E-Commerce Lighting, Inc. v. E-Commerce Trade LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 2022
DocketE074525
StatusPublished

This text of E-Commerce Lighting, Inc. v. E-Commerce Trade LLC (E-Commerce Lighting, Inc. v. E-Commerce Trade LLC) 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
E-Commerce Lighting, Inc. v. E-Commerce Trade LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

See Dissenting Opinion

Filed 12/9/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

E-COMMERCE LIGHTING, INC., et al.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants, E074525

v. (Super.Ct.No. PSC1701019)

E-COMMERCE TRADE LLC, OPINION

Defendant and Respondent;

BANC OF CALIFORNIA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

Intervener and Respondent.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. David M. Chapman,

Judge. Reversed.

Best Best & Krieger, Howard B. Golds, Thomas M. O’Connell, Sunny H. Huynh

Christina M. Morgan, Adam P. Smith and Victor L. Wolf for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

The Daley Law Firm, Darrell Daley; Slovak Baron Empey Murphy & Pinkney and

Brent S. Clemmer for Defendant and Respondent.

Buchalter, Robert S. McWhorter and Jacqueline N. Vu for Intervener and

Respondent. An arbitrator determined that a borrower and lender were liable to each other for

similar amounts, each roughly two and a half million dollars. He then offset the awards

against each other, resolving the disputed issue of whether a setoff was proper.

A bank, however, had also lent money to the borrower. That bank, not a party to

the arbitration, believed that the setoff effectively circumvented the agreement among it,

the borrower, and the other lender that the bank’s loan had priority and would be paid

back first. Instead of being offset against the other lender’s award, the bank believed, the

borrower’s award should go toward satisfying the bank’s loan. It thus convinced the trial

court to correct the arbitrator’s award by eliminating the setoff.

Per statute, the trial court could correct the award only “without affecting the

merits of the decision upon the controversy submitted.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1286.6,

subd. (b).) This helps ensure that a party cannot use a petition to correct an arbitration

award as an appeal of an arbitrator’s considered decision. We hold that, on the facts

presented, the correction affected the merits of the arbitrator’s decision. Accordingly, the 1 correction was improper, and we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Frank Halcovich started E-Commerce Lighting, Inc (ECL) in 2013 to sell lighting

equipment on the internet. In 2015, E-Commerce Trade LLC (Trade) purchased ECL’s

assets for $11.5 million.

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

2 Trade obtained three loans when purchasing the assets. It borrowed $2.5 million

of the purchase price from ECL under a promissory note. It also obtained two loans from

Banc of California, National Association (the Bank), one for $5 million and the other for

approximately $1.25 million. Trade, ECL, and the Bank also entered into a subordination

agreement whereby ECL’s promissory note would be subordinated to the Bank’s loans.

In 2017, ECL sued Trade for breach of contract, alleging that Trade defaulted on

the promissory note. Trade moved to compel arbitration, and the two soon stipulated to

arbitration.

ECL pursued its breach of contract claim against Trade in arbitration, but Trade

also sought damages against ECL for breach of contract by violating the asset purchase

agreement. The Bank did not participate in the arbitration.

The arbitrator found that ECL, Halcovich, and Wendy Hertz (ECL’s chief

financial officer and Halcovich’s wife) “all engaged in numerous breaches” of the asset

purchase agreement by concealing information from Trade during the sale. ECL thus

owed Trade contract damages. (The arbitrator found in ECL’s favor on a fraud claim

based on the same allegations.) But the arbitrator also found that Trade owed ECL under

the note, so Trade also owed ECL contract damages.

The two awards largely cancelled each other out. In its closing brief in arbitration,

Trade argued that it had “an equitable right to set off” the two awards, citing California

cases and distinguishing a case ECL cited for the proposition that an offset was not

warranted. (Our record does not contain ECL’s closing brief in arbitration.) After

3 finding that Trade owed ECL $2,756,635.66 and that ECL owed Trade $2,611,463.58,

with each amount representing damages, interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs, the arbitrator

offset the awards against each other, issuing only a single final award of the difference,

$145,172.08, to ECL. The arbitrator explained that there was “a dispute between the

parties” as to whether the amounts can be offset and that “I find that an offset is

allowable under California law.”

Though it had sought the setoff in arbitration, Trade petitioned to correct the

arbitration award to eliminate it. Trade’s primary basis for eliminating the setoff was that

the offset “negatively impacted the rights” of the Bank. The Bank intervened and joined

that position. The Bank had no quarrel with the arbitrator’s finding that ECL and Trade

each was liable to the other, nor for the particular amounts. The Bank claimed, however,

that the arbitrator erred by offsetting the awards against each other. The Bank contended

that the offset effectively prioritized Trade’s promissory note payments to ECL over

Trade’s loan obligations to the Bank, when the subordination agreement required the

opposite. As the Bank pointed out, if the arbitrator had not offset the awards against each

other, ECL would have paid Trade roughly $2.61 million, and Trade would have been

obligated to use that money to pay off the Bank’s senior debt. Instead, the offset resulted 2 in Trade effectively paying that amount (and roughly $145,000 more) back to ECL.

2 The parties all appear to agree that Trade is insolvent, so Trade cannot pay the Bank using assets other than the contract damages that ECL owes Trade. Not only did ECL sue Trade for missed promissory note payments, the Bank has claimed that Trade has defaulted on both of its loans by missing payments.

4 Trade and the Bank also argued that the setoff was in error because the individuals were

jointly liable to Trade but Trade was not liable to them.

Finding that the arbitrator’s setoff “effectively allow[ed] ECL to circumvent the

subordination agreement” and that “[t]he award can be easily corrected by simply

eliminating the setoff,” the trial court granted Trade’s petition to correct the award and

denied ECL’s petition to confirm it. After the trial court entered judgment accordingly,

ECL, Halcovich, and Hertz appealed. Only Trade was designated as a respondent in the

notice of appeal, but we have since granted the Bank’s motion to proceed as an intervenor 3 and respondent in this appeal.

DISCUSSION

“The scope of judicial review of arbitration awards is extremely narrow.”

(Department of Personnel Administration v. California Correctional Peace Officers

Assn. (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 1193, 1200.) With very limited exceptions, “an award

reached by an arbitrator pursuant to a contractual agreement to arbitrate is not subject to

judicial review except on the grounds set forth in sections 1286.2 (to vacate) and 1286.6

(for correction).” (Moncharsh v. Heily & Blase (1992) 3 Cal.4th 1, 33 (Moncharsh).)

“[C]ourts will not review the arbitrator’s reasoning or the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting the award.” (Cooper v. Lavely & Singer Professional Corp. (2014) 230

3 Trade filed the respondent’s brief in this case, which the Bank joined in full. We refer to the arguments made in Trade’s brief as the Bank’s arguments.

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