Manlin v. Milner

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 7, 2022
DocketB313253
StatusPublished

This text of Manlin v. Milner (Manlin v. Milner) 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
Manlin v. Milner, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 8/10/22; Certified for Publication 9/7/22 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

ROGER MANLIN, B313253, B315077

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 19STCV08154) v.

STEVE MILNER, et al.

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEALS from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Robert B. Broadbelt, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions. Roger A. S. Manlin, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant. Hamburg, Karic, Edwards & Martin, Gregg A. Martin and Ann S. Lee for Defendants and Respondents. ___________________________________ In a dispute between members of a limited liability company (LLC), plaintiff alleged that the LLC’s managing member engaged in self-dealing to the detriment of both plaintiff and the company. After the managing member, represented by the LLC’s attorneys, cross-complained against the plaintiff, the plaintiff cross-complained against both the managing member and the attorneys for further self-dealing and breach of fiduciary duty, alleging they misappropriated funds from the LLC to finance the litigation. Cross-defendants specially moved to strike the complaint under the anti-SLAPP statute (Strategic Lawsuit Against Protected Activity; Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (section or § 425.16)), arguing the alleged conduct occurred as part of the litigation, which was protected activity. Cross-defendants also moved for discovery sanctions. The trial court found that a portion of the cross-complaint arose from litigation activity, and thus granted cross-defendants’ special motion to strike. Plaintiff appeals from that ruling. The trial court also entered discovery orders in 2019 and 2021 imposing monetary and evidentiary sanctions against the plaintiff. Plaintiff separately appeals from these rulings, and we consolidated the appeals. We conclude that appropriation of funds to finance litigation is not protected activity. Accordingly, we reverse in part the order granting cross-defendants’ special motion to strike. We conclude that only the 2021 discovery order imposing monetary sanctions is appealable, and that order is affirmed. Finally, we conclude that the 2019 discovery order for monetary sanctions and the 2021 order insofar as it imposed nonmonetary

2 sanctions are nonappealable, but we will deem the appeal to constitute a petition for extraordinary relief, which we deny. BACKGROUND A. Litigation We take the facts from the complaints, accepting them as true for purposes of these appeals. Roger Manlin, an attorney, and Steven Milner jointly own and are the only members of eight real estate investment LLCs. Milner is the sole managing member of each LLC. Milner, without Manlin’s knowledge or consent, engaged in self-serving conduct in breach of both his fiduciary duties and the eight LLC operating agreements. Manlin sued Milner for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, unfair competition, conversion, and financial elder abuse, and sought an accounting. Milner and the LLCs, represented by the law firm Hamburg, Karie, Edwards & Martin, and attorneys Ann Lee and Gregg Martin (collectively “Attorneys”), cross-complained for legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty, and sought declaratory relief and rescission of the LLC agreements. In response, Manlin cross-complained on behalf of himself and the LLCs against Milner and the Attorneys for further acts of self-dealing and elder abuse. As pertinent here, Manlin’s cross-complaint alleged in the first cause of action, for breach of written operating agreements, that Milner breached the LLC operating agreements “by his diversion of funds from the LLCs in order to pay legal expenses of defending himself in the Manlin complaint against him, and suing Manlin in the Milner cross-complaint, and his refusal to

3 provide and concealment of information relating to the retention of and payment to the Attorneys of their legal fees.” The second cause of action, for breach of fiduciary duty against only Milner, alleged that Milner breached his fiduciary duty by failing to “stipulate to continue any currently existing hearing date, response date, notice date, motion cut off date, or other date associated with the presently scheduled January 8, [2020] trial.” The third cause of action, for breach of fiduciary duty against the Attorneys, alleged the Attorneys breached a fiduciary duty owed to Manlin because they “concealed [their] agreements with the LLCs, concealed the payments made by the LLCs to themselves without Manlin’s knowledge or consent, wrongfully diverted and continue to divert funds from each of the LLCs to Attorneys in order to pay all of Milner’s personal legal expenses of defending the Manlin complaint against him, individually, and proceeding with [the] Milner cross-complaint against Manlin in the names of the LLCs.” The fourth cause of action, for elder abuse, against Milner, alleged that Milner’s conduct constituted elder abuse. B. Anti-SLAPP Motion Milner and the Attorneys specially moved to strike Manlin’s cross-complaint or, in the alternative, portions thereof, arguing that funding litigation constitutes protected petitioning activity, and Manlin could not show a probability of prevailing on any cause of action. Manlin opposed the motion, supporting the opposition with Milner’s deposition testimony indicating the Attorneys were paid from LLC funds.

4 The trial court found that the first and third causes of action arose from Milner and the Attorneys “allegedly diverting funds from the LLCs to pay [Milner’s] legal expenses in this litigation. . . . Thus, the first and third causes of action are based on the payment of funds to maintain a lawsuit, i.e., the attorney’s fees incurred by Steve Milner in this lawsuit.” The court found that Manlin made no attempt to establish the legal sufficiency of his second and fourth causes of action and presented no evidence of diversion of LLC funds to pay Milner’s legal fees. Accordingly, the court granted the anti-SLAPP motion and ordered that Manlin’s cross-complaint be stricken in its entirety. The court awarded attorney fees to cross-defendants. Manlin appeals from that ruling. C. Discovery Issues On June 7, 2019, Milner and the LLCs served their first set of document requests on Manlin. We set forth the relevant request categories, followed by pertinent individualized requests: Request Nos. 11-19 sought all documents showing any capital contribution Manlin made to the LLCs. Request Nos. 20-28 sought all documents showing distributions Manlin received from the LLCs. Request Nos. 31-38 sought agreements for any legal services Manlin performed for the LLCs. Request Nos. 41-48 sought documents relating to legal services Manlin performed for the LLCs, including Manlin’s client files. Request Nos. 50-59 sought all invoices for legal services Manlin performed for Milner and the LLCs.

5 Request Nos. 60-69 sought all checks or other documents showing payment for legal services Manlin performed for Milner and the LLCs. Request Nos. 72-80 sought all communications regarding legal services Manlin performed for the LLCs. Request No. 29 sought all agreements between Manlin and defendants. Request No. 30 sought all agreements for any legal services Manlin performed for defendants. Request No. 40 sought all documents reflecting any legal service Manlin performed for the defendants, including Manlin’s client files. Request No. 70 sought all communications regarding any business transaction between Manlin and the defendants. Request No. 71 sought all communications with Milner regarding any legal service Manlin performed for the defendants. Request No. 81 sought all documents regarding any business transaction between Manlin and the defendants. Manlin’s responses included essentially the same objection to each request.

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Bluebook (online)
Manlin v. Milner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manlin-v-milner-calctapp-2022.