Taricco v. Taricco CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2023
DocketB312303
StatusUnpublished

This text of Taricco v. Taricco CA2/8 (Taricco v. Taricco 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
Taricco v. Taricco CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 1/27/23 Taricco v. Taricco CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

MAUREEN TARICCO, B312303

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. YC071264 v.

DEANE TARICCO,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Robert B. Broadbelt, Judge. Affirmed.

Dentons US, Robert F. Scoular, David Simonton; Primary Law Group and Joshua Kroot for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Sauer & Wagner, Gerald L. Sauer and Amir A. Torkamani for Defendant and Respondent.

__________________________ SUMMARY This case presents a dispute over ownership of a family- owned company whose business consists of owning and leasing commercial property. The mother, Deane Taricco (defendant here), was the majority shareholder. Her son, Tari Taricco, was the minority shareholder and president of the company. In a two-sentence “Agreement to Sell Shares” signed in 2008, defendant agreed to sell all her shares to her son, at any time he chose (including after her death), for the sum of $10,000 for each 1 percent of her share ownership. Defendant signed the agreement, but she was in a hurry at the time and did not read it, and her son did not give her a copy of it. In November 2013, the son died in an accident. His wife Maureen Taricco (the personal representative of the son’s estate) sued his mother for specific performance of the 2008 agreement. After a 14-day court trial, the court found Maureen Taricco (plaintiff) was entitled to specific performance. Among other things, the court found there was consideration for the agreement because it granted the son an option to purchase stock while he was an employee of the company, which provided an incentive to continue his employment. The court rejected defendant’s unclean hands defense, finding nothing prevented her from reading the agreement before she signed it, or from making a copy of it when she signed it. The court also found that, since neither party presented evidence of the value of defendant’s shares in 2008, there was no evidence to support defendant’s assertion that the option price undervalued her shares of the company. Defendant sought a new trial, contending, among other things, an error of law: that specific performance “cannot be

2 enforced against a party to a contract” in cases where “he has not received an adequate consideration for the contract” or “[i]f it is not, as to him, just and reasonable.” (Civ. Code, § 3391, subds. 1. & 2.) Defendant argued the trial court’s failure to make any express findings as to whether plaintiff met her burden of proof on this issue precluded the grant of specific performance. The trial court agreed, and granted a new trial, limited to the issues of whether defendant received adequate consideration and whether the agreement was, as to defendant, just and reasonable. At the second trial, the court found, based on expert testimony, that the fair market value of defendant’s shares in 2008 was more than $5.4 million, while the option price in the 2008 agreement was approximately $530,000. The court concluded plaintiff did not meet her burden of proving defendant received adequate consideration. Further, the court found that, taken together, the gross disparity between the fair market value and the option price, and the circumstances in which defendant signed the 2008 agreement, “establish that the 2008 Agreement is not just and reasonable as to defendant.” On appeal, plaintiff’s principal contention is that the trial court was bound by factual and legal findings at the first trial that were not vacated, and “improperly ignored, recast and contradicted those findings” at the second trial. Plaintiff also raises an evidentiary issue and a separate issue about ownership of nine shares that was resolved against her in a summary adjudication. We do not find any contradiction in the trial court’s findings in the two trials; nor do we find any error in the court’s evidentiary ruling or its summary adjudication. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

3 FACTS 1. The Background We recite the background facts, for the most part as found in the trial court’s statement of decision after the first trial, often quoting without attribution from the trial court’s ruling. The company whose ownership is at issue is Fuel Engineering Corporation (FEC), a nominal defendant. FEC owns commercial real estate, and its principal activity is leasing its property to several tenants. Defendant’s late husband, Lawrence Taricco, co-founded the company in the 1950’s. In 1976, defendant and her husband acquired all 100 outstanding shares of FEC. They gave five shares to each of their two sons, Tari and Todd Taricco. In 1980, defendant became FEC’s president; her husband was vice president; and Tari and Todd were secretary and treasurer, respectively. In 1981, defendant and Tari were responsible for the company’s day-to-day business operations. Lawrence Taricco died in July 1981, and defendant was then the owner of their 90 shares. In 1984, defendant redeemed some of her shares, reducing her ownership from 90 shares to 62.61 shares. With the sons each having five shares, a total of 72.61 shares were outstanding. In 1991, defendant sold six shares of FEC to Tari for $168,000 ($28,000 per share). On May 25, 1992, in preparation for defendant’s retirement and Tari assuming sole management of FEC, defendant signed an “Agreement to Sell and Transfer Stock.” Defendant agreed to sell all her shares to Tari for $28,000 per share, if purchased in whole or in part within five years, on or before May 25, 1997. The trial court stated: “Pursuant to that agreement Tari

4 purchased a certain number of shares of FEC from defendant.” (More about the number of shares later.) Effective December 29, 1992, defendant retired as president of FEC, and Tari became “chief officer”—president, secretary and treasurer—with sole responsibility for FEC’s management and operations. In August 1998, Tari purchased his brother Todd’s five shares, for $150,000. Defendant and her son Tari were then the sole shareholders of FEC. On January 22, 2008, defendant and Tari entered into the “Agreement to Sell Shares” on which this lawsuit is based. The agreement states, in its entirety: “Deane Taricco agrees to sell all shares held in Fuel Engineering Corporation, a California Corporation to Tari Taricco for the sum of $10,000 per each 1% of share ownership of said Corporation held by Deane Taricco. This agreement may be exercised at any time at the election of Tari Taricco and shall be binding upon any will or estate of Deane Taricco.” Tari died in an airplane crash on November 19, 2013. At the time of his death, Tari owned 34 of FEC’s outstanding 72.61 shares, or 47 percent, and defendant owned 38.61 shares, or 53 percent. After Tari’s death, plaintiff asked defendant a number of times to honor the stock option in the 2008 agreement, and plaintiff’s counsel sent a demand letter to defendant on November 19, 2015. Defendant refused the demand. Plaintiff filed this lawsuit in April 2016, and her first amended complaint in July 2016. She alleged causes of action for specific performance, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, declaratory relief, and involuntary dissolution. Defendant answered and

5 filed a cross-complaint for declaratory relief and money had and received. Defendant’s answer included unclean hands as an affirmative defense. 2.

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Taricco v. Taricco CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taricco-v-taricco-ca28-calctapp-2023.