Buckley v. De Jong CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 7, 2013
DocketD059316
StatusUnpublished

This text of Buckley v. De Jong CA4/1 (Buckley v. De Jong CA4/1) 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
Buckley v. De Jong CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 8/7/13 Buckley v. De Jong CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

JAMES BUCKLEY, D059316

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2009-00092288- CU-BC-NC) ARIE DE JONG,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, David G.

Brown, Judge. Reversed.

Niddrie, Fish & Addams, David A. Niddrie; White and Bright, Leigh A. Rayner

and Randolph W. Ortlieb for Defendant and Appellant.

Law Offices of Neal A. Markowitz, Neal A. Markowitz; Lepine Law Group, Amy

J. Lepine, Charles L. Pratt and Sara A. Simmons for Plaintiff and Respondent.

In this breach of contract case, we reverse the $2.8 million verdict entered in favor

of the plaintiff. The record demonstrates that jurors, who believed the plaintiff was not entitled to any damages, compromised their view of the evidence in order to reach a

verdict rather than because they agreed the plaintiff established the right to a substantial

recovery. Our conclusion is based on the responses the trial court gave the jury to

questions they had during the course of deliberation, affidavits of jurors with respect to

what took place during deliberation, and the fact that the amount awarded was

substantially less than the principal damages theory advanced by the plaintiff at trial.

We note the plaintiff's theories of both liability and damages were based in

substantial part on his contention that the defendant failed to properly compensate him

for sums he claimed were due on an earlier agreement, which itself was contingent on the

outcome of contracting decisions made by the governing boards of local municipalities.

Arguably, these theories of liability and damages are barred by public policy. Because

this defense was not raised below and because there may be circumstances which relieve

plaintiff from it in whole or in part, we decline to resolve this issue at this juncture.

Rather, on remand, the defendant may raise public policy as a defense to the plaintiff's

claims, and the plaintiff may fully contest the validity and application of the defense.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

Plaintiff and respondent James Buckley has spent a good deal of his working

career as a salesman, first in the restaurant equipment business and then later selling and

servicing commercial waste disposal contracts. In 1988, Buckley became interested in

exploiting the possibility of turning waste into compost and, in particular, a company

2 called Agripost, which was promoting the concept. As a result of his experience both

selling and managing waste disposal contracts and his interest in waste-to-compost

opportunities, Buckley became very familiar with the waste disposal industry and

collected a substantial amount of information about trash collection companies in

Southern California and their franchise agreements with local municipalities.

Defendant and appellant Arie DeJong has owned and managed a number

businesses in northern San Diego County. In 1976, he purchased a small waste

management company and, over time, operating it as Coast Waste, DeJong built it into a

sizeable enterprise with a fleet of trucks and the only waste transfer station in the north

county area. Between 1976 and 1994, DeJong unsuccessfully attempted to get trash

hauling contracts in Escondido, Poway, Encinitas, and a landfill contract with the cities of

Oceanside, Carlsbad and Escondido.

B. 1994-1997 Agreements

In 1994, Buckley contacted DeJong and tried to interest DeJong in participating in

an Agripost trash-to-compost venture. Because Agripost had not been successful,

DeJong declined to invest in the venture.

However, DeJong was very impressed by all the information Buckley had

collected with respect to the trash collection business in Southern California and, in

September 1994, DeJong enlisted Buckley's assistance in obtaining documents relevant to

the circumstances under which the trash franchise in the City of Poway (Poway) had been

awarded to one of Coast Waste's competitor's, Mashburn Sanitation (Mashburn), in 1991.

3 Without any agreement as to his compensation and after a great deal of effort on

Buckley's part, Buckley obtained copies of the bids and rate sheets submitted by the

bidders on the 1991 Poway trash franchise. DeJong was pleased with Buckley's success

and asked him to obtain any documentation which would show that Mashburn had acted

unlawfully in obtaining the Poway trash franchise. This task became quite time

consuming and, according to Buckley, led the parties to enter into a partnership

agreement in January 1995. Buckley testified at trial that he and DeJong agreed Buckley

was "to bust -- or to expose that there was some corruption or whatever in Poway on that

bid . . . and if [DeJong] got [the Poway franchise], we'd be partners. That was the sum

total."

At the time DeJong made this agreement with Buckley, DeJong was also engaged

in efforts to obtain contracts that had been awarded to Mashburn by the cities of Encinitas

and Escondido. DeJong sued Mashburn with respect to Mashburn's successful Encinitas

bid; in Escondido, DeJong sponsored a ballot initiative which would require competitive

bidding on the city's refuse collection franchises. Shortly after Buckley and DeJong

reached their partnership agreement with respect to Buckley's work on the Poway trash

contract, they agreed to expand the agreement to include work DeJong wanted Buckley to

do on the lawsuit against Mashburn and the Escondido initiative. Thus, according to

Buckley, he would become DeJong's partner on any trash contract DeJong obtained from

Poway, Encinitas or Escondido.

With respect to Poway, Buckley obtained information that showed Mashburn had

4 made unlawful campaign contributions to members of the Poway City Council. This

information led to a Fair Political Practices Commission complaint and fine. Buckley

also initiated litigation against the City of Encinitas and obtained information from the

city about Mashburn's successful bid for the contract there. Finally, Buckley assisted the

campaign consultant DeJong retained to support the Escondido initiative. DeJong paid

Buckley on an hourly basis for the work he did and reimbursed him for his expenses.

None of DeJong and Buckley's efforts to obtain trash contracts in Poway,

Encinitas or Escondido were successful: DeJong's lawsuit against Mashburn was

dismissed on Mashburn's demurrer, Poway did not reopen its trash contract and the

Escondido trash initiative was rejected by voters.

In 1997, DeJong sold Coast Waste to U.S.A. Waste Management (U.S.A. Waste).

The sale included a covenant which prevented DeJong from competing in the north

county area for a period of five years. Buckley testified that at some point after the sale,

DeJong told him that DeJong was able to obtain a premium of $10 million on the sale

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