Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 2022
DocketB317177
StatusUnpublished

This text of Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6 (Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6) 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
Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 6/3/22 Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SIX

LAS POSAS VALLEY WATER 2d Civil No. B317177 RIGHTS COALITION, (Super. Ct. No. VENCI00509700) Plaintiff, (Santa Barbara County)

v.

MAHAN RANCH, LLC, et al.,

Defendants and Appellants;

ZONE MUTUAL WATER COMPANY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Mahan Ranch, LLC, and associated persons and entities1 (collectively, Mahan Ranch) appeal from the trial court’s

1 Shannon Alexander; Kirschbaum, LLC; Courtney Maguire; Mahan Development Corporation; Ralph D. Mahan, Trustee of the Ralph D. Mahan Separate Property Trust dated order disqualifying Ferguson Case Orr Paterson LLP (FCOP) as their attorney of record in the ongoing litigation concerning the Las Posas Valley groundwater basin (the Basin Litigation). Mahan Ranch contends: (1) FCOP had no conflict of interest based on its previous work for Berylwood Heights Mutual Water Company and Zone Mutual Water Company (collectively, Respondents), but even if it did the disqualification motion should have been denied either (2) as untimely, or (3) because Respondents waived the conflict. We agree with Mahan Ranch’s second contention, and vacate the disqualification order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY The Las Posas Valley groundwater basin and its stakeholders In 1983, the Legislature created the Fox Canyon Groundwater Management Agency to manage the Las Posas Valley groundwater basin in central Ventura County. Twenty-six years later, interested stakeholders formed the Las Posas Users Group (LPUG) to work with Fox Canyon to allocate the basin’s groundwater. Entities owned by the Ralph D. Mahan family retained FCOP partner Neal Maguire—who is married to

June 12, 2003; Ralph D. Mahan and Georgia A. Mahan, Trustees of the Mahan Family Trust dated June 12, 2003; John McGonigle; Nuveen; Oro Del Norte, LLC; John C. Orr; Sharon L. Orr; Frances Orr Parr; John D. Poe; RBV 2+5 LLC; RBV-Vanoni, LLC; Suzanne Saw; Leon Scott Stevens, Trustee of the Leon O. Stevens Trust dated November 19, 1997; TIAA; Craig H. Underwood; Underwood & Son, LLC; Urban-D Ranch Limited Partnership; US Horticulture Farmland, LLC; Charles L. Vanoni; David Vanoni; Lucy Vanoni; Mary Vanoni; VMB Water System; Melissa Wallace; Theodora Warner; Westchester Group Investment Management; Debra A. Whitson, Thomas E. Olson, and Thomas K. Strain, Trustees of the McGonigle Ranch Trust dated April 1, 2021.

2 Mahan’s daughter—to represent them in allocation discussions. John C. Orr, another FCOP partner, also participated. Dissatisfied with Fox Canyon’s proposed allocation, in 2018 a coalition of LPUG members sued to establish their rights to Las Posas Valley groundwater. Among those sued by the coalition were Respondents. These companies, along with the Del Norte Water Company, jointly retained attorney Craig Parton to represent them in the Basin Litigation. Shareholders of three other mutual water companies sued by the coalition— Jane Donlon Waters, owner of Donlon Ranch; Urban-D Ranch Limited Partnership; and Oro Del Norte, LLC—retained FCOP to represent them. Entities owned by the Mahan family also retained FCOP. Kirschbaum, LLC, later retained FCOP to represent it. Several of the parties sued by the coalition have longstanding relationships with each other: Waters is a member of Berylwood’s board of directors and its former president. Maguire is a former Berylwood board member, and his in-laws, the Mahans, are longtime shareholders. Craig Underwood, the manager of Urban-D Ranch, is a former president of Zone. Orr, the manager of Oro Del Norte and an FCOP partner, is a former president of Del Norte. Jack Poe, the manager of Kirschbaum, is a member of the Del Norte board of directors. The parties’ relationships to each other generally, and to FCOP specifically, have been well known since the Basin Litigation commenced in 2018. Maguire previously represented the Mahan family on the Berylwood board of directors. At least three members of Zone’s board of directors know Orr and have attended events he hosted. Parton has known Orr and of his ties to Del Norte and Oro Del Norte for more than a decade. Parton

3 also knew that Maguire was related to the Mahans and that FCOP represented them. Parties involved in the Basin Litigation have shifted over time. Relevant here, in February 2021 US Horticulture acquired Donlon Ranch. Respondents both stipulated that the litigation could “proceed with US Horticulture as a successor in interest to Donlon Ranch” and that “US Horticulture [could] continue to be represented by [FCOP].” FCOP’s work for Respondents Prior to the Basin Litigation, FCOP performed limited legal work for Zone. In the 1990s, FCOP helped Zone negotiate two well agreements with basin landowners. In 2015, FCOP advised Zone about a corporate governance issue. Despite this work, Underwood, in his capacity as Zone president, said that an attorney from a firm other than FCOP was Zone’s general counsel. FCOP continued to perform discrete legal work for Zone after the Basin Litigation commenced. In May 2020, while Parton was Zone’s attorney in the litigation and Underwood was its president, Zone discovered that it did not have properly recorded easements for some of its roads and pipelines. Because Parton did not do that type of work, Zone asked FCOP to draft the necessary documents. FCOP agreed to do so if Zone would consent to FCOP’s continued representation of its clients in the Basin Litigation. Zone consented, and signed a conflict waiver on June 30, 2021. FCOP performed no legal work for Berylwood prior to the Basin Litigation. After litigation commenced, however, Berylwood asked FCOP to negotiate a well easement with one of its shareholders. Before doing so, FCOP prepared a conflict

4 waiver. Berylwood executed the waiver on October 12, 2020, acknowledging the possibility of a conflict of interest between it and FCOP’s clients in the Basin Litigation and consenting to FCOP’s continued representation of its clients if such a conflict arose. FCOP subsequently advised Berylwood on the transfer of Berylwood stock between shareholders. The Basin Litigation In 2019, the parties stipulated that the Basin Litigation would proceed in three phases. In Phase 1, which concluded in September 2020, the trial court established the total “safe yield” of the basin and the percentage of that yield that certain public agencies may extract. In the current phase, Phase 2, the court will determine how the remainder of the basin’s yield will be allocated among landowners and mutual water companies. The Phase 2 trial was initially set for June 2021, but was later continued to January 2022. During Phase 1, FCOP worked closely with Parton, who repeatedly confirmed on behalf of his clients that each mutual water company collectively owned the water rights associated with their pumping. In February 2021—five months into Phase 2 of the Basin Litigation—Respondents again confirmed that each company asserted a “correlative, overlying right to extract groundwater from the [b]asin.” Some of Respondents’ shareholders subsequently agitated to change their companies’ positions regarding the ownership of water rights.

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Bluebook (online)
Las Posas Valley Water Rights Coalition v. Mahan Ranch CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/las-posas-valley-water-rights-coalition-v-mahan-ranch-ca26-calctapp-2022.