Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 2022
DocketB310345
StatusUnpublished

This text of Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5 (Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5) 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
Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 6/13/22 Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

AREG BAGHDASSARIANS, B310345

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 19GDCV01096) v.

SK VISION, LLC,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Curtis A. Kin, Judge. Affirmed and remanded with directions. YK Law and Vahe Khojayan for Plaintiff and Appellant. Law Offices of Eugene S. Alkana, Eugene S. Alkana and Robert I. Alkana for Defendant and Respondent.

__________________________ Plaintiff and appellant Areg Baghdassarians as trustee for AEAB Trust appeals the judgment in favor of defendant and respondent SK Vision, LLC, following a bench trial on his complaint for an easement by necessity. Baghdassarians owns a vacant lot behind residential property owned by SK Vision, and argues the evidence established the elements for an easement by necessity as a matter of law. We conclude that, while Baghdassarians may have established a prima facie case for an easement, the trial court’s implied finding that SK Vision defeated that prima facie case is supported by substantial evidence. We therefore affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND This appeal is presented as a property dispute, but the facts reveal that it is much more personal. Specifically, both properties had previously been owned by Baghdassarians – the residential property held his home and the vacant lot behind it was largely unused. The dispute arose when SK Vision demanded, and ultimately foreclosed on, a deed of trust on Baghdassarians’s “personal residence located at 4343 Vista Place,” unaware that Baghdassarians’s address actually encompassed both parcels. 1. SK Vision Obtains the Residential Property Greg Kurdoglanyan is the owner and managing member of SK Vision. Kurdoglanyan and Baghdassarians (and their companies) had been involved in a number of real estate projects.1 The business relationship soured, and SK Vision

1 We refer to Baghdassarians and all his related entities collectively as Baghdassarians. We refer to Kurdoglanyan and SK Vision collectively as SK Vision (except when necessary to refer to Kurdoglanyan as an individual).

2 brought suit against Baghdassarians for the loss of its investments. On August 26, 2010, they settled their dispute for $2.6 million, pursuant to a written agreement. Under the agreement, Baghdassarians agreed to transfer certain unrelated properties to SK Vision, as well as $1,946,000, to be paid in $6,000 monthly installments. Baghdassarians agreed to provide SK Vision with two deeds of trust on a specified (unrelated) property to secure his obligations. The parties also agreed to execute a stipulation for entry of judgment in the amount of $2.6 million, to be held unfiled unless there was a default in the terms of the settlement agreement. Eighteen months later, on February 24, 2012, counsel for SK Vision wrote Baghdassarians, documenting further agreements that had been negotiated privately between Baghdassarians and Kurdoglanyan. Baghdassarians signed the letter, agreeing to its terms. According to the letter, Baghdassarians “apparently acknowledged that [he was] in default in a number of respects in connection with the Settlement Agreement . . . .” Based on Baghdassarians’s proposals, SK Vision was “amenable to holding off on the filing of the judgment provided certain conditions are met.” The letter then itemized a number of conditions. Among other terms, Baghdassarians agreed to sign a new deed of trust in favor of SK Vision to replace the original deeds of trust listed in the settlement agreement. The letter stated, “The Deed of Trust will be secured by your personal residence located at 4343 Vista Place, La Canada-Flintridge, California, which shall be security for the Settlement Agreement . . . .” Baghdassarians, at this point, held record title to the property located at 4343 Vista Place. But what Baghdassarians

3 knew, and SK Vision did not, was that the property at that address consisted of two separate parcels – Baghdassarians’s personal residential property in front, and the vacant lot behind.2 In compliance with his understanding of the agreement, Baghdassarians gave SK Vision a deed of trust on the residential property, but not the vacant lot behind it. SK Vision recorded the deed of trust on May 21, 2012. Some four years later, SK Vision foreclosed the deed of trust and obtained the residential property with a credit bid at the trustee’s sale. SK Vision recorded its trustee’s deed on April 19, 2016. 2. The Two Properties The residential property is situated on a public street, and consists of “the street level and flat livable area where the house and level backyard is situated.” Baghdassarians testified that the “residence built on [the property] consumed the entire parcel.” It contains the house, and a backyard with a swimming pool. It is “surrounded on three sides by a concrete wall. At the

2 The two lots have assessor’s parcel numbers 5810-019-007 and 5810-019-009, respectively. According to the agreed statement provided on appeal, the 007 parcel contains the vacant lot and the 009 parcel is the residential property. This is mistaken. The assessor’s map confirms that 007 is the residential property and 009 is the vacant lot. The agreed statement indicates that Baghdassarians’s testimony was in accord with the assessor’s map. The error is only in the agreed statement’s description of the case, and, unfortunately, crept into the trial court’s judgment, which provides that there is no easement over 009 (which is actually the vacant lot) in favor of 007 (the residential property). At oral argument, the parties agreed the judgment was mistaken in this regard. We will remand with directions for the trial court to correct it.

4 time of construction and thereafter, there was no access provided from the residence parcel to the vacant parcel. [Baghdassarians] built a fence separating the residence lot from the vacant lot.” There is no gate or entryway in the fence allowing access. The vacant lot has no direct access to the street. It “consists of a small downward slope behind the fenced area” of the residential property. “It is vacant land, and essentially unusable.” It did, however, contain the equipment for the residence’s swimming pool. It is not disputed that, as a matter of legal title, the vacant lot is landlocked and has no direct access to any public road. It is also undisputed that the vacant lot is not factually landlocked, and can be reached by crossing over other undeveloped land, owned by a third party. Baghdassarians never contacted the third party who owned this land, to see if it would be amenable to an easement for the vacant lot.3 3. Baghdassarians Uses His Ownership of the Vacant Lot to Interfere with SK Vision’s Use of the Residential Property SK Vision’s deed of trust on the residential property had been in a junior position; after SK Vision foreclosed, the property was still encumbered by two senior liens. In 2016, in order to prevent loss of the property to the senior lienholders, SK Vision filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Part of SK Vision’s bankruptcy plan was to rent out the house for $5000 per month. Baghdassarians objected to the plan,

3 There is no evidence that SK Vision did, either. Kurdoglanyan, at deposition, testified that he did not know who owned the adjacent empty parcel.

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Bluebook (online)
Baghdassarians v. SK Vision CA2/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baghdassarians-v-sk-vision-ca25-calctapp-2022.