WooriChemtech Co. v. EPC Technologies CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 2015
DocketE061174
StatusUnpublished

This text of WooriChemtech Co. v. EPC Technologies CA4/2 (WooriChemtech Co. v. EPC Technologies CA4/2) 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
WooriChemtech Co. v. EPC Technologies CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 10/14/15 WooriChemtech Co. v. EPC Technologies CA4/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

WOORICHEMTECH CO., LTD.,

Cross-complainant and Appellant, E061174

v. (Super.Ct.No. CIVRS1009301)

EPC TECHNOLOGIES, INC. et al., OPINION

Cross-defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Gilbert G. Ochoa,

Judge. Affirmed.

Kim, Shapiro, Park & Lee and Paul Park for Cross-complainant and Appellant,

WooriChemtech Co. Ltd.

Lee Counsel and Ginam Lee for Cross-defendant and Respondent, EPC

Technologies, Inc.

Price, Parkinson & Kerr and Steven W. Garff for Cross-defendant and

Respondent, Basic Research.

No appearance for Cross-defendant and Respondent, Kwangwon USA, Inc. 1 I

INTRODUCTION1

Appellant WooriChemtech Co. Ltd. (Woori) and respondents EPC Technologies,

Inc. and related parties (EPC), Kwangwon USA, Inc. and related parties (Kwangwon),

and Basic Research, LLC. (Basic) became embroiled in a dispute over the ownership,

acquisition and distribution of StriVectin skin care products. The parties attempted to

settle their disputes and litigation, to no avail.

Woori appeals the trial court order dismissing EPC and Basic from the action after

granting Basic, Kwangwon, and EPC’s motion to enforce a written settlement agreement

between Woori and EPC, entered on May 18, 2013 (2013 settlement agreement). Woori

argues EPC and Woori mutually rescinded the settlement agreement. Therefore it is

unenforceable. Woori also argues the trial court erred in refusing to consider proffered

extrinsic evidence when reviewing and construing the terms of the 2013 settlement

1 EPC and Basic request this court to judicially notice (1) a certified copy and translation of “Gist of Defense Argument” for Hwa Youn Seol, filed on May 22, 2013, in the Southern Branch of the Seoul District Court and (2) a certified copy and translation of “Final Statement of Defendant” Seol Hwa Youn, filed on June 7, 2013, in the Southern Branch of the Seoul District Court. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (f).) EPC and Basic acknowledge the documents were not presented to the trial court in this case but argue this court nevertheless should consider them because the documents refute Woori’s contention that the 2013 settlement agreement was rescinded. Woori indicates in the documents that the 2013 settlement agreement was an enforceable agreement. EPC’s request for judicial notice is denied. Although the documents show that Woori and Seol believed the 2013 settlement agreement was valid and enforceable, the documents were submitted in a different jurisdiction (in a court in South Korea) and were not presented to the trial court in the instant case.

2 agreement. In addition, Woori asserts Basic and Kwangwon do not have standing to

enforce the settlement agreement between EPC and Woori.

We conclude substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings Woori and

EPC entered into a valid, enforceable written settlement agreement and the parties to the

agreement did not mutually rescind the agreement. The trial court therefore properly

granted enforcement of the 2013 settlement agreement, which required Woori to dismiss

its claims with prejudice. We also reject Woori’s contention the trial court erred in not

considering extrinsic evidence, and find no merit to Woori’s standing challenge.

Regardless of whether Basic and Kwangwon had standing to bring the motion to enforce

settlement, EPC, which joined in the motion, had standing to bring the motion. We

affirm the judgment.

II

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Klein-Becker USA, LLC (Klein-Becker) manufactures and markets StriVectin

skin care products. Basic is a distributor of StriVectin products. In 2005, Basic and

Klein-Becker (collectively BKB) and Woori entered into an agreement entitled,

“International Distributor Agreement” (2005 IDA), permitting Woori to distribute

StriVectin products in the Republic of Korea. Various disagreements arose from the

2005 IDA. In December 2008, BKB and Woori entered into a settlement agreement and

mutual release (2008 Settlement Agreement), in which BKB agreed to provide Woori

with a $740,000 credit for the purchase of BKB products.

3 Thereafter, Woori and Basic entered into an agreement entitled,

Additions/Modifications to Standard Purchase Agreement (A/M Agreement), which

stated Woori ordered, and Basic would supply to Woori, $516,420 worth of BKB’s

StriVectin products. Payment for the products would be charged against the $740,000

credit under the 2008 Settlement Agreement. Under the A/M Agreement, Woori had a

remaining credit balance of $223,580. Woori received the ordered products from Basic.

Because of Woori’s delay in signing a new distributorship agreement and various

violations of the A/M Agreement, in February 2009, Basic notified Woori that Basic

would not enter into another distributorship agreement with Woori and was looking for

other distributors for Korea. Basic demanded Woori immediately cease and desist from

selling BKB products, provide an accounting of disposition of the products, and transfer

the website domain to Basic.

The president of Woori, Hwa Youn Seol (Seol), encouraged EPC to enter into a

distributorship agreement with BKB. BKB selected EPC as a new distributor. In March

2009, EPC and BKB entered into an IDA (2009 IDA) in which EPC became the sole

authorized distributor of BKB’s products for Asia Pacific Countries, including Korea and

Japan. The 2009 IDA stated EPC replaced Woori in the 2008 Settlement Agreement,

with the $740,000 credit transferred to EPC, and EPC was given the right to dispose of

the products Woori had received or return them to Basic. The remaining credit was also

transferred to EPC.

In 2009, Woori executed a Confirmation of Assignment (COA), which provided

that Woori transferred to EPC all rights to the remainder of the StriVectin products in

4 Woori’s possession, and authorized EPC to sell or dispose of the products. In May 2009,

pursuant to the COA, EPC moved Woori’s remaining products to Kwangwon’s

warehouse.

In July 2009, BKB transferred its StriVectin cosmetics assets to StriVectin

Operating Company, Inc. A dispute arose between EPC, BKB, and StriVectin Operating

Company regarding rights and obligations under the 2009 IDA. The parties settled and

agreed to enter into a new IDA (2011 IDA), which remained in effect until June 2012. In

June 2012, StriVectin Operating Company authorized EPC to take civil and criminal

legal action on behalf of StriVectin Operating Company to protect and prosecute

infringements of StriVectin Operating Company’s intellectual property registered in

Korea. Such infringements included Woori and Seol’s tampering with the expiration

dates on the StriVectin products and selling expired products in Korea.

By impersonating Gun Choon Lee (G.C. Lee), the president and chief executive

officer (CEO) of EPC, Seol, on behalf of Woori, caused the remaining StriVectin

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