Militello v. VFARM 1509

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 2023
DocketB318397
StatusPublished

This text of Militello v. VFARM 1509 (Militello v. VFARM 1509) 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
Militello v. VFARM 1509, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 3/21/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

SHAUNEEN MILITELLO et al., B318397

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 21SMCV00789)

VFARM 1509 et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mark A. Young, Judge. Affirmed. Hosie Rice, Spencer Hosie, Diane S. Rice and Darrell R. Atkinson for Plaintiffs and Appellants Shauneen Militello, Spencer Hosie and Hosie Rice LLP. Zweiback Fiset & Zalduendo, Rachel L. Fiset and Jeanine Zalduendo for Defendant and Respondent Ann Lawrence Athey. _______________________ Shauneen Militello, Ann Lawrence Athey (Lawrence) and Rajesh Manek are the co-owners of Cannaco Research Corporation (CRC), a licensed manufacturer and distributor of cannabis products. All three individuals served as officers of CRC until February 2021, when Lawrence and Manek voted to remove Militello from her position, and as directors of CRC until March 2021, when Lawrence and Manek removed Militello from that position as well. In April 2021 Militello sued Lawrence, Manek and others, including Joel Athey, Lawrence’s husband, in a multicount complaint alleging causes of action for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud and other torts. In November 2021 Lawrence moved to disqualify Militello’s counsel, Spencer Hosie and Hosie Rice LLP, on the ground Militello had impermissibly downloaded from Lawrence’s CRC email account private communications between Lawrence and Athey, protected by the spousal communication privilege (Evid. Code, § 980), and provided them to her attorneys, who then used them in an attempt to obtain a receivership for CRC in a parallel proceeding. Militello opposed the motion, arguing in part Lawrence had no reasonable expectation her electronic communications with her husband were confidential because she knew Militello, as a director of CRC, had the right to review all communications on CRC’s corporate network. Militello also argued disqualification is not appropriate when a lawyer has received the adverse party’s privileged communications from his or her own client. The trial court granted the motion, finding that Militello had not carried her burden of establishing Lawrence had no reasonable expectation her communications with her husband would be private, and ordered the disqualification of Hosie and Hosie Rice.

2 We affirm. The evidence before the trial court supported its finding that Lawrence reasonably expected her communications were, and would remain, confidential. And while we acknowledge disqualification may not be an appropriate remedy when a client simply discusses with his or her lawyer improperly acquired privileged information, counsel’s knowing use of the opposing side’s privileged documents, however obtained, is a ground for disqualification. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. CRC’s and Militello’s Lawsuits Militello, Lawrence and Manek were business partners, owning, directly or indirectly, singly or in various combinations, several corporate entities forming a vertically integrated cannabis business. All three were shareholders and directors of CRC, a licensed manufacturer and distributor of cannabis products. Manek owned two dispensaries; Lawrence and Militello had long-term management contracts with the dispensaries with their income tied to store revenue. Militello was the sole owner of Beaux Canna, which developed and marketed cosmetics containing CBD oil. In September 2020 Militello, with the initial agreement of Lawrence and Manek, moved the email accounts for CRC and the partners’ other businesses from Microsoft onto Google Workspace (then known as G Suite). In a lawsuit CRC filed against Militello in Los Angeles County Superior Court on April 7, 2021 for breach of fiduciary duty and violation of the California Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act (Pen. Code, § 502), Cannaco Research Corporation v. Militello (L.A.S.C. No. 21STCV13314) (CRC action), CRC alleged Militello had improperly interfered with CRC’s computer systems and

3 operations. Specifically, CRC alleged Militello, without the knowledge or consent of the CRC board (that is, without informing Lawrence and Manek), set up G Suite, paid for by CRC, to host email accounts for Beaux Canna and assigned herself the exclusive role as super-administrator, which gave her control over all the accounts of the various businesses in the G Suite organizational structure. CRC further alleged Militello searched for and reviewed other individuals’ emails, deleted entire email accounts, diverted CRC emails to alias accounts and blocked Lawrence and Manek’s access to various electronic documents systems necessary for CRC to conduct its business. CRC sought a permanent injunction requiring Militello to restore administrative control over the G Suite to CRC and preventing her future access to the company’s systems. On April 29, 2021 Militello filed the complaint in the instant action, and on May 18, 2021 a first amended complaint, on behalf of herself and derivatively on behalf of CRC, naming as defendants Lawrence, Manek and various other entities that formed part of the former partners’ integrated cannabis business, including cannabis dispensaries. Also named as defendants were Athey, who Militello alleged represented her during certain difficult contract negotiations with Lawrence and Manek, and 1 Athey’s law firm, Holmes, Taylor, Cowan & Jones LLP. The first amended complaint alleged 22 causes of action (in 490

1 Lawrence, Athey and Militello are active members of the California State Bar and apparently worked together at some point at DLA Piper, where Athey and Militello represented Manek. Militello alleged in her first amended complaint that Lawrence was her mentor when she was “a practicing corporate attorney at a large law firm.”

4 paragraphs) including for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty and fraud. In brief, Militello alleged Lawrence, with the cooperation of Manek, conspired with Athey to force Militello out of her position at CRC, as well as from various lucrative consulting agreements procured through Militello’s efforts, to increase their share of the profits from the business and to shield the illicit accounting practices being used in the business. On June 4, 2021 the trial court (Judge Young) denied Militello’s application for a receivership for CRC. On August 13, 2021 Militello filed a cross-complaint, and on September 1, 2021 an amended cross-complaint, in the CRC action against CRC, Lawrence and Manek, again asserting causes of action for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty, as she had in the instant action, and also alleging wrongful termination and whistleblower retaliation. On September 28, 2021, now represented by Hosie Rice in both lawsuits, Militello filed a second request for appointment of a receiver, albeit in the CRC action (heard in the writs and receivers department by Judge Chalfant). In support of the motion Spencer Hosie submitted a declaration that attached as exhibits copies of numerous electronic communications between Lawrence and Athey that Militello had obtained from Lawrence’s email account on CRC’s computer system and provided to her lawyers. Both the motion for a receiver and Militello’s declaration in support of it quoted extensively from those communications (sometimes referred to by the parties and trial court as “GChats”). The motion for appointment of a receiver was denied. The court granted Lawrence’s application to seal the electronic communications based upon the spousal communication privilege, but stated its ruling “does not mean Militello is

5 foreclosed from revisiting the privilege issues in future motions or at trial.” 2. The Motions To Disqualify Hosie Rice a.

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Militello v. VFARM 1509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/militello-v-vfarm-1509-calctapp-2023.