Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 2014
DocketG048849
StatusUnpublished

This text of Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America CA4/3 (Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America 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
Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 7/8/14 Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

ANAHEIM DUCKS HOCKEY CLUB,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G048849

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2012-00563336)

DS WATERS OF AMERICA, INC., OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Franz E. Miller, Judge. Reversed in part and affirmed in part. Jerome M. Jackson for Plaintiff and Appellant. Law Offices of Geoffrey Long, Geoffrey Long; Seyfarth Shaw, Eugene S. Suh and James M. Harris for Defendant and Respondent.

* * * Plaintiff and cross-defendant Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club, LLC (the Ducks), appeal from the judgment entered after a bench trial on the Ducks’ complaint and cross-complaint of defendant and cross-complainant DS Waters of America, Inc. (DS). The trial court had entered judgment in favor of DS on the Ducks’ complaint for breach of contract and in favor of the Ducks on DS’s cross-complaint for breach of the same contract. The Ducks contend this was error because the court’s finding that the Ducks’s breaches of the sponsorship agreement between it and DS were not material meant DS’s failure to perform under the contract was not excused. We agree and reverse that part of the judgment on the Ducks’s complaint in favor of DS and order the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the Ducks. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2008, the parties entered into a Sponsorship Agreement (agreement), effective from August 1, 2008 to June 30, 2011. In exchange for a sponsorship fee, the agreement gave DS “the right to place and staff one (1) table on the Plaza Level of the Facility at each public event,” and granted DS “the right to be the provider of five-gallon water service to the Ducks, the Facility and the Practice Facility and coffee service to the employees of the Ducks, the Facility and the Practice Facility.” The agreement also provided that whenever a party is in default for failing “to perform any material obligation in a timely manner,” “the non-defaulting party shall deliver written notice specifying the default to the defaulting party,” giving the defaulting party 30 days to cure the default. If the defaulting party fails to comply, the non- defaulting party may terminate the agreement and “accelerate the payment of and bring [a]n action to collect all installments of the [s]ponsorship [f]ee . . . payable through the [t]ermination [d]ate,” i.e., June 30, 2011, regardless of the date of default.

2 DS paid the sponsorship fee for the first year. In 2009, the parties attempted to renegotiate the agreement but the agreement was never modified or amended. DS did not pay the sponsorship fees for the second or third years. In both October and December 2010, the Ducks sent DS a notice of default for nonpayment of the second year sponsorship fee and a notice of termination. The Ducks thereafter sued DS for breach of written contract, alleging that as a result of DS’s nonpayment of the sponsorship fees for the second and third years, it was damaged in the amount of the unpaid fees. DS answered and filed a cross-complaint alleging, among other things, the Ducks’s material breaches of the agreement excused DS from its contractual obligations. DS alleged the Ducks breached these provisions by failing to: (1) permit DS to place and staff a promotional table on the Plaza level at all public events (tabling provision); (2) give DS “the exclusive right to sell all coffee and coffee-related products at Honda Center concession stands” (coffee exclusivity provision); and (3) allow DS “the right to be the provider of 5-gallon water service and coffee service to the . . . Ducks.” After a four-day bench trial, the court orally issued its findings and decision. On appeal, both parties focus on the tabling provision and “the right to be the exclusive provider of coffee service (coffee and coffee-related products) to the Honda Center concession stands.” We shall as well. The court found a breach of the tabling provision because the Ducks did not allow DS to place a table on the Plaza level at every event, sometimes relegating DS to the Terrace level instead. It noted that “[b]y one estimate, it was something like 16 out of 50 times.” As to the coffee exclusivity provision, the court ruled that granting DS the right “to be the provider of . . . coffee service” (italics added) instead of “a” provider indicates “exclusivity.” Additionally, the provision was ambiguous because it could be

3 construed as giving DS the exclusive right to provide coffee service to “just employees of the Ducks and then, in general, to the facility and the practice facility or to the employees of each of those entities[.]” It thus construed the provision against the Ducks, whom it deemed to be the drafters of the agreement. The court then considered whether these breaches were material. It examined “the conduct and behavior of the parties,” observing DS never complained about either breach by the Ducks, nor was it ever “concerned about whatever technical breaches there might have been.” The court cited the provision in the agreement that “if you think there’s a default . . . , you got to give written notice,” which “[t]hey never did” because, in the court’s opinion, “they never thought that the Ducks were in material default.” Rather, the court believed DS had “tried to renegotiate [the] contract because the numbers weren’t working out right for [it].” It was “paying a whole lot of money on this contract and [was] not getting back what [it] expected.” The fact that Aramark, the third-party concessionaire operating the concession stands at the Honda Center, purchased 75 percent of its coffee and coffee-related products from DS further “support[ed] the inference . . . this breach was not a material breach.” The court concluded “the Ducks failed to perform everything . . . that was their responsibility to perform as a condition precedent to their right to payment under the contract” and that “with regards to the cross-complaint, that the breaches . . . claimed by . . . [DS] were not material breaches, and therefore, they are not entitled to damages. It ordered the Ducks to prepare a judgment stating neither party had proven their case. The record does not reflect either party requested a written statement of decision. Nor does it show the parties stipulated that the reporter’s transcript would serve as the statement of decision. Nevertheless, the judgment prepared by the Ducks reads, “After hearing the evidence, and entertaining oral argument, the Court orally rendered its Statement of Decision” and later DS filed and served a notice of entry of judgment

4 stating, “after hearing the evidence and entertaining oral argument, [the court] rendered a Statement of Decision on [the date of the oral hearing].”

DISCUSSION

1. Applicability of Implied Findings Doctrine and Standard of Review We first address DS’s contention that because no statement of decision was requested or prepared, the doctrine of implied findings applies. Although this is a correct principle of law (see In re Marriage of Arceneaux (1990) 51 Cal.3d 1130, 1133-1134), the fact no written statement of decision was prepared does not mean one does not exist.

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Anaheim Ducks Hockey Club v. DS Waters of America CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaheim-ducks-hockey-club-v-ds-waters-of-america-ca43-calctapp-2014.