Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2020
DocketB293259
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4 (Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4) 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
Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/31/20 Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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(a). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115(a).

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR

PETER L. KAUFMAN, B293259 PANISH, SHEA & BOYLE LLP, Los Angeles County Petitioners and Super. Ct. No. BS169525 Appellants, v. PROSPECT FUNDING LLC, Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from a Judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Daniel Murphy, Judge. Reversed. Peter L. Kaufman, Panish, Shea & Boyle for Petitioners and Appellants. Patrick R. Mahoney and Tyson W. Kovash for Respondent. The law firm of Panish Shea & Boyle (PS&B) and one of its attorneys, Peter L. Kaufman, Esq., appeal from a judgment confirming an arbitration award against them in favor of Prospect Funding (NY) LLC. We reverse, concluding the arbitrator exceeded his authority in finding Kaufman and PS&B agreed to arbitrate disputes arising out of a litigation funding agreement between their client, La-Phosa Sangkaphim, and Prospect, and by entering an arbitration award against them in absentia.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 1. The Underlying Personal Injury Litigation and Prospect’s Purchase of an Interest in the Litigation. Kaufman and PS&B represented La-Phosa Sangkaphim on a contingency basis in a personal injury suit in Riverside County Superior Court. While the lawsuit was pending, Prospect provided $10,000 to Sangkaphim under an undated “Sale and Repurchase Agreement” (Agreement) drafted by Prospect. The Agreement provided that Prospect, as the “Purchaser,” would buy from Sangkaphim, as the “Seller,” an interest in Sangkaphim’s eventual recovery, if any. The Agreement specified a “Purchase Price” of $13,600, of which Sangkaphim received $10,000 ($3,600 was a fee paid to Prospect). In exchange, Prospect acquired a right to receive proceeds from any eventual settlement or recovery through Sangkaphim’s “repurchase” of the interest sold to Prospect. The amount Prospect would receive varied depending on when Sangkaphim “repurchased” the interest sold. If the interest were “repurchased” within six months, Prospect would be paid $17,680. The amount to be paid to Prospect out of any

2 recovery (the “Repurchase Amount”) increased steeply to a maximum of $46,240 (the “Prospect Ownership Amount”) if paid after April 15, 2019.1 The Agreement contained a liquidated damages clause providing in the event Sangkaphim did not comply with the Agreement, “[Sangkaphim] SHALL IMMEDIATELY PAY TO [Prospect] LIQUIDATED DAMAGES IN THE AMOUNT OF TWICE THE PROSPECT OWNERSHIP AMOUNT REGARDLESS OF THE OUTCOME OF THE LEGAL CLAIM,” plus costs. The Agreement provided for mandatory arbitration of claims, including the determination of arbitrability: “[i]nstead of suing in court, [Prospect] and [Sangkaphim] agree to arbitrate all disputes . . . . ” and “THE PARTIES AGREE THAT THE ISSUE OF ARBITRABILITY SHALL BE DECIDED BY THE ARBITRATOR AND NOT BY ANY OTHER PERSON.” Prospect and Sangkaphim were the only parties to the Agreement. Underneath Sangkaphim’s signature on the last page of the Agreement, Kaufman signed a separate “Certification of Seller’s Attorney” (Certification), also drafted by Prospect. It states Kaufman “certifies to [Sangkaphim] that [Kaufman] has reviewed the terms and conditions of this . . . Agreement and explained [them] to [Sangkaphim].” The Certification also states: “I have a written fee agreement with Purchaser [sic]2 to pay my

1 This structure is known as a prepaid forward contract. (See Wood, Capital Gains, Litigation Finance & Legal Fees, (Mar. 2015) Vol. 23, No. 8 The M&A Tax Report (Woodllp.com/publications/articles/pdf/capital_gain_litigation.pdf) .)

2 In the Agreement, Sangkaphim was referred to as the “Seller” while Prospect was the “Purchaser.” Kaufman’s

3 fees contingent upon the outcome of the case. I agree that all disputes regarding this agreement will be resolved via arbitration and I have explained this to [Sangkaphim]. All proceeds of the legal claim will be disbursed via the attorney’s trust account and the attorney is following the written instructions of [Sangkaphim] with regard to this [Agreement] and the Irrevocable Letter of Directions which attorney has acknowledged.” Below Kaufman’s signature was a signature block for Prospect. The Irrevocable Letter of Direction (Letter), referenced in the Agreement and Certification, is dated October 6, 2015. Prospect prepared it for Sangkaphim’s signature, and addressed it to Kaufman. The Letter directed Kaufman, among other things, to “place an assignment, consensual lien and security interest against any and all settlement proceeds . . . after payment of legal fees and reimbursable costs, and to protect and satisfy this assignment, consensual lien and security interest of $46,240 which is the Prospect Ownership Amount.” It also directed Kaufman to pay Prospect in full before disbursing any settlement funds to Sangkaphim. The Letter states that in the event of a dispute over Prospect’s ownership amount, Kaufman is to hold the amount in dispute in PS&B’s trust fund “until the dispute is resolved by arbitration as per [Sangkaphim’s] agreement with [Prospect].” The concluding sentence of the letter states, “By signing the acknowledgement below, you acknowledge that this letter is from me and that you will comply with this irrevocable Letter of Direction for the benefit of [Prospect].”

contingent fee agreement was with Sangkaphim, not Prospect, so this is a scrivener’s error. The contingent fee agreement is not part of the record.

4 In an “Attorney Acknowledgment” (Acknowledgment) placed below Sangkaphim’s signature line in the Letter, Kaufman states, among other things: “[¶] I . . . acknowledge receipt of this Letter from my client; [¶] I will honor my client’s irrevocable letter of direction . . . as per instructions above. . . . [¶ . . . ¶] I acknowledge that all disputes arising out of this transaction will be resolved via arbitration per the Sale and Repurchase Agreement and the irrevocable letter of direction . . .[;] [and] [¶] [Prospect] has relied upon this letter and acknowledgement . . . .”

2. Settlement of Claim and Arbitration. The litigation settled for $350,000 in February 2016, with net settlement proceeds to Sangkaphim of $70,120.87, after deduction of attorneys’ fees, medical liens, non-recourse loans, and other costs and expenses. At the time of the settlement, pursuant to the terms of the Agreement, $17,680 was due Prospect, but PS&B did not pay it. Instead, PS&B later sent Prospect a check for $5,000 with a letter stating, “[e]nclosed please find a check in the amount of $5,000 as re-payment for the loan provided to [Sangkaphim]. Unfortunately, the case settled for much less than the actual value and we have no additional funds.”3 Prospect submitted a “Certification of Damages” to Sangkaphim and Kaufman, asserting $138,720 plus costs was due, consisting of the Prospect Ownership Amount of $46,240

3 Apparently, PS&B mistakenly disbursed Sangkaphim’s share of the settlement proceeds, except for $5,000, to Sangkaphim, without first paying Prospect. When PS&B discovered the error, it sent the remaining $5,000 to Prospect.

5 plus liquidated damages of two times that amount ($92,480). As a result of PS&B’s failure to pay, Prospect took the matter to arbitration in July 2016, alleging breach of contract against Kaufman and PS&B. Sangkaphim was not a party to the arbitration.

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Peter L. Kaufman, Panish etc. v. Prospect Funding CA2/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-l-kaufman-panish-etc-v-prospect-funding-ca24-calctapp-2020.