Nakahara v. Cohen CA2/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
DocketB321385
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nakahara v. Cohen CA2/2 (Nakahara v. Cohen CA2/2) 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
Nakahara v. Cohen CA2/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/29/24 Nakahara v. Cohen CA2/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

PATRICIA NAKAHARA, B321385

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 21STCV18608)

BRUCE COHEN, Individually and as Trustee, etc.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Bruce Iwasaki, Judge. Affirmed. BMCA Law Group, Julia Machai Cohen and Bruce M. Cohen for Defendants and Appellants. Reed & Reed and Darren G. Reed for Plaintiff and Respondent. __________________________________ Patricia Nakahara sued her attorney, Bruce Cohen, for allegedly failing to repay a loan she made to him in 2017. Cohen petitioned to compel arbitration and stay the lawsuit, citing a 2018 contingent fee agreement. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1281.2.)1 The trial court denied Cohen’s petition. On de novo review, we affirm. The arbitration clause in Cohen’s engagement letter solely applies to his contingent fee representation of Nakahara in a lawsuit against Coldwell Banker. It does not apply to a side deal, such as a personal loan to Cohen, or to disputes over hourly bills Nakahara incurred in other legal matters. Arbitration of a loan or hourly fee dispute cannot be ordered merely because the parties agreed to arbitrate a different matter. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Allegations in Nakahara’s Lawsuit In her unverified second amended complaint (SAC), Nakahara alleges that Cohen has been her attorney for many years. In 2017, Cohen asked to borrow money from Nakahara, who felt pressured to agree because he represented her in pending legal matters. She loaned him $111,902 to pay his rent; he promised to repay her within one year. The loan was not memorialized in writing. The SAC alleges that Cohen failed to repay the loan and continued to charge Nakahara for legal services. He had her sign a contingent fee agreement in 2018. She did not want to rock the boat by asking for repayment, for fear he would cease representing her.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 In 2019, the controller for Nakahara’s business asked Cohen about the debt. Cohen remained silent, which Nakahara “interpreted as meaning he acknowledged the debt and was still intending to pay it back.” In 2021, after Cohen “made it clear that he did not intend to pay back the loan,” Nakahara sued him individually and as trustee for a family trust.2 The SAC asserts claims for money lent; breach of an oral contract; and breach of fiduciary duty for entering a loan transaction with a client that created a conflict of interest. Attached as exhibits to the SAC are copies of two checks, one for $56,052.45 dated May 18, 2017, and one for $55,850 dated July 13, 2017. They are payable to “Douglas Emmett.” It is undisputed that Douglas Emmett was Cohen’s landlord. Each typewritten check has a handwritten note at the bottom reading “Bruce Loan—1801 Rent.”3 The Parties’ Arbitration Agreement On October 31, 2018, Cohen sent Nakahara a contingent fee agreement (Agreement). The Agreement is in a letter titled, “Re: Legal Representation of Patricia Nakahara in the matter of Nakahara v. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Co. et al., Los Angeles Superior Court Case No. SC128079.” The “Scope of Representation” states, “Our responsibility is to represent you in connection with your affirmative claims” in the Coldwell case. Nakahara signed the Agreement. The Agreement has a “Dispute Resolution” clause. It reads:

2 We refer to defendants collectively as “Cohen.”

3 Cohen’s office was located at 1801 Century Park East in Los Angeles.

3 “In the unlikely event of any dispute between us arising out of or related to our legal representation, including disputes over bills or the quality of representation, the matter will be resolved, to the extent permitted by California law, not by a Court proceeding, but by arbitration, in California, pursuant to the California Code of Civil Procedure. The result of arbitration will be binding and judgment may be entered in any Court having jurisdiction.” Cohen’s Petition to Compel Arbitration Cohen petitioned for arbitration, arguing that Nakahara agreed to arbitrate “any dispute” between them “arising out of or related to” his legal representation. In his view, this covers Nakahara’s “purported ‘loan’ ” to him in 2017. Cohen invoked the California Arbitration Act (CAA) and the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), which favor arbitration of disputes. Nakahara refused to honor her agreement to arbitrate. Cohen asked the court to order arbitration and stay the lawsuit. Nakahara’s Opposition Nakahara wrote that Cohen has been her attorney for over 20 years, mainly for her business. He performed legal services and billed her without a formal agreement. In early 2017, Cohen became delinquent on his rent and borrowed $111,902.45 from Nakahara, whose checks were made payable to Cohen’s landlord. The loan terms were not documented in writing. Nakahara did not dispute signing the Agreement in 2018, long after she loaned money to Cohen. She declared that the Agreement was “strictly for” her case against Coldwell and had “absolutely nothing to do with the loan I gave to BRUCE COHEN in 2017.” She noted that “defendant’s petition to compel arbitration is strangely quiet as to why the defendant believes an

4 arbitration clause in a 2018 contingency fee retainer agreement can somehow apply to a transaction that occurred in 2017.” Nakahara asked the court to deny the petition because the arbitration clause has nothing to do with this lawsuit. Cohen’s Reply Cohen reiterated his longstanding attorney-client relationship with Nakahara. He claimed she consented, in the Agreement, to arbitrate “ ‘any dispute’ ” arising out of his legal representation. He pointed to unsworn allegations in the SAC stating that Nakahara signed the Agreement when Cohen sought to repay his debt to her by performing services on a contingent fee basis. He opined that her breach of fiduciary duty claim arose in the context of his performance under the Agreement. He denied taking a loan from Nakahara or any obligation for repayment. Cohen asserted that the checks attached to the SAC are altered. The originals did not have handwriting about a loan. He wrote that the handwriting was “a later addition, created for the purposes of fabricating the appearance of a ‘loan.’ ” Cohen declared that the checks were payment for legal services, “making this, at most, a billing dispute.” When she disbursed the checks in 2017, Nakamura owed Cohen’s law firm $141,883. The firm applied the checks as payment toward her debt for legal services. It asked Nakahara to make the checks payable to its landlord, Douglas Emmett, to serve as payment for the firm’s $56,000 monthly rent. Cohen wrote, “The entire $111,902.45 was applied to multiple client invoices in several legal matters” for services performed in 2016–2017. The firm’s custodian of records, Julia Machai Cohen, declared that the checks were applied to “legal

5 work performed on [an] hourly fee basis and costs incurred in and prior to 2017.” At the time, “the firm was continuing to perform significant amount of legal work and incur costs on behalf of Plaintiff and/or Morita Produce.

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