SB Liberty v. Isla Verde Asso.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 2013
DocketD061261A
StatusPublished

This text of SB Liberty v. Isla Verde Asso. (SB Liberty v. Isla Verde Asso.) 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
SB Liberty v. Isla Verde Asso., (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 5/22/13; modified 6/11/13 as nonpub. opn.; pub. order 6/18/13 (reposted 6/21/13 to include 6/11 mod.)

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SB LIBERTY, LLC, D061261

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2011-00059253- CU-MC-NC) ISLA VERDE ASSOCIATION, INC.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Frederick A.

Mandabach, Judge. (Retired judge of the San Bernardino Superior Court, assigned by the

Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.) Affirmed.

Epsten Grinnell & Howell, William S. Budd and Thomas A. Scutti; Gates,

O'Doherty, Gonter & Guy and Douglas D. Guy for Defendant and Appellant.

Lepiscopo & Associates Law Firm and Peter D. Lepiscopo for Plaintiff and

Respondent. INTRODUCTION

In 2006 Gregg and Janet Short (together the Shorts, who are not parties to this

appeal but are interested persons) purchased a home in the Isla Verde residential

community (Isla Verde). They then transferred title to themselves as trustees of their

family trust and later transferred title to plaintiff SB Liberty, LLC (SB Liberty), a

California limited liability company organized in early 2011, which is owned by the

Shorts as trustees of their trust and is managed by Gregg Short, SB Liberty's sole

manager. The Shorts reside in the home. Defendant Isla Verde Association, Inc. (the

Association) is a California nonprofit mutual benefit corporation that is an association of

the Isla Verde homeowners. It is undisputed that SB Liberty is a member of the

Association.

This action against the Association for injunctive relief (among other things) arose

when the Association's board of directors (the Board) denied SB Liberty's retained

counsel, Peter D. Lepiscopo, access to the Board's September and October 2011

meetings. SB Liberty brought a motion for preliminary injunction seeking to enjoin the

Association and the Board from taking any action to prevent or interfere with SB

Liberty's representatives, including Lepiscopo, attending and participating in the Board's

meetings. The court denied the motion.

SB Liberty appeals the denial of its motion for preliminary injunction, contending

(1) the Association─a "quasi-government entity"─has prevented SB Liberty─ whose

association, speech, and member rights are fundamental in nature─from attending the

open sessions of the Association's Board meetings by excluding its chosen

2 representative─attorney Lepiscopo1─from those meetings, thereby causing SB Liberty to

suffer great and irreparable harm; and (2) SB Liberty is entitled to send the representative

of its own choosing (Lepiscopo) to the open sessions of the Board's meetings because SB

Liberty is a member of the Association but not a natural person. We affirm the order

denying SB Liberty's motion for preliminary injunction.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Isla Verde is a residential community consisting of 87 single-family properties

located in the Lomas Santa Fe area of Solana Beach. The Association is a nonprofit

mutual benefit corporation established to conduct the business of Isla Verde's member

homeowners. The Association conducts its business pursuant to various governing

documents, including the articles of incorporation (Articles), protective covenants and

restrictions (PC&Rs) and bylaws (Bylaws).

The Association operates through its board of directors (Board), which consists of

seven Association "members," which the Bylaws define as "[e]very beneficial owner (as

defined by California Code, and as distinguished from a security owner) of real property

situated in . . . Isla Verde."

The Bylaws contain rules governing the meetings of members and the Board.

Article XV, section 15.14, of the Bylaws provides that "[a]ny member in good standing

1 Lepiscopo represented SB Liberty during the trial court proceedings in this matter and also represents SB Liberty on appeal. 3 may attend any [Board] meeting, except those portions of such meetings which are

declared as 'Executive Session' meetings." (Italics added.)

After the Shorts transferred title of their home to themselves as trustees of their

family trust in mid-2006, they submitted architectural plans to remodel the their house,

which eventually led to a dispute between the Shorts and the Association regarding the

scope of the construction the Shorts were permitted to perform, eventually resulting in

litigation brought by the Association.

SB Liberty's articles of organization were filed in early 2011, establishing it as a

limited liability company with Gregg Short designated as the sole manager.

Later that year, the Shorts' retained counsel, Lepiscopo, provided notice to the

Association's legal counsel, William S. Budd, that he represented the Shorts. In that

notice, Lepiscopo requested various documents and a "detailed summary of the purpose

for and status of any proposed amendments to the governing documents."

Thereafter, Lepiscopo advised Budd that he might attend the September 14, 2011

Board meeting on behalf of the Shorts. Budd advised Lepiscopo that he was not planning

to attend the September meeting and asked that Lepiscopo not attend, stating that "the

Rules of Professional Conduct prohibit communication with a represented party without

permission from that party's attorney."

Lepiscopo replied, indicating his attendance at the upcoming September 14 Board

meeting would not implicate the Rules of Professional Conduct because he would be

appearing as a representative of his clients, whom he again identified as Gregg and Janet

Short.

4 On the day before the Board meeting, Budd reiterated in an e-mail to Lepiscopo

that he was not allowed to attend the Board meeting over Budd's objection, as it would

violate rule 2-100 of the Rules of Professional Conduct, and also instructed Lepiscopo

that he could not communicate with his client without Budd's permission.

Lepiscopo responded with a letter, which he sent to Budd by e-mail and fax,

disagreeing with Budd's interpretation of rule 2-100 and stating that he (Budd) and the

Board "do not hold a veto over [the Shorts'] right to decide the manner in which they

attend any [Association] Board meeting," and reiterating that he (Lepiscopo ) planned to

attend the September 2011 board meeting on behalf of the Shorts as their representative.

Lepiscopo attempted to attend the September 2011 Board meeting on behalf of the

Shorts, but was denied access to the meeting. Specifically, after he advised the Board

that he represented the Shorts, Lepiscopo was asked to leave and was advised that the

Shorts could be at the meeting, but not their attorney. When Lepiscopo refused to leave,

the meeting was adjourned to a board member's residence.

The next day the Shorts, as trustees of their family trust, recorded a grant deed

conveying ownership of their residence to SB Liberty, a California limited liability

company.

About a week later the Shorts, as trustees of their trust, and Gregg Short, as the

manager of SB Liberty, executed─as principals─a "Specific Power of Attorney" (which

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SB Liberty v. Isla Verde Asso., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sb-liberty-v-isla-verde-asso-calctapp-2013.