AAA Blueprint v. Vasquez CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 2013
DocketG042693
StatusUnpublished

This text of AAA Blueprint v. Vasquez CA4/3 (AAA Blueprint v. Vasquez CA4/3) 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
AAA Blueprint v. Vasquez CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 4/2/13 AAA Blueprint v. Vasquez CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

AAA BLUEPRINT & DIGITAL REPROGRAPHICS, INC., G042693 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2007-00100248) v. OPINION DENNIS ADRIAN VASQUEZ et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert J. Moss, Judge. Affirmed. Respondent’s motion for sanctions denied. Sakamaki & Baumgartner and Francis Sakamaki for Defendants and Appellants. Silverstein & Huston, Steven A. Silverstein, Mark W. Huston and Robert I. Cohen, for Plaintiff and Respondent. INTRODUCTION Appellants Dennis Adrian Vazquez, Melissa Huerta, and All Blueprint, Inc. (All Blue), appeal from a judgment rendered against them and in favor of AAA Blueprint & Digital Reprographics, Inc. (AAA Blueprint), after a two-day bench trial. The central issue at trial was whether appellants had tried to hinder the collection of a judgment entered in 2006 for AAA Blueprint and against Alliance Reprographics, a rival company owned by Vazquez. The trial court found that Vazquez and Huerta had indeed sought to frustrate AAA Blueprint’s efforts to collect its 2006 judgment by transferring Alliance’s assets to the newly formed All Blue, a competing printing shop. The court also found that all the defendants in this action – Vazquez, Huerta, All Blue, and Alliance – were alter egos of each other. The court issued an injunction preventing any of the defendants from disposing of assets pending the installation of a receiver. We affirm the judgment. The issues appellants have raised in this court – lack of standing, lack of injury, and insufficient evidence of alter ego – are all without merit. AAA Blueprint also moved for sanctions against Vazquez and his attorney, Francis Sakamaki, on the ground the appeal is frivolous. While we agree that appellants’ briefs are dismal specimens of appellate advocacy, we must be careful not to equate poor lawyering with frivolousness. However ineptly, appellants raised issues not totally devoid of merit. We therefore deny the motion for sanctions. FACTS1 In 2006, AAA Blueprint was the plaintiff in a case against Alliance and one Jimmy Ibarra, an employee who had quit and gone to work for Alliance. Ibarra brought

1 We recite the facts in the form most favorable to the judgment. (See SCI California Funeral Services, Inc. v. Five Bridges Foundation (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 549, 552.)

2 with him pricing information for AAA Blueprint’s customers, allowing him to lure them to Alliance by undercutting his former employer’s prices. AAA Blueprint sued Alliance and Ibarra for misappropriation of trade secrets and won a judgment of over $250,000 which included both compensatory and punitive damages. We affirmed the judgment in an unpublished opinion. (AAA Blueprint & Digital Reprographics v. Ibarra (Oct. 24, 2007, G037831) [nonpub. opn.].) After the trial court’s judgment, Vazquez offered Peter Bouchier, AAA Blueprint’s principal, $100,000 to settle the case. If Bouchier did not accept the offer, Vazquez promised to close down Alliance and open another company across the street. AAA Blueprint would recover nothing on its judgment. Bouchier rejected the settlement offer. Vazquez proceeded to do just as he had threatened. With the help of his sometime girlfriend Huerta, Vazquez opened up All Blue, blocks away from Alliance’s place of business.2 All of Alliance’s printing equipment, most of it leased, went to All Blue. Alliance’s employees – Huerta, her father, her brother, and eventually Vazquez himself – went to work for All Blue. Alliance’s customers became All Blue’s customers. All Blue used Vazquez’s personal cars to make deliveries, without any discernible documentation for reimbursement. Money began flying about between people and between companies and people. For example, Vazquez lent Huerta $40,000 interest-free, most of which she used to start All Blue. Huerta in turn lent money to Vazquez, who was being paid only $1,500 per month to work at All Blue. He nevertheless repaid these loans, despite the fact that she had made no payment on his $40,000 loan to her. Vazquez lent All Blue $3,000 in July 2008. All Blue paid hefty American Express bills for which statements were not produced, creating the inference the company was paying for Huerta’s and Vazquez’s personal expenses. All Blue paid all the expenses for two

2 Both businesses were located on West Commonwealth Street in Fullerton, just a few blocks apart.

3 BMWs for Vazquez (both cars registered in his name). It also made payments on two cars belonging to Vazquez that All Blue was using to make deliveries. Vazquez personally guaranteed a loan to All Blue. Checks from Alliance customers to pay Alliance invoices were altered to make the payee All Blue or were simply deposited into All Blue’s account without alteration. And true to Vazquez’s promise, AAA Blueprint collected nothing on its judgment against Alliance, now stripped of all its assets. AAA Blueprint sued Vazquez, Huerta, Alliance, and All Blue for fraudulent transfer and alter ego. After a two-day bench trial in July 2009, the court issued its ruling, finding that Vazquez and All Blue are alter egos of Alliance, and Vazquez and Huerta are alter egos of All Blue. The court also found that Vazquez and Huerta conspired to transfer Alliance’s assets to All Blue to avoid paying AAA Blueprint’s judgment. The court issued an injunction forbidding defendants from disposing of any assets pending the appointment of a receiver and issued writs of attachment against all defendants. The court’s alter ego findings made all defendants liable for the Alliance judgment, so the court did not award any additional damages. It also did not award punitive damages, because of insufficient evidence of the defendants’ wealth. Vazquez, Huerta, and All Blue appealed from the judgment. Their opening brief specified three grounds for the appeal. First, at the time judgment was entered in 2006, AAA Blueprint was not separately incorporated, but was merely the fictitious business name for another corporation. It did not exist as a separate legal entity. It therefore had no standing to sue, and a judgment entered in favor of AAA Blueprint is void. Second, the transfer of assets to All Blue did not injure Alliance, because the only evidence of the monetary value of Alliance property transferred to All Blue was paper and toner worth $600. Finally, Vazquez is not the alter ego of Alliance or of All Blue.

4 DISCUSSION I. Appeal from the Judgment A. AAA Blueprint’s Standing to Sue Respondents’ main issue is AAA Blueprint’s lack of standing to sue. They elicited testimony at trial from Bouchier that back in 2006, when the company got its judgment against Alliance, AAA Blueprint was not a corporation. It did not become incorporated until after the fraudulent transfer action was filed in December 2007. Before that time, including when the judgment against Alliance was entered, AAA Blueprint was the fictitious business name of another corporation, Graafikko, Inc. As we understand appellants’ argument on appeal, they are now asserting that the 2006 judgment was void – because it was rendered in AAA Blueprint’s favor and not in favor Graafikko – and therefore AAA Blueprint was not a legitimate judgment creditor, because it was not the real party in interest in the 2006 case. The transfer of Alliance’s assets to All Blue was not a fraudulent transfer, because AAA Blueprint had no interest in them.

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