Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 2023
DocketB314225
StatusUnpublished

This text of Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2 (Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2) 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
Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 3/7/23 Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

TRIUROL, INC. et al., B314225

Cross-complainants and (Los Angeles County Appellants, Super. Ct. No. SC123657)

v.

CHARLES KAMEN,

Cross-defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order and judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Mark H. Epstein, Judge. Affirmed.

Parcells Law Firm and Dayton B. Parcells III for Cross- complainants and Appellants.

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton and Emil W. Herich for Cross-defendant and Respondent. ______________________________ Cross-complainants Triurol, Inc. (Triurol), Floyd A. Katske (Katske), and Jacob Rajfer (Rajfer) appeal from a judgment entered in favor of cross-defendant Charles Mcfall Kamen (Kamen) following his successful motion for summary judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., § 473c.) They argue that the trial court erred in dismissing their fraud claims against Kamen because they presented evidence of justifiable reliance upon Kamen’s alleged misrepresentations.1 We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The parties and relevant contracts According to the second amended cross-complaint (SACC), Triurol is a corporation that developed “Quercetin based food supplements,” including Prosta-Q and Cysta-Q. Triurol’s principals include Katske and Rajfer. Farr Laboratories, LLC (Farr) is a corporation with “valuable expertise and experience in the manufacturing, marketing, labeling and sales of nutritional food supplements.” Its principals include Fred Reinstein (Reinstein) and Alcides (Al) Rodriguez (Rodriguez). According to the SACC, Kamen is an attorney and was, at one time, president of Farr. On June 5, 1999, Triurol and Farr entered into an agreement pursuant to which Triurol granted to Farr an exclusive license to “manufacture, package, label, market and

1 Cross-complainants only challenge the trial court’s order on these two causes of action. They do not raise any argument regarding the three contract-based claims that were also adjudicated in Kamen’s favor.

2 sell” Protas-Q, a Quercetin-based food supplement. The agreement was amended on September 17, 1999, January 14, 2000, and either on March 30 or April 7, 2009. On June 30, 2000, Triurol and Farr entered into another agreement pursuant to which Triurol granted to Farr an exclusive license to “manufacture, package, label, market and sell” Cysta-Q, another Quercetin-based food supplement. That agreement was amended on April 7, 2009. In exchange, Farr agreed to provide Triurol with quarterly royalties. Farr also agreed not to develop, market, or sell any other Quercetin-based products. The pleadings On January 21, 2015, Triurol brought this action against Farr for breach of the two amended licensing agreements. Farr responded by filing a cross-complaint against Triurol, Katske, and Rajfer, alleging breach of the licensing agreements by Triurol and fraud in the inducement by Katske and Rajfer. Triurol, Katske, and Rajfer then filed a cross-complaint against Farr, Reinstein, Rodriguez, and Kamen. The operative pleading is the SACC, which alleges claims for breach of contract, fraud, and declaratory relief. As is relevant to the issues in this appeal, the SACC alleges that in order to induce Triurol to give Farr the exclusive license to its Quercetin products, cross-defendants made certain representations. “In reasonable reliance on Cross-Defendants[’] representations, Cross-Complainant entered into the amended license agreements and agreed to continue to grant to . . . Farr . . . an exclusive worldwide license to manufacture, package, label, market and sell” Triurol’s Quercetin-based food supplements.

3 Triurol later learned that Kamen, along with Farr, Reinstein, and Rodriguez, made a host of misrepresentations in the quarterly accounting reports that were provided to Triurol. Triurol further alleged that an August 28, 2012, e-mail from Kamen to Farr’s trademark attorney was proof that Farr had been developing competing Quercetin products in violation of its agreements with Triurol. Kamen’s motion for summary judgment Kamen filed a motion for summary judgment. Regarding the fraud causes of action (second and fourth), Kamen noted that the SACC does not allege that he made any precontractual representations. Rather, cross-complainants’ fraud claims against him stem from alleged misrepresentations in quarterly royalty reports that Kamen allegedly distributed and in the August 28, 2012, e-mail sent by Kamen to Farr’s trademark attorney. And, there was no evidence that cross-complainants justifiably relied upon either the quarterly royalty reports or the 2012 e-mail. Cross-complainants’ opposition Cross-complainants opposed Kamen’s motion. They argued that there was a triable issue of fact concerning whether they relied upon Kamen’s misrepresentations set forth in (1) quarterly royalty reports, (2) the 2012 e-mail from Kamen to Farr’s trademark counsel, and (3) a January 2009 e-mail from Kamen to cross-complainants that (a) addressed a scheduling issue, and (b) asked for an address to send them a “check and inventorship correction documents.” Specifically, cross-complainants asserted that “in reasonable reliance on Kamen’s representations, [they] continued to grant to [Farr] the exclusive worldwide license to manufacture, package, label, market and sell the licensed

4 products to their detriment, and if they had known Kamen’s representations were false and what he was concealing and the resulting damages they were suffering, they would not have done those things.” In support, cross-complainants offered a declaration from Katske, who attested, in general terms, that he and Triurol relied upon Kamen’s representations and continued to grant to Farr the exclusive license to its products. Trial court order On May 18, 2021, the trial court issued a 10-page written order granting Kamen’s motion for summary judgment. Regarding the fraud claims, the trial court found that “cross- complainants [could not] demonstrate they detrimentally relied on any alleged fraud by Kamen.” After all, at the heart of cross- complainants’ claims was the theory that cross-complainants only entered into their contracts with Farr based upon representations made before those agreements were executed. Since Kamen’s alleged fraud postdated the formation of the contracts, cross-complainants could not demonstrate that they justifiably relied upon any alleged misrepresentation made by Kamen. In so ruling, the trial court rejected cross-complainants’ contention that they justifiably relied upon Kamen’s alleged fraud by “‘continu[ing]’ to give Farr a license after already having entered into agreements for the same.” “At first glance, this seems like enough to defeat the motion as to these causes of action. But . . . except for one e-mail in January 2009 all of [Kamen’s] supposed misrepresentations made to cross- complainants are alleged to have occurred after the agreements and their last amendments were executed. . . . Cross-

5 complainants could not have ‘continued’ to allow Farr to use the license if they had already signed the most recent agreement allowing the licensing to continue. If the licensing agreement [had] been signed after the misrepresentations, the outcome might be different. But that is not what the evidence shows. And the single January 2009 e-mail is of no help.

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Bluebook (online)
Triurol v. Kamen CA2/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triurol-v-kamen-ca22-calctapp-2023.