Fuller v. Heurlin

176 Cal. App. 4th 279
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 2009
DocketNo. G040506
StatusPublished

This text of 176 Cal. App. 4th 279 (Fuller v. Heurlin) 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
Fuller v. Heurlin, 176 Cal. App. 4th 279 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

IKOLA, J.

Appellant John M. Heurlin appeals from the judgment entered in the voluntary dissolution of FairWageLaw (FairWage), a professional corporation of which he was a shareholder. He challenges the court’s finding he was not a party to the voluntary dissolution proceeding, which led the court to deny his efforts to secure discovery, obtain summary judgment, and call witnesses at the dissolution hearing.

Heurlin further contends the court violated his right to due process by entering judgment against him. The dissolution judgment assessed FairWage’s dissolution litigation expenses against Heurlin’s shareholder interest, and ordered him to pay FairWage the deficiency of $19,422.

[282]*282On this latter issue, we reverse. Like shareholders generally, Heurlin was not a party to the dissolution proceeding. The dissolution petition did not give Heurlin notice FairWage would seek to recover its litigation expenses from him. And because Heurlin was a nonparty, the dissolution hearing did not afford him the opportunity to be heard on these claims. The court and counsel, mired in an infrequently invoked proceeding for judicial supervision of the voluntary winding up of a corporation, lost sight of fundamental due process principles while adjudicating the respective rights of the adverse parties. We publish this opinion to assist future litigants and the courts in devising procedures to preserve these fundamental guarantees when the principal shareholders and the corporation are making claims against each other during court supervision of a winding up under Corporations Code section 1904.1 Of course, not all judicial supervisions of a corporate winding up will involve claims by the principal shareholders against each other or against the corporation. But where, as here, the principals are, to understate it, not getting along, the essentially supervisory role of the court under sections 1904, 1806, and 1807 cannot be utilized to summarily adjudicate competing claims without affording the parties the benefits and burdens of our normal rules of civil procedure.

FACTS

Heurlin and two other lawyers, respondents David J. Fuller and Henry P. Schrenker, formed FairWage as one-third shareholders intending to prosecute wage and hour class actions. Fuller and Schrenker voted to voluntarily dissolve FairWage in February 2005, when they discovered Heurlin would be suspended for two years from practicing law. Heurlin filed notices of attorney liens in two of FairWage’s class actions in August 2005, claiming an interest in any attorney fee payments to the firm.

After Heurlin filed his attorney fee liens, FairWage petitioned the court to take jurisdiction over the voluntary dissolution. FairWage asked for an order directing all shareholders, creditors, and claimants to show cause why the court should not “make orders and adjudge as to any and all matters ... set forth and permitted in California Corporations Code Sections 1802-1808” and, after a hearing, to “enter [an] order assuming jurisdiction over the winding up of the affairs of FAIRWAGELAW.” It served the petition on Heurlin. The court granted the petition in October 2005. It ordered FairWage to publish notice to creditors and claimants that they would have six months to present their claims. FairWage served the order granting the petition and the order for notice to creditors on Heurlin.

[283]*283Heurlin attempted to obtain discovery in the voluntary dissolution proceeding. He served written discovery requests on Schrenker and Fuller, which he followed by filing motions to compel responses. Schrenker and Fuller opposed the motions on the ground Heurlin was not a named party to the voluntary dissolution proceeding, had not intervened in it, and thus lacked standing to seek discovery. The court apparently agreed and denied the motions in February 2006.

In March 2006, Heurlin submitted a claim against FairWage in the voluntary dissolution proceeding. The claim stated, “in accordance with the order of this Court entered October 4, 2005, Respondent John M. Heurlin makes a claim against FairWage Law, a professional corporation, its officers, agents, and shareholders of not less than $1,091,200.00.”

Also in March 2006, Heurlin filed a separate civil action against FairWage and respondents, asserting various direct and derivative claims against respondents and FairWage. The court stayed litigation in that case. On Heurlin’s motion, the court consolidated Heurlin’s action with the voluntary dissolution in March 2007, while continuing the stay on litigating Heurlin’s complaint. The court continued the stay in April 2007 and denied Heurlin’s motion to lift the stay in January 2008, all in apparent disregard of the consolidation order, which had expressly ruled “that only one set of findings of facts and conclusions of law (if appropriate), or jury decision, will be filed and only one judgment will be entered.”

In the meantime, Heurlin appeared at case management conferences in the voluntary dissolution proceeding and continued, futilely, to request discovery. He also moved for summary judgment on his claim in the voluntary dissolution proceeding in September 2007. He contended the undisputed evidence showed the reasonable value of his legal work on FairWage’s class actions was at least $740,000, and that he was entitled to this sum in quantum meruit as a matter of law.

The court heard argument on Heurlin’s summary judgment motion and denied it, finding he lacked standing to file it. It noted in its minute order, “Service of notice of a hearing per [section 1904] does not make [Heurlin] a respondent in these proceedings. Further, he has not filed a formal response to the petition.”

FairWage moved for an order ratifying its rejection of Heurlin’s claim. The court granted the motion in January 2008. Its order stated FairWage properly rejected the claim “because Heurlin, a shareholder of FairWage, had no [284]*284contract to be paid fees and that his compensation, if any, arose exclusively through his status as a shareholder of FairWage.” It further stated “all known debts owed by FairWage to Heurlin have been paid”—even though just two weeks prior, the court effectively severed Heurlin’s civil action and reverted it to a separate proceeding by continuing to stay it.

The court held a bench trial on the voluntary dissolution in April 2008. At the start, it granted Schrenker and Fuller’s motion in limine to exclude Heurlin from the proceeding, noting that Heurlin was not a party and had a history of disrespecting the court. It also quashed Heurlin’s notice to Schrenker and Fuller to appear at trial and produce documents. The court stated it would allow Heurlin to remain in the courtroom and testify. After the court announced these rulings, Heurlin left the courtroom. The trial proceeded without him.

The court entered a “Judgment of Dissolution” later that month. It declared FairWage was duly wound up and all debts had been paid or provided for. The court noted Heurlin’s claim had been rejected earlier because he “failed to properly intervene in the Dissolution action to raise and assert any causes of action he might have against the corporation or its shareholders.” It ordered FairWage to set aside $100,000 “as a legal reserve for any appeal, and to defend John Heurlin’s consolidated action” (which had been effectively severed due to the perpetual stay).

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Bluebook (online)
176 Cal. App. 4th 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-heurlin-calctapp-2009.