In Re Gorina

296 B.R. 23, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1731, 2002 WL 32137513
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedNovember 19, 2002
DocketSV 01-16208-KL
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 296 B.R. 23 (In Re Gorina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gorina, 296 B.R. 23, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1731, 2002 WL 32137513 (Cal. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON OBJECTION TO CLAIM OF BILLIE MILAM WEISMAN

KATHLEEN T. LAX, Bankruptcy Judge.

J. Mercedes Gorina, chapter 13 debtor in the above-captioned case (“Debtor” or “Gorina”), objects to Claim #4 filed by Billie Milam Weisman (“Weisman”) in the amount of $476,953.33. Gorina asserts that Weisman fails to give proper credit for monies received from settling co-defendants and that attorneys’ fees, if any, which may be allowed against Gorina should be limited to a proportionate share, allocated in accordance with her participation in or importance to the case.

Weisman filed an opposition to Gorina’s objection. The matter came on for hearing and was submitted for decision.

BACKGROUND FACTS

Pre-bankrwptcy Activity

Weisman’s claim against Gorina arises out of an action in the California Superior Court entitled Weisman v. Cohen, Case no. SC 040816 (the “State Court Action”) concerning the purchase of a residence in Holmby Hills. The State Court Action sought damages based on construction defects, breach of contract and breach of warranty. Gorina was one of eleven co-defendants.

After four years of litigation, the case was tried in November and December 1999. During the trial, Weisman settled with the general contractors and one of the sellers for $2.1 million. Trial proceeded against the remaining defendants. Weisman obtained a jury verdict of $1,812,065 in compensatory damages against three sellers, Gloria Shulman, Carmen Gomez, and the debtor Gorina, jointly and severally, on a single cause of action, breach of warranty. Gorina successfully defended against six other causes of action for fraudulent misrepresentation (non suit), fraudulent concealment (non suit), breach of purchase and sale contract (jury verdict), negligence based on breach of duty of design and construction (jury deadlock), breach of duty based on violation of the requirements of the building code (jury deadlock) and breach of statutory duties of disclosure (jury deadlock).

The trial court ruled that the settlement proceeds offset the award of compensatory damages, leaving no net recovery thereon *26 due to Weisman. The court granted Weisman the right to recover her costs in the amount of $24,520.33, jointly and severally against Gorina, Schulman and Gomez. The trial court declined to award attorneys’ fees in her favor. (See Amended Judgment after Trial by Jury, filed on February 22, 2001 in the State Court Action.)

Weisman appealed. On March 29, 2001, the Second Appellate District affirmed the trial court’s order taxing costs and reversed its order denying attorneys fees. The appellate court found that the contractual language on which the request for attorneys’ fees was based was sufficiently broad to encompass relief granted on the breach of warranty claim, regardless of whether that claim sounded in contract or tort. The appellate court also found that application of the settlement proceeds to offset the entirety of the compensatory damages did not negate the fact that Weisman prevailed at trial on liability and damage issues. The case was remanded to the trial court to “calculate a reasonable fee award under the purchase agreement’s attorney fee clause, based on plaintiffs status as the prevailing party.” (See Court of Appeal Opinion (unpublished), filed March 29, 2001.)

On June 26, 2001, Gorina filed bankruptcy in this court.

Post-bankruptcy Activities

On August 3, 2001, after the filing of this bankruptcy case, Weisman filed a motion in the State Court Action against Shulman, Gorina, and Gomez seeking an award of attorneys’ fees of $400,000 out of $450,000 for trial, $35,000 for post-trial motions and proceedings, $15,000 for attorneys fees incurred on the appeal, and $1,615.66 for costs incurred in the appeal, for a total of $451,615.66. This court is informed that the trial court in the State Court Action granted Weisman’s motion.

The Proof of Claim

Weisman’s proof of claim, filed in the bankruptcy case on November 13, 2001, asserts a claim in the amount of $476,953.33 based on “Judgment for breach of warranty in sale of real property, order for attorneys fees... .Judgment 2/22/01; order 8/3/01.” More specifically, the elements of Weisman’s $476,953.33 claim are:

(1) $24,520.33 in costs awarded in the State Court Action and upheld on appeal, plus interest in the amount of $817.34, calculated at 10% for 4 months from February 22, 2001, to the date of bankruptcy on June 22, 2001, for a total of $25,337.67;

(2) $415,615.66 in fees and costs sought (and awarded post-petition) in the State Court Action, consisting of:

(A) $400,000 in attorneys fees through trial;
(B) $35,000 for post-trial motions and proceedings;
(C) $15,000 for attorneys fees on appeal; and
(D) $1,615.66 as costs incurred on appeal.

DISCUSSION

Resolution of the Debtor’s objection to Weisman’s proof of claim requires this court to apply both state and federal law. The status and effect of Weisman’s claim is determined in accordance with federal bankruptcy law. The validity and extent of the claim is determined according to California law. Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green, 329 U.S. 156, 67 S.Ct. 237, 91 L.Ed. 162 (1946). Certain issues raised in the pleadings are put to rest or narrowed by direct application of appropriate state or federal law.

*27 Res Judicata Governs Prevailing Party Status and Certain Costs

The Debtor objects to the entirety of Weisman’s claim on various grounds, including a late-asserted contention in Gorina’s second supplement that this court may exercise its discretion to find that there is no prevailing party or that Gorina is the prevailing party. Such is not the case. Certain issues decided prior to the commencement of this case bind the parties in the bankruptcy court. The designation of a prevailing party has been litigated in the state court, decided in the state courts, and is no longer subject to appeal. The California Appellate Court’s prepetition decision that Weisman is the prevailing party binds this court. Similarly, the California Appellate Court’s decision affirming the award of costs through February 2001 against Gorina in the amount of $24,520.33 binds both Weisman and Gorina. Neither the amount nor the designation as costs is open for reconsideration here.

Post-bankruptcy Rulings by the State Court Are Void as to Debtor

Weisman suggests that this court ought to adopt the trial court’s post-bankruptcy findings against Shulman and allow an additional $451,615.66 in fees and costs on the grounds that the trial court is in the best position to make such findings. Weisman acknowledges that the automatic stay which arose on the filing of Gorina’s bankruptcy prevented the State Court from proceeding against Gorina, Weisman also argues that this court can grant relief from stay to allow those findings to set the amount of the claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 B.R. 23, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 1731, 2002 WL 32137513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gorina-cacb-2002.