Gordon v. 101 Ash CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2024
DocketD081523
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gordon v. 101 Ash CA4/1 (Gordon v. 101 Ash 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
Gordon v. 101 Ash CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/25/24 Gordon v. 101 Ash CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

JOHN A. GORDON, D081523 (Consolidated with D081919) Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2020- 101 ASH, LLC et al., 00028837-CU-FR-CTL)

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from judgments of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Joel R. Wohlfeil, Judge. Affirmed. Aguirre & Severson, Michael J. Aguirre, Maria C. Severson, and Elijah T. Gaglio for Plaintiff and Appellant. Vantage Law Group and Michael H. Riney; Caldarelli Hejmanowski Page & Leer and Marisa Janine-Page for Defendant and Respondent 101 Ash, LLC. Office of the City Attorney, Mara W. Elliot, City Attorney, and M. Travis Phelps, Assistant City Attorney; Schwartz Semerdjian Cauley & Evans, Dick A. Semerdjian and John A. Schena for Defendants and Respondents City of San Diego and Rolando Charvel. Ballard Spahr, Craig Soloman Ganz, Michael S. Myers, and Mitchell L. Turbenson for Defendant and Respondent Wilmington Trust, National Association.

In 2016, defendant City of San Diego (the City)1 entered into a lease-to- own agreement (Lease) for an office building located at 101 Ash Street in downtown San Diego (Ash Street Property or Building). Not long after the City workers had moved into the Building, asbestos contamination required all workers to vacate the Ash Street Property. The City sued the various principals involved in the Lease transaction. Plaintiff John A. Gordon, a taxpayer, brought his own suit against the City and other principals to the Lease (which is the matter pending before us), alleging that the Lease violated the California Constitution and is thus void, and seeking disgorgement of payments the City had made under the Lease. After Gordon’s suit had commenced, the City settled its lawsuit with the various principals (Settlement Agreement). One of the terms of the Settlement Agreement was the termination of the Lease. On appeal, we independently conclude that the claims in Gordon’s operative complaint are moot because the Lease ceased to exist under the Settlement Agreement. We further conclude that the exceptions to the mootness doctrine are inapplicable; and that, without any remaining injury or wrong in his operative complaint, Gordon is not entitled to disgorgement of the rent the City paid under the Lease. We thus affirm the judgments for Defendants.

1 Also named in this lawsuit is defendant Rolando Charvel, sued in his official capacity as the City’s chief financial officer (collectively, the City). 2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW A. Prelude to the Lease In 2014, during a review of office space leases occupied by City staff in downtown San Diego, the City recognized that 49 percent of its then-current leases would expire within the next five years, and that lease rates were then increasing due to demand and a lack of development of office space. As a result, the City began focusing on long-term solutions to control its office space expenses including office ownership, purportedly to “minimize the negative effects of being subject to real estate conditions outside the City’s control, with the ultimate goal of saving taxpayer’s money.” As one example of its focus, in March 2015, the City entered into a lease-to-own

arrangement2 for an office building at Civic Center Plaza (CCP), located at 1200 Third Avenue and 201 A Street. Under this arrangement, the landlord acquired CCP through a loan funded by the lender of CCP, and the City then

2 Lease-to-own agreements are sometimes used by local governments to acquire and use real property. One of the attributes of such agreements is that they avoid the necessity of voter approval for such acquisitions, as required by article 16, section 18, subdivision (a) of the California Constitution, which provides in pertinent part: “No . . . city . . . shall incur any indebtedness or liability in any manner or for any purpose exceeding in any year the income and revenue provided for such year, without the assent of two-thirds of the voters of the public entity voting at an election to be held for that purpose.” (Cal. Const., art. XVI, § 18, subd. (a).) Our Supreme Court has concluded that a long-term, lease-to-own agreement would not violate this provision “so long as liability for each individual rent payment is contingent” on the locality’s use of the leased property during the corresponding rental period, or on “receipt of some additional, contemporaneous consideration.” (Rider v. City of San Diego (1998) 18 Cal.4th 1035, 1047, 1049, citing Doland v. Clark (1904) 143 Cal. 176, 181.) 3 entered into a lease agreement with the landlord and made payments directly to the lender. B. The City’s Lease of the Ash Street Property Since about 2013, the City had engaged Jason Hughes as a “volunteer Special Assistant for Real Estate Services” and had “authorized him to advise [the City] on leasing strategies, negotiate with its potential landlords and property sellers, and represent it in negotiating the terms of any contract or lease for its downtown San Diego office needs.” Ultimately, Hughes’s role included his involvement in the events and transactions leading to the City’s Lease of the Ash Street Property. Prior to the Lease with the City, the Ash Street Property was owned and operated by “entities controlled” by Sandor Shapery (Shapery) and Douglas Manchester (Manchester), specifically, The Gas & Electric Headquarters Building—San Diego, L.P., and Shapery Developers Gas & Electric Property, L.P. (the Manchester and Shapery entities). Hughes engaged in “protracted negotiations” with Shapery and Manchester over the lease or sale of the Ash Street Property to the City. When a deal could not be reached, Hughes commenced negotiations with Cisterra Partners, LLC (Cisterra) on the City’s behalf regarding a lease-to-own plan that the City would approve if Cisterra could acquire the Ash Street Property. In July 2016 the City executed a “letter of intent with Cisterra expressing an intention to enter into a lease-to-own arrangement” for the Ash Street Property. In October 2016, Cisterra pitched the proposed transaction to the City Council; Hughes attended the meeting as the City’s representative. In anticipation of the Lease with the City, Cisterra created a limited liability company, defendant 101 Ash, LLC (Landlord). As an underlying

4 transaction related to the Lease, the Manchester and Shapery entities sold the Ash Street Property to Landlord for $72.4 million. To purchase the Ash Street Property from the Manchester and Shapery

entities, Landlord borrowed $91,793,022.123 from defendant Wilmington Trust, National Association, as trustee for the registered certificate holders of the CGA Capital Credit Lease-Backed Pass-Through Trust, Series 2017-CTL- 1, a Maryland-based provider of private capital (Lender). Landlord executed a promissory note in the same amount, secured in part by a “Deed of Trust, Security Agreement, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Fixture Filing” in favor of Lender. As a condition of obtaining the loan, Landlord assigned and granted Lender a security interest in the Lease, and directed the City to remit to Lender all payments of rent and all other sums the City owed under the Lease. The City subsequently learned that the closing transactions for the Ash Street Property included a transfer to Hughes (the “volunteer Special Assistant for Real Estate Services”) of $4.41 million from Cisterra and/or 101 Ash LLC. Landlord and the City entered into the Lease in mid-November 2016.

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Gordon v. 101 Ash CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-101-ash-ca41-calctapp-2024.