Filed 11/7/24 Haacke v. Herrera CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
CHA HAACKE,
Plaintiff and Appellant, E080450
v. (Super.Ct.No. CVSW2000934)
VICTOR J. HERRERA et al., OPINION
Defendants and Respondents.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Judith F. Hayes, Judge.
(Retired Judge of the San Diego Super. Ct. assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to art.
VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.) Affirmed.
Cha Haacke, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Kaufman Dolowich, Courtney Curtis-Ives, and Robert J. Borowski, for
A brother and sister are beneficiaries of a trust set up by their mother. After the
mother was deemed incompetent, they became co-trustees of the trust. They could not
1 get along, and they agreed to the appointment of a professional fiduciary as a neutral
successor trustee. Alas, this arrangement did not resolve their disputes.
In this lawsuit, the brother and his wife allege the trustee’s attorneys aided and
abetted fraud by the sister and the trustee. The brother’s wife, representing herself,
appeals from the trial court’s order granting the anti-SLAPP motion of two of the
attorneys and dismissing plaintiffs’ first amended complaint. The brother is not an
appellant here, as he has been declared a vexatious litigant and this court denied his 1 request for permission to appeal. We affirm.
FACTS
In 2012, plaintiff Rodney Haacke and his sister Desrie Pfister became co-trustees
of the Haacke Family Trust dated August 23, 1994 (the trust), after their mother was
deemed mentally incompetent. The siblings did not agree on how to administer the trust.
In June 2017, Rodney Haacke petitioned in probate court to remove his sister as co-
trustee (Case No. MCP1700472, the probate action), and separately petitioned to be
appointed as conservator for the mother (Case No. MCP1700476, the conservatorship
action).
The siblings, together with the mother’s attorney, agreed that Robin Shea, a
professional fiduciary, would be appointed as a neutral successor trustee. In October
1 Our order denying the brother permission to appeal states his request focused on whether he should have been declared a vexatious litigant in the first place, and failed to seriously attempt to explain how the appeal has merit and was not filed for purposes of harassment or delay. (See Code Civ. Pro., § 391.7, subd. (b); McColm v. Westwood Park Assn. (1998) 62 Cal.App.4th 1211, 1217.)
2 2017, Shea hired defendants and respondents Victor J. Herrera and Kevin McKenzie of
the law firm Swan, Carpenter, Wallis & McKenzie PC to represent her. The same month,
the probate court accepted the parties’ stipulation and appointed Shea as the successor
trustee of the trust. Herrera has since changed firms but continues to represent the trust.
Soon after her appointment, Shea became concerned about both siblings’ use of
trust assets, and the quality of care being provided to their mother, who had been living
with Rodney Haacke. In December 2017, with the support of the mother’s attorney, Shea
(acting through her attorneys) petitioned to be appointed conservator of the mother’s
person and estate. The court granted the petition and appointed Shea as conservator,
though it did not authorize her to change the mother’s residence.
In January 2018, the mother died. Later that month, Rodney Haacke filed a
petition requesting, among other things, to compel an accounting and to remove Shea as
trustee. The parties reached a settlement agreement on the date the petition was set for
trial, in May 2018, after negotiations between Herrera and Rodney Haacke outside the 2 courtroom. The parties agreed: (1) the petition would be dismissed without prejudice;
(2) Shea would make a partial distribution to both siblings; (3) Shea would place two
2 Herrera declared he “explained” to Rodney Haacke “that if we conducted a five year forensic accounting, at his request, and if it was revealed that Rodney and/or Desrie misused Trust funds [Shea] would have a duty to the Trust to pursue litigation to make the Trust whole. We would seek to have any property that was held outside of the Trust (that previously belonged to the Trust) returned to the Trust, which might include [Rodney Haacke’s residence]. In addition, if there was elder abuse, we may have to pursue that and if found, it might result in Rodney and Desrie being unable to receive from the Trust.”
3 rental properties owned by the trust on the market for fair market value; (4) Shea would
distribute the trust equally between the beneficiaries; (5) Pfister and Rodney Haacke
would “accept and approve all prior co-trustee actions and expenses” during the period
before Shea’s appointment; and (6) Shea would “prepare and file with the court a court
appropriate accounting and request for distribution.”
After the settlement, Rodney Haacke continued to challenge Shea’s administration
of the trust through objections and petitions filed in the probate action and the
conservatorship action, including by opposing any payment of fees to Shea or her
attorneys. The objections and petitions failed. In January 2019, the court approved the
first and final accounting in the conservatorship action, and in July 2019 it approved the
first interim accounting in the probate action, including approval of fees for both the
trustee and her attorneys. In March 2021, the court approved a second accounting in the
probate action, including payment of fees for the trustee and her attorneys.
Meanwhile, in April 2019, plaintiff and appellant Cha Haacke, who is Rodney
Haacke’s wife, filed a civil suit against her husband’s mother’s estate and Shea (Case No.
MCC1900422, the employment lawsuit), claiming unpaid wages for taking care of her
husband’s mother. The court approved Shea’s request to hire different counsel to defend 3 the employment lawsuit on behalf of the trust.
3 Two attorneys from the firm Shea hired to defend the employment action are named defendants in the present lawsuit, but are not party to this appeal.
4 In December 2020, Rodney Haacke and appellant, representing themselves, filed
this lawsuit. Their initial complaint, however, was either never served, or not served until
much later. Herrera and McKenzie contend that they were never served with the initial
complaint. But the register of actions shows that on May 6, 2022—the same day as an
attorney substituted in to represent them—plaintiffs filed proof of service by mail of the
summons and complaint. At a hearing on May 10, 2022, the court was satisfied that all
defendants had been served, and therefore discharged an order to show cause regarding
failure to serve. On appeal, appellant takes the position the original complaint was served
on Herrera and McKenzie on May 9, 2022. Her only record citation in support of this
view, however, is the trial court’s register of actions, and it is not apparent how she
derives that date from that source. The proofs of service filed May 6, 2022, were not
included in the record on appeal, so we have no way to know when they show the
documents were mailed.
In 2020 and 2021, Rodney Haacke also filed several additional, separate lawsuits,
including one seeking rescission of the May 2018 settlement agreement. In March 2022,
on Shea’s motion (represented by Herrera), the trial court in the rescission action deemed
Rodney Haacke a vexatious litigant.
In this case, on May 10, 2022, plaintiffs served McKenzie with a first amended
complaint. The version of the first amended complaint filed with the trial court on May
31, 2022, differs slightly from the version served on defendants, in that only in the filed
version is Shea named as a defendant. Our record does not reflect when or if Herrera was
5 served with the first amended complaint; only one proof of service, showing service on
McKenzie, was filed with the court.
The first amended complaint (both versions) asserts four causes of action. Only
one of them, however, is asserted by appellant: the first cause of action for aiding and 4 abetting fraud. A similar cause of action was also included as the first cause of action in
the initial complaint.
The pleaded theory of liability in that first cause of action is that Shea, aided and
abetted by her attorneys, never intended to distribute the trust equally between
beneficiaries, as stated in the May 2018 agreement. Instead, she conspired with her
attorneys and with Pfister to misallocate trust assets, including by denying appellant any
pay for her work as caretaker for her husband’s mother. Specifically, the complaint
asserts Herrera and McKenzie assisted Pfister and Shea in committing fraud by “(1)
having the probate court appoint Ms. Shea to use her position as a trustee and conservator
to cover up [Pfister’s] theft; (2) refusing and failing to recover or marshal the Trust
assets; (3) refusing and failing to hire a forensic accountant nor prosecute [Pfister’s]
illegal activities; (4) continuing to provide [Pfister] and Ms. Shea with legal
representation and support in filing court motions, stipulations, MSJ, etc., against the
Plaintiffs; (5) refusing and failing to pay the Plaintiffs’ legitimate wage claims and
4 The other three causes of action were alleged only by Rodney Haacke so are not at issue in this appeal. Those causes of action are for aiding and abetting breach of contract, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duties, and intentional interference with expected inheritance.
6 damages; (6) using the Trust as [Pfister’s] and Ms. Shea’s ‘protection fund’; [and] (7)
attempting to distribute the ‘remaining’ Trust assets to [Pfister] while all defendants
intentionally put the Trust as Rodney [Haacke]’s equal share and rightful inheritance at
risk of insolvency.”
On July 11, 2022, Herrera and McKensie moved to strike the first amended
complaint under the anti-SLAPP statute, Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (section
425.16). The trial court granted the motion.
DISCUSSION
The trial court found that all plaintiffs’ claims, including appellant’s claim for
aiding and abetting fraud here, arise from activity protected by the anti-SLAPP statute,
and that plaintiffs failed to demonstrate their claims had minimal merit. We agree.
A. Applicable law
Section 425.16 “‘sets out a procedure for striking complaints in harassing lawsuits
that are commonly known as SLAPP suits . . . , which are brought to challenge the
exercise of constitutionally protected free speech rights.’” (Sweetwater Union High
School Dist. v. Gilbane Building Co. (2019) 6 Cal.5th 931, 940.) “A cause of action
arising from a person’s act in furtherance of the ‘right of petition or free speech under the
[federal or state] Constitution in connection with a public issue shall be subject to a
special motion to strike, unless the court determines that the plaintiff has established that
there is a probability’ that the claim will prevail.” (Ibid., quoting § 425.16, subd. (b)(1).)
7 “The anti-SLAPP statute does not insulate defendants from any liability for claims
arising from the protected rights of petition or speech. It only provides a procedure for
weeding out, at an early stage, meritless claims arising from protected activity.” (Baral v.
Schnitt (2016) 1 Cal.5th 376, 384 (Baral).) Thus, “[a]nti-SLAPP motions are evaluated
through a two-step process.” (Park v. Board of Trustees of California State University
(2017) 2 Cal.5th 1057, 1061 (Park).) “Initially, the moving defendant bears the burden
of establishing that the challenged allegations or claims ‘aris[e] from’ protected activity
in which the defendant has engaged.” (Ibid.) “If the defendant carries its burden, the
plaintiff must then demonstrate its claims have at least ‘minimal merit.’” (Ibid.) At this
second stage, the court “does not weigh evidence or resolve conflicting factual claims.
Its inquiry is limited to whether the plaintiff has stated a legally sufficient claim and
made a prima facie factual showing sufficient to sustain a favorable judgment.” (Baral,
supra, 1 Cal.5th at pp. 384-385.)
“Analysis of an anti-SLAPP motion is not confined to evaluating whether an entire
cause of action, as pleaded by the plaintiff, arises from protected activity or has merit.
Instead, courts should analyze each claim for relief—each act or set of acts supplying a
basis for relief, of which there may be several in a single pleaded cause of action—to
determine whether the acts are protected and, if so, whether the claim they give rise to
has the requisite degree of merit to survive the motion.” (Bonni v. St. Joseph Health
System (2021) 11 Cal.5th 995, 1010 (Bonni).)
8 “We review de novo the grant or denial of an anti-SLAPP motion.” (Park, supra,
2 Cal.5th 1057, 1067.)
B. Analysis
1. Timeliness
Appellant argues that Herrera and McKenzie’s anti-SLAPP motion should
have been denied as untimely filed. Any timeliness argument could be deemed forfeited
because it was never raised in the trial court. (Hunter v. CBS Broadcasting Inc. (2013)
221 Cal.App.4th 1510, 1526; see also Bogacki v. Board of Supervisors (1971) 5 Cal.3d
771, 780 [arguments generally not to be considered for first time on appeal, particularly
“when the new theory depends on controverted factual questions”].) We prefer, however,
to address the issue on the merits. We reject this argument for two reasons.
First, the record on appeal indicates the motion was timely, or at least does not
establish that it was untimely. A defendant’s deadline for filing an anti-SLAPP motion is
measured from service—not filing—of the complaint. (§ 425.16, subd. (f).) The
defendant has sixty days from service of the first complaint (or cross-complaint) that
pleads the cause of action falling within the anti-SLAPP statute. (Ibid.; see Newport
Harbor Ventures, LLC v. Morris Cerullo World Evangelism (2018) 4 Cal.5th 637, 641,
646 (Newport Harbor).) In this case, it is unusually difficult to identify which complaint
that is, and when that complaint was served. The initial complaint and the first amended
complaint each have a similar cause of action that would trigger the running of the
9 deadline. But in ruling on the anti-SLAPP motion, the trial court was not asked to decide
the disputed factual question of when each of those complaints was served.
Nevertheless, if the initial complaint was served by mail on May 6, 2022, as the
register of actions suggests, Herrera and McKenzie’s deadline for filing an anti-SLAPP
motion would be extended by five calendar days, and thus the motion they filed would be 5 timely. (See Cal. Code Civ. Proc., § 1013, subd. (a) [when a document is served by
mail, any “right or duty to do any act or make any response within any period or on a date
certain after service of the document . . . shall be extended five calendar days” if both
place of mailing and place of address are within California].) If the sixty-day period
began to run on May 10, 2022, when McKenzie was served by substitute service with the 6 first amended complaint, again, the anti-SLAPP motion would be timely.
Second, even if Hererra and McKenzie’s anti-SLAPP motion were untimely—say,
if the proofs of service plaintiffs filed on May 6, 2022, showed the initial complaint was
served by mail before that date—the trial court has “considerable discretion” to consider
untimely anti-SLAPP motions. (Platypus Wear, Inc. v. Goldberg (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th
772, 787.) Appellant has not articulated any viable reason it would not have been within
the trial court’s discretion to do so here.
5 The sixty fifth day would have been July 10, 2022, but that was a Sunday. The deadline, therefore, would be July 11, 2022, which is the date the anti-SLAPP motion was filed. 6 The sixtieth day would have been July 9, 2022, but that was a Saturday. The deadline, therefore, still would be July 11, 2022.
10 Appellant’s comparison of this case to Newport Harbor is unavailing. In that
case, our Supreme Court agreed with both the trial court and the court of appeal that an
anti-SLAPP motion filed years after service of the first complaint that pleaded a cause of
action coming within the scope of the anti-SLAPP statute, though less than 60 days after
an amended complaint with a similar cause of action, was untimely. (Newport Harbor,
supra, 4 Cal.5th at pp. 641, 646.) Herrera and McKenzie’s anti-SLAPP motion was filed
long after the initial complaint was filed, but service of the initial complaint was delayed,
so the sixty-day period for filing an anti-SLAPP motion did not immediately begin to run.
At most, the motion was untimely by only a short period and may well not have been late
at all. (See Trapp v. Naiman (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 113, 122-123 [finding no abuse of
trial court’s implied exercise of discretion to consider arguably untimely motion].) Also,
service by mail may not have resulted in actual notice of the lawsuit to Herrera and
McKenzie.
Thus, we will not find the anti-SLAPP motion untimely.
2. Protected activity
Appellant contests whether her cause of action against Herrera and McKenzie
arises from protected activity. It does.
It is well established that “all communicative acts performed by attorneys as part
of their representation of a client in a judicial proceeding or other petitioning context are
11 7 per se protected as petitioning activity by the anti-SLAPP statute.” (Cabral v. Martins
(2009) 177 Cal.App.4th 471, 480 (Cabral); see § 425.16, subd. (e)(1) and (e)(2).) The
protection also extends to “communications that are intimately intertwined with, and
preparatory to, the filing of judicial proceedings.” (Cabral, at p. 482.)
McKenzie declared his “only involvement in the matters alleged by Plaintiffs . . .
was to appear in court on Mr. Herrera’s behalf when he had a scheduling conflict,” which
occurred “2-3 times total.” Herrera’s declaration details his representation of Shea in the
various lawsuits filed by plaintiffs, including opposing several attempts to remove Shea
as trustee, negotiating the May 2018 settlement, and assisting Shea in preparing,
submitting, and obtaining court approval of accountings. Plaintiffs produced no evidence
showing McKenzie and Herrera did anything other than provide “normal, routine legal
services,” which are protected under the anti-SLAPP statute. (Cabral, supra, 177
Cal.App.4th at p. 481.) Thus, Herrera and McKenzie carried their burden on the first
prong of the anti-SLAPP analysis.
In support of a different conclusion, appellant argues Herrera and McKenzie’s
conduct falls within the anti-SLAPP law’s narrow exception for illegal conduct. The
argument is unpersuasive. The anti-SLAPP law exempts from the definition of protected
activity conduct that is criminal, where the criminality of the conduct is either conceded
by the defendant or conclusively established as a matter of law. (Flatley v. Mauro (2006)
7 Thus, appellant’s argument that Herrera and McKenzie “had no standing” to bring an anti-SLAPP motion does not merit extended discussion.
12 39 Cal.4th 299, 320 (Flatley) [where “the defendant concedes, or the evidence
conclusively establishes, that the assertedly protected speech or petition activity was
illegal as a matter of law, the defendant is precluded from using the anti-SLAPP statute to
strike the plaintiff’s action”]; see Towner v. County of Ventura (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th
761, 771 [interpreting Flatley’s use of the phrase “illegal” to mean “criminal, not merely
a violation of a statute”].) Conduct falling within this definition is “not in furtherance of
constitutionally protected speech or petition rights,” so is outside the anti-SLAPP law’s
protection. (Flatley, at p. 324.)
Appellant claims Pfister and Shea illegally failed to pay her wages owed for caring
for her husband’s mother, and that the defendant attorneys aided and abetted them in
doing so. Nothing in evidence, however, conclusively establishes that any improper
nonpayment happened, or if it did, that it was a criminal act. (See Pen. Code, § 487m,
subd. (b) [wage theft requires “intentional deprivation of wages . . . or other
compensation by unlawful means, with the knowledge that the wages . . . or other
compensation is due to the employee” (italics added)].) Appellant’s assertion that it is
“undisputed” that she “suffered wage theft” is false. The merits of appellant’s wage 8 claims are, so far as we are aware, being adjudicated in separate (civil) litigation. (See
also Gerbosi v. Gaims, Weil, West & Epstein, LLP (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 435, 446
8 In the employment lawsuit, the trial court granted summary judgment against appellant on statute of limitations grounds, but we reversed that order in an unpublished decision. (See Haacke v. Shea (June 24, 2022, E076015) [nonpub. opn.].) The status of that case is not discernible from our record.
13 [“when a defendant’s assertedly protected activity may or may not be criminal activity,
the defendant may invoke the anti-SLAPP statute unless the activity is criminal as a
matter of law”].)
Further, even if it turns out Pfister and or Shea failed to pay appellant some
amount she was due, there is nothing criminal about attorneys representing their client in
defending a disputed claim. Framing the issue as assisting a theft, rather than defending a
claim of nonpayment of amounts due, does not change the analysis. (See, e.g., Cabral,
supra, 177 Cal.App.4th 471, 481 [even if defendant attorney’s actions “had the effect of
defeating or forestalling [the plaintiff’s] ability to execute her judgment for child support,
thereby (according to [the plaintiff]) violating the child support evasion statutes, this is
not the kind of illegality involved in Flatley”]; Bergstein v. Strook & Strook & Lavan
LLP (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 793, 802 (Bergstein) [defendant attorneys’ alleged aid to
their client in “theft of confidential and privileged documents and information, and in the
unlawful purchase of claims for the purpose of forcing an involuntary bankruptcy,” was
protected litigation activity].)
Appellant proposes that Herrera and McKenzie’s petitioning activity should be
considered “evidence of defendants’ alleged wrongful conduct” that is “only incidental to
[her] cause of action,” and thus not protected activity. Not so. There are no alleged acts
by Herrera and McKenzie that are not part of their representation of Shea. And it is the
“acts supplying a basis for relief” that matter in the anti-SLAPP analysis, not the
plaintiff’s framing of the cause of action. (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 1010.)
14 Appellant also argues her claim concerns “only private matters” and lacks
sufficient connection “with a public issue” for the anti-SLAPP statute to apply. This
argument muddles together the four parts of section 425.16, subdivision (e). The parts
applicable here, section 425.16, subdivisions (e)(1) and (e)(2), do not include the
language “in connection with an issue of public interest,” which appears in subdivisions
(e)(3) and (e)(4). Our Supreme Court has construed this difference to mean there is no
“separate ‘public issue’ requirement” for causes of action, such as appellant’s, that fall
within section 425.16, subdivisions (e)(1) or (e)(2). (Briggs v. Eden Council for Hope
and Opportunity (1999) 19 Cal.4th 1106, 1113.) Rather, “plainly read, section 425.16
encompasses any cause of action against a person arising from any statement or writing
made in, or in connection with an issue under consideration or review by, an official
proceeding or body.” (Ibid.) The court expressly rejected the statutory interpretation
appellant adopts here. (Id. at p. 1114.)
We find Herrera and McKenzie carried their burden of demonstrating the claim
appellant asserts against them arose from protected activity. We turn, then, to the second
3. Probability of prevailing
In her opening brief, appellant’s only argument addressing the second prong of the
anti-SLAPP analysis is her contention that the litigation privilege does not bar her cause
of action against Herrera and McKenzie. That argument, however, lacks merit.
15 The litigation privilege, codified at Civil Code section 47, subdivision (b),
provides that a “‘publication or broadcast’ made as part of a ‘judicial proceeding’” is
privileged. (Action Apartment Assn., Inc. v. City of Santa Monica (2007) 41 Cal.4th
1232, 1241.) “[T]he privilege applies to any communication (1) made in judicial or
quasi-judicial proceedings; (2) by litigants or other participants authorized by law; (3) to
achieve the objects of the litigation; and (4) that have some connection or logical relation
to the action.” (Silberg v. Anderson (1990) 50 Cal.3d 205, 212 (Silberg).) Statements in
pleadings, motions, and other court filings are, of course, core examples of such
communications. (E.g., Optional Capital, Inc. v. Akin Gump Strauss, Hauer & Feld LLP
(2017) 18 Cal.App.5th 95, 118.) “Numerous courts have held that statements relating to
settlements also fall within the [litigation] privilege, including those made during
settlement negotiations.” (Navarro v. IHOP Properties, Inc. (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th
834, 843-844.)
“To effectuate its vital purposes, the litigation privilege is held to be absolute in
nature.” (Silberg, supra, 50 Cal.3d at p. 215.) If a communication falls within its scope,
the privilege applies no matter whether it is “true or false or made with malice or
without” it. (Holland v. Jones (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 378, 382.) The privilege applies
even if the communication is fraudulent. (Herterich v. Peltner (2018) 20 Cal.App.5th
1132, 1141.) “The only exception to application of [the litigation privilege] to tort suits
has been for malicious prosecution actions.” (Silberg, at p. 216.) It follows that
appellant’s cause of action, based on purported fraud in connection with the May 2018
16 settlement agreement and various litigation activities by Herrera and McKenzie on behalf
of their client, is barred by the litigation privilege and thus has no likelihood of success.
Appellant cites two cases in support of a different conclusion. In People v.
Persolve, LLC (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 1267, 1275-1277, the court of appeal held the
litigation privilege does not apply to enforcement claims brought under California’s
Rosenthal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act or the Federal Fair Debt Collection
Practices Acts. In Shafer v. Berger, Kahn, Shafton, Moss, Figler, Simon & Gladstone
(2003) 107 Cal.App.4th 54, 78-82, the court of appeal held the litigation privilege does
not apply to the statutory cause of action created by Insurance Code section 11580.
Neither of these holdings applies here.
Appellant’s cause of action arises from acts protected under the anti-SLAPP
statute, and she cannot demonstrate any likelihood of success because the litigation
privilege applies. The trial court was correct to grant Herrera and McKenzie’s anti-
SLAPP motion.
17 DISPOSITION
The trial court’s order granting Herrera and McKenzie’s anti-SLAPP motion is
affirmed. Herrera and McKenzie are awarded costs on appeal.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
RAPHAEL J.
We concur:
MILLER Acting P. J.
FIELDS J.