Ontiveros v. Constable CA4/1

245 Cal. App. 4th 686, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 836
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2016
DocketD066412
StatusUnpublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 4th 686 (Ontiveros v. Constable CA4/1) 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
Ontiveros v. Constable CA4/1, 245 Cal. App. 4th 686, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 836 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

HALLER, J.

— Guadalupe A. Ontiveros, as the minority shareholder in Omega Electric, Inc. (Omega), sued majority shareholder Kent C. Constable, *690 his wife (Karen Constable), and Omega, 1 asserting direct and derivative claims arising from a dispute over management of Omega and its assets. Karen Moskowitz and Thomas Regele (together, Counsel) represented all the defendants in the litigation. Ontiveros moved to disqualify Counsel on the basis they could not simultaneously represent all the defendants because his derivative claims against Omega rendered Omega and the Constables adverse to each other. The trial court granted Ontiveros’s motion and disqualified Counsel from representing any of the defendants.

On appeal, defendants contend the trial court erred by disqualifying Counsel altogether. Alternatively, defendants contend the court should have allowed Counsel to continue representing only the Constables. Apart from the merits of Ontiveros’s motion, defendants also contend the trial court should have denied it on the basis Ontiveros did not file it until 16 months after he became aware of Counsel’s alleged conflict.

For reasons we will explain, we affirm the order disqualifying Counsel as to Omega, but reverse as to the Constables.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The Underlying Disputes

Ontiveros, Kent, and nonparty Ray Leckband worked together as electricians at Cal Energy Generation during the 1990’s. By 2001, Leckband had retired, Ontiveros had taken a new job at the Imperial Irrigation District (District), and Kent was trying to start his own electrical company. The three agreed to invest in and form an electrical contracting venture that eventually became known as Omega. Leckband, Kent, and Ontiveros were Omega’s shareholders, directors, and officers.

Omega initially operated under Leckband’s electrical contractor’s license. In exchange, Leckband received a 20 percent share of Omega’s original stock and other benefits. Kent received a 40 percent share of Omega’s original stock and served as its president and CEO, overseeing its day-to-day operations. Kent worked exclusively for Omega. Ontiveros also received a 40 percent share of Omega’s original stock.

In 2009, Kent and Ontiveros discussed the possibility of purchasing certain real property as equal owners, with the expectation that they would improve *691 the property and lease it to Omega. Ontiveros contends he and Kent agreed to the deal and that he made a 25 percent down payment of $15,000. Kent contends he and Ontiveros never agreed to the deal, so he purchased the property himself and took title in his and Karen’s names. The Constables then leased the property to Omega, which paid for certain improvements to the property.

■ Kent appointed his son (then a full-time college student at the University of Arizona) corporate secretary of Omega. Omega paid the son approximately $12,000 between May 2011 and August 2012. Omega also paid the Constables’ daughter approximately $14,000 between December 2009 and June 2011. Ontiveros contends the Constables’ children did no work to earn these payments.

Kent understood that when Omega became a viable business, Ontiveros would leave his job at the District, obtain his electrical engineering license, and work full time at Omega. That never happened. Kent considered Ontiveros’s contributions to Omega over the years to be inadequate in light of Ontiveros’s $100,000 annual salary from Omega. When Ontiveros did not accede to Kent’s ultimatum that he leave his District job and join Omega full time, Kent purchased Leckband’s 20 percent share of Omega and became a licensed electrical contractor.

In late October 2012, Kent caused Omega to pay a $10,000 retainer to Counsel ostensibly to fund Counsel’s representation of Kent in his developing dispute with Ontiveros. According to Kent, he did not intend to retain Counsel on Omega’s behalf; Omega already had corporate counsel who continue to represent it on matters unrelated to this litigation. Counsel had not previously represented Omega, the Constables, or Ontiveros.

In November 2012, Kent — now a 60 percent shareholder of Omega— caused Omega to stop paying Ontiveros and to terminate his employment.

The Lawsuit

In December 2012, Ontiveros filed a verified complaint against Kent and Omega. The complaint asserted a variety of contract and tort claims against Kent. It also asserted a claim against Kent and Omega for involuntary dissolution of Omega. The complaint did not assert any claims against Karen or any derivative claims against Omega.

Within days of receiving the complaint, Kent propounded written discovery to Ontiveros and noticed his deposition.

*692 In late January 2013, Omega retained Counsel to represent it in this lawsuit.

On January 30 and 31, Counsel took Ontiveros’s deposition on Kent’s behalf.

In February, Omega first appeared in the lawsuit by moving (together with Kent) to strike portions of the complaint. The motion became moot when Ontiveros filed a first amended verified complaint the same day.

Ontiveros’s first amended complaint asserted derivative causes of action against Kent and Omega (as a nominal defendant) 2 to confirm Omega’s (as opposed to the Constables’) ownership interest in the property and to “have Omega get . . . back from [Kent]’s fraud” (among other things) the money spent acquiring Leckband’s 20 percent interest in Omega and rent Omega paid to the Constables for the property. The amended complaint also substituted Karen as a Doe defendant and asserted equitable causes of action against her.

In March, Karen retained Counsel to represent her in this lawsuit.

Omega and Karen noticed Ontiveros’s deposition. After Ontiveros did not appear, Omega and Karen successfully moved to compel Ontiveros to appear and were awarded sanctions.

Because Ontiveros was claiming damages for emotional distress and lost income, defendants subpoenaed his medical and employment records. Ontiveros objected to both subpoenas and moved to quash them; defendants opposed. The court denied Ontiveros’s motion to quash the employee records subpoena, but granted the motion to quash the medical records because the court’s concurrent ruling striking Ontiveros’s allegations of emotional distress rendered those documents irrelevant.

In May 2013, Ontiveros filed a second amended verified complaint. Defendants successfully moved to strike and demurred to certain portions of it. Defendants answered the second amended complaint, and Kent and Omega *693 filed a cross-complaint for breach of fiduciary duty, breach of duty of undivided loyalty, conversion, claim and delivery (of corporate property entrusted to Ontiveros), and rescission of any agreement between Kent and Ontiveros regarding the property.

In December 2013, Ontiveros subpoenaed business records from Omega’s bank and accountant; both objected to the subpoenas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. App. 4th 686, 199 Cal. Rptr. 3d 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ontiveros-v-constable-ca41-calctapp-2016.