Kapur v. Trumbly CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 2015
DocketC076804
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kapur v. Trumbly CA3 (Kapur v. Trumbly 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
Kapur v. Trumbly CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/14/15 Kapur v. Trumbly CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sacramento) ----

RAVI KAPUR et al., C076804

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. Nos. 34201300148233CUMCGDS, v. 34201400159970CUPAGDS)

WARREN TRUMBLY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiffs Ravi Kapur, Nalini Kapur, and Rishi Kapur (jointly the Kapurs) appeal from a judgment in which the superior court denied a petition to vacate an arbitration award and granted a competing petition to confirm that award.1 In the arbitration award, the arbitrator determined that defendants Jeremy and Robyn Noonan were members of a

1 The Kapurs also appeal from an order in a related case that was essentially identical to the judgment we address, but (as we will explain) that order was not appealable and therefore we will dismiss the appeal from it.

1 limited liability company because they had made their required capital contributions to the company and that defendant Brad Donaldson originally held his membership in the company in trust for defendants Warren and Linda Trumbly but later returned that membership interest to the Trumblys. The Kapurs contend the arbitrator exceeded his powers in making these determinations because the arbitrator “changed the language in the Operating Agreement and Asset Purchase Agreement to [make these determinations] . . . without applying California’s law of [contract] reformation” and thereby “failed to apply California law as he was required to do by the arbitration agreement.” As a result, the Kapurs contend, the arbitration award “must be vacated.” Like the superior court, we find no merit in the Kapurs’ arguments. The arbitrator did not, either expressly or implicitly, reform either the operating agreement or the asset purchase agreement to make the determinations he did regarding the Noonans, Donaldson, and the Trumblys. Instead, the arbitrator only interpreted the agreements in reaching the conclusion that the Noonans had made their required capital contributions to the company and that Donaldson held his interest in the company for the benefit of the Trumblys. Because the arbitrator only interpreted the agreements, and did not reform them, he did not exceed his powers, and the superior court properly denied the petition to vacate the award and granted the petition to confirm it. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We take the pertinent factual background largely from the arbitrator’s award. Warren and Linda Trumbly are husband and wife, Robyn Noonan is their daughter, and Jeremy Noonan is Robyn’s husband. Nalini Kapur is the mother of Ravi and Rishi Kapur is the brother of Ravi. Linda owned a company called Broadland Properties, Inc. (Broadland), which owned a television station with the call letters KAXT. Linda’s ownership interest in Broadland was a community property asset that belonged equally to Warren, who himself

2 had been involved in the television industry for over 40 years. Ravi is a journalist who had worked in television for 20 years as an anchor, reporter, and producer. Around April 2008, Warren asked Ravi if he knew people who might want to invest in KAXT to assist in changing the station’s broadcasting from analog to digital, among other things. Thereafter, both Warren and Ravi tried to spur investment in the station, with a target of $300,000, but to no avail. Accordingly, Ravi brought his mother and brother onboard, and the three of them agreed to invest $300,000 in the station as a group. Warren thought KAXT’s broadcasting license and assets were worth $1 million, and he proposed that the Kapurs receive a 30 percent ownership stake for their investment. The Trumblys and the Kapurs signed a memorandum of understanding on those terms, but following further negotiations it was determined that the Kapurs would receive a 42 percent ownership stake instead. In May 2009, the Trumblys, the Kapurs, the Noonans, Donaldson, and three other individuals entered into an operating agreement for a limited liability company to be known as KAXT, LLC (hereafter, the company).2 Exhibit B to the operating agreement specified the capital contributions and voting shares of each of the 11 members of the company. Donaldson’s contribution was shown as “$250,000 LEGAL SERVICES,” for which he was to have a 20 percent voting share. The Noonans’ contribution was shown as “$75,000 LOAN” for each of them, with each to have a 13 percent voting share. The Kapurs were shown as contributing a total of $430,000 in loans and services with cumulative voting shares of 42 percent. Warren’s contribution was shown as “$25,000 ASSETS,” for which he was to have a 2.5 percent voting share, and Linda’s contribution was shown as “$75,000 -- ASSETS & LICENSE,” for which she was to have a 4.5 percent voting share.

2 The three other individuals were Herbert Alvarado, Sam Sutton, and Alicia Torres. Together, the operating agreement gave them a 5 percent voting interest in the company.

3 In July 2009, the company entered into an asset purchase agreement to purchase the licenses and other assets of the television station from Broadland. Section 1.3 of the asset purchase agreement -- “Purchase Price and Payment” -- provided as follows: “In consideration of the assignment by Seller to Buyer of the Licenses and the sale by Seller to Buyer of the Assets, respectively, Buyer shall cancel all indebtedness of Seller, including any obligation that may exist for any of Seller’s owners, as listed in Exhibit C hereto. The debt cancellation shall be assigned a current value of Eight Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($850,000.00), regardless of the amounts or terms or conditions set forth in any instruments of indebtedness (‘Purchase Price’). Seller and Buyer agree that the total amount of indebtedness being cancelled equals or exceeds the Purchase Price.” Exhibit C to the asset purchase agreement identified loans made to Broadland by the Kapurs, services provided to Broadland and Warren by Donaldson, services provided to Broadland by the Noonans, and services provided to Warren by Jeremy Noonan as among the “OBLIGATIONS AND INDEB[T]EDNESS TO BE CANCELLED.” Exhibit C did not include any specific amounts or descriptions for any of the loans or services that were being canceled. Donaldson never attended a meeting of the company and never voted on any company matters. Instead, he transferred his membership to the Trumblys in January 2010, and thereafter the Trumblys apparently voted the interests that had been identified as Donaldson’s in the operating agreement. As will be seen, the Trumblys later claimed that Donaldson had, from the outset, held his voting interest in the company in trust for the benefit of the Trumblys. In 2012, two entities made offers to purchase KAXT’s license and assets. Ravi did not want to sell, and his mother and brother supported him. Then, at a meeting of the company’s members in October 2012, the Kapurs brought an attorney who claimed the Kapurs actually held the majority of voting interests in the company.

4 In January 2013, all of the members except the Kapurs voted to approve the sale of KAXT’s license and assets for $10.1 million. The Kapurs refused to recognize the vote as valid, so the other members (with the exception of Sutton) commenced an arbitration proceeding in Sacramento County under the arbitration clause in the operating agreement, seeking a declaration validating the vote to sell.

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Kapur v. Trumbly CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kapur-v-trumbly-ca3-calctapp-2015.