200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 2023
DocketA166470
StatusUnpublished

This text of 200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3 (200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/28/23 200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

200 KANSAS OWNER, LLC, Plaintiff and Respondent, A166470 v. KEENWAWA, INC. (San Francisco City & County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. CPF-22-517812)

Keenwawa, Inc., doing business as Brightloom (tenant) appeals from a judgment confirming a final arbitration award in favor of 200 Kansas Owner, LLC (landlord). We affirm.1 BACKGROUND In June 2015, tenant leased space in landlord’s office building on Kansas Street in San Francisco. Section 29.20.2 of the lease — entitled “waiver of trial by jury” — stated the parties waived their right to a jury trial

1 We deny tenant’s request for judicial notice of, among other things,

the JAMS Comprehensive Arbitration Rules & Procedures, as these documents are unnecessary to our decision. (Najarro v. Superior Court (2021) 70 Cal.App.5th 871, 885, fn. 7.) In violation of California Rules of Court, rule 8.124(b), tenant’s appellant’s appendix omits numerous essential documents, including landlord’s arbitration demand and declarations landlord offered in support of its petition to confirm the award. Landlord has provided a respondent’s appendix supplying the missing documents. We recite only those facts necessary to resolve the dispositive issues. 1 in any litigation arising out of, or connected to, the lease. (Capitalization omitted.) Section 29.20.2 also provided that if the jury waiver is not enforceable, “the following provisions shall apply. . . . [A]ny action, proceeding or counterclaim brought by either party hereto against the other . . . on any matters arising out of or in any way connected with this Lease, Tenant’s use or occupancy of the Premises and/or any claim of injury or damage . . . shall be heard and resolved by a referee under the provisions of the California Code of Civil Procedure, Sections 638 – 645.1[.]”2 (Capitalization omitted.) Additionally, the provision stated that pursuant to section 644, “[a]ny decision of the referee and/or judgment or other order entered thereon shall be appealable to the same extent and in the same manner that such decision, judgment, or order would be appealable if rendered by a judge of the superior court in which venue is proper.” Tenant stopped paying rent in April 2020. Not long after, it decided to “go ‘permanent remote,’ ” and it paid rent intermittently or not at all. In late December, the parties entered into a “Surrender and Lease Termination Agreement” (agreement). Under the agreement, tenant vacated the space; the parties terminated the lease, and they acknowledged the existence of a dispute over tenant’s nonpayment of rent and landlord’s entitlement to damages (rent dispute). The parties also agreed the rent dispute would “be resolved in accordance with the alternative dispute resolution mechanism set forth in Section 29.20.2 of the Lease, as clarified and amended by the terms and conditions” of the agreement. Section 7 of the agreement — entitled “Agreement to Alternative Dispute Resolution” — provided that “[n]otwithstanding anything in the Lease to the contrary, the Parties

2 Undesignated statutory references are to the California Code of Civil

Procedure. 2 acknowledge and agree that the Rent Dispute is and shall be subject to arbitration pursuant to section 29.20.2 of the Lease, and agree to submit such Rent Dispute to arbitration before JAMS.” (Italics added.) The agreement’s integration clause stated the agreement was the parties’ “final, entire, and exclusive agreement” and that all “understandings, discussions, proposals and agreements [. . .] are merged.” Two months later, landlord demanded arbitration. It sought damages, attorney fees, and costs. Tenant answered the demand. Thereafter, JAMS confirmed the commencement of the arbitration. The parties selected an arbitrator — who confirmed the claims were “arbitrable in this forum” — and they arbitrated their claims in March 2022. In June, the arbitrator issued a final award. The arbitrator first concluded the parties had “expressly reserved” the rent dispute to arbitration and that landlord’s claims were “arbitrable.” Next, the arbitrator determined tenant breached the lease, and it rejected tenant’s affirmative defenses. The arbitrator ultimately awarded landlord $3,813,866.72 in damages, attorney fees, and costs — a complete win for landlord. Thereafter, landlord petitioned to confirm the arbitration award pursuant to section 1285. Tenant did not move to correct or vacate the award. Instead, it filed an opposition in which it argued the petition was not “the appropriate procedural mechanism for attempting to enforce the award.” Relying on the lease, tenant insisted the parties had agreed to resolve their disputes by judicial reference and that any decision reached by the referee would be appealable.3 It requested an “opportunity to appeal the award

3 “ ‘Judicial reference involves sending a pending trial court action

to a referee for hearing, determination and a report back to the court.’ ” (O’Donoghue v. Superior Court (2013) 219 Cal.App.4th 245, 255.) The referee

3 pursuant to the parties’ agreement.” Tenant also suggested the arbitrator “exceeded his authority in such a manner that the award [could not] be fairly corrected” (§ 1286.2, subd. (a)(4)), but tenant did not seek to vacate the award on that basis. In reply, landlord urged the trial court to confirm the award and enter judgment in its favor because tenant had failed to contest the arbitration award or oppose the petition on statutory grounds. Tenant filed a supplemental response. Taking a new tack — and claiming the “only question” before the court was the “nature of the judgment” — tenant requested entry of judgment pursuant to section 644, which applies to reference proceedings. (Capitalization omitted.) In light of this new theory, the court granted tenant leave to file a petition to correct the arbitration award. Instead of doing so, tenant moved to “enter judgment on the reference.” (Capitalization omitted.) The motion rehashed the arguments tenant made in response to landlord’s petition to confirm the arbitration award. Landlord opposed the motion, arguing tenant could not convert an arbitration award into a so-called judgment on the reference. In October 2022, the trial court granted landlord’s petition to confirm the arbitration award, and it entered a judgment after arbitration. On the same date, the court issued a separate order denying tenant’s motion to enter judgment on the reference. It concluded no “judicial reference proceedings ha[d] been initiated” under sections 638 and 639, and that the parties

tries “ ‘all issues in the action’ ” and “ ‘prepares a statement of decision that stands as the decision of the court and is reviewable as if the court had rendered it.’ ” (Ibid.) A judgment based on a referee’s statement of decision is reviewed on appeal using the same rules that apply to a court’s statement of decision. (§ 644.) There “are significant differences between a judicial reference and a contractual arbitration.” (Sy First Family Ltd. Partnership v. Cheung (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 1334, 1341.)

4 participated in an arbitration and availed “themselves of the benefits of such proceedings without objection.” Tenant appealed from the judgment after arbitration. DISCUSSION Tenant urges us to review the merits of the arbitrator’s factual and legal conclusions and to reduce landlord’s damages. We will not.

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200 Kansas Owner v. Keenwawa CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/200-kansas-owner-v-keenwawa-ca13-calctapp-2023.