Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 2015
DocketB261858
StatusUnpublished

This text of Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8 (Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8) 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
Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 11/10/15 Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 EIGHT

KAZUTO TAKEDA, B261858

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. YC056502) v.

AKIYAMA TSUKEMONO CALIFORNIA, INC., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Ramona G. See, Judge. Reversed and remanded.

Law Offices of Robert W. Cohen, Robert W. Cohen and Mariko Taenaka for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Law Offices of Joseph F. Hart and Joseph F. Hart for Defendant and Respondent.

__________________________ Plaintiff Kazuto Takeda appeals from the judgment entered in his favor against defendant Akiyama Tsukemono, California, Inc., contending that in this retrial on the issue of damages the trial court erred by excluding evidence of a damages calculation summary both parties had prepared. We agree and therefore reverse and remand for a new trial on the damages issue.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

Kazuto Takeda owned Ebisu Market, a Japanese grocery store in Fountain Valley. Takeda bought pickled food products known as tsukemono from Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. For many years Akiyama employee Makoto Miyahara made twice- weekly deliveries to Takeda’s market, and Takeda relied on him to check his shelves and determine how much of each product he needed to order. In order to obtain a discount, Takeda paid in cash at the time of each delivery. Deliveryman Miyahara would give Takeda an invoice showing how much of each product he had delivered, and would then give a copy of that invoice to his employer, the Akiyama company. When Miyahara went on vacation in September 2006, Takeda noticed that the substitute deliveryman was ordering and delivering a much smaller amount of tsukemono products. Takeda contacted Katsuhisa Yamanaka, the president of Akiyama, and the two prepared a summary based on a comparison of their respective invoices which showed that the market’s invoices reflected average deliveries of $300 while the invoice copies turned in to Akiyama showed average deliveries of $100.2 The market concluded that Miyahara had swindled it for several years by overstating the amount ordered, reporting

1 Some portion of our statement of facts comes from our previous decision in this matter. (Naylor v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. (June 18, 2012, B231028) [nonpub. opn.].)

2 For ease of reference, we will hereafter refer to Takeda and Ebisu Market collectively as the market and to Yamanaka and Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc., as the supplier. 2 the correct lower amount to the supplier, and then pocketing the difference. Miyahara admitted the fraud but contended it worked the other way, with him delivering the correct amount to the market, submitting an invoice to his employer showing that much less had been delivered, and then keeping the difference. The summary prepared by the market and the supplier was based on twice-weekly deliveries from 2000 through August 2006, and added up to approximately $120,000. Between its deposition testimony and testimony at the damages retrial that is the subject of this appeal, the supplier said it had not yet seen the market’s invoices when the summary was prepared, but did see them later. Invoices from 2001 had been water damaged, however, causing both parties to estimate the amounts involved for that year. Even though the figures on the market’s invoices matched those supplied by the market for the damages summary, the supplier believed that check marks on the market’s invoices meant that the products listed had been delivered, leading it to conclude that the market had received most, if not all, the products and that it was the one that had been cheated. The supplier also testified that the supposed discrepancies were not consistently $200 because his invoices showed that the amount delivered to the market often fluctuated from $70 to $120. The supplier was therefore willing to pay approximately $45,000 to the market to settle the matter. The parties did not reach a settlement. The market sued Miyahara (the deliveryman) and the supplier.3 After a bench trial in 2010, the trial court found Miyahara liable for fraud and punitive damages, but found that the supplier was not liable for its employee’s misconduct. The trial court believed that the damages summary prepared by the parties was merely an attempt to calculate damages without any basis. Even so, the trial court accepted the summary’s $200 discrepancy calculation, but awarded damages of only $14,400 for once-monthly

3 That led to an appeal by the market challenging the trial court’s decision to grant Miyahara equitable relief from a default judgment, an order that we affirmed. (Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. (Jan. 28, 2010, B213462) [nonpub. opn.] (Takeda I.) 3 deliveries on the mistaken assumption that there was no evidence concerning the frequency of deliveries. The market brought a motion to set aside the judgment, contending that the trial court erred by awarding damages based on only one delivery per month and by failing to hold the supplier liable for Miyahara’s fraud. The original trial judge had retired and the new judge treated the motion as one for reconsideration. The second judge agreed that the supplier was liable for Miyahara’s fraud but declined to increase the damage award because the evidence was in conflict and had led the first judge to come up with a number that the second judge was unwilling to second guess. In its amended statement of decision, the trial court termed the damages summary spreadsheet a “guess” because it was based solely on the delivery invoices, without any supporting documentation such as cash register receipts, inventory records, or other accounts of the market’s sales of tsukemono products.4 The trial court still found that there was an approximate discrepancy of $200 per delivery, but left in place the first judge’s finding that deliveries occurred only monthly. The market appealed the judgment and we reversed. (Naylor v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. (June 18, 2012, B231028) [nonpub. opn.].)5 We held that both trial courts erred by determining there was no evidence of anything other than monthly deliveries because the evidence was undisputed that deliveries occurred twice- weekly. Even though both trial courts found an average discrepancy of $200 per delivery, we declined to order a eight-fold increase in the judgment, instead ordering a new trial on damages because both judges had been troubled by the adequacy of Takeda’s evidence on that point.

4 Takeda testified at the first trial that he bought the market in 1984 and still used the old cash register system, which did not accept bar codes or otherwise allow for inventory tracking.

5 That appeal was brought by the then-bankruptcy trustee for Ebisu Market. For ease of reference, and to avoid confusion, we will refer to it as Takeda II. 4 The damages retrial was conducted by a third judge. The market did not introduce in evidence all of the several hundred invoices showing its purchases from the supplier over the years. Instead, the market relied heavily on the damages summary it prepared with the supplier and introduced a limited number of invoices that it compared with the supposedly corresponding invoices the deliveryman gave the supplier.

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Bluebook (online)
Takeda v. Akiyama Tsukemono California, Inc. CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/takeda-v-akiyama-tsukemono-california-inc-ca28-calctapp-2015.