Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 2016
DocketB258847
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7 (Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7) 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
Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 3/15/16 Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SEVEN

KAROOSH ZAGHI, B258847

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. SC120466) v.

SHAOUL LEVY et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Craig D. Karlan, Judge. Affirmed. Murphy Rosen, Paul D. Murphy, Jodi M. Newberry and Mark J. Nagle, for Defendants and Appellants Shaoul Levy, Aryeh Aslan, Jessie Liu and Raziel La Madrid Valiente. Daar & Newman, Jeffrey J. Daar and Michael R. Newman, for Defendant and Appellant Tony Frazier. Ervin Cohen & Jessup, Geoffrey M. Gold and Eric W. Cheung for Defendants and Appellants Great American Chicken Corp., Inc. and U.S. Food Corp., Inc. Hamburg, Karic, Edwards & Martin, Steven S. Karic, Gregg A. Martin and David A. Householder, for Plaintiff and Respondent Koorosh Zaghi. _________________ Karoosh Zaghi was employed by, and held a 20 percent ownership interest in, Great American Chicken Corp., Inc. and U.S. Food Corp., Inc., which operate a large number of franchised KFC and Long John Silver’s fast-food restaurants. After his employment was terminated and his shares of stock involuntarily repurchased, Zaghi sued the two companies and several of his former business associates for fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, defamation and related common law and statutory causes of action. Zaghi’s lawsuit sought $20 million in compensatory damages and restoration of his employment and ownership interests in the companies. Great American Chicken and U.S. Food moved pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (section 425.16) to strike several of the causes of action pleaded. Shaoul Levy and four of the other individual defendants did as well. The trial court denied both motions, ruling any allegations of protected speech or petitioning conduct in Zaghi’s first amended complaint were incidental to the gravamen of the challenged causes of action. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. Zaghi’s First Amended Complaint On November 26, 2013 Zaghi filed a 66-page, 237-paragraph first amended complaint containing 15 causes of action and naming as defendants Great American Chicken and U.S. Food (collectively corporate defendants), Levy, Tony Frazier, Aryeh Aslan, Jessie Liu and Raziel La Madrid Valiente (collectively individual moving defendants) and two other individuals and a (suspended) mortgage broker. Zaghi alleged that he and his friend and business partner Ataollah Aminpour had originally formed Great American Chicken and U.S. Food in 2011 to acquire 70 KFC and 21 Long John Silver’s franchised restaurants through negotiations with Yum Brands, a publicly traded Fortune 500 corporation that owned the two brands. Zaghi held a 20-percent interest in each corporation and was employed as an officer and served as a director of both. Zaghi’s employment was terminated in March 2013 (Aminpour had been discharged at an earlier date) based on false allegations of misconduct and self-dealing; Levy and Aslan then exercised their purposed right to repurchase his stock for a nominal amount and

2 excluded Zaghi from participating in the companies in any respect—the culmination of defendants’ scheme to acquire full control of the companies and obtain Zaghi’s and Aminpour’s ownership interests in them. Since February 2013 Zaghi has received no wages, income or distributions from either company. All those actions, Zaghi alleged, were fraudulent and in violation of various statutory and contractual rights he enjoyed as a shareholder and employee of the companies. The first amended complaint alleged Zaghi was fraudulently induced into making substantial personal financial commitments in connection with the acquisition of the KFC and Long John Silver’s restaurants and his interests in the two companies were thereafter misappropriated through a series of wrongful actions. The defendants allegedly made misrepresentations about the plans for funding and operating the joint venture formed by Zaghi, Aminpour, Frazier and Levy to acquire the restaurants; misrepresentations and concealment of the status of bank signing authority, which gave Levy single signature authority over corporate accounts; misrepresentations regarding Zaghi’s responsibility for a loan from the Small Business Administration; and a false promise that Zaghi would continue to be employed with the companies and retain his ownership interests if he cooperated in litigation against Aminpour after Aminpour’s employment with the companies had been terminated and his stock repurchased. As to this final category of misconduct, Zaghi alleged he was improperly pressured into signing a false declaration that described Aminpour’s purported wrongful conduct for use in the litigation. Zaghi 1 also alleged he was defrauded into signing various corporate resolutions. In addition to Zaghi’s claims regarding his employment and stock interests, the first amended complaint alleged he was defamed by written and oral statements by Levy, Aslan and Frazier to Yum Brands that Zaghi had been dishonest in his business dealings

1 The first amended complaint also contains allegations concerning interference with Zaghi’s exercise of his rights under the California Family Rights Act (CFRA) after he took leave to care for his wife, who was being treated for cancer, and denial of his right to inspect corporate books and records. 3 with Yum Brands and had purposefully failed to disclose information related to the ownership of Great American Chicken and U.S. Food and the financing for the acquisition of the KFC and Long John Silver’s restaurants. The false accusations were made to hide defendants’ own wrongdoing from Yum Brands. Between late December 2012 and the date of his termination, March 11, 2013, Levy, Aslan and Frazier repeatedly advised Zaghi that Yum Brands was seeking his removal from Great American Chicken and the elimination of his equity interest, apparently based upon the false and misleading statements made by the individual defendants to Yum Brands. 2. The Motions To Strike Great American Chicken and U.S. Food moved pursuant to section 425.16 to strike eight of the 15 causes of action in the first amended complaint: fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of shareholder agreements, breach of employment agreement, interference with the California Family Rights Act, wrongful termination in violation of public policy and defamation. The corporate defendants emphasized that the first amended complaint alleged, as part of their scheme to wrongfully terminate Zaghi and usurp his equity position in the companies, they had conspired with their litigation attorneys to coerce Zaghi into signing a false declaration for use in opposing Aminpour’s motion for preliminary injunction in Aminpour’s lawsuit against the companies. Those allegations, they argued, brought the challenged claims within the ambit of section 425.16 as an exercise of their right to petition. The companies’ special motion to strike made no separate argument with respect to the nature of the protected activity involved in the defamation cause of action, as the trial court noted in denying the motion: “The Company defendants’ sole argument to support the first prong of the anti-SLAPP statute is based on the alleged coerced false 2 declaration, including the involvement of [litigation counsel] in its preparation.”

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Zaghi v. Levy CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaghi-v-levy-ca27-calctapp-2016.