Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2024
DocketB326440
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5 (Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5) 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
Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 7/24/24 Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

HARI HARA, LLC, B326440 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County v. Super. Ct. No. PC058126)

TEAM ENTERPRISES, LLC,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Melvin D. Sandvig, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Paladin Law Group, Bret A. Stone, and Kirk M. Tracy for Plaintiff and Appellant. Horvitz & Levy, Steven S. Fleischman, Scott P. Dixler; Greben Law Office and Jan A. Greben for Defendant and Respondent. Plaintiff Hari Hara, LLC (Hari Hara) purchased commercial property previously occupied for decades by a series of dry cleaning tenants. Years after the purchase, Hari Hara sued one of those tenants, Team Enterprises, LLC (Team), seeking damages for environmental contamination of the property. In a prior appeal, this court reversed summary judgment in Team’s favor, which the trial court entered based on a prior landlord’s purported release of claims for environmental contamination.1 On remand, the trial court granted summary judgment based on additional evidence of the parties’ intent with respect to the release and on the alternative ground that Hari Hara’s claims are time-barred. We consider two issues: whether Team has demonstrated the release is binding upon Hari Hara and whether, and to what extent, Hari Hara’s claims are time- barred.

I. BACKGROUND A. The Complaint Hari Hara commenced this action in 2017. The operative first amended complaint, filed in 2018, alleges Hari Hara was the owner of commercial property in Santa Clarita, California, at which Team operated a dry cleaning business from 1967 through 1995. The gist of the complaint is that Team released hazardous substances and waste into the environment, which caused Hari Hara to incur “monitoring, investigation, remediation, and response costs in determining the scope of the contamination in the indoor air, soil, soil vapor, and groundwater.” The operative

1 Hari Hara, LLC v. Team Enterprises, LLC (Sept. 29, 2021, B306217) [nonpub. opn.] (Hari Hara I).

2 complaint alleges causes of action for contribution under the Hazardous Substance Account Act (HSAA),2 equitable contribution, abatement of a public nuisance, abatement of a private nuisance, negligence, continuing trespass, and declaratory relief.3

B. Team’s First Motion for Summary Judgment In April 2019, Team moved for summary judgment on the ground that Hari Hara is bound by a settlement agreement the property’s former owner, Mark Weinstein (Weinstein), signed to resolve a federal lawsuit.4 Alternatively, Team contended all of Hari Hara’s causes of action—save the HSAA cause of action— are time-barred. With respect to its release-based defense, Team submitted evidence of the history of environmental contamination on the property and efforts to resolve it.

2 The Hazardous Substance Account Act is presently codified at Health and Safety Code section 78000 et seq. At the time Hari Hara filed its complaint, it was codified at Health and Safety Code section 25300 et seq. 3 Hari Hara alleged the same causes of action, plus a seventh cause of action for breach of contract, against Hueng Kyu Jang (Jang), who operated a dry cleaning business at the property from 1999 through the date of the operative complaint. Hari Hara later dismissed Jang, and he is not a party to this appeal. As we shall discuss, Jang was a party to the purported release and signed a declaration in support of Team’s second motion for summary judgment. 4 Weinstein executed the agreement as trustee of the Weinstein Family Trust Dated March 20, 1997.

3 Weinstein discovered perchloroethylene (PCE) contamination at the property in 1998. The Los Angeles County Fire Department and Regional Water Quality Control Board (Control Board) took charge of investigating the contamination in the soil and groundwater. In 1999, Weinstein’s environmental consultant requested the Control Board “grant site closure” because soil remediation would only be required if the commercial space were to be remodeled. The Control Board granted the request on the condition that Weinstein record a deed restriction. The Control Board also maintained the “removal of contaminated soil (soil remediation) will be required during any future construction, demolition, or use change” affecting the dry cleaner unit of the property. Weinstein would not accept the deed restriction. His consultants thereafter excavated parts of the property and removed soil containing certain levels of PCE. However, they left in place bedrock that was “difficult to remove with conventional excavation equipment.” The Control Board thereafter granted site closure, concluding in a “No Further Action” letter issued in November 2000 that the residual PCE in the bedrock was “relatively immobile, and d[id] not pose a threat to groundwater quality.” The Control Board did not address in the No Further Action letter the deed restriction it earlier proposed, and there is no evidence in the record indicating any deed restriction was recorded. Weinstein sued Team and others in federal court to recover costs of the cleanup and the associated diminution in the value of the property. In 2002, the parties executed a “MUTUAL RELEASE AND SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT” (the Settlement

4 Agreement). A section entitled “RELEASE OF ALL PARTIES BY WEINSTEIN” provided, among other things, that: “[i]n consideration for the monies paid to WEINSTEIN in accordance with [another section of the Settlement Agreement], WEINSTEIN, for himself and his agents, affiliates, predecessors, successors and assigns, hereby agrees to execute and file with the court, a Stipulation and Order signed by all parties and attached hereto as Exhibit ‘1’, dismissing the Complaint and all other related pleadings in this litigation with prejudice and releasing and forever discharging the parties to the WEINSTEIN LITIGATION . . . from all matters related to any environmental contamination of the premises and including all environmental matters related to the WEINSTEIN LITIGATION that were or could have been asserted in that litigation . . . . This [Settlement Agreement] specifically includes, but is not limited to, any release of PCE . . . at or from, the PROPERTY. WEINSTEIN shall file the above noted Stipulation and Order with the Court no later than five (5) business days after the receipt of all for [sic] monetary payments to be made to WEINSTEIN . . . .” The Settlement Agreement further provided that Team would pay Weinstein $65,000. Team’s motion for summary judgment did not include a copy of “Exhibit 1” mentioned in the Settlement Agreement. Hari Hara opposed Team’s summary judgment motion and argued it was not bound by the terms of the Settlement Agreement. Hari Hara further argued that Team waived its separate statute of

5 limitations defense because it did not plead the specific subdivisions of the relevant statutes that, according to Team, operated to bar the action. The trial court granted summary judgment, finding the Settlement Agreement was binding on Hari Hara as Weinstein’s successor. The court did not address Team’s statute of limitations defense.

C. Reversal and Remand Hari Hara appealed the summary judgment ruling and this court reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
Hari Hara v. Team Enterprises CA2/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hari-hara-v-team-enterprises-ca25-calctapp-2024.