The Little Cottage Caregivers v. Meiri CA2/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 2020
DocketB294533
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Little Cottage Caregivers v. Meiri CA2/3 (The Little Cottage Caregivers v. Meiri CA2/3) 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
The Little Cottage Caregivers v. Meiri CA2/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/21/20 The Little Cottage Caregivers v. Meiri CA2/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

THE LITTLE COTTAGE B294533 CAREGIVERS, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. SC126909)

v.

ADIE MEIRI,

Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent;

TZEHOU KUNG,

Cross-defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Gerald Rosenberg, Judge. Reversed with directions. Horvitz & Levy, Curt Cutting, Allison W. Meredith and Rebecca G. Powell; Katchko Vitiello & Karikomi, Giandominic Vitiello, Tatyana Brenner and Edward E. Angwin for Cross- defendant and Appellant. Law Offices of JT Fox & Associates and J.T. Fox for Plaintiff and Respondent and Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent. ‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗

In 2010, Vietnam Nguyen (Nguyen) sold a 50 percent interest in The Little Cottage Caregivers, LLC, a California limited liability company (Caregivers), to respondent Adie Meiri (Meiri). The following year, Nguyen signed a second agreement giving Meiri an option to buy an additional 35 percent interest in Caregivers for $1,000. In 2012, while the option period remained open, Nguyen sold a 50 percent interest in Caregivers to Yun Kang (Kang), appellant Tzehou Kung’s (Kung) predecessor in interest. Thereafter, Meiri purported to exercise his option. This litigation followed. The case was tried to the court, which concluded that Meiri owned an 85 percent interest in Caregivers because he entered into the 2010 purchase agreement and the 2011 option agreement before Kang purported to purchase his competing 50 percent interest in the company. Kung challenges this finding on appeal: Although he concedes that Meiri validly acquired his initial 50 percent interest, Kung urges that Meiri’s purported subsequent acquisition of an additional 35 percent interest was invalid because Kang did not have actual or constructive knowledge of the option agreement. We conclude that Kung is correct, and thus we reverse the judgment with directions.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Background1 A. Meiri’s Acquisition of an Interest in Caregivers Caregivers is a medical marijuana collective that has operated in Los Angeles since at least 2006. Prior to the events at issue, Nguyen was Caregivers’s sole owner. At some point in 2010, Meiri’s father, Shlomo Meiri (Shlomo), decided to give 19-year-old Meiri a gift in the form of a business. Shlomo met Nguyen through a third party and, in September 2010, he purchased a 50 percent interest in Caregivers in Meiri’s name. After the transaction closed, Nguyen “approached [Shlomo] in tears” and asked to repurchase the 50 percent interest in Caregivers. Shlomo agreed and retained an attorney to draft a repurchase agreement. As relevant here, the repurchase agreement provided as follows: (1) Nguyen would have the right to repurchase his 50 percent interest in Caregivers upon certain terms and conditions—namely, an immediate cash payment of $110,000, a subsequent cash payment of $60,000, and the assignment to Meiri of a $230,000 debt.2

1 The record does not contain a complete reporter’s transcript of the bench trial; thus, references to trial testimony are to the settled statement certified by the court.

2 The drafting attorney testified that he intentionally made the repurchase agreement ambiguous as to whether Nguyen would recover the 50 percent share immediately or after the satisfaction of the specified conditions. For purposes of this

3 (2) Contemporaneously with the repurchase agreement, the parties would execute an option agreement “under which [Meiri] shall, for $10.00, . . . acquire [the option to purchase a] thirty-five [percent] (35%) additional interest in the Company in the case of [Nguyen’s] nonperformance of” his obligations under the repurchase agreement. The option agreement provided that Meiri could exercise the option during its two-year term by giving written notice to Caregivers’s manager or to Nguyen, accompanied by a check for $1,000. The option agreement further provided that Nguyen “may not assign any of its rights or duties under this Agreement without the express written consent by [Meiri].” Nguyen and Meiri executed the repurchase agreement and the option agreement on January 24, 2011. There is no evidence that either agreement was ever recorded. It is undisputed that Nguyen did not comply with all of his obligations under the repurchase agreement, and thus he never reacquired the 50 percent interest in Caregivers from Meiri. B. Kang’s Acquisition of an Interest in Caregivers In March 2012, Caregivers was unable to pay its rent and was facing an unlawful detainer action. That month, Nguyen entered into an agreement with Kang (the investment agreement), in which Kang agreed, in exchange for a 50 percent interest in Caregivers, to pay Caregivers’s past due rent and other expenses. The investment agreement recited that Nguyen “and his partner” were unable to make a rent payment on time, and their

appeal, Kung does not contest that Meiri retained his initial 50 percent share of Caregivers, and thus we need not address the ambiguity.

4 landlord had initiated an unlawful detainer action against Nguyen. Kang was willing to invest in Caregivers by paying Nguyen’s landlord the accrued but unpaid rent. In exchange, “Nguyen shall give and Kang shall acquire one-half ownership interest in [Caregivers].” From the date of the agreement, Kang would have the right to operate and manage Caregivers, but Nguyen would continue to work on licensing matters in consultation with Kang. The investment agreement provided that Nguyen would obtain the consent of a person named “Dick Van Vu,” who either had relinquished, or would relinquish, “any and all rights in” Caregivers to Kang. Nguyen “represents and warrants that there are no other person [sic] who has any interest, ownership or otherwise, in [Caregivers] other than Nguyen himself.” Kang testified that he did not question Nguyen about Dick Van Vu, and he did not ask whether there were any other members of Caregivers. It is undisputed that at the time Kang executed the investment agreement, he had never heard of Meiri, and he was not aware of any competing interests in Caregivers or any outstanding options to purchase an interest in Caregivers. He learned of Meiri’s claimed interest in Caregivers for the first time in 2016. C. Meiri’s Purported Exercise of the Option Shlomo determined Nguyen was in breach of the repurchase agreement. On July 30, 2012, at Shlomo’s direction, Meiri executed an “Option Exercise Notice” (option notice) that purported to exercise Meiri’s option to purchase an additional 35 percent interest in Caregivers. Shlomo testified that although Meiri executed the option notice in July 2012, he did not deliver it to Nguyen at that time.

5 Shlomo ultimately delivered the option notice and $1,000 in cash to Nguyen sometime in late 2012. Shlomo testified that Nguyen accepted the $1,000 and signed the assignment certificate. However, at trial neither Shlomo nor Meiri produced a copy of the signed assignment certificate, testifying that it had been “lost.” Despite Meiri’s purported 85 percent interest in Caregivers, neither Meiri nor his father ever visited Caregivers’s premises after their single visit there in 2010, at the time of the original investment.

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