VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 2020
DocketB291330
StatusPublished

This text of VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC (VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC) 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
VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 5/12/20 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

VVA-TWO, LLC, B291330

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC548740) v.

IMPACT DEVELOPMENT GROUP, LLC,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment and orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, David Sotelo, Judge. Affirmed. Glaser Weil Fink Howard Avchen & Shapiro, Michael Cypers; Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Robin Meadow and Jeffrey E. Raskin for Plaintiff and Appellant. Shaw Koepke & Satter and Jens B. Koepke for Defendant and Respondent.

Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of the Discussion post, part B.3. Efficiency, finality, and restricted appellate review are the hallmarks of arbitration under California law, and thus often the impetus for parties to enter into an arbitration agreement. Absent party agreement providing otherwise, the Code of Civil Procedure reflects those goals by limiting the bases for vacatur of an arbitration award to a short list of situations in which the award reflects not legal or factual error, but some flaw in the arbitral proceedings or award rendering them fundamentally unfair or unauthorized. (See Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 1286.2; see also § 1283.4.) We disagree with appellant VVA-TWO, LLC (VVA) that the award underlying this appeal presents any such basis for vacatur. VVA appeals from a judgment resulting from the court’s confirmation of an arbitration award in favor of Impact Development Group, LLC (IDG) regarding a contractual dispute between the parties. VVA presents three arguments for vacatur, none of which we find persuasive. In considering these arguments, we are guided by the general policy in favor of arbitration and, more specifically, in favor of interpreting arbitration awards to give effect to parties’ stated desire to avoid court involvement. VVA first argues that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by awarding IDG remedies that are inconsistent with the contract. But where, as here, the arbitration agreement does not expressly prohibit the specific remedies awarded by the arbitrator, California Supreme Court precedent requires only a rational relationship between the arbitrator’s interpretation of the contract and the remedies awarded—nothing further.

1 Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 Ours is not to assess the merits of the arbitrator’s contractual interpretation, even if, as VVA argues is the case here, it is inconsistent with the plain terms of the contract. The remedies the arbitrator awarded here bear a rational relationship to the arbitrator’s interpretation of the contract, which we infer from the terms of the award itself and the record more generally. The arbitrator thus did not exceed his authority in awarding this remedy. We also disagree with VVA’s argument that the award is incomplete. Under the circumstances that existed at the time the arbitrator signed the award, it finally resolved all issues between the parties. Events that might—but are not necessarily likely to—happen in the future could render the remedy incremental, but the arbitrator retained jurisdiction to implement those potentially incremental terms, should such hypothetical events materialize. As to VVA’s third argument, in the unpublished portion of this opinion, we conclude that the arbitrator’s assessment of certain evidence as irrelevant and his resulting refusal to reopen proceedings to admit such evidence do not render the arbitration process fundamentally unfair. Thus, the trial court correctly confirmed the award.

3 BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY A. The Contracts Underlying This Dispute This litigation is part of a larger set of disputes between Gary Downs, William Rice, Douglas Day, and Kristoffer Kaufmann stemming from their ownership of a low income housing development entity called Highland Property Development, LLC (Highland).2 One such dispute arose between Day, Downs, and Rice regarding Highland’s efforts to acquire two low-income housing projects, Villa Vasona and Twin Oaks. To resolve this dispute, Day, Downs, and Rice agreed that appellant VVA, a housing development entity owned by Rice and Day, would acquire the two housing projects and assign a one-third economic interest in them to respondent IDG, a housing development entity owned by Downs. IDG and VVA memorialized their agreements regarding the housing projects on February 1, 2013 with a complex set of contracts that included, among other documents, a set of substantively identical agreements the parties refer to as Distributable Cash Agreements (DCAs) and a set of limited partnership agreements (LPAs). Pertinent to the matter before us, each of the DCAs contains an arbitration clause and, as an

2 Neither Highland, nor any of its individual members, is a party to this appeal. More background regarding the dispute underlying this appeal and related disputes involving individual Highland partners, can be found in our opinions in Rice v. Downs (2016) 248 Cal.App.4th 175 (Downs I) and Rice v. Downs (Jul. 23, 2019, B286296) [nonpub. opn.] (Downs II). The background provided in these opinions is not necessary to an understanding of the issues here.

4 amendment to the Highland operating agreement, a “Mandatory Buy-Sell of Membership Interests” clause, and a “Limitation of Buy-Sell Rights” clause.3 (Underlining omitted.) The DCAs defined various events as “Buy-Sell Events” that could trigger the agreements’ buy-sell provisions. On the occurrence of a “Buy-Sell Event,” either IDG or VVA could invoke the buy-sell provisions by sending a buy-sell notice to the other party. The notice was to contain “the terms and conditions for the Offering Party’s purchase of the [i]nterests of the other party . . . (the ‘Non-Offering Party’).” Upon delivery of a buy-sell notice, the contracts gave the other party—the Non-Offering Party—the option to purchase the Offering Party’s interest “on the same terms and conditions set forth in the Buy-Sell Notice

3 The “Limitation of Buy-Sell Rights” clauses stated: “Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth herein, no party shall have the right to exercise the Mandatory Buy-Sell if the exercise of the Mandatory Buy-Sell and/or the consummation of the transactions contemplated thereby would result in a breach of any agreement to which the Project, the [project partnership] and/or the [project co-general partner] are a party or subject to, including, without limitation, the [project] Partnership Agreement[s]. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the exercise and consummation of the rights under the Mandatory Buy-Sell shall be subject to (i) any consent rights of an Investor Limited Partner under the [project] Partnership Operating Agreement, and (ii) any consent or approval rights of any other third party if required under their documents, the [project] Partnership, and/or the [project co-general partner] Operating Agreement, including, but not limited to, any secured lender of the Project, the federal department of Housing and Urban Development, CBRE HMF, Inc., and the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee.” The DCAs designated RBC Tax Credit Equity, LLC (RBC) as the “Investor Limited Partner.”

5 of the Offering Party” by giving the Offering Party notice of the election to exercise the option within 30 days after delivery of the buy-sell notice. The contracts also provided that “[t]he closing . . .

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VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vva-two-llc-v-impact-development-group-llc-calctapp-2020.