Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC v. Brookfield Natomas, LLC CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 2015
DocketG050001
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC v. Brookfield Natomas, LLC CA4/3 (Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC v. Brookfield Natomas, LLC CA4/3) 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
Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC v. Brookfield Natomas, LLC CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 11/10/15 Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC v. Brookfield Natomas, LLC CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

ZEPHYR EQUITIES & DEVELOPMENT, LLC, G050001 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2013-00648089) v. OPINION BROOKFIELD NATOMAS, LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Charles Margines, Judge, and Ronald L. Bauer, Judge. Reversed. Donna Bader for Plaintiff and Appellant. Corbett, Steelman & Specter, Bruce R. Corbett, Laura M. Mascheroni, Susan J. Ormsby, and Adam G. Wentland for Defendant and Appellant. We have for our consideration two appeals challenging the trial court’s order confirming and modifying an arbitration award. The dispute concerns a consulting agreement between a real estate developer and Steven P. Rosenblatt (Rosenblatt), the sole owner of Zephyr Equities & Development, LLC (Zephyr). On appeal, the real estate developer asserts the trial court erred in refusing to vacate an arbitration award based on evidence it enforced an illegal contract and the illegal provisions were not severable. Alternatively, it asserts the award should be reduced because the trial court miscalculated the portion attributable to the legal provisions. In its cross-appeal, Zephyr maintains the trial court should not disturb the arbitrator’s determination the contract was legal and the court erred in reducing the arbitrator’s award. In summary, the issues raised by the parties in these two appeals are whether (1) the arbitration award is immune to judicial review; (2) the parties’ consulting agreement required Zephyr to perform activities that required a real estate license it did not possess; (3) if yes, were these illegal activities severable to permit Zephyr to be compensated for the legal work it performed; and (4) if Zephyr is owed compensation, did the court correctly reduce the arbitration award based on the evidence presented. We conclude the arbitration award was subject to judicial review and, after independently reviewing the issue, we conclude the consulting agreement did not require Zephyr to perform activities that required a real estate license. Consequently, the arbitration award is not the enforcement of an illegal contract and must be confirmed without modification. We reverse the trial court’s ruling confirming but modifying the arbitration award and direct the trial court to enter a new order confirming the award without modification. Based on this ruling, we need not address the contention the court’s calculations modifying the award were incorrect.

2 I A. Background Facts Brookfield Natomas, LLC (Natomas) is a subsidiary of Brookfield Land Company, Inc., (BLC), a California corporation, which is a subsidiary of the Canadian company, Brookfield Homes (these three related entities will collectively be referred to in the singular as BLC or Brookfield unless the context requires otherwise). BLC operates several large residential community development subsidiaries, each named after a particular real estate development. Natomas was formed and named for a multi-unit residential community near Sacramento, California. Since 1997, BLC and Zephyr have worked together on several land development projects. Rosenblatt, the sole owner of Zephyr, worked closely with BLC’s chief executive officer John Stewart. In 2001 BLC started the Natomas project in Sacramento and hired attorney, Karen Diepenbrock, to draft agreements with several farmers (Landowners) in the area (the Landowner Agreements). Diepenbrock testified these agreements were not purchase and sale agreements. Rather, BLC received the Landowner’s permission to obtain whatever entitlements would be necessary to later develop the Landowner’s property, increasing its sale value. Most of the Landowner Agreements were signed in September 2002. In January 2003, BLC hired Rosenblatt (owner of Zephyr) to work as a consultant on the Natomas project. In 2008 BLC stopped paying the consulting fee, but Zephyr continued to work on the project until 2011, when Zephyr demanded payment and then commenced the underlying arbitration proceedings. B. The Consulting Agreement with Zephyr On January 27, 2003, Stewart (on behalf of BLC) and Rosenblatt (on behalf of Zephyr) executed a “Consulting Agreement” (the Agreement). The Agreement contained the following “RECITALS”: (1) BLC “has executed or is in the process of

3 executing Landowner Agreements with all of the landowners in the Project Area” in Sacramento; (2) “A list of the present and potential Landowners and the number of acres owned by each within the Project Area and subject to a Landowner Agreement” is attached as exhibit A; (3) “A copy of a Generic Landowner Agreement already executed or to be executed by [BLC] with all the Landowners in the Project Area” is attached as exhibit B; (4) BLC desires to hire Zephyr (referred to as “consultant” throughout the Agreement) “to render business advice, development and marketing expertise and other services in furtherance of the Project as hereinafter specified.” Zephyr agreed to provide the following ten “Specific Duties”: (1) “Assistance in securing Landowner Agreements with Landowners within the Project Area”; (2) “Assistance in securing such other lands as may be required to satisfy open space, habitat or other Project needs”; (3) “Assistance in pursuit of City or County development rights (‘Entitlements’) as to Project Land, including annexation to . . . Sacramento and satisfaction of the requirements” of all governmental agencies having jurisdiction; (4) “Assistance in budgeting the financial requirements for the development of Project Land as described in the Generic Landowner Agreement; provided, however, that the Consultant shall have no obligation to provide any funds to meet such requirements excepting the need to advance such minor costs as may have time to time be needed . . .”; (5) “[M]onitoring and coordinating the work of other consultants and experts engaged by [BLC]”; (6) “[P]reparing or processing the Project Master Plan and all environmental documents pertinent thereto”; (7) “[M]arketing the Project Land including active oversight of the activities of the realtors involved”; (8) “Coordinating and attending all meetings of Landowners, governmental entities, consultants, and other as may from time to time be necessary or appropriate in pursuit of the Project”; (9) “Assistance in connection with any eminent domain proceedings”; and (10) “Completion of such other work or assignments as may from time to time be made by [BLC] in furtherance of the Project.”

4 In the Agreement, BLC agreed to be responsible for the following: (1) paying Zephyr; (2) “Proceeding with the assembly of the Project Land and such other land in or around the Project area as may be necessary . . . to provide such habitat and open space as may be necessary to obtain the Entitlements”; (3) funding the project “to the extent set forth in the Generic Landowner Agreement”; (4) providing an office, supplies, and necessary equipment; (5) hiring an attorney to represent BLC “and provide such legal and development advice, coordination, and other services” deemed necessary; (6) providing a project engineer and land planner to represent BLC “and provide engineering, land and development advice, coordination, and other services” deemed necessary; and (7) provide services to process receipts, financial disbursements, and any other supervision or support deemed necessary.

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