Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 2013
DocketA135644
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2 (Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2) 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
Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 12/13/13 Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

MONGOOSE CAPITAL, INC., Plaintiff and Appellant, A135644 v. PETER J. RADIN, JR., (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG06289441) Defendant and Appellant.

Following a bench trial, the court entered judgment for plaintiff Mongoose Capital, Inc. (Mongoose) against defendant Peter J. Radin, Jr. (Radin) for $72,629.52, including $54,100 in punitive damages. This judgment has prompted appeals by both parties along very familiar lines: Radin contends the trial court awarded too much; Mongoose claims it awarded too little. We reject Radin’s claim that there was no basis for the trial court to conclude that he had interfered with Mongoose’s contractual relationship. We conclude that Mongoose was not entitled to a greater recovery because of the remedy it elected to pursue. We also conclude, however, that Radin is entitled to credit for a $60,000 settlement by a joint tortfeasor, but that he cannot use that credit to erase the entire judgment. We will modify the judgment to reflect the credit, and affirm the judgment as so modified. BACKGROUND This dispute originated with a construction loan that was to be used for remodeling an Oakland property. The transaction became vastly complicated. Fortunately, we have the trial court’s exhaustively thorough 39-page first statement of decision (there were

1 two), and briefs from the parties that are models of accurate and dispassionate narrative. Aided by these sources, we can distill the salient details of the dispute to the following1: Menlo Park I, LLC (MP-1) borrowed $575,000, secured by a promissory note and deed of trust, from United States Dairy Products (USDP) to develop a property in Oakland. As memorialized in their “Participation Agreement Construction Loan,” Mongoose provided $100,000 of the $575,000, and agreed to service the note as USDP’s agent. Shortly thereafter, USDP sold the entire loan obligation to Regency Acquisitions, LLC (Regency). MP-1 then defaulted. Radin’s presence permeated the transaction. The trial court described him as follows: “[A]n attorney who has been licensed for more than 20 years. Radin served as an agent for Robert Trafton, Inc., USDP’s managing general partner. Radin, either directly or indirectly, through various family trusts and other vehicles, owned interests in other defendants or key players. Radin acted individually and as agent for those trusts.” Specifically, and among other things, Radin: (1) participated in the negotiation of the $575,000 loan and executed the appropriate documents on USDP’s behalf; (2) personally provided $50,000 of the loan; (3) provided $112,500 from a limited partnership of which he was the general partner; (4) apparently provided an additional $115,000 from “an entity of which Radin is an ‘indirect equity partner’ ”; (5) “delivered the original Menlo Park Note and Deed of Trust to Mongoose”; (6) as USDP’s agent, modified the interest rate on the note without bothering to advise Mongoose or get its consent; (7) executed on USDP’s behalf the sale to Regency (which was owned by a “longtime friend”) without disclosing that Mongoose had a participation interest, and again without notifying Mongoose or securing its consent; (8) “made the decision to sell the interests of Mongoose in the Menlo Park Note”; and (9) initiated default and foreclosure proceedings against the property owner (which seems to have been how Mongoose learned of the resale of the obligation to Regency).

1 All ensuing quotes in this part of our opinion are, unless otherwise indicated, taken from this statement of decision.

2 In December 2005, the property owner sued USDP, its managing general partner Robert Trafton, Inc. (Trafton), Regency, and others. The matter settled in May of 2006, when “USDP and Radin-related entities paid $192,000 of the settlement amount, and . . . an entity controlled by Radin’s wife[] paid $300,000 of the settlement funds. Other entities also contributed to the . . .total settlement,” which was $1 million. That same month, Regency and USDP “modified the terms” of the their agreement. Regency executed a new promissory note for $660,000 that “was unsecured and not guaranteed.” Approximately $200,000 for purchase of payments were made on the note, all of which went to the “entity of which Radin is an ‘indirect equity owner.’ ” In October 2006, MP-1 refinanced the terms of the original promissory note. Regency received $345,000 from the refinance, and “reconveyed” a deed of trust to MP-1. “A portion of the proceeds went to pay off one of the loan participants,” i.e., the “entity of which Radin is an ‘indirect equity partner.’ ” In September 2006, Mongoose sued USDP, Regency, and Radin for breach of contract, fraud, and injunctive relief to halt a pending trustee’s sale. In January 2007, shortly after filing its second amended complaint which added MP-1 as a defendant, Mongoose recorded a lis pendens. The lis pendens was expunged—so that the Oakland property could be sold—when MP-1 posted a surety bond of $185,000. At the request of USDP and Radin, the matter was stayed for a private arbitration of Mongoose’s claims against USDP only. In March 2008, the arbitrator’s award in favor of Mongoose was confirmed and entered as a judgment for $141,958.90 against USDP.2

2 In his award, the arbitrator calculated this sum as “One Hundred Thousand Dollars . . . being the amount paid by [Mongoose] . . . for its interest in the promissory note, together with simple interest thereon . . . being $41,958.90.” The arbitrator excoriated USDP for an “egregious breach” of its agreement with Mongoose, and also because USDP “stole [Mongoose’s] interest in the note and sold it, deceived [Mongoose] not only regarding the sale but for several months after the sale occurred.” These words were quoted by the trial court in its statement of decision, but they are almost an encomium when compared to the blistering language used by the trial court to characterize Radin and his conduct.

3 The stay lifted, the matter proceeded to trial, and was tried in two phases. The first, which generated the extraordinary statement of decision mentioned earlier, was held in July 2010, and concerned Mongoose’s claims against Radin and MP-1.3 The trial court determined that Radin was liable for $138,900 of principal and accrued interest, plus $18,529.52 of attorney fees. MP-1 was held liable for $213,715.73 in principal and accrued interest. The court deferred to the second phase the determination of the amount of punitive damages for which Radin would be liable. Also deferred was the allocation of a $60,000 settlement by a former defendant. The second phase entailed no presentation of evidence, but was decided on trial briefs and argument. The court determined that Radin would be assessed punitive damages of $54,100. Mongoose submitted a proposed judgment that would award it its principal investment of $100,000, interest of more than $128,000, and attorney fees from MP-1, together with $100,000 principal, $38,900 interest, $18,529.52 for attorney fees, and $54,100 punitive damages from Radin. USDP and Radin had several problems with the scope of recovery Mongoose was claiming: “The time has finally come for Mongoose to elect its remedy: either a judgment for judicial foreclosure against MP-1 or a judgment for damages against Radin . . . .

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Mongoose Capital v. Radin CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mongoose-capital-v-radin-ca12-calctapp-2013.