BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2014
DocketA135829
StatusUnpublished

This text of BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5 (BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5) 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
BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/24/14 BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

BP WEST COAST PRODUCTS LLC et al., A135829 Plaintiffs and Respondents, v. (Solano County KAMAL Y. AZARI et al., Super. Ct. No. FCS 035180) Defendants and Appellants.

Kamal Azari and Pari Azari appeal from an order adding them as judgment debtors, in their capacity as trustees for their family trust, to a judgment obtained against Kamal Azari individually. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 187.) Appellants contend the evidence did not support the order and the amended judgment is void. We will affirm.1 I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Kamal Azari (Azari) and respondent BP West Coast Products LLC (BP) were parties to certain franchise agreements by which Azari operated a gasoline station and

1 Respondent filed a motion to augment the record and a request for judicial notice on June 25, 2013. We granted the motion to augment, deemed the record on appeal to be augmented to include a copy of the documents attached to the motion, and deferred our ruling on the request for judicial notice. Because the request for judicial notice pertains to the same documents as the motion to augment, we now deny the request for judicial notice as moot. 1 convenience store in Vallejo. BP also loaned Azari $525,000 pursuant to two written loan agreements; Azari signed promissory notes that were secured by a deed of trust on the station property. A. BP’s Complaint In February 2010, BP filed a lawsuit against Azari to recover $82,593.85 for unpaid gasoline deliveries, royalties, advertising, and maintenance charges under the franchise agreements, $249,861 for outstanding loan payments, and prejudgment interest, costs, and attorney fees. BP also sought $123,284.29 in liquidated damages in connection with Azari’s termination of his franchise. The complaint included a cause of action for breach of the franchise agreements, a common count for goods sold and delivered, and a claim for foreclosure of the deed of trust on the station property. B. Azari’s Cross-Complaint Azari filed a cross-complaint and amended cross-complaint, asserting claims for breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, declaratory relief, and violation of statute. Azari’s declaratory relief claim represented that a judicial declaration was necessary for Azari to “ascertain his rights and duties under the deed of trust and protect his property from foreclosure.” (Italics added.) C. Trial and Judgment At trial, Azari did not dispute that he owed BP $49,731.68 for unpaid gasoline deliveries and $32,861.17 for unpaid franchise fees; his primary defense was that BP caused him to withhold payment when it deprived him of two bills of lading regarding two loads of gasoline that it had sold and delivered to him. Nor did Azari claim at trial that he was unable to pay BP due to a lack of personal assets or cash flow. To the contrary, he emphasized his substantial personal wealth and financial wherewithal, introducing his personal bank records to indicate that he had millions of dollars at his disposal. Furthermore, Azari did not disclose that the station property at the heart of BP’s foreclosure claim was no longer owned by Azari, but by a family trust.

2 The court issued its tentative decision in August 2011. Azari filed a “Request for Statement of Decision and Objections.” The court overruled Azari’s objections and ordered judgment in favor of BP and against Azari on all causes of action alleged in BP’s complaint and Azari’s operative cross-complaint. Judgment was entered against Azari in the sum of $648,703.20. Azari appealed from the judgment in December 2011 (No. A134076). The appeal was dismissed in January 2012 due to Azari’s failure to designate the record on appeal. D. Azari’s Posttrial Communications Regarding His Assets Not long after judgment had been entered against him, Azari finally disclosed that his assets were held in the family trust, and he had no funds to pay the judgment. 1. The November 2011 Smith Letter BP’s attorney, John Arya, received a letter from Azari’s business consultant, Robert L. Smith, dated November 25, 2011 (Smith Letter). The letter, written on Azari’s behalf, advised BP that Azari and his wife had transferred to their family trust—later identified as “The Kamal and Pari Azari 2003 Living Trust, dated 5-15-03” (Azari Trust)—all of the Azaris’ personal assets, including the station property that was the subject of BP’s foreclosure claim. The letter further admonished that, in light of the Azari Trust’s ownership of these assets, BP’s remedies were “limited, difficult and expensive to assert,” and proposed a settlement of the judgment against Azari based on the potential sale of the station property that belonged to the Azari Trust. The Smith Letter also represented that Azari now had an approximate net worth of just about $6,300, but the Azari Trust had net assets of approximately $6.4 million.2

2 The Smith Letter stated in part: “As you are aware Kamal and his wife have a family trust, that was established in 2009. All of their personal assets were transferred into the trust in early 2009, as a part of a comprehensive estate plan and without any anticipation of litigation with BP. The service station (333 Curtola Parkway) was transferred to the trust by a deed dated February 9, 2009 and recorded October 20, 2009. There are no liquid assets or other holdings in the trust capable of conversion into cash or that are readily saleable. 3 2. The January 2012 Azari E-mail In correspondence to BP’s counsel dated January 11, 2012 (January e-mail), Azari claimed that the trial evidence of his substantial personal assets reflected a misrepresentation to the court by his lawyer. Azari stated: “I am currently diligently working towards liquidation of the station in order to generate liquidity. No cash monies exist. Acknowledge that during the trial Attorney Lewis represented to the Court a different picture of my financial status than what reality is.” E. BP’s Amendment of the Judgment to Add the Azaris as Trustees On January 27, 2012, after receiving the Azari’s January e-mail, BP filed a motion to amend the judgment by adding “Kamal and Pari Azari, [in their capacity] as Trustees

“The trust’s assets consist primarily of various parcels of real property, the house and winery, a vacant parcel, and various improved commercial and residential properties. The trust’s net worth is but a mere fraction of the values attributed to Kamal in 2007 or 2008. I am informed that a fair estimate of the net worth of the trust’s property, after deducting encumbrances of record is approximately [$6.4 million]. “The remedies available to BP as a judgment creditor in this matter are limited, difficult and expensive to assert and, as is the situation with the deed of trust on 333 Curtola Parkway, subject to prior liens of record. Without ready cash, or other available liquid assets, the only apparent solution is through the sale of one or more of the properties. The obvious first choice being the service station site. “Accordingly, I am authorized on behalf of Kamal Y. Azari to submit the following proposal. The parties shall enter into a stipulation providing that Kamal will pay [BP] the sum of $525,000 on or before December 31, 2012, payable through proceeds of sale of the service station directly from escrow.

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Bluebook (online)
BP West Coast Products v. Azari CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bp-west-coast-products-v-azari-ca15-calctapp-2014.