Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 2017
DocketG054078
StatusPublished

This text of Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove v. Super. Ct. (Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove v. Super. Ct.) 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
Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 6/28/17; pub. & mod. order 7/28/17 (see end of opn.)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

BEACHCOMBER MANAGEMENT CRYSTAL COVE, LLC, et al.,

Petitioners, G054078 v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2016-00839339) THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY, OPINION

Respondent;

DOUGLAS L. SALISBURY, as Trustee, etc., et al.,

Real Party in Interest.

Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate to challenge an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Martha K. Gooding, Judge. Petition granted. Kohut & Kohut, Ronald J. Kohut, Laura Kohut Hoopis and Kristyn E. Kohut for Petitioners. No appearance for Respondent. Weibtraub│Tobin, Gary A. Waldron, Sherry S. Bragg and Darrell P. White for Real Parties in Interest. * * * Defendants Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove, LLC (Management) and Douglas Cavanaugh (collectively, Defendants) challenge the trial court’s order disqualifying the law firm of Kohut & Kohut LLP (Kohut) from continuing to represent Defendants in the underlying matter. Plaintiffs Douglas L. Salisbury, as trustee of the DLS Living Trust, Philip de Carion, and Gina de Carion (collectively, Plaintiffs) brought this derivative lawsuit on behalf of Beachcomber at Crystal Cove, LLC (Company) to challenge various actions Defendants took as the sole managing member of the Company. The duty of confidentiality generally prevents an attorney from continuing to represent a client if the representation conflicts with the attorney’s representation of a previous client in a related matter. Once the previous client establishes a substantial relationship between the successive representations, the court must disqualify the attorney from continuing to represent the second client because the law presumes the attorney received confidential information during the first representation that is relevant to the second. Here, the trial court concluded disqualification was mandatory based on its findings that (1) Defendants and the Company have conflicting interests because the Company is the true plaintiff in this derivative suit that Plaintiffs brought against Defendants on the Company’s behalf, and (2) Kohut previously represented the Company concerning some of the issues raised in this suit, and a substantial relationship

2 therefore exists between that representation and Kohut’s representation of Defendants in this lawsuit. We conclude the trial court erred because it failed to apply a more specific line of cases that governs an attorney’s successive representation of clients in a derivative lawsuit brought on a small or closely held company’s behalf against the insiders who run the company. Under these cases, an attorney may represent the insiders in a derivative lawsuit by the company despite the attorney’s previous representation of the company regarding issues raised in the suit. Unlike the ordinary successive representation case, these cases recognize the attorney’s representation of the insiders does not threaten the attorney’s duty of confidentiality to the company because the insiders already are privy to all of the company’s confidential information. Indeed, any attorney representing the insiders would discover the company’s confidential information because the insiders are the source of that information. Plaintiffs contend these cases do not apply here because the evidence shows Defendants were neither solely in charge of the Company’s operations nor the sole repositories of its confidential information. Plaintiffs, however, misconstrue the underlying rationale of these cases. The critical inquiry is not whether the insiders were solely in charge or the sole repositories of the company’s confidential information. Rather, the critical inquiry is whether the insiders possessed or had access to the same confidential information as the attorney who previously represented the company. The trial court made no findings regarding this critical question, and therefore we grant the petition and issue a writ of mandate directing the court to (1) vacate its order disqualifying Kohut; (2) determine whether the reasoning in these cases permits Kohut to continue representing Defendants in the lawsuit; (3) determine whether the additional grounds Plaintiffs raised in their motion support disqualification; and (4) enter a new order on Plaintiffs’ disqualification motion.

3 I

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2006, Management founded the Beachcomber Café at Crystal Cove, which the Company owns. The Company is a limited liability company and Management serves as its managing member with the exclusive right to operate its business. The Company has five other members who invested in it, but have no right to participate in the day-to-day operations. These members are Plaintiffs and nonparties Ralph Kosmides, Edward and Janis Carpenter, and Michael Hoopis. Management is a limited liability company and Cavanaugh is its managing member with the exclusive right to manage the Company. Cavanaugh also operates and owns an interest in several other restaurants and food service entities, including Ruby’s Diner, Inc., Ruby’s Franchise Systems, Inc., Ruby’s Management, LLC, Ruby’s Retail Brands, LLC, Lighthouse Café, and Malibu Restaurant Group, LLP. Salisbury is an investor in some of these entities, and he has a long history of questioning Cavanaugh’s actions in managing the Company and these other entities. In 2009, Cavanaugh hired Kohut to represent him and certain of the Ruby’s Diner entities regarding Salisbury’s numerous requests for information and challenges to Cavanaugh’s management. Kohut’s representation included defending some of the Ruby’s Diner entities and Cavanaugh in a lawsuit Salisbury filed entitled Salisbury v. Ruby’s Diner (Super. Ct. Orange County, 2011, No. 30-2011-00510153). In 2011, Management hired Kohut to represent it regarding Salisbury’s requests for information and challenges to Cavanaugh’s management of the Company. Since 2011, Kohut regularly corresponded with Salisbury and his counsel about Cavanaugh’s management of the Company. It is undisputed Kohut also has represented the Company twice. First, between April 2010 and November 2011, Kohut represented the Company, Management,

4 and some investors when served with subpoenas in an unrelated lawsuit entitled DeCinces v. Ruby’s Diner, Inc. (Super. Ct. Orange County, 2009, No. 30-2009- 00124231). Second, during September and October 2010, Kohut advised the Company about a former employee’s wrongful termination lawsuit, but the Company’s insurance carrier hired a different counsel to represent the Company in that lawsuit. Defendants assert these are the only occasions Kohut represented the Company, and those representations ended by late 2011. The trial court, however, found Kohut also represented the Company along with Defendants relating to Salisbury’s inquiries and objections to Cavanaugh’s management of the Company before Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit. In March 2016, Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit on the Company’s behalf as a shareholder derivative action against Defendants. The complaint named the Company as a nominal defendant and alleged claims for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, abuse of control, gross negligence and mismanagement, breach of duty of honest services, unjust enrichment, declaratory relief, and accounting. Plaintiffs allege Defendants abused their position as the Company’s managers by diverting Company funds to other Cavanaugh entities, paying themselves unauthorized management fees, misallocating expenses the Company shares with other entities, and refusing to provide Plaintiffs complete access to the Company’s books and records. Defendants hired Kohut to represent them in this lawsuit, and the Company hired independent counsel, the law firm of Corbin, Steelman & Specter, to represent it in this lawsuit.

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Bluebook (online)
Beachcomber Management Crystal Cove v. Super. Ct., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beachcomber-management-crystal-cove-v-super-ct-calctapp-2017.