HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 2023
DocketE076124
StatusUnpublished

This text of HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2 (HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2) 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
HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 1/10/23 HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

HAYDX, INC.,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E076124

v. (Super.Ct.No. PSC1800056)

LYNDON ICHIDA. et al., OPINION

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Irma Poole Asberry,

Judge. Affirmed.

Snell & Wilmer, Jason T. Yu, and Jing (Jenny) Hua, Andrew M. Jacobs for

Plaintiff and Appellant.

Ferrari Law and Charles D. Ferrari for Defendants and Respondents.

After a bench trial in this business contract case, the trial court found that the seller

was not liable to the purchaser for conversion of hay-baling machinery and a fleet of

trucks. The purchaser argues on appeal that this finding was erroneous. We interpret the

1 contracts and conclude that the seller did not transfer this equipment to the purchaser, so

there was no conversion. We therefore affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

The parties to this appeal had a series of contracts for sale of a business, but their

relationship soured and this litigation began. The sellers were defendants and

respondents Hayday Farms, Inc. (Hayday) and Lyndon Ichida. Hayday is “a Southern

California corporation that grows, processes, sells and purchases hay and alfalfa.” Ichida

is Hayday’s president. The purchaser was plaintiff and appellant HayDx, Inc. (HDX), a

California corporation, formed by an investor for entering into the transaction here.

Hayday owns a property in Blythe, California, where it “compresse[d] forage

crops for export to Asian markets.” Hayday and HDX entered into an Asset Purchase

Agreement (APA) regarding that “Business.” The trial court found, echoing the phrasing

of an expert who testified at trial, that the business “was a turnkey operation,” and that

the intent of the parties was for HDX to “acquire[] a going concern, the inventory,

equipment, customers, vendors, employees, government licenses and permits, and use of

the land.” The APA provided for HDX to take over the business from Hayday by, among

other things, purchasing (with certain express exclusions) “[a]ll machinery, equipment,

tools, vehicles . . . and other tangible physical property that are used or useful in the

Business and owned by Seller or located at the Blythe Property.” The purchased property

included, but was not limited to, items listed or described in Exhibit C to the agreement.

2 The APA was backdated to June 3, 2014, though it was actually signed later that

month, and parts of it—in particular its Exhibit C—continued to evolve during an escrow

process of sorts, as the parties specifically identified what assets were used or useful in

the business and thus were to be transferred to HDX on closing. The APA contemplated

that on closing the purchased assets were to be transferred to HDX “free and clear of any

and all Liens,” except that HDX would “assume and agree to perform and discharge”

certain liabilities totaling $2,238,378.73 that were secured by items listed in Schedule 2.8 1 to the APA. HDX was also required under the APA to pay Hayday $3 million.

Two types of assets listed in Schedule 2.8 are at issue. The first, referred to by the

parties as “the Hunterwood Press,” is a “particularly valuable piece of equipment used to 2 bale alfalfa,” which secured a debt of $1,205,301.57. The second is a set of 13 trucks 3 powered by liquified natural gas (LNG trucks), which secured a debt of $477,762.16.

In late August 2014, HDX paid Hayday the $3 million contemplated by the APA.

It did not, however, formally assume the debts secured by the Hunterwood Press or the

LNG trucks, or even contact the lenders about the possibility of assuming them. The

1 In addition to the APA, the parties also entered into a separate “Supplemental Agreement to Asset Purchase Agreement (SAAPA). The most relevant provisions of the SAAPA, however, were incorporated into the final version of the APA. The parties apparently agree, therefore, that the SAAPA is not crucial to our analysis.

2 The Hunterwood Press was initially purchased by Hayday for approximately $2.1 million and had an estimated market value in 2014 of $1.8 million.

3 The fleet had been a set of 15 LNG trucks, but two were destroyed in accidents. The parties estimated the trucks’ market value in 2014 at between $60,000 and $90,000 each, depreciated from an initial purchase price of $137,767 each.

3 parties either discovered or assumed that the lenders for the Hunterwood Press and the

LNG trucks would not agree to formal transfer of title in those items and assignment of

the debt they secured from Hayday to HDX, and also (unlike some other lenders listed on

Schedule 2.8 of the APA) would not accept a less formal arrangement whereby HDX

simply paid loan invoices issued to Hayday. Thus, by September 2014, it became

apparent to all involved that Hayday would not be able to fulfill the APA’s condition

requiring transfer of “all title to and rights and interest” in the purchased property until 4 the debts the Hunterwood Press and LNG trucks secured were paid in their entirety.

Under the terms of the APA, therefore, absent a written waiver, the transaction could not 5 close.

4 The conditions on closing included not only a general “instrument of conveyance,” but also “such other . . . assignments, consents and other good and sufficient instruments of conveyance . . .to convey to and vest in [HDX] all title to and rights and interest in the Purchased Assets in accordance with the terms of this agreement,” as well as an “assignment and assumption instrument with respect to the Assumed Liabilities . . . .” Although such documents are listed as “deliveries” to be made by Hayday, HDX was also required to deliver documents “as [Hayday] may reasonably and timely request . . . to consummate more effectively the transactions contemplated by this Agreement or in order to evidence the compliance by [HDX] with any obligation in this Agreement.” (Italics added.) Thus, because the lenders who held a security interest in the Hunterwood Press and the LNG trucks were not on board, neither Hayday nor HDX could satisfy the closing conditions.

5 The APA provided that “[t]he Closing shall not occur unless and until all of the [enumerated] actions and conditions . . . shall have been taken (or waived).” It further provided that “any provision” of the agreement could be amended or waived, “but only in a writing signed by the party against whom such amendment or waiver is sought to be enforced.”

4 In September 2014, apparently to break through this impasse and proceed with the

sale of the business, Hayday and HDX entered into a series of lease agreements regarding 6 the Hunterwood Press and the LNG trucks. The lease agreements provide for the leased

items to remain the “sole property” of Hayday, and that the “Lessee shall have no

property interest therein, but only the right to use the Equipment” during the term of the

lease. The lessee is responsible for all operating costs, fuel, labor, maintenance, and

taxes on the leased items during the lease term, and required to obtain insurance. The

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Bluebook (online)
HayDx v. Ichida CA4/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haydx-v-ichida-ca42-calctapp-2023.