Tract No. 7260 Assn. v. Parker

10 Cal. App. 5th 24, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 660, 2017 WL 1101407, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 265
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 2017
DocketB271111
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Cal. App. 5th 24 (Tract No. 7260 Assn. v. Parker) 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
Tract No. 7260 Assn. v. Parker, 10 Cal. App. 5th 24, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 660, 2017 WL 1101407, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 265 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

SORTINO, J. *

A member of a nonprofit mutual benefit corporation requested inspection of the corporation’s membership list, and other books and records. The corporation refused, and the member brought a petition for writ of mandate to compel inspection. The trial court agreed with the corporation that the member sought the inspection for an improper purpose, unrelated to his interest as a member of the corporation. As a result, the court denied the petition with respect to the books and records. However, the court concluded the corporation did not timely challenge the request for the membership list as required by statute, and therefore ordered the list disclosed. Both parties appeal. We conclude (1) substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that the member sought the information for an improper purpose and (2) the corporation’s challenge to disclosing the membership list was not barred by *28 statute. We therefore reverse that part of the court’s judgment requiring disclosure of the membership list, and otherwise affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Don Parker is a member of Tract No. 7260 Association, Inc., a nonprofit homeowners association (the HOA). This action arises out of his request for inspection of the HOA’s membership list and other records. As far as the HOA is concerned, though, the action also arises out of a dispute the HOA has with another entity known as Fix the City.

Parker used to be the treasurer of the HOA. When Parker was treasurer, a man named Michael Eveloff was the President. Eveloff created Fix the City. According to the HOA, it had been granted the right to control a substantial amount of money. However, Eveloff convinced the HOA board to transfer that money to Fix the City, which used it for purposes which were of no use to the HOA. The HOA is now suing Fix the City for usurping its corporate opportunity. The HOA believes that Parker is aligned with Eveloff and Fix the City, and that he sought access to the membership list and other HOA records to use them against the HOA in the dispute with Fix the City.

A. Parker’s Request

On January 29, 2015, the same day that the HOA filed suit against Fix the City (the “HOA/Fix the City” action), Parker requested seven categories of corporate information from the HOA, including its membership fist. He stated legitimate reasons for which he sought the information. For example, he stated that he wanted to inspect the HOA’s books to make certain the HOA was following generally accepted accounting principles. He explained that he sought the membership fist for possible communications with the members to ascertain whether there had been corporate misdeeds.

Parker sought the information under Corporations Code section 8330 et seq. 1 Requests under those sections may be made by “[a]ny member” of the corporation (§ 8330, subd. (b)(1)) or by the “authorized number of members” (§ 8330, subd. (b)(2)). When the corporation has less than 1,000 voting members, the “authorized number” is 5 percent of voting power. (§ 5036.) As we shall discuss, different procedures apply depending on whether a single member, or the authorized number of members, is making the request. Parker made his request as “the undersigned member,” and signed it as “Homeowner—Tract 7260.” He did not state that he was acting for the authorized number of members, nor did he suggest that he had written authorizations from members holding sufficient voting power.

*29 B. The HOA Largely Denies the Request

There is no serious dispute that the HOA did not fully comply with Parker’s request. A representative of the HOA met with Parker briefly and let him review certain of the documents he had sought—hut not all of them, and not the membership list.

C. Parker Files His Petition

On April 6, 2015, Parker filed a petition for writ of mandate, seeking an order compelling the HOA to allow him to inspect and copy the membership list and the other books and records he had sought. As in his written request for inspection, Parker asserted he had a right to inspect “in his capacity as a member” of the HOA. The HOA answered the petition, arguing that Parker had no right to inspect because he sought the information for an improper purpose.

D. The HOA Fails To Have the Cases Related

On May 27, 2015, the HOA filed a notice of related case, in order to relate this case (Parker’s writ petition) to the HOA/Fix the City action. In its notice, the HOA argued that Parker was seeking inspection in this case in order to give Fix the City an unfair advantage in the HOA/Fix the City case. Parker opposed relation on both procedural and substantive grounds. On June 24, 2015, the court in the HOA/Fix the City case denied relation, stating that the writ petition must be decided in a writ and receivers department, and would not be moved to the civil department in which the HOA/Fix the City case was pending.

E. Briefing on the Writ Petition

The briefing on the merits of the writ petition turned to the issue of Parker’s reasons for seeking inspection of the membership list and other documents. Parker filed a declaration stating that he sought the information for legitimate reasons reasonably related to his interests as a member. He expressly represented that he did not make his demand “for any reason related to the other lawsuit subsequently filed by [the HOA] after I made the Demand.”

The HOA presented evidence as to why it believed Parker was, in fact, aligned with Fix the City, and seeking the inspection in order to improperly assist Fix the City in the HOA/Fix the City action. This included evidence of the following facts: (1) Parker had been aligned with Eveloff in convincing the HOA to transfer the corporate opportunity to Fix the City, which the HOA *30 alleges Parker accomplished by misrepresentation; (2) the HOA’s then-lawyers gave the HOA an opinion that the transfer to Fix the City was lawful; (3) shortly after the transfer to Fix the City was approved by the HOA’s board, Parker and Eveloff simultaneously resigned, effective April 7, 2013; (4) on April 5, 2013, the last business day prior to his resignation, Parker e-mailed the HOA’s bank with an emergency request for a cashier’s check for nearly $49,000 to the attorneys who had opined on the legality of the transfer; (5) the HOA’s current treasurer can conceive of no “legitimate reason” why it would be in the HOA’s interest to pay the attorneys with a cashier’s check or to speed such a payment through as a treasurer’s last official act; (6) that same law firm has since represented Fix the City in other cases (but not the HOA/Fix the City case); and (7) Parker’s counsel in the current writ case is the same firm that is presently representing Fix the City in the HOA/Fix the City case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. App. 5th 24, 215 Cal. Rptr. 3d 660, 2017 WL 1101407, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tract-no-7260-assn-v-parker-calctapp-2017.