Oviedo v. Windsor Twelve Properties, LLC

212 Cal. App. 4th 97, 151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 117, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1283
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2012
DocketNo. B237756
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 212 Cal. App. 4th 97 (Oviedo v. Windsor Twelve Properties, LLC) 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
Oviedo v. Windsor Twelve Properties, LLC, 212 Cal. App. 4th 97, 151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 117, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1283 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion

CROSKEY, J.

This is an appeal by Elvira Oviedo (appellant) of an order granting a special motion to strike each cause of action in her complaint pursuant to the anti-SLAPP1 statute, Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16.2 Appellant contends that the trial court’s granting of the special motion to strike was in error as (1) respondents’ alleged illegal rent increase, the basis of her first cause of action, was not a protected activity, and (2) she established a probability of prevailing with respect to her malicious prosecution action. We agree with appellant and will reverse the order in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND3

1. Factual History of the Parties’ Dispute4

Appellant resides in apartment J of a 12-unit complex on S. Windsor Boulevard (the Windsor Complex) in Los Angeles, California. The Windsor Complex is owned by respondent Windsor Twelve Properties, LLC (Windsor). Respondent Marc Myers (Myers) is the managing member of [102]*102Windsor. Myers’s family purchased the Windsor Complex in 1999 and transferred its ownership to Windsor in 2000 and Myers became the managing member at that time. Appellant was residing in apartment J prior to the Myers’s family’s purchase. She resides there with her young adopted daughter. Respondents raised appellant’s rent on an annual basis. Each time, respondents provided notice to appellant in the month of November regarding the increase that would become effective on January 1 of the following year.5

On May 17, 2010, Myers posted a three-day notice to pay or vacate on appellant’s door due to her failure to make a timely payment of the May 2010 rent. On May 24, 2010, Myers wrote a letter to appellant that recited that appellant had accused him of trying to intimidate her and of wanting her out of the building, which he denied. In the letter, Myers briefly mentioned the notice to quit for failure to pay rent and enclosed copies of letters that he had received from other tenants complaining about appellant’s child and the noise from her apartment. He also referred to an earlier letter from November of 2009 that described “items” she had yet to fix. The letter concluded with the following sentence, “The bottom line Mandore is really two things; [szc] receiving my rent on time and the noise problem for others.”

Despite referring to a letter he sent in November of 2009 that appeared to note issues regarding her daughter, Myers asserted that he first became aware that appellant had a daughter around April of 2010. Shortly after posting the three-day notice to quit for her failure to pay rent, Myers reported appellant to the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) on July 1, 2010. Myers asserted that he received complaints from current and prospective tenants that appellant’s daughter screamed for hours without comfort including late at night and that she was left unsupervised in the building courtyard near the fountain. He claims he reported appellant to the DCFS out of concern for possible liability by Windsor. Appellant argues that Myers’s intentions were malicious rather than in good faith; however, she produced no evidence to support that claim. The DCFS investigation was later closed as unfounded.

Myers stated in a declaration that he met with Denice Gaucin (Gaucin), an attorney at the Law Offices of Dennis Block, around October 25, 2010, regarding problems he was having with appellant, including “her chronic late rental payments, tenant complaints about noise from her unit, and her [103]*103daughter being left unsupervised.” His “purpose for the meeting was to determine [Windsor’s] rights as [appellant’s] landlord [regarding these problems] and several of the tenant’s personal fears of [appellant.]” Gaucin confirmed his statements in her declaration. He described two incidents involving tenants who occupied units below appellant’s who requested to be moved because of noise. Another tenant, who was set to become the new resident manager, Sabine Volel (Volel), was the focus of a DCFS investigation shortly after Myers had reported appellant and she believed appellant had reported Volel in retaliation. Myers became concerned that if he tried to evict appellant, the process would necessarily involve other tenants and he was not willing to do that. Myers informed Gaucin that he had reported appellant to DCFS during this meeting.

Appellant disputes the beginning of Gaucin’s representation of Windsor and other information asserted in Myers’s declaration but she failed to provide any evidence in support. Instead she points to Myers’s statement that he signed the written retainer agreement on or about January 17, 2011. No copy of such agreement is in the record. Without more, this is not sufficient to negate Myers’s assertion that he sought counsel in October of 2010.

Myers informed Gaucin that there was no written lease with appellant. Gaucin informed Myers that he was entitled to raise appellant’s rent to market prices if appellant did not reside there prior to January 1, 1996. Myers informed her that the current resident manager, Jan Karaoglanian (Karaoglanian), who had resided in the Windsor Complex since 1991, told him appellant moved into the apartment in 1997 to live with her boyfriend, who was the original tenant.

Respondents notified appellant sometime in late 2010 or early 20116 that the rent for apartment J was increased from $1,283 to $1,850 per month, effective January 1, 2011. A written notice was prepared, dated October 25, 2010, and addressed to “Mandore Oviedo.” In response to this notice, appellant’s attorney, Jennifer Hughes (Hughes), contacted Gaucin on January 14, 2011, to discuss appellant’s contention that the 44 percent increase in rent was illegal pursuant to the Rent Stabilization Ordinance of the City of Los Angeles (RSO).7 She followed this discussion with a letter that same day noting that appellant did not receive proper service of the notice regarding increased rent. The letter also stated her reasons for asserting that the increase was illegal, including (1) that appellant had moved into the apartment in 1993 [104]*104with her boyfriend, Phillip Betz (Betz), and their dog, Lucky, and had resided there ever since; (2) that appellant had signed the original lease along with Betz; and (3) that even if she had not signed the original lease, the increase in rent was unlawful because she resided there prior to January 1, 1996.8 In the letter, Hughes referred to appellant as Elvira Oviedo, rather than Mandore Oviedo.

Another of respondents’ attorneys, Dennis Block (Block), replied to Hughes in a letter requesting a copy of the lease, asserting that Mandore Oviedo and her child were the only occupants of apartment J, and asserting that it was irrelevant whether “Elvira Oviedo has a lease or commenced her tenancy before the year 1996.” (Italics added.) It is not clear from the record whether there were any further communications between Hughes and Block regarding his assertions. After appellant failed to pay the demanded increased rent, respondents prepared a “Three Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit Premises,” which was dated January 19, 2011, and addressed again to Mandore Oviedo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 Cal. App. 4th 97, 151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 117, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oviedo-v-windsor-twelve-properties-llc-calctapp-2012.