Save Westwood Village v. Luskin

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 2015
DocketB253013
StatusPublished

This text of Save Westwood Village v. Luskin (Save Westwood Village v. Luskin) 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
Save Westwood Village v. Luskin, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 12/22/14; pub. order 1/15/15 (see end of opn.)

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

SAVE WESTWOOD VILLAGE et al., B253013

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BS142388) v.

MEYER LUSKIN et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. James C. Chalfant, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Offices of Noel Weiss and Noel W. Weiss for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

Meyers, Nave, Riback, Silver & Wilson, Amrit S. Kulkarni, Julia L. Bond, Shiraz D. Tangri, and Mary C. Tsai for Defendants and Respondents. Petitioners and appellants Save Westwood Village, Sandy Brown, and Harald Hahn (collectively, appellants) appeal from the trial court’s order granting a special motion to strike, pursuant Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (anti-SLAPP motion),1 all of the causes of action asserted against respondents Meyer Luskin, Renee Luskin (the Luskins), and the UCLA Foundation (the Foundation)2 in this action concerning a proposed 25,000 square foot conference center and a 294,000 square foot, 250-room guest center to be constructed on the UCLA campus (the conference center). We affirm the trial court’s order. BACKGROUND The parties Save Westwood Village is a California non-profit corporation formed in 1997. Sandy Brown and Harald Hahn are taxpayers, registered voters, and residents of the City of Los Angeles. The Foundation is a California non-profit corporation with its principal place of business located within the County of Los Angeles. Its purpose is to act as a conduit through which individuals can make tax exempt gifts to benefit UCLA. Meyer Luskin is a director of the Foundation. He and Renee Luskin pledged $40 million to the Foundation to support the construction of the conference center. Appellants’ petition Appellants commenced this action on April 3, 2013, by filing a verified petition for writ of mandate seeking to rescind the Luskins’ donation toward construction of the conference center and to require the Regents of the University of California (Regents) to pay the City of Los Angeles (City) certain taxes allegedly owing in connection with the

1 All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise stated. A special motion to strike is also referred as an anti-SLAPP motion.

2 The Luskins and the Foundation are referred to collectively as respondents.

2 conference center and other UCLA visitor accommodations.3 Appellants allege that on December 23, 2010, the Luskins made a written grant to the Foundation of $40 million to be used to support construction of the conference center and that the Foundation in turn pledged those funds to UCLA for that purpose. Thereafter, appellants allege, the conference center project “‘morphed’ into the development of a commercial hotel,” in violation of University of California policies prohibiting the use of tax-exempt financing for non-exempt activities. In March 2012, while approval of the conference center project was still pending, the Regents requested additional information and analysis regarding less costly alternatives. The Regents’s request prompted the Luskins to write a letter in support of the project in July 2012 “‘clarifying’ their initial ‘vision’” for the conference center. Appellants further allege that the Foundation is “mandated by its by-laws and incorporation documents to exclusively fund charitable undertakings,” that this limitation “applies to the financing of the construction of buildings for exempt purposes,” and that the Luskins’ $40 million grant was improperly and unlawfully applied toward activities that exceed the Foundation’s powers. Appellants’ petition asserts causes of action for (1) injunctive relief under section 526a4 against the Regents to pay taxes allegedly owing to the City as the result of UCLA’s existing hotel operations; (2) injunctive relief under section 526a against the Regents, the Luskins, and the Foundation to set aside the Regents’s approval of the conference center, to rescind the Foundation’s $40 million pledge toward construction of the conference center, and to rescind the condition imposed by the Luskins on their $40 million gift to the Foundation that the funds be used only for construction of the

3 The Regents and the City are not parties to this appeal.

4 Section 526a authorizes “[a]n action to obtain a judgment, restraining and preventing any illegal expenditure of, waste of, or injury to, the estate, funds, or other property of a county, town, city or city and county of the state . . . against any officer thereof, or any agent, or other person acting in its behalf . . . by a citizen resident therein . . . who is assessed for and is liable to pay . . . a tax therein.”

3 conference center; (3) writ of mandate against the City to collect all taxes owed on account of the Regents’s operation of UCLA visitor accommodations; and (4) declaratory relief against respondents, the Regents, and the City. Respondents’ anti-SLAPP motion and dismissal from the action Repondents filed a demurrer and an anti-SLAPP motion to strike the claims asserted against them. In response, appellants filed a first amended petition that eliminated all claims against respondents but that still named respondents as parties. Respondents then filed a demurrer to the first amended petition and renewed their anti- SLAPP motion. Appellants opposed the anti-SLAPP motion, arguing that neither respondents’ free speech rights, nor their rights of petition were implicated by the original petition because the gravamen of the claims against respondents was enforcement of the Regents’s fiduciary duties to refrain from engaging in ultra vires commercial activities and to evaluate the economic bona fides of the proposed conference center. Appellants repeatedly stated that they were not challenging the Luskins’ right to donate funds to the Foundation or the Foundation’s right to contribute those funds to a UCLA construction project. Their challenge, appellants’ insisted, was directed at the Regents’s unauthorized operation of a commercial enterprise. Appellants claimed to have named respondents as parties in order to give respondents “an opportunity to defend their position and provide the Court with the relevant input and authority to support the lawfulness of the REGENTS’ actions.” Appellants argued that their claims against respondents came within section 425.17, subdivision (b), which exempts certain public interest lawsuits from the ambit of the anti-SLAPP statute. The day before the October 1, 2013 hearing on respondents’ demurrer and anti- SLAPP motion, appellants voluntarily dismissed respondents from the action. Trial court’s ruling At the October 1, 2013 hearing, the trial court noted that by voluntarily dismissing respondents from the petition, appellants had conceded they could not show a probability of prevailing on their claims against respondents. The court addressed the merits of the

4 anti-SLAPP motion solely for purposes of determining respondents’ entitlement to an attorney fee award under section 425.16, subdivision (c)(1). The trial court found that appellants’ claims against the Luskins were based on the December 23, 2010 letter granting $40 million to the Foundation and the July 2012 letter the Luskins had written in support of the conference center when the Regents’s approval of the project was pending. The trial court found that these letters constituted an exercise of free speech in connection with a matter of public interest. The court found that the Foundation’s pledge of funds to UCLA toward construction of the conference center was also an exercise of free speech.

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Save Westwood Village v. Luskin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-westwood-village-v-luskin-calctapp-2015.