SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
DocketB249964
StatusUnpublished

This text of SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1 (SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1) 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
SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 8/27/14 SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

SFL PARAMOUNT, LLC, B249964

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. NC058481) v.

FRIENDLY VILLAGE MOBILE ASSOCIATES, LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Michael P. Vicencia, Judge. Affirmed. Edgerton & Weaver, Chad E. Weaver and Jacquelyn M. Mohr for Defendant and Appellant. Smith, Mark T. Kearney and Steven C. Smith for Plaintiff and Respondent. _______________________________ Defendant Friendly Village Mobile Associates, LLC (Friendly Village) appeals from the trial court’s order denying its anti-SLAPP motion under Code of Civil 1 Procedure section 425.16 in this malicious prosecution action brought by SFL Paramount, LLC (SFL). We find, although this action arises from protected activity within the meaning of the anti-SLAPP statute, SFL has demonstrated its malicious prosecution action has at least the minimal merit required to demonstrate a probability of prevailing and to survive the anti-SLAPP motion. Accordingly, we affirm. BACKGROUND The Parties and Their Dispute Friendly Village and SFL owned neighboring parcels of land in the City of Long Beach, located on a site formerly used as a garbage dump. Friendly Village used its property to operate a mobile home park, containing 182 mobile homes, two apartment buildings, a clubhouse and a pool. Twenty-four of the mobile homes were situated along the southern border of Friendly Village’s property, adjacent to SFL’s property. The mobile home park was built on top of the garbage dump. Thus, the soil underneath was filled with refuse. When SFL acquired the property next to the mobile home park in 2005, SFL’s property was a vacant lot. The prior owners had planned to turn the property into a self- storage facility. SFL continued with this plan. SFL decided the appropriate way to develop the property—and to promote stability and avoid subsistence problems at the property—was to grade and excavate the property by making vertical cuts in the soil, scraping off the top soil, removing the garbage under the top soil, and removing the waste from the property. Before beginning the work, SFL had visited Friendly Village’s property and observed the effects of building on top of garbage: sinking land (or settlement) and cracking concrete throughout the mobile home park. Beginning in 2004, the prior owners and then SFL performed the grading and excavation work under permits obtained from several governmental agencies, including

1 Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 the City of Long Beach, County of Los Angeles and Air Quality Management District (AQMD). Before the work began SFL provided its neighbors, including Friendly Village, with notice of the work and the dates of public hearings regarding the work. Representatives of Friendly Village attended the hearings. Friendly Village did not raise objections regarding the work at these hearings. Nor did Friendly Village complain about the grading and excavation work which SFL completed prior to late 2007. On December 28, 2007, Friendly Village’s counsel sent a letter to SFL’s counsel, listing damage to its property and the mobile homes it contended was caused by SFL’s grading, excavation and construction work on the adjacent property. In pertinent part, this letter states: “The vibration of your construction equipment has caused substantial damage to homes and infrastructure in my client’s mobilehome park, including, but not limited to, the common area, settling of mobilehomes, cracks in the mobilehomes of tenants, cracks in the roadway, [fissures] in the ground, etc. Along the southerly border of the property, about 15 to 18 feet in from the property line, a large [fissure] has occurred running in an east west direction. It is apparent that this [fissure] is as a result of the grading and construction activities on your property, and in fact, the [fissure] appears to be created by land separating and moving in a southerly direction, i.e., towards your property. At one point during your construction project, the vibration (your construction equipment busted a water line in the mobilehome park). We suspect that vibration may have been the cause of this, but, in any event, the breaking of the water line was caused by you or your contractor’s activities. My client in fact hired plumbers and fixed that break in the water line. On Christmas eve, an SCE [Southern California Edison] electrical truck line was severed on your property, and apparently, either [as] a result of the severance, or as a result of your contractor’s efforts to repair same without SCE presence, transformers in my client’s mobilehome park blew, causing the families in my client’s mobilehome park to be without electricity from Christmas eve, through Christmas day, into Christmas night. It was not before Christmas night that we were finally able to get trucks to fix the problem.

3 “If all the foregoing were not bad enough, on the 26th, rather than ceasing the grading and construction activities until appropriate analysis could be undertaken to understand what needed to be done to stabilize the situation, one of your back hoes crossed the property line into our property, breaking our water main, causing numerous of our residents to be without water for a considerable period of time, and further causing substantial water inundation in and around the area affected.” In this letter, Friendly Village’s counsel requested SFL reimburse Friendly Village and the mobile home residents “for all costs associated with these identified problems,” including “‘resetting’” and “‘releveling’ of the homes as necessary.” Counsel also demanded SFL “cease all grading, excavation and construction activities until we can determine the problems at the site, until we can clearly document the causes of the problems and concerns at the site, and until we can determine the appropriate measures to be taken to ensure that when construction, grading, and/or excavation resumes at your site, it will not undermine the integrity of my client’s property, or cause damage to my client or my client’s residents’ property.” On December 29, 2007, an engineering geologist from GeoSoils, Inc. (GSI) “performed a visual observation of the south property line area of [Friendly Village],” at Friendly Village’s request, as stated in a three-page report issued by GSI on January 4, 2008. GSI did not perform any “subsurface exploration.” SFL did not grant GSI “permission to enter the offsite grading area, to evaluate the vertical cut slopes.” After its visual inspection, GSI concluded: “Based on our observations, it is clear that distress to the site is the direct result of failures within the offsite vertical cut, and in the case of the water line break at the storage area, excavation within the [Friendly Village] property with a backhoe. The distress to the slope has the potential for damaging water, gas, and electrical lines in the utility corridor along the south fence. There is a very real potential for ruptured gas lines and fire triggered by broken power lines which now lie on the ground in the utility meter and control area.

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Bluebook (online)
SFL Paramount v. Friendly Village Mobile Associates CA2/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sfl-paramount-v-friendly-village-mobile-associates-calctapp-2014.