Nunez v. Pennisi

241 Cal. App. 4th 861, 193 Cal. Rptr. 3d 912, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 955
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 27, 2015
DocketH039910
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 241 Cal. App. 4th 861 (Nunez v. Pennisi) 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
Nunez v. Pennisi, 241 Cal. App. 4th 861, 193 Cal. Rptr. 3d 912, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 955 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

WALSH, J. *

Joseph Nunez (Nunez) hoped to establish a commercial fishing business so that his son, Edward, could become a businessman and entrepreneur. Nunez faced two major obstacles: Nunez had no prior experience in the fishing industry and the commercial fishing vessel he and his son purchased for $1, the Pioneer, was in need of extensive repair. So, in addition to hiring a captain, Nunez contracted with Guiseppe Pennisi (Pennisi) to make repairs.

When a dispute arose about the quality of Pennisi’s work, Nunez sued for breach of contract, among other claims. Pennisi filed a cross-complaint alleging Nunez had failed to pay amounts due under the contract. Edward was added as a party as the case went to trial, as was Pennisi’s spouse, *866 Grazia. 1 Following the Nunezes’ opening statement, the trial court granted the Pennisis’ motion for nonsuit. The trial proceeded on the Pennisis’ claims. The jury returned a verdict against the Nunezes and the court entered judgment in favor of the Pennisis.

Subsequently, the Pennisis filed a complaint against the Nunezes and their attorneys alleging they committed the tort of malicious prosecution by filing and pursuing the original claims against the Pennisis. The Nunezes appeal an order denying their Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 2 (anti-SLAPP) motion to strike the malicious prosecution complaint and awarding $8,315 in attorney fees to the Pennisis. 3

On appeal, the Nunezes challenge both the denial of their anti-SLAPP motion and the award of attorney fees. We conclude Pennisi has not shown his action against Edward has the minimal merit necessary to avoid being stricken as a SLAPP, nor has Grazia shown a probability of prevailing on the merits against either of the Nunezes. We conclude, however, Pennisi has shown that his malicious prosecution action against Nunez has minimal merit. In doing so, we hold that unless a trial court otherwise specifies, a grant of nonsuit in the underlying case is a “legal termination favorable to the plaintiff’ for the purposes of a subsequent malicious prosecution action.

With respect to the order awarding attorney fees, we conclude reversal is required because the order failed to comply with the requirements of sections 425.16, subdivision (c) and 128.5, subdivision (c). For the foregoing reasons, we shall reverse and remand with directions.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Pioneer and the Contract

In July 2008, the Nunezes purchased the Pioneer, a commercial fishing vessel built in 1944, for $1. Having no fishing or boating expertise, they hired Frank Flores to captain the boat. On Flores’s recommendation, Nunez hired Pennisi to install a refrigeration system. Pennisi operates G&G Engineering and Construction in Monterey, a general contracting business specializing in refrigeration. Pennisi’s wife, Grazia, assists him in the business.

*867 Nunez and Pennisi entered into an agreement for the refrigeration work in July 2009. At Nunez’s direction, Pennisi contacted a Mexican company, Sirsa Titanium, to design the refrigeration system and fabricate the chillers, evaporators, and condensers. In August 2009, Pennisi learned Sirsa Titanium would provide the chillers in six to eight weeks. He informed Nunez that, as a result, the refrigeration system would not be ready for sardine fishing season. Nunez agreed that, for the upcoming season, his crew could use ice to keep the sardines cold, a common practice in the sardine fishing industry.

Pennisi determined the Pioneer needed additional repairs to be seaworthy. Nunez agreed to pay for the additional work Pennisi recommended and, therefore, Pennisi and his team repaired the boat’s pumping and electrical systems.

In September 2009, Pennisi and Nunez signed a contract describing the agreed-upon expanded scopie of work and setting forth a schedule of payment. The contract stated Nunez had paid $230,000 and owed a balance of $174,945. The schedule of payment provision required a down payment of $60,000 and weekly payments of $50,000 until the balance was paid in full.

The Pioneer went out sardine fishing in mid-September 2009. However, the crew was forced to return to port because of steering problems unrelated to Pennisi’s work on the boat. The boat remained docked for the remainder of the month. Pennisi helped repair the steering, which delayed work on the refrigeration system. Between October 7 and October 28, 2009, work was performed on the Pioneer to repair the shaft and to align the engine. Nunez testified that the Pioneer was inoperable in October 2009 because of repairs being performed on the shaft, not because of Pennisi’s work on the refrigeration system.

The refrigeration system’s chillers were installed on November 4, 2009. Pennisi started the refrigeration system in the evening on November 7, 2009. At that time, he was “only able to run one compressor off one generator” because, according to Pennisi, “the generators [Nunez] had purchased were worn out and inefficient, and could not produce steady consistent power.” Pennisi “had informed [Nunez] that the generators would have to be replaced,” but Nunez had failed to do so despite representing “that he would obtain or purchase new generators.”

Gabriel Koch, who worked on the Pioneer’s refrigeration system with Pennisi, testified that “the generators were not giving the proper voltage for the [refrigeration] system to stay where it should be to keep the chillers cold so that fish could stay cold.”

Ernest Pagan, a commercial fisherman and shipwright, testified that he was on the Pioneer on the night Pennisi started the refrigeration system. Pagan *868 looked at Pennisi’s work on the refrigeration system and judged it to be “[a]bsolutely beautiful . . . very professional.” According to Pagan, “the generators did not put enough power out . . . [s]o you could not run all four of [the compressors] together. You had to run one at a time, otherwise the system would totally collapse.” Pennisi told Pagan he planned to return to the boat the following day to continue working on the refrigeration system.

The next day, November 8, 2009, Pennisi went to work on the Pioneer as usual but it was gone, along with tools belonging to Pennisi and his team. At Nunez’s direction, Flores had sailed the boat to Southern California to start squid fishing. According to Pagan, Pennisi was “upset” the boat was gone and “disappointed that he couldn’t finish the job.” Koch testified that the Pioneer left Monterey for Southern California before they had finished work on the refrigeration system. Because he did not know the boat was leaving and he had more work to do, Koch left approximately $1,000 worth of tools on the boat.

Dennis Leudesiaire, a Pioneer

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 Cal. App. 4th 861, 193 Cal. Rptr. 3d 912, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunez-v-pennisi-calctapp-2015.