ECC Capital Corp. v. Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP

9 Cal. App. 5th 885, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 492, 2017 WL 999227, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 230
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 2017
DocketB265760
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 9 Cal. App. 5th 885 (ECC Capital Corp. v. Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP) 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
ECC Capital Corp. v. Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP, 9 Cal. App. 5th 885, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 492, 2017 WL 999227, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 230 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

SEGAL, J.

INTRODUCTION

ECC Capital Corporation (ECC Capital) and its subsidiary, Performance Credit, LLC, formerly known as Encore Credit Corp. (collectively, ECC), appeal from a judgment confirming a final arbitration award of almost $7 million against them and in favor of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP (Manatt). The award was for attorneys’ fees, expert fees, and costs incurred by Manatt as the prevailing party in an arbitration of legal malpractice claims ECC brought against Manatt.

ECC contends the trial court erred in confirming the arbitrator’s interim award denying ECC’s claims because the arbitrator violated mandatory disclosure rules governing arbitrations. ECC also contends the trial court erred in confirming the final award because Manatt’s engagement agreement was illegal, Manatt obtained the award by fraud, and the arbitrator limited ECC’s rights to take discovery and present evidence at the arbitration on the issue of Manatt’s conflict of interest. Because we conclude ECC’s arguments are either meritless or forfeited, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. ECC Contracts with and Then Sues Bear Steams

In October 2006 ECC Capital and Bear Stearns Residential Mortgage Corporation (Bear Stearns) 1 entered into an asset purchase agreement (APA) providing that Bear Stearns would buy ECC Capital’s subprime mortgage loan origination business, Encore Credit Corp (Encore). The APA required Encore to originate a minimum average of $400 million in mortgage loans *890 per month for as many months as it took the parties to close the transaction, a period they expected to last approximately three months. The APA required Bear Stearns to purchase and securitize the loans Encore originated during this “pre-closing period.”

ECC Capital hired Latham & Watkins (Latham) as “deal counsel” for this transaction. ECC Capital also hired Manatt partner Ellen Marshall to help negotiate and draft section 7 (Section 7) of the APA, the portion of the agreement governing Bear Stearns’s obligation to purchase and securitize the loans Encore originated during the preclosing period. According to ECC Capital, Bear Stearns had agreed, and ECC Capital understood and intended, that Bear Stearns would purchase those loans before the borrowers’ first payments were due, so that Bear Stearns would assume all risk of early defaults. ECC Capital claimed it communicated its intention on this point to Marshall and, based on conversations with her, understood the final draft of Section 7 reflected that intention. 2

By December 2006, however, a dispute had arisen between ECC Capital and Bear Stearns about the timing of Bear Stearns’s obligation to purchase the loans Encore originated. Roque Santi, president of ECC Capital and Encore, felt Bear Stearns was “not living up to the spirit of the deal” because Bear Stearns was not purchasing all of the loans “promptly upon origination.” Bear Stearns’s position was that the APA did not obligate it to purchase the loans before the first payments were due, but did prohibit it, after purchasing a loan, from requiring Encore to repurchase the loan in the event of an early payment default (or breach of a representation or warranty), as Bear Stearns had required when previously purchasing loans from Encore.

ECC Capital and Bear Stearns ultimately closed the transaction contemplated by the APA on February 9, 2007. Approximately two months later, ECC filed suit in federal court against Bear Stearns, seeking damages for Bear Stearns’s alleged breach of the APA by, among other things, not buying all of the loans Encore originated during the preclosing period before the due dates of the loans’ first payments. The case settled in July 2009, with ECC receiving $15 million.

*891 B. ECC Sues Latham and Manatt, Who Compel Arbitration

In January 2010 ECC filed this action in state court against Latham and Manatt, asserting causes of action for legal malpractice, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. ECC alleged that poor drafting by Latham and Manatt of Section 7 of the APA had enabled Bear Stearns to refuse to buy loans promptly during the preclosing period, forced ECC to sue Bear Stearns to recover ECC’s resulting losses, and weakened ECC’s position in that litigation, leaving ECC to settle for much less than the $48 million it sought. ECC also asserted Latham and Manatt “failed to make full written disclosure of conflicting interests to [ECC] and to obtain [ECC’s] informed written consent,” but made no specific factual allegations to support this assertion.

Manatt moved to compel arbitration, citing arbitration provisions in an April 2003 engagement agreement between Manatt and Encore and a January 2007 engagement agreement between Manatt and ECC Capital. Latham also moved to compel arbitration, citing an arbitration provision in a March 2005 engagement agreement between Latham and ECC Capital, although Latham conceded it lacked a fully executed copy of that agreement. Latham also argued it could compel arbitration under ECC’s engagement agreements with Manatt because ECC alleged Latham acted as Manatt’s agent (and vice versa) in providing legal services to ECC.

In opposing the motions, ECC did not dispute the validity of the engagement agreements or arbitration provisions cited by Manatt. Rather, ECC argued it had no enforceable arbitration agreement with Latham and, because ECC’s claims against Latham and Manatt arose out of the same transaction, the court should try the claims against both defendants pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2, subdivision (c), 3 to avoid conflicting rulings on common issues of law and fact. The court granted the motions to compel arbitration “under the Manatt contract.”

In October 2010 ECC initiated arbitration against Latham and Manatt before the American Arbitration Association (AAA), asserting the same claims it had asserted in court. 4 Shortly before the arbitration hearing began in January 2013, ECC settled with Latham.

*892 C. ECC Takes Discovery on Manatt’s Alleged Conflict of Interest

The arbitrator limited discovery to requests for production of documents and depositions. One category of documents ECC requested from Manatt was “[a]ll DOCUMENTS concerning [Manatt’s] COMMUNICATIONS or analysis of conflicts of interest concerning the representation of ECC in connection with the BEAR STEARNS TRANSACTION.” ECC also requested billing records for any legal services Manatt provided to The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc., and its affiliates, including Bear Stearns Residential Mortgage Corporation and EMC Mortgage Corporation, from 2004 through 2008.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Cal. App. 5th 885, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 492, 2017 WL 999227, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ecc-capital-corp-v-manatt-phelps-phillips-llp-calctapp-2017.