Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 2015
DocketC074571
StatusUnpublished

This text of Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3 (Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3) 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
Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/21/15 Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Placer) ----

ROY HIGGS, C074571

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. SCV0028391)

v.

UNITED PROFESSIONAL REAL ESTATE INSPECTORS, INC., et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Defendants United Professional Real Estate Inspectors, Inc., Mold Detectives, Inc., and Husbands for Rent, Inc., (collectively, UPRI) appeal from a default judgment entered by the trial court (Curry, J.) in favor of plaintiff Roy A. Higgs. The trial court (Jones, J.) imposed terminating sanctions after accepting the recommendations of the discovery referee (Sims, J, Ret.) who had found UPRI intentionally destroyed or withheld discoverable documents that UPRI’s counsel repeatedly represented would be disclosed.

1 Higgs has moved to dismiss the appeal and obtain monetary sanctions. Given the failure of either side to provide a coherent account of the proceedings relevant to this appeal, we will simply resolve the issues properly tendered on appeal. We affirm. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The operative pleading is a verified second amended complaint filed in October, 2011. It is a shareholder’s derivative action against UPRI and defendants Russell and Marci Colliau--not parties to this appeal--on behalf of Inspection Management Systems, Inc. (IMS), a close corporation and named defendant. Higgs alleged he was a minority (39%) shareholder, and Russell Colliau was the majority (61%) shareholder. The entities collectively referred to herein as UPRI, and referred to in the complaint as the corporate defendants, are owned by Russell Colliau, who, with his wife Marci Colliau, comprised the officers of those entities. Higgs alleged that in 2005 he and Russell Colliau formed IMS to market software for home inspectors that Higgs had developed. Higgs alleged Russell Colliau, as president and sole director of IMS, diverted IMS assets to UPRI, entered into self-dealing contracts, made disproportionate corporate distributions favoring himself, and allowed one UPRI entity to use IMS services without compensation. IMS funds were also used to pay personal expenses of Russell and Marci Colliau, and to pay for services that benefitted UPRI. Other defalcations and fiduciary breaches were alleged, but are not important to detail. Various discovery and other motions were filed, culminating in a January 11, 2012, order denying leave to file a third amended complaint. The following week, a demurrer was overruled and a summary judgment motion was denied. The next week, Higgs’s motion to continue a trial date was itself continued, because the trial court (Wachob, J.) wanted to await the findings of the discovery referee, to whom several motions by both sides had been referred.

2 On July 27, 2012, in set four of the findings and recommendations of the referee, Justice Sims recommended terminating sanctions in favor of Higgs. In his ruling, Justice Sims summarized the proceedings, noting that in set one of his findings, on February 10, 2012, he had found that on March 20, 2011, Higgs served requests for production of documents on UPRI seeking 11 categories of documents, and UPRI failed to comply with the request. Counsel exchanged a series of meet and confer letters in which UPRI’s counsel represented that documents existed and would be produced, at one point referencing a total of 25 boxes and at another point referencing 10 boxes. On October 24, 2011, the trial court (Nichols, J.) granted Higgs’s motion to compel and the date of production, as clarified by Judge Wachob, was November 14, 2011. In response, UPRI produced three insurance policies and a device containing QuickBooks files, and asserted no other paper documents existed. Justice Sims noted the discrepancy between UPRI’s counsel’s representation that boxes of documents existed, and the paltry response to the order compelling production. However, Justice Sims concluded expert testimony was necessary to interpret the QuickBooks files, before he found UPRI violated the discovery order, so he denied the motion without prejudice to renewal. Higgs then presented a declaration from a CPA, who examined the QuickBooks files and concluded they did not respond to the discovery request, and Higgs renewed the motion for terminating sanctions. Justice Sims overruled UPRI’s objections to the procedure and to the expert declaration, and rejected UPRI’s contention that Higgs’s failure to attend the second day of a scheduled deposition barred him from moving for sanctions. Justice Sims then found UPRI “intentionally and in bad faith refused to produce documents” and “the only effective sanction is entry of a default judgment.” He based the bad faith finding on four facts: (1) UPRI’s counsel’s letters referred to boxes of documents and even detailed that some documents were stapled together, which showed that at some point paper records existed; (2) UPRI’s claim that no paper records were

3 kept was not credible “when, in fact, a closely related corporation [IMS], produced 19 boxes of paper documents in this action”; (3) the CPA’s declaration was credible, and explained the QuickBooks files did not contain any responsive documents; (4) although UPRI’s expert, an accountant, declared that the QuickBooks files had had “hundreds of invoices,” and that Higgs, during the earlier hearing, had only shown fewer than 20 existed, at the hearing, Russell Colliau went through the QuickBooks files “at length . . . and explained the entries to” Justice Sims, and if they had been altered as suggested by the defense expert, “these omissions would have been noted by Mr. Colliau; they were not. I find that [Higgs] did not alter the QuickBooks disc supplied to him by defendant Colliau. If the disc was altered, as declared by [UPRI’s accountant] it was altered while in the possession of a defendant.” As for the remedy, “the only effective sanction as to these corporate defendants is entry of a default judgment. The documents that defendants refused to produce were crucial to proving both liability and damages.” Justice Sims declined to impose alter ego liability on Russell Colliau, but sanctioned him $5,000 for perpetrating discovery abuse, and also sanctioned Higgs’s attorney $3,520 for pursuing sanctions against Marci Colliau without cause. On May 13, 2013, Judge Jones largely overruled objections to the referee’s recommendation. Judge Jones found substantial evidence supported the referee’s factual findings, and in particular upheld the conclusion that Higgs’s expert CPA was qualified to give an opinion about the content of the QuickBooks files, and that UPRI had presented a contrary expert opinion, which was rejected by the referee. Further, Judge Jones upheld the referee’s recommendation that lesser sanctions would not be effective in this particular case, and rejected UPRI’s contention that because it subsequently purported to subpoena paper records from third parties, terminating sanctions were excessive. Judge Jones also rejected the contention that Higgs’s purported discovery violations precluded the recommended remedy, and rejected the contention that Higgs’s

4 CPA did not disclose facts purportedly showing bias. Accordingly, Judge Jones struck the answer to the second amended complaint and entered a default judgment against UPRI, subject to a prove-up hearing as to the amount of damages. The prove-up hearing was conducted by Judge Curry, who issued the final default judgment. UPRI timely appealed from that judgment.1 The appeal lies. (See Code Civ.

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Higgs v. United Prof. Real Estate Inspectors CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgs-v-united-prof-real-estate-inspectors-ca3-calctapp-2015.