Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 2013
DocketG046589
StatusUnpublished

This text of Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3 (Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3) 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
Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 3/5/13 Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

CLEAN CONVERSION TECHNOLOGIES, INC., et al., G046589 Cross-complainants and Respondents, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00483341) v. OPINION CLEANTECH BIOFUELS, INC.,

Cross-defendant and Appellant.

STEVE VANDE VEGTE,

Plaintiff,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00482577)

EDWARD CAMPOS et al.,

Defendants.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, James Di Cesare, Judge. Affirmed. Buchalter Nemer, Robert M. Dato and Michael L. Meeks for Cross- defendant and Appellant. Higgs, Fletcher & Mack, John Morris, Victoria E. Fuller, James M. Peterson and Kevin L. Wheeler for Cross-complainants and Respondents. * * * The court, in a thorny litigation matter over technology licensing and investment fraud, denied a motion to compel arbitration of the issues arising under a cross-complaint. It held that there was an apparent risk of conflicting rulings between an arbitration decision on the cross-complaint and a judgment on the complaint. Moving party and cross-defendant CleanTech Biofuels, Inc. appeals. We affirm. The risk of conflicting rulings is clear. I FACTS A. Fraud in the Inducement Lawsuit: Steve Vande Vegte filed a complaint against five individuals alleged to be officers, directors and managers of, or legal counsel for, Clean Earth Solutions, Inc., a waste management company. (Vande Vegte v. Campos (Super. Ct. Orange County, No. 30-2011-00482577) (Fraud in Inducement Lawsuit).) According to Vande Vegte‟s allegations, the defendants represented to him that they had acquired certain equipment from World Waste Technologies and were in the process of purchasing certain intellectual property rights from that company as well. Allegedly, the defendants represented that they needed immediate funding for pending obligations, including the completion of the intellectual property purchase, and Vande Vegte invested an initial $1 million in Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. based on their representations. In his complaint, Vande Vegte alleged that he had lost his entire investment due to fraud and conspiracy.

2 B. Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit: (1) Complaint— Less than a week later, Vande Vegte filed another complaint, against some of the same defendants as well as certain others, including Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc., and CleanTech Biofuels, Inc.1 (Vande Vegte v. Failla (Super. Ct. Orange County, 30-2011-00483341) (Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit).)2 In the complaint in the Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit, Vande Vegte alleged that CleanTech Biofuels, Inc. was the licensor of certain pressurized steam classification technology, having acquired the patent from World Waste Technologies, and that Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. was the licensee. He further alleged that Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. had purchased $7 million in equipment from World Waste Technologies for use in connection with the licensed technology. Vande Vegte claimed that his investment, which had increased to $1.3 million, was in the nature of a loan, secured by a UCC-1 financing statement against the pressurized steam classification equipment. He represented that his loan had not been repaid when due. Accordingly, he had filed a lawsuit against Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. in San Diego Superior Court and had obtained a default judgment in the amount of

1 The court consolidated the two lawsuits.

2 Curiously, CleanTech Biofuels, Inc. did not designate the complaint in the Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit as a part of the record on appeal. This omission was not lost on CleanTech Biofuels, Inc., inasmuch as it found itself unable to provide a record reference for the complaint in its opening brief. Although it offered a parenthetical reference to a motion to augment, this court has no record of a motion to augment ever having been filed. Having noticed the deficiency in the record, this court notified the parties that it intended to augment the record on its own motion to include a copy of the complaint in the Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit, and gave the parties an opportunity to object. No objection having been received, this court, by order of January 23, 2013, augmented the record to include a copy of the complaint. We are dismayed, to say the least, at this material omission from the record.

3 $1,616,977.56. (Vande Vegte v. Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. (Super. Ct. San Diego, 2011, No. 37-2010-00059236) (Loan Repayment Lawsuit).) In the Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit, Vande Vegte alleged that, after the Loan Repayment Lawsuit was filed, the board of Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. transferred the company‟s primary assets—the equipment, valued at $7 million, and the intellectual property rights, valued at $940,000, to a newly created shill company—Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. He explained that Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. had entered into a 20- year sublicense with Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. and Michael Failla, who had been one of the founding shareholders of Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. and who also had formed Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. Vande Vegte also asserted that in addition to sublicensing the intellectual property rights, Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. transferred to Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. the license “itself”—ostensibly meaning all of the rights of Clean Earth Solutions, Inc. under the license agreement with CleanTech Biofuels, Inc.3 Of particular importance, Vande Vegte alleged that after the transfer of the intellectual property rights to Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. and Failla, CleanTech Biofuels, Inc. pronounced that the unauthorized transfer had effectuated an automatic termination of the license agreement. Vande Vegte, in the Fraudulent Transfer Lawsuit, framed causes of action for fraudulent transfer, breach of fiduciary duty, and declaratory relief. He asserted, inter alia, that the transfers of the equipment and intellectual property rights to Clean Conversion Technologies, Inc. were voidable pursuant to Civil Code sections 3439.04,

3 The parties use inconsistent terminology in referring to the rights under the license, stemming from the Amended and Restated License Agreement dated August 18, 2003, and the rights under the sublicense, arising under the Technology License Agreement dated September 16, 2010. For ease of reference, we shall simply refer to them as rights under the license or the sublicense, or collectively as the intellectual property rights, and will refer to the “transfer” of the rights even when meaning to encompass both transfers.

4 3439.05 and 3439.07, and he sought a court order setting aside the transfers. In his declaratory relief cause of action, Vande Vegte requested the court to declare: (1) the transfer of intellectual property rights had been “avoided”; (2) the attempted transfer of intellectual property rights was void; (3) the “avoided” intellectual property rights under the license and sublicense remained valid and enforceable; and (4) the “avoided” intellectual property rights in the license and sublicense were subject to levy by him. (2) Demurrer— CleanTech Biofuels, Inc. filed a demurrer to the cause of action for declaratory relief. It argued that Vande Vegte lacked standing to seek declaratory relief and the claim for declaratory relief was not ripe for judicial determination. The court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend.

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Bluebook (online)
Clean Conversion Technolgies v. CleanTech Biofuels CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clean-conversion-technolgies-v-cleantech-biofuels-ca43-calctapp-2013.