Clapkin v. Levin

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 2026
DocketB340606
StatusPublished

This text of Clapkin v. Levin (Clapkin v. Levin) 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
Clapkin v. Levin, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/16/26 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

ANDREW B. CLAPKIN et al., B340606

Cross-complainants and (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. Appellants, No. 24STCV02330)

v.

SHANA LEVIN et al.,

Cross-defendants and Appellants.

APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Daniel M. Crowley, Judge. Affirmed; dismissed. Ervin Cohen & Jessup, Robert M. Waxman, Jason L. Haas, and Elliot Z. Chen for Cross-complainants and Appellants. Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger, Gregg A. Martin and Ann S. Lee; Klapach & Klapach and Joseph S. Klapach for Cross-defendants and Appellants. __________________________ INTRODUCTION

In this case, one of at least nine so far between two sets of cousins, Shana Levin and Tamara Levin (the Levins) appeal from an order denying their motion under Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 to strike four causes of action in a cross-complaint filed by Andrew Clapkin, Dina Marshall, Marci Clapkin Weiser, and Karen Callan (the Clapkins). 1 Though the Clapkins’ cross- complaint mentions the Levins’ conduct in some of the other actions, the Clapkins’ causes of action arise from their underlying dispute with the Levins, not from the Levins’ protected litigation activity. Therefore, we affirm the order denying the Levins’ special motion to strike. We also dismiss the Clapkins’ appeal from a nonappealable order denying their motion for attorneys’ fees under section 425.16, subdivision (c).

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Levins and the Clapkins Own Shares in a Family-run Corporation The Levins and the Clapkins are shareholders in JosLevin Realty Corp. of L.A. (JLR), a closely held, family corporation that owns industrial real estate. In the early 1990s Martin Levin, the Levins’ and Clapkins’ grandfather, owned all of JLR’s shares. Martin gave his shares in equal portions to his three children, Sheila Clapkin, Michael Levin, and Ronald Levin. After Ronald transferred his shares back to Martin, Martin distributed those

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 (i.e., Ronald’s) shares equally among Sheila, Michael, and Martin’s seven grandchildren: Michael’s children (the two Levins) and Sheila’s children (the four Clapkins and their sister Sheri Clapkin, the one grandchild not a party to this internecine litigation). 2 Sheila transferred her shares into a trust that named Sheila and her husband as trustees and their five children as successor cotrustees and beneficiaries. Michael played an active role in JLR until 2009, when Andrew became more involved. Andrew managed JLR’s business operations with the help of two employees, Andrew’s husband and Dina’s husband. In 2020 Andrew became president of JLR. In 2009 the Levins disagreed with the Clapkins about whether JLR should acquire new properties or, as the Levins preferred, distribute profits to shareholders. At the 2011 annual shareholders’ meeting the Levins announced they were abstaining from the election and walked out. The Levins did not attend or vote at another annual shareholders’ meeting until 2022. In February 2022 Michael died, and Shana and Tamara inherited his shares. At that time Sheila’s trust was JLR’s largest shareholder, with a 37 percent interest, followed by Shana and Tamara (each with 22.2 percent), and the five Clapkin children (each with 3.7 percent).

2 We refer to the four cross-complainants as the Clapkins and the five Clapkin siblings as the Clapkin children, i.e., {Clapkins} ⊂ {Clapkin children}.

3 B. The Levins and the Clapkins Clash over Control of JLR; the Levins-Clapkins Feud Moves to Court At JLR’s annual shareholder meeting in February 2022 Shana, Dina, and Marci were elected as directors, and the directors appointed Shana as president. During the meeting Tamara had the locks changed at JLR’s corporate office, and the Levins refused to give keys to the Clapkins. After the meeting Shana hired outside advisors, fired Andrew and the other two employees, and limited the Clapkins’ access to JLR’s records. In June 2022 Dina and Marci voted to remove Shana as president and to appoint Marci as president. The Levins, however, refused to accept the results of the election. Between June and September 2022 the Levins and the Clapkins filed the first four actions against each other, including a wrongful termination action by Andrew and a shareholder derivative action by the Levins.

C. The Levins Dispute the Clapkins’ Right To Vote the Trust’s Shares In October 2022 Sheila’s husband resigned “with respect only to the Trust’s interest in” JLR. In November 2022 Sheila’s physicians declared her incapacitated due to Parkinson’s disease dementia. The Clapkins contended that, because Sheila was incapacitated and her husband had resigned as trustee, under the terms of the trust the Clapkin children became successor cotrustees of Sheila’s trust. In November 2022 the Clapkins voted 51.8 percent of JLR’s shares (the trust’s 37 percent, plus their 14.8 percent (3.7 x 4)) to wind up and dissolve JLR. The Clapkins also filed a petition for judicial supervision and appointment of a receiver (the fifth action between the cousins).

4 The Levins disputed the Clapkins’ authority to vote the trust’s shares and opposed dissolving JLR. They contended the transfer of shares from Sheila as trustee to the Clapkin children as successor cotrustees violated JLR’s buy-sell agreement, which Sheila, Michael, and Ronald executed in 1994 “to establish consistent and harmonious policies and to assure continuity of management by persons who have a proprietary interest in” JLR. To further its stated purpose of providing “for the purchase of the Shares of a Shareholder following the death of such Shareholder and on the occurrence of certain other events,” paragraph 2.1 of the buy-sell agreement limits a shareholder’s ability to transfer JLR shares “other than to the Corporation or to the other Shareholders.” The agreement states that, “[n]otwithstanding Paragraph 2.1,” a shareholder may transfer shares to his or her “immediate family” or to “a revocable inter vivos trust for the transferring Shareholder’s benefit and in which the transferring Shareholder continues to maintain control of the transferred Shares in his or her capacity as a trustee of said trust, so long as the transferring Shareholder retains in his or her individual capacity the voting power connected with the Shares so transferred.” The Levins argued the provision regarding transfers to a trust meant “no one other than Sheila” could vote the trust’s shares. They also argued Sheila’s “purported transfer of the ‘voting power’ connected with” her shares was, under the terms of the buy-sell agreement, “void and ineffectual” and should “be deemed to constitute an offer to the remaining shareholders to sell” the shares under the agreement’s involuntary transfer provision. In January 2023 the Levins sent notices of election to purchase the trust’s shares under that provision.

5 The Clapkins disputed the Levins’ interpretation of the buy-sell agreement, arguing the agreement permitted “unlimited transfer of shares to the children of shareholders.” They asserted that, in executing the buy-sell agreement, Sheila, Michael, and Ronald intended “to ensure that ownership and control of JLR would remain within the family” and that they “did not seek to prevent . . . shareholders from transferring shares among themselves, or their shareholders from passing on their shares to their children.” In February 2023 the Levins held an annual shareholders’ meeting; the Clapkins objected on the ground “JLR had been in voluntary dissolution since November 2022.” The Levins and the Clapkins brought separate ballots and held competing elections.

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Clapkin v. Levin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clapkin-v-levin-calctapp-2026.