Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 2014
DocketG049096
StatusUnpublished

This text of Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3 (Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3) 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
Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/714 Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

STEVEN M. SPEIER

Petitioner,

v. G049096

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF (Super. Ct. Nos. RID 230814 consol. RIVERSIDE COUNTY, with RIC 534024)

Respondent; OPINION

PING XI LOU,

Real Party in Interest.

Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate to challenge an order of the Superior Court of Riverside County, L. Jackson Lucky IV, Judge. Petition denied. Shulman Hodges & Bastian, Leonard M. Shulman and Samuel J. Romero for Petitioner. No appearance for Respondent. Judith E. Hoover and Amanda M. Francuz; Grobaty & Pitet, and Christopher L. Pitet, for Real Party in Interest. * * * A receiver has filed an appeal from a minute order discharging him. His appeal is premature, because the order he has appealed from is not even a final disposition of a collateral matter, much less an appeal from a final judgment. Special circumstances, however, favor addressing the merits of the appeal by treating it as a petition for writ of mandate. The case, as far as the receiver is concerned, is at a standstill, with the trial judge expressly waiting for an appellate court decision on the subject of whether the receiver’s original appointment was void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The judge is waiting for an appellate decision on the question of subject matter jurisdiction before he tackles the merits of the receiver’s final report and request for fees. In brief, here is our determination: The receiver was appointed in a shareholder derivative suit brought by a husband against the wife to administer two 100 percent community-owned corporations pursuant to a stipulation entered into by the husband and wife. However, two months before the husband’s shareholder derivative suit, the wife filed a family law action. Under the rule of exclusive concurrent jurisdiction, the family court had exclusive jurisdiction over what was, in substance, the issue of control and management of community property during the pendency of the family law action. However, the rule of exclusive concurrent jurisdiction rendered the appointment of the receiver not void, but simply voidable. The order appointing the receiver was thus not void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Even so, after the shareholders’ derivative action was consolidated with the family law action, the trial judge was well within his discretion to discharge the receiver, especially since the appointment of receivers in family law cases (while allowed) is disfavored. The trial judge was also correct to note, in the proceedings which led to the discharge order, that the receiver should be paid for the reasonable value of his services, regardless of whether the original appointment order was valid or void. With our determination, the case may

2 now be returned to wrap up the receiver’s involvement in the community businesses of the Lous. I. FACTS In June 2009, Wife filed a petition for dissolution (case RID 230814, or “the 814 family law case”).1 Husband and Wife were the 100 percent owners of the stock in two family corporations, Great China International, Inc., and Chiam Pets Direct, Inc. Great China imported pet food goods from China; Chiam distributed it. Husband and Wife owned all stock in the two businesses. The record indicates Husband and Wife alternated between one being in China while the other managed the American corporations. At the time of the dissolution petition in 2009, it was Wife who was running the domestic corporations and Husband who was handling the Chinese end of the business. A little more than two months after the 814 family law case was filed, in August 2009, Husband filed a separate civil case seeking damages as a shareholder for the Wife’s mismanagement of the two corporations (RIC 534024, or “the 024 shareholder’s derivative action”).2 This “shareholder’s derivative” suit was nothing other than one 50 percent shareholder suing the other 50 percent shareholder. Wife hired separate counsel from her dissolution counsel to respond to the suit. Instead of filing a motion to stay the 024 shareholder’s derivative action on the ground it was an improper attempt to seek relief in the civil courts for what was already a family law matter involving the management of community property and its possible

1 The briefs identify the parties differently. The respondents’ brief of Ping Xi Lou refers to herself as “Patty” and to her husband Yi Hui Lou as “Henry.” This has the advantage of symmetry and is, further, common practice in family law opinions. The appellant’s brief of receiver Steven M. Speier refers to the parties as “Ping” and “Henry,” which is not symmetrical. Ordinarily, we would prefer Ping Xi Lou’s “Patty” and “Henry.” However, in this case, to emphasize its essential family law nature, we adopt the convention many family law cases have used over the years and call the two spouses “Husband” and “Wife.” 2 Readers should note that it is the “shareholder’s derivative action” singular, not, as usual, a “shareholders’ derivative action” plural. In this case there is exactly one shareholder – a husband – who sued the other shareholder – his wife.

3 waste (cf. d’Elia v. d’Elia (1997) 58 Cal.App.4th 415, 417 [“Once again this court confronts a family law case which has been allowed to metastasize into something else.”]), Wife attempted to obtain a restraining order in the 024 shareholder’s derivative action, then – just before the restraining order request was set to be heard – stipulated with the Husband to the appointment of Steven Speier as a receiver to manage both companies. Pursuant to the stipulation, a formal order filed October 30, 2009 was filed in the 024 shareholder’s derivative action appointing Speier as receiver of both Great China and Chiam Pets. As one member of this panel wrote in In re Marriage of Barth (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 363, 365, “be careful what you wish for.” By June of 2010, the receiver proposed to file a cross-complaint in the 024 shareholder’s derivative action to sue both Husband and Wife for their various attempts to take or otherwise use the property of the two community corporations, though the record we have indicates the pleading was never formally filed. But whatever the fate of the receiver’s cross-complaint, relations between the receiver and Husband and Wife had clearly broken down. In his proposed cross- complaint, the receiver alleged Wife had absconded with corporate mail, bank accounts and various corporate binders, while he also alleged that Husband was trying to set up his own competing business using trademarks owned by the two corporations. The receiver also spent a good portion of 2011 seeking to hold Husband in contempt. A year later, in June 2011, Wife, now represented by new counsel in the 814 family law case, filed a motion to consolidate the 024 shareholder’s derivative action with the 814 family law case. The motion was scheduled for late September, but in the interim, the receiver and Husband reached a “settlement and compromise” (in the 024 shareholder’s derivative action). The gravamen of this settlement was that Husband would transfer his half of the community interest in two pieces of real property to the “receivership estate.” Wife, however, opposed the receiver’s motion to approve the settlement, arguing the receiver was undervaluing the damage Husband had done to the

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Speier v. Superior Court CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speier-v-superior-court-ca43-calctapp-2014.