Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 2015
DocketB251133
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6 (Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6) 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
Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 1/6/15 Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SIX

WENDY ROAD STORAGE, LLC, 2d Civil No. B251133 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2010-00379340- Cross-complainant and Respondent. CU-BC-SIM) (Ventura County) v.

TELEFLEX INCORPORATED,

Cross-defendant and Appellant.

Teleflex Incorporated (Teleflex) appeals a judgment after jury verdict in favor of Wendy Road Storage, LLC (Wendy Road) on a cross-complaint for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage. Teleflex contends substantial evidence does not support the verdict because Teleflex was not a stranger to the economic relationship with which it allegedly interfered; the jury would not have found Teleflex's disruptive conduct was independently wrongful by an objective legal standard if it had been properly instructed; the award of $250,000 in compensatory damages was speculative; and the $1 million punitive damage award was not supported by substantial evidence of malice, oppression or fraud. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In 1986, Teleflex acquired contaminated property in Thousand Oaks (the property) and began remediation. Telair International, Inc. (Telair) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Teleflex. By 2003, Telair owned and was remediating the property. In 2004, real estate developer Paul Bollinger approached Telair about buying the property to develop an office park. Larry Miller is executive vice president and general counsel of both Teleflex and Telair. Jeff Jacobs is an officer of both Teleflex and Telair. At trial, counsel jointly represented Teleflex and Telair. Bollinger is a principal of Wendy Road. He also has interests in Bollinger Construction, Bollinger Development, and the Bollinger Family Trust (collectively, "the Bollinger entities"). In 2004, Wendy Road and Telair formed an LLC, "Telair-Wendy Road LLC" (the LLC), to buy and develop the property into a 28-building office park. The LLC's operating agreement provided that the LLC would buy the property from Telair for $5 million, develop it, and market the 28 buildings, with Wendy Road acting as the managing partner. Telair contributed $2.75 million in cash. Wendy Road and Telair were the only members of the LLC. Only Telair and Wendy Road were entitled to distributions under the operating agreement. Teleflex also signed the LLC's operating agreement, but "[s]olely for purposes of Section 7.6." In section 7.6, Teleflex and Telair agreed to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Wendy Road, Bollinger, the LLC, and their successors and assigns against claims arising from existing environmental contamination on the property. Teleflex and Telair also agreed to give equivalent indemnification to buyers of the buildings. Telair, but not Teleflex, agreed that in the event of foreclosure, its indemnity obligation would be assigned to the project's lender. Bollinger testified that no bank would have provided financing without Teleflex's agreement to indemnify environmental claims. In 2007, the LLC borrowed $26 million from First California Bank for project construction. Paul Bollinger and the Bollinger entities guaranteed the loan. When the loan matured in 2008, the LLC went into default. The bank extended the loan, but required Bollinger to execute a deed of trust encumbering his home as collateral. The extension also required a balloon payment in five months. By then, construction was

2. complete, but the LLC had not sold any buildings. The construction loan went into default when the balloon payment became due on May 14, 2009. Bollinger and Wendy Road wished to delay foreclosure long enough to sell the buildings and recover a profit, but Telair had concluded that its best interest would be served by treating its investment in the project as a loss. Telair's accounting director concluded in September 2009 that Telair should "write-off" its investment in the LLC and take a tax deduction. The LLC's attorney negotiated with the bank and threatened to file for bankruptcy in an attempt to forestall foreclosure. Miller and Jacobs rejected the idea of filing for bankruptcy. Neither member of the LLC had a unilateral right to file a petition for bankruptcy under the terms of the operating agreement. The LLC's assets always exceeded its debts, according to Teleflex's expert. The LLC had little debt aside from the construction loan, and the buildings added value to the property. Telair's assets exceeded $200 million at the time of the settlement negotiations. The bank initiated nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings against the project and against Bollinger's home, with a foreclosure sale date set about one year away, for June 2010. When the bank would not agree to further extend the duration of the loan, Bollinger said, "[I]t became, you know, how do we do a friendly foreclosure and still make money in the event the project sells for more than the loan amount." Bollinger testified that the bank would not agree to give the LLC part of future sales, but appeared to be open to paying cash "up front" in exchange for the LLC's agreement not to resist the foreclosure. The parties negotiated with the bank and reached a settlement on June 29, 2010, pursuant to which the LLC cooperated in the foreclosure of the property, the bank released claims against Bollinger and his home, and Teleflex received $300,000 from the bank in the form of six $50,000 payments upon the future sale of the first six buildings. During negotiations, Wendy Road and Bollinger objected to the proposed payment to Teleflex on the grounds that the money was an LLC asset paid in exchange

3. for the LLC's cooperation with the foreclosure. About a month before the settlement, the LLC's attorney wrote to Miller and Jacobs, "The company's position is that the cash is being paid to avoid a bankruptcy and to allow a cooperative foreclosure." Bollinger also expressed his objection and believed the money should go to the LLC. In a conference call with Miller and Jacobs, the LLC's attorney said the "money is a corporate asset and it should come into the company." Miller responded, "We're not going to allow the company to sign anything if the money doesn't go to Teleflex," and "It's time for us to take some money. [Bollinger has] taken all the money out of this deal so far," according to the LLC's attorney. It was a "very heated conversation," and both Bollinger and Miller were very upset. Miller also said, "We're not going to agree to indemnify any future building owners, which we would do if it was sold through the LLC. We won't do it if there [is] a foreclosure, and we want money for that." When the LLC's attorney relayed Teleflex's position about indemnity to the bank, the bank's negotiator said "the Bank was not particularly concerned about the additional indemnities since Teleflex [was] already obligated to clean up the property," according to the LLC's attorney. The attorney wrote in an e-mail to Miller and Jacobs, "[The bank's negotiator] said the Bank didn't care who got the money but it definitely would not pay $500,000. I asked if the Bank would do the deal without Teleflex's agreement, and he said it might." Bollinger testified that about two weeks before the settlement, he presented to Miller and Jacobs an attorney's opinion about filing for bankruptcy. Miller told Bollinger, "[I]f [Bollinger] went down that path . . .

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Wendy Road Storage v. Teleflex CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendy-road-storage-v-teleflex-ca26-calctapp-2015.