Hardell v. Vanzyl

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 2024
DocketA168113
StatusPublished

This text of Hardell v. Vanzyl (Hardell v. Vanzyl) 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
Hardell v. Vanzyl, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 6/20/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

CAILIN HARDELL, Plaintiff and Appellant, A168113 v. ADRIAN VANZYL, (City & County of San Francisco Defendant and Respondent. Super. Ct. No. CGC22602112)

Cailin Hardell appeals from the trial court’s order granting Adrian Vanzyl’s motion to quash. Hardell sued Vanzyl, along with Waleed Mohsen and Blumberg Capital, for sexual assault and battery, sexual harassment, and retaliation, among other claims, relating to an incident in Miami, Florida in March 2022. Vanzyl moved to quash service of summons of the first amended complaint, arguing that, as a non-resident defendant, he had insufficient contacts with California for the trial court to exercise either specific or general personal jurisdiction over him. The trial court agreed, and also denied Hardell’s request to conduct jurisdictional discovery. On appeal, Hardell argues that the trial court erred in finding that Vanzyl was not domiciled or continuously and systematically present in California in March 2022, and otherwise that Vanzyl had insufficient suit- related contacts with California. She also argues that the court should have granted her request for jurisdictional discovery. We conclude that the connection between Hardell’s claims against Vanzyl and his contacts with California is too attenuated to support specific jurisdiction. We also conclude, 1 however, that the trial court erred in failing to consider whether it could exercise general jurisdiction over Vanzyl notwithstanding its finding that he was not domiciled in California in March 2022, and that it abused its discretion in denying Hardell’s request for discovery. On remand, Hardell must be allowed to conduct limited discovery addressing whether the trial court may exercise general jurisdiction over Vanzyl. BACKGROUND I. Factual History In 2019, Hardell founded Segmed, Inc., a medical data company, with three other Stanford alumni. Hardell became Segmed’s CEO and worked and resided in California until roughly March 2020, when she traveled to Colorado and remained as a resident. Vanzyl was a Blumberg senior director. Blumberg is a venture capital firm that invests in privately held portfolio companies, and Mohsen was and is the CEO of two companies in which Blumberg invested. Blumberg and Segmed are headquartered in California and both companies operate from California. In October 2020, Blumberg invested in Segmed. Pursuant to the investment agreement, Blumberg appointed Vanzyl to Segmed’s board of directors. Starting in summer 2021, Vanzyl directed Hardell to raise more funds for Segmed. He also assisted Hardell in her fundraising efforts, including with respect to a particular venture capital firm, dubbed “VC Firm A” in Hardell’s complaint. In January 2022, Vanzyl took Hardell to lunch in San Francisco, where he explained that “he was essential to Hardell’s and Segmed’s continued success,” and that if Blumberg expressed support for Segmed, other investors were more likely to invest in the company. In February 2022, Hardell met with representatives from

2 VC Firm A, who tentatively suggested a large investment, subject to further discussion with Vanzyl. From March 6 to 9, 2022, Hardell attended a business conference in Miami, Florida as part of her fundraising efforts for Segmed. Hardell alleges that, while there, she attended a March 8 dinner with Vanzyl, Mohsen, and the CEO of another Blumberg portfolio company. At the dinner, Vanzyl and Mohsen encouraged her to drink alcohol. The two men then accompanied her, uninvited, to a second event where she met with potential investors. They again served her alcohol. Afterward, they purchased more alcohol at a liquor store, and Hardell alleges that Vanzyl directed them to the beach. “Hardell protested, asking about Vanzyl’s wife and kids.” Nevertheless, they proceeded to the beach, drinking on the way. Vanzyl and Mohsen went skinny-dipping. Hardell also swam but kept her undergarments on. Back on shore, Vanzyl and Mohsen encouraged Hardell to drink more. The three discussed work. Vanzyl had previously expressed support for VC Firm A’s investment in Segmed, but on the beach he became “purposefully non-committal.” He steered the conversation to the topic of sex. He asked Hardell about her sex life. He then told her he loved her and kissed her. Vanzyl performed oral sex on Hardell and encouraged Mohsen to do the same. They continued even though she repeatedly told them to stop. Hardell then got dressed and the three went to a bar, where Mohsen asked his roommate to vacate their hotel room. Hardell protested and explained that she was scared of Vanzyl and Mohsen due to the power dynamic at play. Vanzyl responded with “a ‘safe word.’ ” The men handed her two shots of tequila and told her to drink them and then “took Hardell to Mohsen’s hotel room and continued the assault.”

3 At 5:30 a.m. on March 9, Vanzyl told Hardell “he had to get home to his wife.” Hardell walked to her hotel room and called a rape hotline. A medical examination revealed that she had suffered physical injuries. Hardell also experienced severe emotional distress and was not able to return to work as Segmed’s CEO. After she reported the incident, Hardell alleged, Blumberg retaliated against her, causing her eventually to relinquish her role in the promising startup that she had co-founded and directed. II. The Lawsuit and Motion to Quash Hardell sued Vanzyl, Mohsen, and Blumberg on September 30, 2022, asserting claims of retaliation, unlawful conduct under Government Code section 12964.5, sexual assault and battery, gender violence, harassment, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. She named Vanzyl as a defendant on the latter four claims. Vanzyl lived in Australia when Hardell filed suit. She served him with the summons and complaint on March 25, 2023. He moved to quash service, arguing that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over him. He averred in his declaration in support of the motion that he was not a California resident in March 2022, having permanently relocated from California to Florida in February 2022. When he moved to Florida, and then to Australia, he “had no intention of moving back to California to either live or work.” He sold his house in California and purchased one in Miami, where his daughter was enrolled in a new school. His paystubs identified Florida as his residence for tax purposes in the latter half of February 2022. Vanzyl denied that he owned real property in Tahoe, California, and stated that he did not have any interaction with Hardell in California after moving to Florida. He worked for Blumberg in Florida, not California, in March 2022, and he did not operate any business in California in March 2022. Vanzyl asserted that he did not

4 direct Hardell to attend the conference in Florida, but that she emailed him and asked about it. He also denied directing Hardell to attend the March 8 dinner and attached email correspondence showing that Mohsen invited Vanzyl and Hardell to the dinner. At the time of the invitation, Vanzyl averred, he “had already moved to, and was working in, Florida.” Vanzyl’s realtor also submitted a declaration. The realtor helped Vanzyl search for a home in late 2021 and early 2022. The sale of the Florida home closed in February 2022. During her “regular” visits in February and March 2022, she “observed that both Mr. Vanzyl and his wife had moved their belongings into the house, had decorated the house, and appeared to be fully moved into and living in the house.” In opposition to the motion to quash, Hardell argued that Vanzyl’s declaration was not credible. She provided evidence to rebut his claims of domicile, including that court filings in another case referenced a “Vanzyl family vacation home” in Tahoe, California.

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Hardell v. Vanzyl, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardell-v-vanzyl-calctapp-2024.