Long Beach Unified School Dist. v. Margaret Williams, LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 2019
DocketB290069
StatusPublished

This text of Long Beach Unified School Dist. v. Margaret Williams, LLC (Long Beach Unified School Dist. v. Margaret Williams, LLC) 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
Long Beach Unified School Dist. v. Margaret Williams, LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 12/9/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

LONG BEACH UNIFIED SCHOOL B290069 DISTRICT, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. NC060708) Cross-complainant and Appellant,

v.

MARGARET WILLIAMS, LLC,

Cross-defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Dudley W. Gray, II, Judge. Affirmed. Christen Hsu Sipes, Scott J. Sterling and Joshua D. Watts; Bassi, Edlin, Huie & Blum, Fred M. Blum, Michael E. Gallagher, Tiffany Wells-Fox, Lisa Stevenson, J. Kyle Gaines and Barry D. Bryan for Cross-complainant and Appellant. Schonbrun, Seplow, Harris & Hoffman and Wilmer J. Harris for Cross-defendant and Respondent.

_____________________________________

INTRODUCTION Long Beach Unified School District (the District) appeals from the dismissal of its cross-complaint under Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, commonly known as the anti-SLAPP statute. (See Wilson v. Cable News Network, Inc. (2019) 7 Cal.5th 871, 880 (Wilson).) In 2006, the District entered into a contract with respondent Margaret Williams, LLC (Williams LLC), which had been formed by Margaret Williams that year for the purpose of working for the District. According to Williams, the District required her to form a business entity to enter the contract, which was a standardized form agreement with terms she could not negotiate. For nearly a decade, Williams worked full-time for the District, through her LLC, on construction management and environmental compliance, including work under the District’s agreement with a state agency to clean up material at a school construction site contaminated with arsenic. After a dispute arose between Williams and the District about alleged violations of the cleanup agreement, Williams was diagnosed with arsenic poisoning, and the

2 District terminated Williams LLC’s then-current contract, 1 which included an indemnity provision. Williams and her LLC filed a lawsuit against the District (the Underlying Action). Each plaintiff brought claims alleging the termination was retaliatory, and Williams brought claims alleging the District unlawfully caused her arsenic poisoning. The District invoked the indemnity provision to demand that Williams LLC defend and indemnify the District in the Underlying Action. After Williams LLC refused to defend the District against the LLC’s own and Williams’s claims, the District filed a cross- complaint alleging, inter alia, that this refusal breached the contract. Williams LLC filed an anti-SLAPP motion to strike the cross-complaint, arguing, inter alia, that the District could not prevail on its cross-claims because the indemnity provision is unconscionable. The trial court granted the motion and struck the District’s cross-complaint.

1 In an indemnity contract, “one engages to save another from a legal consequence of the conduct of one of the parties, or of some other person.” (Civ. Code, § 2772; see also Rossmoor Sanitation, Inc. v. Pylon, Inc. (1975) 13 Cal.3d 622, 628 [“Indemnity may be defined as the obligation resting on one party to make good a loss or damage another party has incurred”].) Unless an indemnity contract provides otherwise, “[t]he person indemnifying is bound, on request of the person indemnified, to defend actions or proceedings brought against the latter in respect to the matters embraced by the indemnity . . . .” (Civ. Code, § 2778, subd. (4).)

3 On appeal, the District contends the trial court erred in striking its cross-complaint under the anti-SLAPP statute. In the alternative, it contends the trial court erred in denying the District leave to include nine additional pages in its brief opposing the anti-SLAPP motion. Finding no error, we affirm. If enforced as the District requested, the indemnity provision would require Williams LLC to fund the District’s defense against the very litigation the LLC and Williams brought against the District. The District’s cross-complaint therefore arose from that litigation or the LLC’s refusal to sabotage it -- each of which is protected by the anti-SLAPP statute. Moreover, the District sought to require the LLC not only to fund the District’s defense, but also to reimburse the District for any award secured by Williams or the LLC falling within the provision’s broad scope. Such a bar to meaningful recovery embodies a high degree of substantive unconscionability, sufficient -- when combined with the procedural unconscionability shown through Williams LLC’s unrebutted evidence of adhesion, oppression, and surprise -- to establish that the indemnity provision is unconscionable. We limit the provision to avoid an unconscionable result, rendering it inapplicable to claims brought by Williams LLC and claims brought by Williams. As a result of this limitation, the District fails to show error in the dismissal of the District’s breach of contract and declaratory relief claims. The District further fails to show error in the dismissal of its other cross-claims, or in the

4 denial of its application for leave to file an oversized opposition brief.

PROCEEDINGS BELOW A. Williams LLC’s History with the District Williams formed Williams LLC in 2006. The same year, Williams LLC entered into a contract to work for the District, as a consultant, on construction management and environmental compliance. In a declaration submitted by her LLC in support of its anti-SLAPP motion, Williams stated that she formed her LLC as a requirement for working for the District: “In order to work with the District, I was directed by the Executive Facilities Planning Manager to form a corporation or partnership. This was the only way I could work for the District: I could not enter into a contract with the District as an individual.” Further, the District presented the contract “on a ‘you either sign or you don’t work’ basis,” and Williams was “unable to negotiate the terms.” The terms were standardized; the contract was “a standard form contract given to all contractors before they were allowed to perform any work for the District.” The District has not submitted evidence that the terms of the contract were negotiable. Nor has it submitted evidence that Williams LLC was formed for any purpose other than to meet the District’s requirements for Williams to work for it. Williams worked full-time for the District, through her LLC, for nearly a decade, during which she signed a new contract between her LLC and the District in 2013.

5 Williams’s duties included overseeing environmental compliance at a construction site for a school, the Newcomb Academy (Academy). According to her declaration, Pinner Construction (Pinner) -- the District’s general contractor at the Academy site -- illegally brought contaminated material onto the site in October 2013. Williams directed Linik Corporation (Linik) -- the District’s construction supervisor at the site -- to remove the contaminated material, but Linik ignored her. Through the following year, Williams attempted to resolve the problem by discussing it with two District administrators, one of whom directed Williams to oversee the site’s cleanup. In January 2015, the District and the California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) entered into a cleanup agreement requiring the District to remove potentially hazardous material at the site. The District designated Williams as its project manager for the cleanup agreement. Later that year, the District gave control over the Academy site project (and all other projects affiliated with Linik) to District employee Les Leahy and consultant Jerry Vincent. According to Williams, Leahy and Vincent deliberately interfered with her efforts to prevent continued mishandling of the contaminated material.

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Long Beach Unified School Dist. v. Margaret Williams, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-beach-unified-school-dist-v-margaret-williams-llc-calctapp-2019.