Cam-Carson, LLC v. Carson Reclamation Authority

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 23, 2022
DocketB312729
StatusPublished

This text of Cam-Carson, LLC v. Carson Reclamation Authority (Cam-Carson, LLC v. Carson Reclamation Authority) 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
Cam-Carson, LLC v. Carson Reclamation Authority, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 8/23/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

CAM-CARSON, LLC, B312729

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County v. Super. Ct. No. 20STCV16461

CARSON RECLAMATION AUTHORITY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Maureen Duffy-Lewis, Judge. Reversed and remanded.

Latham & Watkins, Richard P. Bress, Daniel S. Schecter, Robert J. Ellison and Nima H. Mohebbi for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Aleshire & Wynder, Sunny K. Soltani and June S. Ailin for Defendants and Respondents City of Carson and the Successor Agency to the Carson Redevelopment Agency. ____________________________________ SUMMARY Plaintiff CAM-Carson, LLC sued the City of Carson (City), the Carson Reclamation Authority (CRA) and others for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Plaintiff is a commercial real estate developer. Plaintiff entered contracts with the City and CRA to develop a 40-acre site after the City and CRA remediated soil and groundwater contamination, installed infrastructure, and built roads. Plaintiff alleged the City and CRA engaged in gross mismanagement and malfeasance that created a massive funding deficit which derailed the project, causing damages to plaintiff of over $80 million. Plaintiff seeks to hold the City liable in equity under alter ego principles for the CRA’s breach of a contract between plaintiff and the CRA. We hold the alter ego doctrine may be applied to government entities where the facts justify an equitable finding of liability. Here, the allegations in plaintiff’s second amended complaint are sufficient to survive the City’s demurrer. We cannot say, as a matter of law, the City cannot be held the alter ego of the CRA if plaintiff is able to prove the facts alleged. Accordingly, the trial court erred in sustaining the City’s demurrer to plaintiff’s breach of contract claim. For the same reason, the trial court erred in sustaining the City’s demurrer to plaintiff’s breach of implied covenant claim. Apart from alter ego liability, the court failed to consider plaintiff’s allegations that the City breached the implied covenant in connection with a development agreement to which the City was a party. Accordingly, the judgment of dismissal is reversed.

2 FACTS We recite the facts as alleged in the operative complaint. 1. The Parties and the Background This case involves an undeveloped site the parties call the “157 Acre Site” in Carson. It was operated as a landfill in the 1950’s until its closure in 1965. It has sat vacant since then. The site has soil and groundwater contamination that requires environmental remediation before it can be developed. It is subject to a State remedial action plan. The plaintiff is a joint venture of subsidiaries of two major U.S. commercial real estate developers. The defendants are the City; the CRA, which is a joint powers authority that was “created by the City solely to oversee environmental remediation on the 157 Acre Site”; the Successor Agency to the now-dissolved Carson Redevelopment Authority; and RE | Solutions, LLC (RES), the CRA’s primary contractor. (The first three are sometimes referred to collectively as the city defendants. The CRA and RES are not parties to this appeal.) Over the years, ownership of the 157 Acre Site changed hands between a number of private entities and developers, but none was able to complete the extensive remediation required. In 2006, the site was sold to Carson Marketplace LLC, which entered into an agreement with the Carson Redevelopment Agency to effectuate a redevelopment plan under the State remedial action plan. But that project could not be completed either. In 2012, the Carson Redevelopment Agency was dissolved in accordance with state law. The Carson city council passed a resolution creating the Successor Agency to serve as successor to the redevelopment agency, and “ ‘the City became the Successor

3 Agency of the former redevelopment agency by operation of law.’ ” 1 The Successor Agency assumed the redevelopment agency’s enforceable obligations, including the obligation to fund the remediation work, “an obligation which the City and Successor Agency admit still exists today.” (Boldface & italics omitted.) By 2015, the City determined that a governmental entity would have to acquire the 157 Acre Site and complete the remediation and basic infrastructure before a private developer would agree to build. Early that year, the City created the CRA to acquire the site and complete the remediation. In May 2015, Carson Marketplace transferred its interest in the 157 Acre Site to the CRA, in consideration for, “among other things, the Successor Agency’s obligation to ensure the completion of the remediation work and other infrastructure improvements.” The City and the Successor Agency “have admitted that, in the context of [plaintiff’s] claims, ‘the Successor Agency is directly liable . . . for competently undertaking the Remediation Work and alleviating the Hazardous Substances upon the 157 Acre Site.’ ” From 2016 through 2018, the City and the CRA negotiated with plaintiff, leading to a series of interconnected agreements (the “project agreements”) for the development of 40 acres of the 157 Acre Site, called the “Cell 2 Site.” The project was to be “a state-of-the-art, first-class, regional fashion outlet and retail mall.” For plaintiff to develop the Cell 2 Site, it was critical that the CRA

1 The dissolution law “transfers control of redevelopment agency assets to successor agencies, which are contemplated to be the city or county that created the redevelopment agency [citations]. [The law] requires successor agencies to continue to make payments and perform existing obligations.” (California Redevelopment Assn. v. Matosantos (2011) 53 Cal.4th 231, 251.)

4 and the City first remediate the Cell 2 Site, install infrastructure in the subsurface, construct roads, and much more. The “project agreements” were executed in September 2018. They included a conveyancing agreement between plaintiff and the CRA (exhibit A to plaintiff’s operative complaint); a cooperation agreement between the CRA and the City; and a development agreement between plaintiff and the City. Under the conveyancing agreement, the CRA must construct the remedial systems at its sole cost. The parties acknowledged development would be financially infeasible without remediation, and the CRA “has substantial funds to do so.” The CRA represented it had $75,873,000 as of December 31, 2017. The CRA and the City advised plaintiff the Cell 2 Site remediation would cost $26,888,698. The CRA was also responsible under the conveyancing agreement to fund and construct, on behalf of the City, certain offsite improvements to serve the 157 Acre Site, such as roadway improvements, water and other utilities, that were prerequisites for building out the project’s infrastructure. Some of the offsite and site development improvements were subject to advances of funds from plaintiff. Plaintiff was entitled to recoup its advances from future tax revenues generated by the project and paid to the City. The CRA could not use plaintiff’s advances to fund any remediation work. Plaintiff had the right to approve the CRA’s plan for offsite improvements and site development improvements, including any improvement changes. The cooperation agreement between the CRA and the City required the CRA to report to the City any change orders over a de minimis amount, and in certain cases to obtain plaintiff’s approval.

5 Plaintiff is identified as a third party beneficiary in connection with the project. The CRA retained RES as its primary contractor. RES was tasked with managing the subcontractors.

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Cam-Carson, LLC v. Carson Reclamation Authority, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cam-carson-llc-v-carson-reclamation-authority-calctapp-2022.