Norman v. Strateman

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 2025
DocketA170356
StatusPublished

This text of Norman v. Strateman (Norman v. Strateman) 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
Norman v. Strateman, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 6/20/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

DONALD NORMAN, Plaintiff and Appellant, A170356 v. PATRICK STRATEMAN et al., (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. CGC-17-556483) Defendants and Respondents, and INTERSANGO LLC, et al., Nominal Defendants.

Plaintiff Donald Norman, defendant Patrick Strateman (Patrick), and Amir Taaki established Intersango, a start-up cryptocurrency exchange. After Intersango was shuttered, Norman filed a derivative complaint on behalf of Intersango against Patrick and Jamie Strateman (jointly, the Stratemans) and Taaki. Over a year after the parties entered into a settlement agreement, Norman filed a motion to set aside the settlement, and the Stratemans filed a motion to enforce the settlement. The trial court granted the motion to enforce, denied the motion to set aside, and entered judgment dismissing the parties’ claims pursuant to the settlement agreement. Norman now appeals from that judgment and related order, claiming the trial court erred in concluding the settlement agreement had been judicially approved and was

1 enforceable. We agree and remand for the trial court to conduct the necessary judicial review of the settlement. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Patrick asserts Intersango faced numerous legal and financial liabilities, while Norman asserts the company was successful and growing. Regardless of the accuracy of their respective assertions, it is undisputed that Patrick eventually closed Intersango’s bitcoin exchange. The derivative complaint alleged that Patrick excluded Norman and Taaki from Intersango’s operations, closed the company’s bitcoin exchange without their consent, and retained Intersango’s assets for his benefit while refusing to return customers’ bitcoins. These claims formed the basis for seven causes of action: (1) breach of fiduciary duty; (2) aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty; (3) conversion; (4) aiding and abetting conversion; (5) unjust enrichment; (6) accounting; and (7) concealment. The complaint sought compensatory damages, restitution, a court-supervised accounting, imposition of a constructive trust over Intersango’s bitcoin and other assets, injunctive relief, punitive damages, attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest. In response, Patrick filed a derivative cross-complaint against Norman, alleging Norman abdicated his duties as CEO of Intersango and liquidated an Intersango bank account for his own benefit. The cross-complaint asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, unjust enrichment/restitution, and accounting. During trial, the parties participated in settlement negotiations at the recommendation of the trial judge, Judge Rochelle East. Norman and the Stratemans entered into a settlement of all claims and cross-claims against each other. Judge Harold Kahn, the settlement judge, had the parties recite the terms of the settlement on the record. All parties confirmed their

2 agreement to the terms of the settlement, represented they did not have any questions and had the opportunity to confer with counsel, and acknowledged the settlement would be immediately enforceable. Neither party requested the court include any additional information on the record, apart from retaining jurisdiction to resolve future disputes. The parties informed Judge East of their settlement, and the court adjourned trial. The court also set an order to show cause (OSC) hearing regarding dismissal pursuant to the settlement. Norman later sought to continue the OSC hearing because the parties were still finalizing a written agreement formalizing the terms of the settlement. The Stratemans objected, noting that there was no basis for any delay because “the Parties entered into a binding settlement agreement and put the terms on the record before Judge Kahn,” “that settlement agreement is reflected in a final, binding transcript,” and “there are no claims or cross- claims left to prosecute.” Norman eventually altered his justification for delaying dismissal of the action from needing a written settlement to opposing the settlement entirely. Norman filed a motion “to confirm absence of an enforceable settlement in derivative action and/or in the alternative, to set aside settlement on various grounds.” He argued a derivative lawsuit settlement cannot be enforced without judicial approval, and the court had not provided such approval. Norman further asserted the settlement should be set aside due to (1) Patrick’s false promise to return customer funds, and (2) Patrick’s position that only certain customer funds were subject to the settlement. In response, the Stratemans filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement, arguing the settlement terms were explicitly defined, and the

3 parties understood and agreed to be bound by those terms. They requested the court enter judgment on the settlement agreement and dismiss the case. At the subsequent hearing, Norman argued that any derivative litigation settlement required judicial approval. Norman argued a motion for judicial approval must be filed, and he was entitled to oppose the motion and argue that the interests of Intersango and its customers were not being protected. Norman conceded this issue was not raised at the time the settlement was placed on the record, stating, “I think everyone forgot it was a derivative litigation.” The trial court (Judge East) granted the motion to enforce the settlement. The court explained “the transcript does not indicate that anyone made any objection at the time [of the settlement] or requested that something be put in more detail on the record.” The court further noted derivative lawsuits are designed “to protect shareholders,” all three of the Intersango shareholders “were parties to the lawsuit,” and “[s]o in terms of protecting the shareholders, that settlement agreement clearly goes right to that issue.”1 The court further concluded that the purpose of the settlement was to protect and return customer assets, and “those are the terms that are in the [settlement] agreement.” The court explained that if the Stratemans failed to return customer assets pursuant to the settlement, the remedy “is to enforce the agreement not to necessarily set it aside.” The court then denied the motion to set aside the settlement. It acknowledged Norman may now wish he added additional terms, such as an audit, but “in terms of the pace and the fact of refunding customers,” those

1 We note one of the shareholders, Taaki, did not participate in the

litigation or the settlement negotiations, although he was a named defendant in Norman’s complaint.

4 issues are “all addressed in this agreement, and those things can be addressed as may be needed going forward with the settlement agreement.” The court noted the parties, including Norman, stated they did not have any questions regarding the settlement terms, they had the opportunity to consult with their attorneys, and they understood there was “no room for buyer’s remorse.” The court concluded, “So it is clear to me reading the transcript of this settlement agreement that all of the parties understood . . . what the terms were and what it was that they were agreeing to and that it was indeed immediately enforceable.” The court entered judgment and dismissed the claims and cross-claims with prejudice. Norman timely appealed. DISCUSSION On appeal, Norman argues the settlement required court approval because it resolved derivative claims, the settlement was never approved, and the trial court erred in enforcing the settlement and entering judgment. Norman further asserts the trial court ignored evidence that Patrick did not intend to return customer funds as required by the terms of the settlement. I.

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Bluebook (online)
Norman v. Strateman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-v-strateman-calctapp-2025.