion once it concluded—correctly—that
    the complaint presented at least one claim that did not arise from
    anti-SLAPP protected conduct.
    The Nazaris resist this only by suggesting the trial court
    was compelled to grant their motion because it previously
    granted Torres-Siegrist’s anti-SLAPP motion. Because the
    claims against Torres-Siegrist differ from those asserted against
    the Nazaris, however, the earlier ruling did not resolve identical
    issues as required for collateral estoppel to apply.
    8
    A.     The Trial Court Permissibly Chose to Deny the Anti-
    SLAPP Motion Because the Entire Complaint Does
    Not Arise from Protected Activity
    The anti-SLAPP statute “authorizes a special motion to
    strike a claim ‘arising from any act of [the moving party] in
    furtherance of [the party’s] right of petition or free speech under
    the United States Constitution or the California Constitution in
    connection with a public issue.’ (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(1).)” (Wilson,
    
    supra,
     
    7 Cal.5th at 884
    .) “The anti-SLAPP statute does not
    insulate defendants from any liability for claims arising from the
    protected rights of petition or speech. It only provides a
    procedure for weeding out, at an early stage, meritless claims
    arising from protected activity.” (Baral, 
    supra,
     
    1 Cal.5th at 384
    .)
    “Litigation of an anti-SLAPP motion involves a two-step
    process. First, ‘the moving defendant bears the burden of
    establishing that the challenged allegations or claims “aris[e]
    from” protected activity in which the defendant has engaged.’
    [Citation.] Second, for each claim that does arise from protected
    activity, the plaintiff must show the claim has ‘at least “minimal
    merit.”’ [Citation.] If the plaintiff cannot make this showing, the
    court will strike the claim.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at 1009.)
    In Baral, our Supreme Court explained that “an anti-
    SLAPP motion, like a conventional motion to strike, may be used
    to attack parts of a count as pleaded.” (Baral, 
    supra,
     
    1 Cal.5th at 393
    .) But certain obligations fall on an anti-SLAPP movant
    because this sort of surgical attack on a pleading is permitted. As
    Baral explains, “At the first step, the moving defendant bears the
    burden of identifying all allegations of protected activity, and the
    claims for relief supported by them.” (Id. at 396.) This is crucial
    because complaints frequently include claims arising from
    9
    protected activity alongside claims arising from unprotected
    activity, as well as “so-called ‘mixed cause[s] of action’ that
    combine[ ] allegations of activity protected by the statute with
    allegations of unprotected activity[.]” (Id. at 381.)
    Following Baral, “most Courts of Appeal have taken a
    claim-by-claim approach to the anti-SLAPP analysis, rather than
    attempting to evaluate a cause of action as a whole.” (Bonni,
    supra, 11 Cal.5th at 1010.) In Bonni, our Supreme Court
    considered the minority view that courts need not follow this
    approach—and may instead analyze whether the “gravamen” of a
    pleaded cause of action concerns protected activity—“when a
    defendant has moved to strike an entire cause of action rather
    than individual claims within a pleaded count.” (Id. at 1011.)
    The Court rejected this view, holding that Baral’s claim-by-claim
    analysis is required “even though [the defendants] sought to
    strike [an] entire cause of action, rather than merely parts of it.”
    (Ibid.) Adopting the minority view would “risk saddling courts
    with an obligation to settle intractable, almost metaphysical
    problems about the ‘essence’ of a cause of action that
    encompasses multiple claims” and “yield overinclusive and
    underinclusive results.” (Ibid.)
    Bonni did not hold, however, that every invocation of the
    anti-SLAPP statute, however broad, requires plaintiffs or courts
    to perform the claim-by-claim analysis prescribed in Baral. To
    the contrary, Bonni recognizes a “nonmovant should not be put to
    the burden of parsing the cause of action in the moving party’s
    stead” and explains that “well-established anti-SLAPP law”
    provides a solution when an anti-SLAPP movant seeks to impose
    burdens on the nonmovant or the trial court by filing an
    overbroad or nonspecific motion: “attention to the allocation of
    10
    the applicable burden of proof.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at
    1011.) “If a cause of action contains multiple claims and a
    moving party fails to identify how the speech or conduct
    underlying some of those claims is protected activity, it will not
    carry its first-step burden as to those claims.” (Ibid.)
    Extending these principles to a motion targeting an entire
    complaint is only a matter of degree. Where a defendant moves
    to strike the entire complaint and fails to identify, with reasoned
    argument, specific claims for relief that are asserted to arise from
    protected activity, the defendant does not carry his or her first-
    step burden so long as the complaint presents at least one claim
    that does not arise from protected activity. Here, the Nazaris not
    only failed to identify specific claims for relief arising from
    protected activity, they expressly asked the court to perform the
    type of gravamen analysis disapproved in Bonni. At no point did
    the Nazaris “identify the activity each challenged claim rests on
    and demonstrate that that activity is protected by the anti-
    SLAPP statute.” (Wilson, supra, 
    7 Cal.5th at 884
    .) And there are
    obviously claims in the complaint that do not arise from anti-
    SLAPP protected activity, e.g., the claim that the Nazaris are
    interfering with their ability to obtain funding from the Fund.
    The Nazaris’ accordingly did not carry their first-step anti-
    SLAPP burden. As the trial court suggested at the hearing on
    the Nazaris’ motion, the problem for the Nazaris was their failure
    to link specific claims for relief to protected activity. The trial
    court’s question—“I’m supposed to guess what you want?”—was,
    in substance, a rejection of the Nazaris’ suggestion that the court
    11
    “should . . . be put to the burden of parsing the [complaint] in
    [their] stead.”5 (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at 1011.)
    Our Supreme Court’s guidance from Baral to Bonni
    explains that while courts may strike less than the entirety of a
    complaint or pleaded cause of action, the trial court is not
    required to take on the burden of identifying the allegations
    susceptible to a special motion to strike. If a defendant wants the
    trial court to take a surgical approach, whether in the alternative
    or not, the defendant must propose where to make the incisions.
    5
    In Balla v. Hall (2021) 
    59 Cal.App.5th 652
     (Balla), the
    Court of Appeal held that the trial court “erred by concluding it
    had to deny . . . anti-SLAPP motions [noticed as motions to strike
    complaints “in [their] entirety”] if any portion of the complaints
    were actionable.” (Id. at 666, 671.) The court reasoned “Baral
    makes clear that not only can an anti-SLAPP motion attack
    portions of causes of action, but also that whether it does so turns
    on how the issues are framed—not simply the text of the notice of
    motion.” (Id. at 672.)
    Insofar as Balla holds a trial court may parse the claims in
    a complaint even when an anti-SLAPP movant does not
    discharge his or her burden to, as Baral says, “identify[ ] all
    allegations of protected activity, and the claims for relief
    supported by them” (Baral, supra, 
    1 Cal.5th at 396
    ), we agree.
    Insofar as Balla holds a trial court must do so, we hold to the
    contrary. When a trial court is presented with an anti-SLAPP
    motion that seeks to strike only the entire complaint and does not
    identify specific claims or allegations that should be stricken even
    if the entire complaint is not, the court can properly deny the
    motion so long as the court concludes the movant is not entitled
    to the relief sought, i.e., so long as the court concludes the
    complaint presents at least one claim that does not arise from
    anti-SLAPP protected activity.
    12
    This is done by identifying, in the initial motion, each numbered
    paragraph or sentence in the complaint that comprises a
    challenged claim and explaining “the claim’s elements, the
    actions alleged to establish those elements, and wh[y] those
    actions are protected.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at 1015.)
    [Part II.B, below, is deleted from publication. See post at
    p. 15 for where publication is to resume.]
    B.     Issue Preclusion Principles Do Not Compel a Different
    Result
    Issue preclusion, also known as collateral estoppel,
    “prohibits the relitigation of issues argued and decided in a
    previous case . . . .” (DKN Holdings LLC v. Faerber (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 813
    , 824.) The doctrine applies “(1) after final
    adjudication (2) of an identical issue (3) actually litigated and
    necessarily decided in the first suit and (4) asserted against one
    who was a party in the first suit or one in privity with that party.
    [Citations.]” (Id. at 825.) “Whether collateral estoppel applies in
    a particular case is a question of law which we review de novo.
    [Citation.]” (Duarte v. State Teachers’ Retirement System (2014)
    
    232 Cal.App.4th 370
    , 389, fn. 11.)
    We assume without deciding that a prior order in the same
    litigation may have preclusive effect. (Direct Shopping Network,
    LLC v. James (2012) 
    206 Cal.App.4th 1551
    , 1554 [holding that an
    appellate ruling on a co-defendant’s anti-SLAPP motion barred
    the plaintiff “from relitigating the issue of its probability of
    prevailing on the merits”]; Hoang v. Tran (2021) 
    60 Cal.App.5th 513
    , 530; but see People v. Yokely (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 1264
    ,
    1273 [“[T]he California Supreme Court and courts of appeal have
    13
    expressed doubt that the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies in
    further proceedings in the same litigation,” but the issue “has not
    been resolved definitively”]; United Grand Corp. v. Malibu
    Hillbillies, LLC (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 142
    , 165, fn. 6.) We
    further assume for the sake of argument that plaintiffs’ appeal of
    the order granting Torres-Siegrist’s motion did not prevent the
    trial court’s ruling from having preclusive effect even though we
    had not yet dismissed the appeal when the trial court ruled on
    the Nazaris’ motion.6 (Riverside County Transportation Com. v.
    Southern California Gas Co. (2020) 
    54 Cal.App.5th 823
    , 838 [“a
    judgment is not final for purposes of res judicata or collateral
    estoppel if an appeal is pending or could still be taken”].)
    Even with these assumptions, there is still a fatal flaw in
    the Nazaris’ issue preclusion argument: their anti-SLAPP motion
    did not raise the same issue as Torres-Siegrist’s motion. At the
    first step of the anti-SLAPP analysis, both Torres-Siegrist and
    the Nazaris’ motions were framed such that the issue was
    whether all claims against the moving party or parties arose
    from protected activity. Because the allegations and claims for
    relief against Torres-Siegrist and the Nazaris differed, the
    substance of this question differed from one motion to the next.
    To cite only the most obvious example, Torres-Siegrist is not
    named in—and apparently had nothing to do with—the cause of
    6
    At oral argument, the Nazaris cited Consumer Advocacy
    Group, Inc. v. ExxonMobil Corp. (2008) 
    168 Cal.App.4th 675
    , 683-
    684 for the proposition that an issue does not have to be decided
    on appeal for collateral estoppel to apply. Even if the cited
    authority actually discussed this point, it has no bearing on the
    point regarding finality.
    14
    action relating to plaintiffs’ entitlement to Fund assistance in
    addressing environmental issues at the truck stop. The trial
    court’s ruling that all claims against Torres-Siegrist arose from
    protected activity did not resolve whether this claim against the
    Nazaris arises from protected activity. Put another way, the
    earlier ruling did not resolve the dispositive issue of whether all
    claims against the Nazaris arise from protected activity.
    [The remainder of the opinion is to be published.]
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying the Nazaris’ anti-SLAPP motion is
    affirmed. Plaintiffs shall recover their costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    BAKER, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    MOOR, J.
    KIM, J.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B320483

Filed Date: 7/25/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/25/2023