B340986Ramirez v. McCormack

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 2025
DocketB340986
StatusPublished

This text of B340986Ramirez v. McCormack (B340986Ramirez v. McCormack) 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
B340986Ramirez v. McCormack, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 8/8/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

ADRIANA RAMIREZ et al., B340986

Plaintiffs and Respondents, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 23STCV28036 v.

SANDRA KUHN McCORMACK et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Cherol Nellon, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Klinedinst, Gregory A. Garbacz and Robert M. Shaughnessy for Defendants and Appellants. Shiloh A. Parker for Plaintiffs and Respondents. ____________________ If you are a party in litigation, your tactic of suing opposing counsel is apt to trigger swift retaliation: an anti-SLAPP motion. If opposing counsel are helping their clients petition for legal relief, your motion may fall within anti-SLAPP’s prong one as an attack on petitioning activity. If so, then prong two will require you to produce evidence your claims have minimal merit. If you cannot show minimal merit, you may have to pay your opponent for the trouble you have caused. This case fits this pattern. Adriana Ramirez was engaged in litigation with third parties. Ramirez sued opposing counsel: attorney Sandra McCormack and her law firm. Defendant McCormack responded with the predictable anti-SLAPP motion. In opposition, plaintiff Ramirez offered only an argumentative declaration by her attorney and no actual evidence. In this court Ramirez forfeits her opportunity to argue the merits, so McCormack’s motion wins the day. We reverse the trial court’s denial of McCormack’s anti- SLAPP motion and remand for a calculation of the fees and costs Ramirez must pay. Statutory citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure. I We refer to Ramirez and two members of her family collectively as Ramirez. Ramirez sued attorney Sandra McCormack and others, including McCormack’s law firm. Ramirez filed an unverified complaint in November 2023. This complaint alleged that McCormack and other counsel represented third parties with whom Ramirez had settled, and that McCormack and these opposing counsel “demanded to send the settlement checks” to Ramirez’s attorney’s office address instead of to an address specified on a W-9 form Ramirez provided. As a result of this mailing address dispute, Ramirez claimed she suffered tortious interference with contract and “in excess of $400,000.00” in damages.

2 Ramirez’s complaint did not explain how an address dispute could cause injury. In May 2024, Ramirez filed an unverified first amended complaint. Ramirez attached 17 exhibits to this complaint, comprising over 60 pages. With exhibits, this operative pleading is over 100 pages long. In a nutshell, this complaint alleged McCormack, as counsel to Ramirez’s litigation opponents, had advised her clients to refuse to follow through on a settlement with Ramirez. In more detail, Ramirez alleged as follows. Third party Harvey Miller owned Stockdale Villa Mobile Home Park. Ramirez lived and worked there as a property manager. Ramirez sued Miller and Stockdale on employment claims. Miller hired attorney McCormack to bring an unlawful detainer action against Ramirez. Ramirez retained attorney Shiloh Parker to fight the unlawful detainer. Parker told McCormack to email documents to Parker, but McCormack hired process servers to serve Ramirez at home. The process servers harassed Ramirez. Parker reported McCormack to the State Bar, which investigated McCormack. Miller hired the law firm of Gordon Rees Scully Mansukani LLP to defend against Ramirez’s employment action. McCormack is not a member of the Gordon Rees law firm, but coordinated with Gordon Rees lawyers so as to “distract” Ramirez “with the possibility of a global settlement early in the employment matter.” The Gordon Rees lawyers made misrepresentations to Ramirez as to whether they had authority to waive service of Ramirez’s employment claims. The Gordon Rees lawyers conditioned settlement of Ramirez’s employment case on Parker withdrawing the State Bar complaint against McCormack.

3 The Gordon Rees lawyers worked with McCormack to draft and edit a proposed global settlement agreement that would resolve all litigation between Ramirez on one hand and Miller and Stockdale on the other. The parties agreed Miller and Stockdale would seal and dismiss the unlawful detainer against Ramirez. The Gordon Rees lawyers and McCormack worked together to write a stipulation to accomplish this goal. The Gordon Rees lawyers and McCormack realized Ramirez would not be able to obtain employment as a property manager were the unlawful detainer unsealed, so this provision was a key term of the settlement. The Gordon Rees lawyers refused to mail the settlement check to an address that Parker specified, but instead mailed it to Parker’s law firm address. The amended complaint did not explain how this address dispute could cause injury. Ramirez’s amended complaint also alleged she dismissed her lawsuit against Stockdale and Miller, but they did not dismiss or seal their unlawful detainer against Ramirez, as the settlement required. McCormack and the Gordon Rees lawyers obstructed and delayed the sealing of the unlawful detainer lawsuit. Based on these factual allegations, Ramirez brought claims against McCormack and the Gordon Rees lawyers for interference with contractual and noncontractual relations, interference with prospective relations, inducement to breach contract, civil conspiracy, and unfair business practices. McCormack filed an anti-SLAPP motion that led with this first substantive paragraph, to which we add bold font: “Even if Plaintiff’s allegations were true (they are not) ‘the plaintiff [Ramirez] is a nonclient who alleges causes of action against someone else’s lawyer based on that lawyer’s

4 representation of other parties, the anti-SLAPP statute is applicable to bar such nonmeritorious claims.” (Thayer v. Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP (2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 141, 158 [(Thayer)].) There ‘is no question that communications sent in anticipation of litigation or as part of ongoing litigation constitute legitimate speech or petitioning activity protected under the anti- SLAPP statute.’ (Geragos v. Abelyan (2023) 88 Cal.App.5th 1005, 1023 [citing Cabral v. Martins (2009) 177 Cal.App.4th 471, 480].” Shortly, we will return to the Thayer decision. McCormack appended to her motion her own declaration describing her personal knowledge of the actions Ramirez was challenging. Ramirez opposed McCormack’s anti-SLAPP motion. This opposition responded to Thayer in a four-sentence argument. This argument was that Thayer did not apply because Ramirez had dismissed her complaint before McCormack’s tortious conduct. Her dismissal concluded her lawsuit, Ramirez claimed, and McCormack’s later alleged misconduct fell outside of Thayer’s compass. Ramirez supported her opposition with an argumentative two-page declaration by her attorney Parker. This declaration asserted McCormack did not dismiss the unlawful detainer suit until after the settlement deadline had passed. Parker’s declaration argued McCormack had “not taken all reasonable steps to seal the unlawful detainer as of the date of this opposition.” Parker’s declaration did not explain how an address dispute could cause injury. Ramirez offered no other evidence.

5 McCormack’s reply reiterated the authority of Thayer and its holding that claims against adverse litigation counsel were within prong one of the anti-SLAPP statute. McCormack pointed out Ramirez had not served any defendant other than McCormack with her suit, and that Ramirez’s opposition failed to offer evidence showing her claims had minimal merit. In August 2024, the trial court denied McCormack’s motion. The trial court’s ruling centrally relied on two precedents. The first precedent was Applied Business Software, Inc. v. Pacific Mortgage Exchange, Inc.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Applied Business Software, Inc. v. Pacific Mortgage Exchange, Inc.
164 Cal. App. 4th 1108 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)
Cabral v. Martins
177 Cal. App. 4th 471 (California Court of Appeal, 2009)
Park v. Bd. of Trs. of the Cal. State Univ.
393 P.3d 905 (California Supreme Court, 2017)
Thayer v. Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP
207 Cal. App. 4th 141 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
B340986Ramirez v. McCormack, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b340986ramirez-v-mccormack-calctapp-2025.