Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2013
DocketB238253
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4 (Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4) 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
Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 9/25/13 Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FOUR

GAEL KENNEDY, B238253

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. LC081489) v.

LILA SADAFI,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court for Los Angeles County, Michael B. Harwin, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part. Law Offices of Ron Gold and Ron Gold for Defendant and Appellant. Ferguson Case Orr Paterson, Wendy C. Lascher and John A. Hribar for Plaintiff and Respondent. Defendant Lila Sadafi appeals from a judgment awarding plaintiff Gael Kennedy $112,200 in compensatory damages and $225,000 in punitive damages on Kennedy’s fraud claim. Sadafi raises many issues, most of which are unpersuasive, moot, or forfeited due to inadequate briefing and/or an inadequate record. Nevertheless, Sadafi’s contention that the punitive damages award is improper because plaintiff failed to present evidence of Sadafi’s net worth has merit. Accordingly, we reverse the punitive damages award but otherwise affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND Sometime before the summer of 2006, Kennedy met a composer and conductor, Dino Zonic, who was looking for a screenwriter to write the story of his life during the Croatian war. Zonic asked Kennedy to write a spec script. Kennedy told a friend, Khaled Alawar, about Zonic. Alawar owned an art gallery in Ojai. At around the same time Kennedy told Alawar about Zonic, Sadafi came into the gallery to talk to him about a foundation. Alawar, who had known Sadafi for several years, told Sadafi that she should meet Kennedy because Kennedy was working with an amazing composer; he thought Sadafi could help Kennedy because of her connections. Alawar told Kennedy that Sadafi was a smart business woman, and well-connected to high-powered people. Sadafi met with Kennedy and Zonic to discuss Zonic’s plans to create a film and develop Unity Through Music, a project Zonic started in Europe. After watching Zonic’s DVD, Sadafi told them she wanted to get involved with producing Zonic’s concerts and film. Sadafi arranged for Kennedy, Zonic, Alawar, and Alawar’s wife to go to Colorado with her to meet with Sadafi’s billionaire friends, Hannah and Maurice Strom.

2 Kennedy and Sadafi took a strong liking to each other, and grew very close over the three days they spent in Colorado. After they returned from Colorado, they met or spoke with each other at least once a day, and usually more. Sadafi told Kennedy that she was a confidant and close friend of Hillary Clinton, and that Clinton had asked her to work as a fundraiser on her presidential campaign. Sadafi invited Zonic to go with her to a private birthday party for Clinton; when Zonic returned from the party, he told Kennedy there were only around 20 people there. During their daily conversations, Sadafi often told Kennedy of meetings she was having with powerful people due to her association with Clinton. Shortly after the trip to Colorado, Sadafi told Kennedy and Alawar that she knew someone who could help with Zonic’s Unity Through Music project. She said that this man, Michael Thurber, was a very successful businessman, who had a lot of access to money for the project. She told them that she had made investments with Thurber in the past, and had never lost money with him. Sadafi arranged a lunch meeting with Thurber, Kennedy, Alawar, and Zonic. Thurber arrived in a limousine. After discussing Unity Through Music for a while, Thurber segued into a discussion of his new business opportunity, a company named Camex, which he called “a once in a lifetime opportunity.” As they were leaving the lunch, Sadafi told Kennedy that she had known Thurber for years and had made a great deal of money with him, and that she and her brother Mohammad were each going to invest $50,000 in Camex. She told Kennedy that she thought the investment was closed, but that she would talk to Thurber to see if she could get Kennedy into the investment because she wanted Kennedy to make a lot of money.

3 Both Kennedy and Alawar decided to give Thurber money to invest in Camex. Kennedy invested $50,000, and Alawar invested $75,000.1 Kennedy invested because she trusted Sadafi; Sadafi was her friend, Sadafi told her that she had made a lot of money with Thurber and that she and her brother were each investing $50,000, and Sadafi told her that her relationship with Clinton required that she be totally upfront and honest. Alawar invested because Sadafi told him that Thurber was completely trustworthy, and that she had had several dealings with him and made a lot of money. In October 2006 -- a month or two after the meeting with Thurber -- Sadafi and Kennedy entered into a written agreement under which Sadafi would become Kennedy’s business manager for all of Kennedy’s movie writing projects. At the time they entered into the agreement, Kennedy and Sadafi had discussions about Sadafi helping Kennedy with her finances, because Kennedy did not know anything about investing, and Sadafi had a lot of experience. In late December 2006, Sadafi told Kennedy and her husband, Paul, that Thurber had run off with all of the money that people had invested in Camex. Sadafi apologized, saying that this had never happened to her, and offered to write the Kennedys a check for $50,000. She told them, however, that she was going to reorganize the company under a different name, and they could get stock in that company for the same amount instead of taking the check. She said that they would make the same amount of money they would have made with Camex. She also said that if at any time they wanted to sell back the stock, she would write them a check for $50,000. Kennedy and her husband agreed to take the stock, believing they had nothing to lose. The name of the new company was Facinet;

1 Sadafi told Kennedy that she (Sadafi) would get a commission from Camex or Thurber on all of the money Sadafi brought into the deal.

4 both Kennedy and Alawar eventually received stock certificates in the new company, which they subsequently discovered were worthless. Kennedy, Alawar, and others who had invested with Thurber wanted to file a lawsuit against him. Alawar spoke with Sadafi about trying to locate Thurber to go after him. Sadafi said that she would take care of it, but nothing came of it. Alawar eventually filed a complaint with the California Department of Corporations, and the Department issued a cease and desist order against Thurber.2 In the meantime, Kennedy contacted an attorney, and asked everyone to provide documentation of their investments to the lawyer. When Kennedy later called the lawyer to see whether they could proceed, the lawyer told her that she had not received any documentation from Sadafi. Kennedy called Sadafi, who told Kennedy that she had mailed two checks or money orders to Thurber in Mexico, and gave Kennedy an express mail document as proof of her payments.3 At around the same time, in late 2007, Sadafi told Kennedy that she had heard from Clinton’s people that the economy was going to crash, and said that Kennedy should get out of any investment she had. At the time, Kennedy had her own and her parents’ money invested in mortgages; the investment was paying seven percent. A friend of Kennedy told her about an investment advisor who was very conservative, and Kennedy wanted to meet with him. She asked Sadafi to go with her, since Sadafi was her business manager and Kennedy did not know

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Kennedy v. Sadafi CA2/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-sadafi-ca24-calctapp-2013.