Darulis v. Rancho Valencia Resort Partners CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 2016
DocketD067663
StatusUnpublished

This text of Darulis v. Rancho Valencia Resort Partners CA4/1 (Darulis v. Rancho Valencia Resort Partners 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
Darulis v. Rancho Valencia Resort Partners CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 1/12/16 Darulis v. Rancho Valencia Resort Partners CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

MARK DARULIS, D067663

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2014-00003465- CU-WT-CTL) RANCHO VALENCIA RESORT PARTNERS, LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

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

Eddie C. Sturgeon, Judge. Affirmed.

Mark Darulis, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Daley & Heft, Lee H. Roistacher, Robert H. Quayle IV and Briana M. Pendergrass

for Defendants and Respondents. I.

INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Mark Darulis is employed as a driver for Dynamex, a company that

contracts with a third party, Edward Don & Company (Edward Don), a supplier of

nonfood items to restaurants, to deliver restaurant supplies to Edward Don's customers.

Edward Don received multiple complaints about Darulis and eventually requested that

Dynamex no longer assign Darulis to make deliveries to Edward Don's customers.

Darulis alleges that one of the complaints was made by defendant Stephanie Tesnow, an

employee of another defendant, Rancho Valencia Resort Partners, LLC (Rancho

Valencia). According to Darulis, Tesnow's complaints about Darulis were false and

constituted slander against him.

Darulis filed this action against Tesnow and Rancho Valencia (the Rancho

Valencia defendants), as well as against Edward Don and the other complaining

customers and their employers.1

Darulis asserted a claim against Tesnow for "defamation/slander," and asserted the

same claim against Rancho Valencia based on his allegation that Rancho Valencia is

liable for Tesnow's alleged defamation/slander under a theory of respondeat superior.

Tesnow and Rancho Valencia filed demurrers to Darulis's operative complaint. The trial

1 Darulis has filed separate appeals with respect to judgments related to the other defendants in this action. 2 court concluded that Tesnow's statements about Darulis were statements of opinion, not

fact, and therefore could not support a cause of action for slander. The court also

determined that Darulis failed to allege facts to establish the requisite causation between

Tesnow's statements and any alleged injury he suffered. The court entered judgment in

favor of the Rancho Valencia defendants.

On appeal, Darulis, acting in propia persona, contends that the trial court erred in

sustaining the Rancho Valencia defendants' demurrers with respect to his claims against

them.2 Darulis contends that the statements he attributes to Tesnow are provably false

assertions of fact, not inactionable opinions, and he further contends that he sufficiently

alleged a link between Tesnow's statements and the loss of his delivery assignment for

Edward Don.

We conclude that the trial court appropriately sustained the Rancho Valencia

defendants' demurrers, and that Darulis cannot demonstrate that the alleged statements

can provide the basis for legal liability. We therefore affirm the judgment with respect to

the Rancho Valencia defendants.

2 The record on appeal does not contain an order with respect to Rancho Valencia's demurrer, and it is not clear whether the trial court ever properly entered an order with respect to Rancho Valencia. However, both parties to this appeal assume, based on the trial court's later judgment in favor of Rancho Valencia, that the court implicitly sustained Rancho Valencia's demurrer without leave to amend based on its ruling with respect to Tesnow. 3 II.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND3

Darulis filed a six-count complaint against multiple defendants, including Rancho

Valencia, Tesnow, two other individuals, the Edward Don & Company (Edward Don)

and Maderas Country Club.4

Darulis alleges that he is a delivery driver for Dynamex. According to the

complaint, Dynamex "retains a number of accounts for which they provide delivery

services . . . one of which is the 'Ed Don' account." The "Ed Don Company provides

products to restaurants such as plates, glasses, napkins, etc., everything a restaurant

would use in its day to day operations except the food."

In approximately 2009, Dynamex assigned "permanent driver[s]" to each of four

routes it had created for the Edward Don account. Darulis was assigned to one of these

routes, and he would "do this route every Tuesday and Thursday," making approximately

25 deliveries per week. In 2010, Darulis was assigned an additional Edward Don route,

which meant that he was making approximately "30 stops a week for Ed Don."

In April 2011, Edward Don "received a complaint from a receiver at the Grand

Del Mar Country Club" stating that Darulis "did not provide good service" and "was

3 Because we are reviewing the trial court's ruling on a demurrer to the complaint, our recitation of the factual background of this matter is derived from the allegations set forth in that pleading. 4 The operative complaint is the "Amended Complaint," filed June 25, 2014. 4 rough in his deliveries." Edward Don contacted Dynamex and asked that Darulis not

deliver to the Grand Del Mar Country Club again.

In March 2013, "another complaint was issued against [Darulis]." A "new

receiver at the Rancho Valencia Resort," later identified as Tesnow, complained that

Darulis was a " 'Hot Mess,' " he "smelled of smoke all the time," "his truck was a total

wreck and [was] so dangerous that if you saw it on the highway you would try to stay as

far away as possible," he "did not have the agility to climb onto the back of his truck,"

and that "he grumbled."

Approximately two and a half weeks after this second complaint was made,

"Darulis received a complaint from the [Maderas] Country Club." Darulis alleges that he

was delivering a "large load of product on his cart and the load had shifted and Darulis

had to hold on to it with both hands." After entering the delivery area, Darulis

"encountered an individual who was just standing around and he raised his voice to

Darulis stating he would appreciate it if he would not do that." Although Darulis was not

sure why the man was upset, Darulis "replied OK and made his delivery and left."

According to the allegations of Darulis's complaint, the person with whom he had had

this encounter "called up Ed Don and in an extremely emotional state complained that

Darulis had disrespected him and broken down/almost broke down their delivery gate."

After Edward Don received this third complaint about Darulis, someone from

Edward Don called a manager at Dynamex and "ordered that Darulis be fired from the

5 Ed Don Account." According to the relevant pleading, "[a]fter 4 years and 3 months and

more than 6500 deliveries for Ed Don, Darulis was out of a job."5

In the complaint, Darulis attempted to set forth a single cause of action against

Tesnow for "defamation/slander." Darulis alleged that Tesnow's statements to a

representative of Edward Don were false accusations, and that Edward Don "considered

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