Falcon Brands, Inc. v. Mousavi & Lee, LLP

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
DocketG059477
StatusPublished

This text of Falcon Brands, Inc. v. Mousavi & Lee, LLP (Falcon Brands, Inc. v. Mousavi & Lee, 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
Falcon Brands, Inc. v. Mousavi & Lee, LLP, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 1/27/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

FALCON BRANDS, INC., et. al.,

Cross-complainants and Appellants, G059477

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2020-01128818)

MOUSAVI & LEE, LLP, et. al., OPINION

Cross-defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Craig Griffin, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part. Armstrong Law Group and John Armstrong for Cross-complainants and Appellants. Kaufman Dolowich Voluck, Andrew J. Waxler, Courtney E. Curtis-Ives and Jennifer E. Newcomb for Cross-defendants and Respondents. * * * Lawyers argue for a living. Some do more than argue. They lace their settlement demands with threats. When does such activity cross the line and become professional misconduct? That is the fundamental question presented in this case. Falcon Brands, Inc. and Coastal Harvest II, LLC (collectively Falcon) appeal here from an order granting respondent’s special motion to strike both causes of action in Falcon’s cross-complaint pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (the anti-SLAPP law). The cross-complaint alleges extortion and intentional interference with a contract against attorney Amy Mousavi and her law firm, Mousavi & Lee, LLP (collectively Mousavi). Falcon argues Mousavi’s e-mail settlement demands, described in detail below, which are the focus of Falcon’s cross-complaint, were not entitled to protection under the anti-SLAPP law because they constituted illegal attempts to force Falcon into settling the underlying matter. The trial court rejected this argument and granted Mousavi’s anti-SLAPP motion. We reverse as to the first cause of action for extortion because we conclude Mousavi’s e-mail settlement demands, when considered in context, were not protected speech in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Flatley v. Mauro (2006) 39 Cal.4th 299 (Flatley). Rather, Mousavi’s escalating series of threats ultimately transformed what had been legitimate demands into something else: extortion. We therefore conclude Falcon’s first cause of action is not protected by the anti-SLAPP law as a result of the well-established “Flatley rule.” We affirm as to the second cause of action, intentional interference with a contract. That cause of action arises out of Mousavi’s actual revelation of damaging information about Falcon to Falcon’s merger partner. Falcon does not contend the revelations were illegal as a matter of law. The revelations were made in furtherance of Mousavi’s contemplated litigation. The trial court correctly concluded the revelations were protected by the litigation privilege. Consequently, they are also protected by the anti-SLAPP statute.

2 FACTS Falcon is in the cannabis business. Beginning in 2017, Mousavi’s client, Nick Honard, worked for Falcon both as a contractor who earned commissions, and as an employee. Honard was fired by Falcon in August 2019. Falcon claims it terminated Honard after it learned he had submitted fraudulent expense reimbursement requests and hired an employee without Falcon’s knowledge or authorization. On September 6, 2019, attorney Mousavi e-mailed a letter to Falcon’s counsel, announcing she had been retained to represent Honard with respect to his potential claims for wrongful termination, misclassification of employment, failure to pay compensation, failure to provide employment records and retaliation for actions protected by whistleblower laws. In the e-mail Mousavi requested that Falcon immediately provide her with certain relevant employment records. On October 8, 2019, Mousavi e-mailed another letter to Falcon’s counsel in which she complained she had not received a response to her earlier records request. She then added that if she did not receive a response by the next day, she “will be notifying Harvest Health & Recreation Inc. and Jason Vedadi since they will be acquiring the above named companies and will be named as defendants in the action that I will be filing against all of the above referenced individuals and entities, if we cannot resolve this matter.” In that same e-mail she summarized Honard’s claims: “[a]side from failure to provide earning statements, Falcon and/or Coastal Harvest have consistently cheated Mr. Honard out of his commissions by forcing him to give his account information (which he was earning commissions from) to other employees and the Rezaei brothers, reducing his commissions, not paying Mr. Honard his commissions, and taking over the accounts. . . . Falcon and Coastal Harvest have refused to reimburse Mr. Honard for his expenses.” “In this correspondence, I am not addressing the wrongful termination and defamation by Mark Malatesta, who on the phone told employees that Mr. Honard was

3 let go because he embezzled from the company. Should we not resolve our dispute, I will seek compensation for the damages in the complaint.” Mousavi’s letter then segued into what it characterized as “BCC Violations.” Under that heading Mousavi alleged this: “It appears that Falcon and Coastal Harvest do not really care about compliance with laws, whether California employment laws, or the requirements of the Bureau of Cannabis Control (“BCC”). I will enumerate some of [the] illegal activities that Falcon and Costal Harvest have engaged in.” Mousavi then itemized eleven allegedly illegal activities engaged in by Falcon: “Instructions from Mr. Malatesta to Mr. Honard to sell the cannabis on the black market; [¶] - Delivering products to the dispensaries in personal vehicles, instead of secure distribution vehicle; [¶] - Instructions to illegally drop a ‘free replacement eighth’ to a man from Vacaville; [¶] - Bribing a [deputy district attorney] when a Falcon employee named Ronald was arrested driving cannabis across the interstate line; [¶] - Making illegal deliveries, against BCC codes, to Better Health Group, Life Enhancement Services, and Highway 29 in Vallejo, CA; [¶] - Delivery of illegal products to Magnolia Wellness in Oakland, CA; [¶] - Reassignment of a rejected order from Mom n Pops Inc. in Sacramento; [¶] - Giving away non-cannabis products with the purchase of cannabis products; [¶] - Changing and re-labeling the cannabis products; [¶] - Illegal transportation of cannabis and cannabis products to Las Vegas, Nevada; and [¶] - Distribution of cannabis products at the Las Vegas photo shoot.” (Italics added.) The October 8 e-mail correspondence did not directly link any of the alleged misconduct to Mousavi’s settlement demand. Instead, after listing the purported “BCC Violations,” Mousavi summarized her analysis of the damages Honard was entitled to recover from Falcon thusly: approximately $130,000 in commissions—which she trebled citing statutory authority—plus nearly $61,000 in unreimbursed expenses and $40,000 in unpaid salary, all of which totaled just over $491,000. Mousavi then offered to settle Honard’s claims for $490,000. She required a response to her demand by the

4 next day: “If I don’t have a response from you by tomorrow, I have no choice but to contact Harvest Health & Recreation Inc. and file a complaint.” Falcon’s counsel responded the next day by cautioning Mousavi against contacting Falcon’s merger partner, Harvest Health and Recreation, Inc. (Harvest). Counsel characterized Mousavi’s stated intention to contact Harvest as “a tortious attempt to interfere with Falcon’s contract and prospective economic advantage,” and pointed out that while “Harvest may or may not in the future acquire Falcon,” it was not yet an owner of Falcon and thus would not be a proper party to any claim. Mousavi quickly replied that “since Harvest Health & Recreation Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
Falcon Brands, Inc. v. Mousavi & Lee, LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falcon-brands-inc-v-mousavi-lee-llp-calctapp-2022.