T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 2025
DocketA169514
StatusUnpublished

This text of T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2 (T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2) 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
T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 2/5/25 T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

T&C PROPERTIES, LLC, Plaintiff and Appellant, A169514 v. ST. JAMES PROPERTY CO., LLC, (San Francisco City & County Super. Ct. No. CPF-20-517292) Defendant and Respondent.

In 2019, appellant T&C Properties, LLC (T&C) and respondent St. James Property Co., LLC (St. James) took certain disputes over commercial property they co-owned to arbitration, an arbitration that initially produced a partial award, resolving some issues but reserving jurisdiction as to others. T&C initiated this litigation by petitioning the trial court to confirm and correct the partial award. After the trial court confirmed the partial award without change, the arbitrator issued a final award, and both parties filed petitions to confirm, correct, and/or vacate that award. The trial court confirmed the final award without change, and ultimately awarded St. James approximately $318,000 in attorney fees incurred in connection with the trial court proceedings. T&C appeals the trial court’s fee award, contending that it, not St. James, was the prevailing party in the trial court. We affirm.

1 BACKGROUND The Parties and the General Setting It has long been said that arbitration is favored as a “ ‘speedy and relatively inexpensive means of dispute resolution.’ ” (Moncharsh v. Heily & Blase (1992) 3 Cal.4th 1, 9 and cases there collected; Ramirez v. Charter Communications, Inc. (2024) 16 Cal.5th 478, 492.) That description hardly applies here, an arbitration that lasted over three years and generated combined attorney fees to the parties exceeding $1 million. While all the reasons for this are not in the record, one reason may be this observation from the experienced arbitrator, the Honorable Richard Kramer (Ret.), who would later explain, “this case could have been a relatively simple landlord- tenant dispute regarding the terms of a long-term lease/holdover arrangement” for the property, but for “two crucial complicating factors,” one of which “is that the principals of each of the entities involved in this dispute, including the non-party tenant [RSC], are feuding family members embroiled in a fight that has spanned two generations.” The participants in this generational dispute were Harold “Bob” Rubenstein (who died in 2018), his wife Lillian, and two of their three children—Ron, the oldest and a retired attorney, and Craig, the middle child. And the entities involved are St. James, a California LLC owned by two trusts of which Lillian and Ron were the co-trustees, and T&C, also a California LLC, whose principals are Craig and Terri Rubenstein, his wife. Prior to 2018, T&C and St. James were each 50% owners of certain commercial real property located at 2800, 2818, and 2838–44 San Pablo Avenue in Oakland (the Property). Rubenstein Supply Company (RSC)1, a

1 As is apparent from the above, and as will be seen in more detail

below, our recitation here is replete with acronyms, a practice, we hasten to

2 family plumbing supply business founded by Bob Rubenstein and his two older brothers in the 1930’s, has occupied the property for roughly 80 years. In 2001, T&C, L&B Property Co. (L&B) (the predecessor to St. James), and RSC entered into a five-year lease for the property, with three options to renew, each for a period of five years. The lease provided that RSC would pay an initial rent of $11,000 per month, with a cost of living adjustment 30 months into the term, and that the rent would be further adjusted to current fair market value at the commencement of each extended five-year term. In 2002, Bob Rubenstein sold his 25% interest in RSC to Craig, a sale that left Craig the sole owner of RSC. As Judge Kramer would later observe, “[t]his arrangement, of course, placed Craig in a dual role of effectively being both the landlord and the tenant” under the lease. In February 2002, T&C and L&B entered into a Property Management Agreement (PMA). Again, according to Judge Kramer, “[t]he possibility of a conflict from Craig’s positions . . . was expressly recognized and dealt with under the arbitration clause of the PMA,” which provides that any controversy between St. James and T&C relating to the PMA or the property be resolved by binding arbitration and that “[i]n resolving any controversy or dispute . . . which may arise between the Owners as to any action or decision that the Owners [St. James and T&C], as Lessors, should or should not take or make with respect to the Lessee [RSC], the Lease or the Property, the arbitrator shall apply a standard based upon the action that a typical sophisticated landlord, in an arms-length relationship with the Lessee, would

add, is not one we favor—indeed, one to be avoided. That said, we use the acronyms for consistency with the parties’ briefing and with the descriptions in the orders and rulings by the arbitrator.

3 take under the circumstances for the reasonable protection of the Lessor’s interest.” In July 2018, Bob Rubenstein died at the age of 97. According to St. James’ opening arbitration brief: “In October 2018, while settling Bob’s financial affairs, Ron and his mother were advised to get a professional appraisal to establish the Property’s value, and thus determine the amount to include on Bob’s estate tax return. The family retained the Berkeley appraisal firm Yovino-Young to provide an appraisal for estate tax purposes. When the family closely reviewed the late-2018 appraisal, they saw that Yovino-Young had also rendered the opinion that the fair market rent for the Property, on the same triple net basis as found in the Lease, was almost $24,500 per month. This meant that Lillian’s share of the monthly rent should have been almost twice the monthly rent then being paid by RSC. This came as a total shock to Lillian and her family.” Ron Rubenstein was also unable to find any indication that the lease had been renewed beyond the first option to do so, meaning it had expired on September 30, 2011, and that RSC had been a holdover tenant since that time. The 2019 Arbitration In August 2019, pursuant to the arbitration clause in the PMA, St. James commenced a JAMS arbitration before Judge Kramer.2 According to St. James’s opening arbitration brief, “[t]he core issues in this arbitration concern the additional sums owed to Lillian and the fair and proper terms of a new or retroactively-extended lease if RSC is to be permitted to remain in possession of the Property. [¶] St. James seeks a new five year, triple net lease, commencing effective March 1, 2019, at a monthly rate of $29,100. St.

2 By this time, Lillian Rubenstein was 97 years old.

4 James further seeks to collect back rent owed under the Lease in the amount of $205,297.01, less recent payments by Craig.” And according to T&C’s opening arbitration brief: “All parties desire to resolve this matter with a new lease. The parties agree on the lease term of five (5) years and the parties appear to agree that the form of the now expired written lease, for the sake of simplicity, should be adopted and extended by affixing a revised Rider to the lease, as herein alleged.

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T&C Properties v. St. James Property Co. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tc-properties-v-st-james-property-co-ca12-calctapp-2025.