Capozza v. Rubin CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2025
DocketD083064
StatusUnpublished

This text of Capozza v. Rubin CA4/1 (Capozza v. Rubin 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
Capozza v. Rubin CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 2/18/25 Capozza v. Rubin CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

MICHAEL CAPOZZA, D083064

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. CVPS2102359)

JOSEPH RUBIN et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Godofredo Magno, Judge. Affirmed. McGarrigle, Kenney & Zampiello and Patrick C. McGarrigle for Defendant and Appellant Joseph Rubin. Orsus Gate, Denis Shmidt, Nabil Bisharat; Salvato Boufadel, Gregory M. Salvato and Joseph Boufadel for Defendant and Appellant DLJJ, LLC. Purdy & Bailey and Micah L. Bailey for Plaintiff and Respondent. Joseph Rubin, individually and as Trustee of the Licht 2018 Irrevocable Trust (Rubin), and DLJJ, LLC (DLJJ) (collectively, defendants) appeal the trial court’s order denying Rubin’s special motion to strike a complaint filed by Michael A. Capozza, as Trustee of the Michael A. Capozza Separate Property Trust Dated January 25, 2018, individually and derivatively on behalf of 395 Palm Canyon, LLC (395 PC) (collectively, Capozza), as a strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP). (See Code Civ.

Proc.,1 § 425.16.) DLJJ also seeks to appeal the denial of its joinder in Rubin’s anti-SLAPP motion. Defendants contend the court erred by finding that Capozza’s claims do not arise from protected litigation activity. Defendants also assert that while the court correctly found that the operative complaint’s fraud allegations related to tax filings arose from protected activity, the court erred in finding that Capozza showed a probability of succeeding as to those allegations. DLJJ separately argues that it has standing to appeal the denial of Rubin’s anti-SLAPP motion because it filed a proper motion for joinder. We conclude that defendants failed to meet their burden of showing that the complaint’s allegations about litigation activity are protected under section 425.16, subdivision (e)(1) or (e)(2), because they merely provide context and do not support a claim for recovery. We further conclude that even if the tax-related fraud allegations arise from protected activity, Capozza has met his burden of adducing evidence that, if credited, would sustain a judgment in his favor as to those allegations. Lastly, because we find that DLJJ filed a valid motion to join Rubin’s anti-SLAPP motion, we conclude it has standing to appeal the trial court’s order denying joinder, which we construe as the functional equivalent of an appealable order

1 All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 2 denying an anti-SLAPP motion. Accordingly, we affirm the denial of defendants’ motion to strike. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Background In 2017, Rubin and his family members began raising capital to open cannabis retail businesses in Coachella and Palm Springs, California. Rubin persuaded Capozza to invest in 395 PC, an entity formed to purchase and hold the property from which one of the cannabis businesses (TLPS) would operate. Rubin allegedly told Capozza that he and his family would contribute $700,000 in capital to TLPS and $1.466 million to 395 PC. Impressed by Rubin’s representations about TLPS’s projected profitability and Rubin’s claims about his family’s personal wealth and investment power, Capozza invested $500,000 in 395 PC in 2018. In 2019, Rubin, Capozza, and another investor signed an Operating Agreement to govern 395 PC, appointing Rubin as the company’s initial manager. The Operating Agreement provided that one of the Rubin family’s trusts (Children’s Trust) would contribute $1.466 million in capital to 395 PC. Capozza alleges, however, that the Children’s Trust never fulfilled its obligation to contribute capital and instead misappropriated funds from TLPS and investors. Meanwhile, Rubin took out multiple loans on 395 PC’s property and signed a lease between 395 PC and TLPS which dramatically increased TLPS’s monthly rent. TLPS underperformed after opening its doors, and 395 PC became delinquent in its mortgage payments. Capozza alleges he learned near the end of 2020 that Rubin had commingled funds between 395 PC and TLPS, fraudulently transferred funds out of TLPS, and siphoned funds from 395 PC and TLPS to pay for personal expenses. Capozza also claims that TLPS

3 failed to pay any of the rent it owed to 395 PC, and that Rubin and his family concealed all of these and other violations of the Operating Agreement from investors. B. First Amended Complaint Capozza filed a first amended complaint against defendants and other

entities, including some of Rubin’s family members,2 alleging civil conspiracy and numerous causes of action: breach of fiduciary duty, securities fraud, intentional misrepresentation, concealment, expulsion of a limited liability company member, breach of the Operating Agreement, unfair competition, conversion, civil theft, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duties, aiding and abetting fraud, intentional interference with existing contractual relations, accounting, and breach of lease. 1. Litigation-Related Allegations Among the complaint’s 264 paragraphs, Capozza includes an allegation that “as a result of [Rubin’s] fraud, mismanagement, conversion, misappropriation, and opulent spending habits” in carrying out a hotel and retail development in Coachella (the Glenroy Project), “a multitude of lawsuits have been filed in the last three years, all of which are intertwined with the failed construction project.” In five subsequent paragraphs, the complaint describes lawsuits filed in connection with the Glenroy Project, purportedly to highlight the Rubin family’s “fraud and complete inability to pay their debts[.]” The complaint also alleges that the Rubin family’s fraud in this case was motivated by a desire to shield itself “from the ever-

2 Abraham Stuart Rubin, Annette Rubin, and ASR Development Co., who are Rubin’s co-defendants in the underlying litigation, also filed a notice of appeal in this case. Their appeal was dismissed, however, after they failed to file an opening brief after notice given pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.220(a). 4 increasing number of third-party creditors related to the Glenroy Project and their other failed real estate ventures on top of the fact that at the time, 395 PC was grossly behind on its mortgage payments[.]” Later in the complaint, Capozza alleges that Rubin refused to produce 395 PC’s books and records for inspection, which is the subject of a separate petition for writ of mandate. Capozza claims the Rubin family conspired with each other to conceal their fraud in connection with 395 PC, which “included colluding with the multiple attorneys that the Rubin Family hired to represent 395 PC and TLPS, supposedly as nominal defendants, in connection with the instant lawsuit and the other lawsuit filed against TLPS, which served to drain 395 PC and TLPS of all resources.” Capozza also claims that Rubin used 395 PC and TLPS resources to pay for individual representation by certain named law firms, “which has caused significant damage to 395 PC and which violated the 395 PC Operating Agreement.” 2. Tax-Related Allegations The complaint alleges that Rubin misled 395 PC’s tax advisors, Squar Milner LLP (Squar Milner) and Baker Tilly, LLP (Baker Tilly), into believing that another entity, Rubin Capital Group LLC (RCG), had acquired the Children’s Trust’s entire interest in 395 PC. As a result, Baker Tilly included RCG as a partner in 395 PC’s 2019 tax returns.

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