Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 2025
DocketA172431
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4 (Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4) 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
Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/30/25 Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FOUR

VITAL BUILDING & ENTERPRISES, INC., et al., A172431 Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Alameda County v. Super. Ct. No. RG21087720) RENE BOISVERT, Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant and judgment debtor Rene Boisvert appeals from the Alameda County Superior Court’s November 12, 2024 post-judgment order granting an ex parte motion by plaintiffs and judgment creditors Vital Building & Enterprises, Inc. (Vital) and Aaron Vitale1 (collectively, the Vital parties) for an order that a third party, Matthew Haley, former counsel for Boisvert in another action, turn over to the Vital parties $145,769.52 Haley was holding on Boisvert’s behalf. Seeing no merit to the appeal, we affirm.

1 Appellate counsel represents in Vital’s opening brief that Aaron Vitale

passed away after Boisvert appealed from this order, that Mr. Vitale’s estate remains the sole shareholder of Vital, and that the estate is currently in probate court. Vital is the only respondent in this appeal.

1 I. BACKGROUND A. The Judgment and Initial Assignments In 2022, the superior court confirmed an arbitration award in favor of the Vital parties and against Boisvert and Kaso, LLC (collectively, the Boisvert parties) for damages, attorney’s fees, and arbitration costs related to the Vital parties’ general contractor work. The resulting judgment, when entered on July 14, 2022, was for $560,025.27. Also in 2022, the Vital parties assigned that judgment to a third party, Eugene Kim. On March 6, 2024, Kim filed with the superior court an acknowledgement of his assignment of the judgment to another third party, Diana C. Guadalupe Chipana doing business as Wealth Recovery Solutions (Chipana). B. The Judgment Debtor’s Examination Hearing and Reassignments of the Judgment Two days later, on March 8, 2024, the superior court held a hearing on an application for an order for appearance and examination of a person, presumably Boisvert (the application is not contained in the record). The hearing had been continued multiple times. Chipana, identified as “Assignee,” appeared by telephone, and Boisvert also appeared. The court’s March 8, 2024 minutes and the resulting order state in relevant part, “The Court is in receipt of Defendant’s documents requested by the Assignee. Assignee will pick up documents from the Court at 2:00 PM on 3/8/24. Assignee may re-subpoena Defendant and set another hearing on Order for Appearance and Examination if requested documents are not procured.” About three and a half months later, on July 29, 2024, Chipana filed with the court a reassignment of the judgment to Kim. On the same day, Kim filed an acknowledgement of reassignment of the judgment to the Vital parties.

2 C. The Vital Parties’ Pursuit of Boisvert’s Assets In August 2024, the Vital parties obtained a writ of execution from the superior court for the judgment plus interest, $674,218.36. They indicated the Boisvert parties had not paid anything towards the judgment. Later that same month, on August 28, 2024, Boisvert, appearing pro se, filed a pleading entitled, “Request for Judicial Notice,” in which he contended, without presenting any evidentiary support, that the judgment had been fully satisfied. He further contended that Chipana “did not show up” at the March 8, 2024 hearing, but that he did, with confidential documents in hand that were not “picked up” until “many weeks” later. He represented that one of these confidential documents was “a spreadsheet that showed—not only was the judgment ‘satisfied in full’—but there was an overpayment of $102,628 that was to be re-paid back to the defendant.” (Underscoring omitted.) Boisvert did not include any such spreadsheet in his August 28, 2024 filing. On October 7, 2024, the Vital parties filed a motion for an order that Haley, in conjunction with a third-party examination of him, turn over assets he was holding on Boisvert’s behalf. The Vital parties, referring to documents that they asked the court to take judicial notice of, contended that Kaso, LLC was a Wyoming limited liability company that had been administratively dissolved by the State of Wyoming; that Boisvert was on a statewide vexatious litigant list; that Haley was holding, on Boisvert’s behalf, settlement funds paid to Boisvert in a separate action; and that Haley had recently been served with a writ of execution, notice of levy, and notice of judgment lien. On November 1, 2024, the superior court denied the Vital parties’ motion without prejudice because it was filed in conjunction with the third- party examination of Haley and, also, it referred to documents that had not

3 been filed or necessarily served on the other parties. The court further stated that an informal order of examination, apparently of Haley, would be conducted that day; that “Plaintiff to file ex parte after today’s hearing”; that opposition to the ex parte was to be filed by November 6, 2024; that a reply was to be filed by November 8, 2024, and that a hearing on the ex parte filing was to be held on November 12, 2024. The court added, “All documents are to be filed, served, and courtesy copies emailed to Department 22.” Due to gaps in the record we have been provided, it is unclear what, if anything, the Vital parties submitted to the court in response to this directive.2 Although the clerk’s transcript designated by Boisvert and filed with this court does not contain an additional ex parte filing by the Vital parties, there are indications in the record that Boisvert and the court reviewed a written ex parte motion by the Vital parties seeking turnover of properties, and that that ex parte motion led to the order now under review, which was entered on November 12, 2024. We cannot tell whether the motion reviewed by the court and the parties was a renewed or different motion than the motion that was denied November 1, 2024, or was simply the same motion, in substance, properly served and emailed (or otherwise lodged with the court and thus showing no docket entry). D. The November 12, 2024 Order On November 6, 2024, Boisvert filed “Defendant’s Opposition to Plaintiff’s Ex Parte Motion for Delivery of Property After Examination” and his own declaration. In his opposition, he cited specific pages and lines of an ex parte motion by the Vital parties. He contended the judgment had been

2 We note that Boisvert also elected not to include any reporter’s

transcripts in the appellate record, further obscuring what may have occurred below.

4 satisfied in 2022 and the debt overpaid, and that plaintiffs were attempting to trick the court into ordering a double payment of the judgment. He based his contentions on a variety of legal arguments and factual representations, not all of which were supported by citations to law or fact, as well as on a variety of documents. On November 8, 2024, the superior court issued a tentative ruling indicating its intention to grant the Vital parties’ ex parte motion. Then, at the scheduled November 12, 2024 hearing, at which none of the parties appeared, the superior court adopted its tentative ruling. Specifically, it granted the ex parte motion in its entirety and ordered Haley to turn over $145,769.52, citing Code of Civil Procedure sections 699.040 and 708.205 (November 12, 2024 order).

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Vital Building & Enterprises v. Boisvert CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vital-building-enterprises-v-boisvert-ca14-calctapp-2025.