Peterson v. Zhang

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2025
DocketB334987
StatusPublished

This text of Peterson v. Zhang (Peterson v. Zhang) 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
Peterson v. Zhang, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/8/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

CHARLES F. PETERSON, B334987

Plaintiff and Respondent, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 22STCV254641

JINSHU ZHANG,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mel Red Recana, Judge. Affirmed and remanded. Law Offices of Charles F. Peterson and Charles Peterson; Benedon & Serlin, Gerald M. Serlin and Wendy S. Albers for Plaintiff and Respondent. FTW Law Group and Felix T. Woo for Defendant and Appellant. ____________________ This case began as a neighbor-to-neighbor disagreement about a tree branch. The neighbor would not cut the branch on a pine tree, so Jinshu Zhang submitted a “view restoration application” to his homeowners association, which retained Charles Peterson to mediate the dispute about the branch. When the association dismissed Zhang’s application, Zhang sued mediator Peterson for a breach of fiduciary duty. Zhang lost against Peterson because Zhang could not establish this mediator owed him a fiduciary duty. Zhang did not appeal his defeat. After Zhang’s lawsuit ended in failure, Peterson sued Zhang. We now confront Peterson’s case for malicious prosecution against Zhang. As the defendant in Peterson’s malicious prosecution action, Zhang filed an anti-SLAPP motion, which the trial court rightly denied. We affirm this denial of Zhang’s special motion to strike. Our main holding is that a discretionary sanctions ruling did not trigger the so-called “interim adverse judgment rule,” which Zhang hoped would shield him from Peterson’s malicious prosecution suit. We explain the nature of this rule and why we reject Zhang’s ill-conceived effort to broaden it. Zhang’s other attacks on the trial court ruling come to naught. Undesignated citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure. I In evaluating Zhang’s anti-SLAPP motion, we accept as true the allegations in Peterson’s complaint and his supporting evidence. (See Wilson v. Parker, Covert & Chidester (2002) 28 Cal.4th 811, 821 (Wilson).) Zhang’s neighbor, the one who owned the tree branch, was Travers Wood. Wood is not a party to this appeal. Rather, our parties are Zhang and mediator Peterson.

2 Zhang and Peterson are lawyers and homeowners in Palos Verdes Estates. Both belonged to the Palos Verdes Homes Association, which we refer to as the Association. The Association had the right to enter private properties in this neighborhood and to trim trees. It provided a mediation and arbitration procedure to resolve tree disputes between neighbors and, to this end, hired a mediator on an as-needed basis. If mediation did not resolve the dispute, the mediator would arbitrate the matter. Homeowners could appeal the arbitration result to the Association’s board for a final decision. The Association retained Peterson as a mediator for this dispute resolution program. Peterson owned a mediation firm called Stonebridge Mediation. Zhang bought his Palos Verdes Estates home in 2000. The coastline view was a major factor for Zhang, who alleged this view added substantial value. Peterson resolved two complaints Zhang submitted in 2007. These concerned flora on property belonging to Zhang’s neighbor Jimmy Kim. In October 2013, Zhang submitted a third view restoration application to the Association. In his application, Zhang claimed a pine tree on Wood’s property blocked his view. This is the pine tree sparking the current lawsuit. The Association retained Peterson to mediate this dispute. Peterson met with Zhang and Wood. Wood agreed to trim the offending branch. Relying on Wood’s promise, Zhang withdrew his application. In July 2017, Zhang sent another view restoration application to the Association, claiming Wood had not trimmed the pine tree. The Association again retained Peterson to resolve the dispute.

3 Peterson met with Zhang, who understood from this meeting Peterson would tell Wood to remove the branch, and that removing it would not damage the tree. Peterson met with Wood, who agreed to trim the pine tree but would not remove the entire branch. Peterson asked if Zhang would accept this proposal. Zhang said no. If Wood refused to cut the branch, Zhang wrote: “I am ready to fight him all the way at the Board level and, if necessary, in the Superior Court.” Peterson offered to supervise the trimming of Wood’s pine tree so Zhang could recover as much of the view as possible. Peterson said the tree branch was large and removing it could harm the tree or cause instability on the slope. He also cautioned Zhang the Association’s board “could deny [his] application outright on several grounds: not a primary view, not a significant obstruction, not an adjacent property, same view from different floor unobstructed.” Peterson continued: “All these points will be argued, and as you know, taking this to court will be a time-consuming and expensive undertaking.” Zhang disputed each point and insisted the entire branch had to go. In early August, Peterson reiterated his offer to supervise the trimming of Wood’s tree. His email told Zhang that, if Zhang or Wood were unhappy with his decision about the extent of needed trimming, they were free to appeal Peterson’s decision to the Association’s board. Thereafter, on August 4, 2017, Zhang told Peterson that if Peterson did not issue an arbitrator’s award in Zhang’s favor, Zhang would sue Peterson, the Board, and tree owner Wood. Peterson then spoke to Sidney Croft, the Association’s general counsel, about the impasse between Zhang and Wood.

4 Peterson told Croft he planned to prepare an arbitration award denying Zhang’s application “on the grounds he had previously mentioned to Zhang, i.e., that the view was not significantly obstructed, that the view he was seeking was not his primary view, and/or that he did not qualify for the program because his property was not adjacent to the tree owner’s property.” He also mentioned Zhang’s threat to sue the Association if the arbitration decision did not favor Zhang. Croft unilaterally decided the Association should not proceed with Zhang’s application. Croft sent Zhang a letter stating the Association was unable to proceed with Zhang’s application because Zhang’s property did not adjoin Wood’s property. Croft wrote the Association could resolve only disputes concerning adjoining properties. Zhang rejected this “adjoining properties” rationale as a pretext for a bad faith denial of his claim. He found an article Peterson published in 2014 that Zhang interpreted to mean the Association did not have an “adjoining properties” requirement. Zhang sued Peterson, Croft, and the Association in 2017. His claims were breach of contract against the Association and breach of fiduciary duty against the Association, Croft, and Peterson. Zhang alleged Peterson “is, and at all relevant times hereto, was a member of the Board of Directors and an officer of [the Association]” and “an agent, servant or employee of [the Association], hired to act on behalf of [the Association].” Zhang’s complaint alleged the Association’s website listed Peterson’s name under its “Board of Directors.” Zhang further alleged Peterson, Croft, and the Association “had a fiduciary duty to [Zhang] to protect his view right under the [Association’s Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions] by

5 accepting and processing his tree applications in good faith and ordering the cutting of the offending tree branches that obstruct his view.” Croft, Peterson, and the Association breached this fiduciary duty, Zhang alleged, by “unscrupulously fabricat[ing] a prerequisite of ‘adjoining properties’ with full knowledge of its falsehood.” According to Zhang, the reason for this fabrication was “rabid racial discrimination” against him.

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Peterson v. Zhang, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-zhang-calctapp-2025.