Opinion
California’s compulsory cross-complaint statute prohibits a party from asserting a claim if, at the time the party answered a complaint in prior litigation, it failed to allege in a cross-complaint any then existing, related cause of action against the plaintiff. (Code Civ. Proc., § 426.30, subd. (a).) 1 Few cases have construed the relatedness requirement of the compulsory cross-complaint statute. Accordingly, whether an unasserted *953 claim is a “related” cause of action that is barred by section 426.30 can be a difficult question to answer.
In January 2008, appellant Align Technology, Inc., sued its former employee, Bao Tran, 2 for (among other things) breach of contract and conversion of patents belonging to the company. Tran demurred, claiming that the action was barred under the compulsory cross-complaint statute. He asserted that Align, in a prior state court action in San Francisco (the prior suit), had sued Tran, he had cross-complained for wrongful termination, and Align had failed to assert the current claims at the time it answered the cross-complaint. The court agreed that Align’s claims were barred under section 426.30 because they should have been raised in the prior suit, and it sustained Tran’s demurrer without leave to amend.
Align contends the claims asserted in the present action were not matters that it was required to assert as a compulsory cross-complaint in the prior suit. It argues that some of the claims were unknown at the time it answered Tran’s cross-complaint and that the other claims were not “related” to Tran’s cross-complaint; accordingly, none of the claims are barred because of Align’s failure to allege them in the prior suit. Align argues further that the court abused its discretion by failing to grant Align leave to amend after sustaining Tran’s demurrer.
We conclude that the allegations of the complaint included claims that were barred on their face by the compulsory cross-complaint statute because they were claims logically related to Tran’s cross-complaint that should have been asserted in the prior suit. We hold further that, based upon certain allegations in the complaint and representations made by counsel both at the hearing on the demurrer and on appeal, Align may be able to assert claims against Tran that did not exist when it answered Tran’s cross-complaint in the prior suit and would thus not be barred under section 426.30. Accordingly, Align should have been granted leave to amend. We will therefore reverse the judgment and remand the case with instructions that the court enter an order sustaining the demurrer with leave to amend.
*954 PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Complaint
On January 25, 2008, Align filed its complaint, alleging 11 causes of action against Tran. 3 Align alleged 4 that it hired Tran in March 2000; his position was “Corporate Counsel—Technology and Licensing.” His duties consisted of managing Align’s intellectual property (including patents), drafting and prosecuting applications for patents, managing Align’s licensing arrangements, and assisting in general legal matters. Tran was later promoted to the position of “Associate General Counsel and Director of Legal Affairs.”
Tran signed an Employee Proprietary Information and Inventions Agreement (Inventions Agreement) in which he promised loyalty to Align and assigned to Align any interest in any inventions, except to the extent such assignment would be prohibited under Labor Code section 2870. Tran was also required under the agreement to disclose any inventions conceived by him or reduced to practice prior to his employment with Align; Tran advised Align that he had “ ‘[n]o inventions or improvements’ ” predating his Align employment. Tran also agreed in writing in September 2000 to abide by Align’s mies, policies and standards, including those set forth in the company’s employee handbook. Lastly, in June 2004, Tran signed a document under which he “agreed to abide by and comply with Align’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics.” That document provided that employees (1) should avoid actual or apparent conflicts of interest; (2) were prohibited from engaging in conduct interfering with their job duties or that otherwise conflicted with Align; (3) were prohibited from simultaneous employment with any of Align’s competitors, suppliers, customers, or developers; (4) were prohibited from conduct that would enhance or support the position of an Align competitor; and (5) were required to disclose any interests that might be in conflict with Align’s interests.
Align placed Tran on administrative leave in January 2005 after it learned that he had used Align’s confidential information to assist a startup competitor, OrthoClear, Inc. Align terminated Tran on February 3, 2005, and filed the prior suit against OrthoClear, Tran, and others at that time.
*955 Align alleged in this action that Tran had committed acts during the course of his employment that were, inter alia, in breach of his contract with Align, a violation of his fiduciary duties and his duties of loyalty to the company, and a conversion of corporate property. In general, these actions consisted of Tran’s (1) using company funds to apply to the United States Patent & Trademark Office (U.S.P.T.O.) for non-Align patents, including patents for Tran; (2) operating an unauthorized side business (Tran & Associates) in which he used Align’s phone and computer systems to perform patent prosecution work for clients besides Align; and (3) misappropriating Align’s property by applying for patents in his own name for inventions (i.e., methods of managing patent portfolios) that belonged to Align, in violation of his Inventions Agreement. While he was employed by Align, Tran failed to disclose to his employer that he was operating a side business or that he had inventions belonging to Align that he was claiming as his own.
Align learned of Tran’s side business from telephone calls received from at least 13 of his clients, including one call in June 2005 from an individual who indicated that Tran had been his company’s intellectual property and patent attorney for three years. Align also determined from a forensic search of Tran’s company computer (performed on a date not alleged) that he had used that computer to operate his side business (e.g., to generate invoices, patent applications to the U.S.P.T.O., legal correspondence and memoranda, and client engagement letters).
In June 2006, Align performed an analysis of patent applications filed with the U.S.P.T.O., which disclosed that between 2004 and 2005, Tran filed 53 applications on behalf of his business and only six on behalf of Align. In one such patent application that Tran prosecuted for a client through Tran’s separate business, he copied verbatim the language contained in an Align patent application. There were two particular patent applications filed by Tran in his own name in March 2004 and September 2004, respectively, that involved methods of managing a patent portfolio, which patent applications should have been assigned to Align.
II. The Demurrer
Tran filed a demurrer to the complaint. Tran specified that the demurrer was being brought under section 430.10, subdivision (e), i.e., that the complaint “does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The grounds for the demurrer were, inter alia, that the entire action was barred under (1) the compulsory cross-complaint statute, (2) the doctrine of retraxit, and (3) the one-year statute of limitations applicable to actions against *956 attorneys (§ 340.6). 5 Tran included in the demurrer a request for judicial notice (§ 430.30, subd. (a); Evid. Code, § 452) of several pleadings from the prior suit, namely, Align’s first amended complaint (the prior complaint), Tran’s first amended cross-complaint against Align (hereafter, the Tran cross-complaint, or cross-complaint), and Align’s answer to the Tran cross-complaint. Tran also asked the court to take judicial notice of the settlement agreement and mutual release (Settlement Agreement) entered into in October 2006 that settled, among other disputes, the prior suit. 6 That settlement resulted in the dismissal of the prior suit on October 18, 2006.
In his demurrer, Tran relied in part on the prior complaint. In the prior suit, Align sued OrthoClear, Muhammad Chishti (former chief executive officer and cofounder of Align, and founder of OrthoClear), Tran, and five other former Align employees (who later became employees of OrthoClear). As it concerned Tran, Align alleged in the prior complaint, inter alia, that (1) Align hired Tran in 2000; (2) by virtue of his employment, Tran “designed, implemented and managed virtually every aspect of Align’s intellectual property protection program”; (3) Tran (and the other defendants) “engaged in a systematic effort to misappropriate [Align’s] Confidential Information for the purpose of unfairly competing with Align . . .” in breach of Tran’s employment agreement with Align and his duty of loyalty owed to Align; (4) during a meeting in San Francisco in December 2004 involving Chishti, Tran, and other defendants, “[i]n response to questions about how OrthoClear could sell a product similar to the Invisalign System without infringing Align’s patents, Tran assured the group that he was confident that OrthoClear could circumvent Align’s patents” 7 ; and (5) Tran “made unauthorized charges to Align’s account with the [U.S.P.T.O.]” Align asserted claims against Tran, inter alia, for unfair competition (in violation of Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), trade secret misappropriation, breach of contract (the Inventions Agreement), conversion, and breach of loyalty (Lab. Code, §§ 2860-2863).
Tran also relied on his cross-complaint in the prior suit in support of his contention that Align’s claims in this action were barred under section 426.30, *957 subdivision (a). In that pleading, Tran alleged, inter aha, claims against Align for wrongful termination and for breach of contract. As to the latter claim, when Align terminated Tran, it also cancelled an agreement under which he had been granted options to purchase 40,600 shares of Align stock.
In support of his demurrer, Tran also cited the filing in the prior suit by Align (on May 30, 2006) of its answer to the cross-complaint. Included among the affirmative defenses in that answer were that Tran’s claims were barred under the doctrines of unclean hands and estoppel (based upon Tran’s “own acts or omissions”). Align did not file a cross-complaint in response to the Tran cross-complaint or otherwise assert any claims against Tran beyond those Align raised in its prior complaint.
Align filed extensive opposition to the demurrer, including a request for judicial notice of other pleadings from the prior suit and two federal lawsuits it had filed in June 2005 and June 2006, respectively, in which OrthoClear (but not Tran) had been named as a defendant. After oral argument and submission of the matter, the court issued a formal order sustaining Tran’s demurrer without leave to amend, concluding that the action was barred under the compulsory cross-complaint statute. 8 The court concluded that “the claims now being asserted against defendant Bao Tran are related claims which plaintiff Align Technology, Inc. failed to assert in the underlying litigation.” It did not specify its reasoning for denying Align leave to amend.
A judgment and an amended judgment on the order sustaining demurrer were entered in favor of Tran on May 22, 2008, and on June 24, 2008, respectively.
9
Align filed a timely notice of appeal. The matter is a proper subject for appellate review.
(Berri v. Superior Court
(1955)
*958 DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We perform an independent review of a ruling on a demurrer and decide de novo whether the challenged pleading stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
(McCall v. PacifiCare of Cal., Inc.
(2001)
“It is not the ordinary function of a demurrer to test the truth of the plaintiff’s allegations or the accuracy with which he describes the defendant’s conduct. A demurrer tests only the legal sufficiency of the pleading.”
(Committee on Children’s Television, Inc.
v.
General Foods Corp.
(1983)
On appeal, we will affirm a “trial court’s decision to sustain the demurrer [if it] was correct on any theory. [Citation.]”
(Kennedy v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.
(1996)
An appellate court reviews the denial of leave to amend after the sustaining of a demurrer under an abuse of discretion standard.
(Schifando v. City of Los Angeles
(2003)
II. Compulsory Cross-complaints
The compulsory cross-complaint statute is designed to prevent “piecemeal litigation.”
(Carroll v. Import Motors, Inc.
(1995)
Section 426.30, subdivision (a), provides that “if a party against whom a complaint has been filed and served fails to allege in a cross-complaint any related cause of action which (at the time of serving his answer to the complaint) he has against the plaintiff, such party may not
*960
thereafter in any other action assert against the plaintiff the related cause of action not pleaded.” As used in the compulsory cross-complaint statute, the term “complaint” includes both a complaint and cross-complaint (§ 426.10, subd. (a)), and the term “plaintiff’ includes both a plaintiff and cross-complainant (§ 426.10, subd. (b)). And the phrase “related cause of action” in section 426.30 is defined as “a cause of action which arises out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences as the cause of action which the plaintiff alleges in his complaint.” (§ 426.10, subd. (c).) Because of the liberal construction given to the statute to accomplish its purpose of avoiding a multiplicity of actions, “transaction” is construed broadly; it is “not confined to a single, isolated act or occurrence . . . but may embrace a series of acts or occurrences logically interrelated [citations].”
(Saunders, supra,
In addition, section 426.30 includes a timing element. The related cause of action must be one that was in existence at the time of service of the answer (§ 426.30, subd. (a)); otherwise, the failure to assert it in prior litigation is not a bar under the statute.
(Crocker Nat. Bank v. Emerald
(1990)
Few California cases have interpreted the relatedness requirement of section 426.30. One case doing so—relied on by both Align and Tran—is
Currie Medical, supra,
III. Order Sustaining Demurrer
We apply the above principles to determine whether the court below properly sustained the demurrer because the claims alleged in Align’s complaint were barred under the compulsory cross-complaint statute. This analysis (as noted above) includes a review of (1) whether the current claims are logically related to those asserted in the prior suit, and (2) if so, whether the current claims are nonetheless maintainable because they were not in existence at the time of Align’s service of its answer to the Tran cross-complaint. We conclude that the demurrer was properly sustained because the claims as
*961
alleged were barred under section 426.30, but that Align should have been granted leave to amend; we therefore need not address Tran’s alternative argument that Align’s claims were barred by principles of retraxit—a ground not mentioned in the court’s order sustaining the demurrer.
(Benach v. County of Los Angeles
(2007)
A. Logical Relatedness
1. Align’s contentions
Align contends that the two lawsuits are not logically related. It argues that the prior suit—which it describes as “corporate raid” litigation involving a startup competitor (OrthoClear) and various former key Align employees— was “separate and distinct from” the current litigation involving Tran’s operation of “a side business law firm” and the misappropriation of Align’s patents. (Hereafter, Align’s claims in this action are sometimes generally referred to as the “side law business claim” and the “patent misappropriation claim,” or collectively as the “current claims.”) In support of this position, Align notes that it did not cite in its letter terminating Tran either his “undisclosed law firm side business,” or nondisclosure of patents. Further, Tran in his cross-complaint did not allege that he was terminated for either of these reasons. And Align argues that the intellectual property involved in this case—patents wrongfully claimed by Tran that concerned the process of managing a patent portfolio—differs from that involved in the prior suit (i.e., “the technology Align uses to design, manufacture, and market clear aligners”). It contends, moreover, that the injury in the prior suit (i.e., “theft of Align’s core business practices, as well as its key employees”) was very different from the injury claimed here (i.e., “patent portfolio management inventions that Tran failed to assign to Align and the loss of compensation paid Tran”). Accordingly, Align asserts that because the claims and alleged misconduct in the prior suit involved were not logically related to Tran’s alleged misconduct in this action, the current claims are not barred under section 426.30. 12
*962 2. Relatedness of Align’s claims to Tran’s cross-complaint
We conclude that Align’s position involves an improperly narrow application of the logical relatedness standard. As discussed below—based upon both case law construing California’s compulsory cross-complaint statute and federal cases interpreting the analogous Rule 13(a)—we find that the claims alleged by Align in the complaint are logically related to the claims asserted in the Tran cross-complaint in the prior suit.
Align’s side law business and patent misappropriation claims here, along with Tran’s claims in the cross-complaint, arose out of the employment relationship between the parties. (See
Saunders, supra,
Moreover, the matters Align asserted here are those that one would anticipate an employer might raise—either as defenses, by cross-complaint, or both—in responding to an employee’s claim for wrongful termination such as the one raised in the Tran cross-complaint. (See, e.g.,
Caldwell
v.
Samuels Jewelers
(1990)
Several cases applying California’s compulsory cross-complaint statute— both section 426.30 and former section 439
14
—are illustrative. In
Saunders, supra,
In
Currie Medical, supra,
Applying the “logical relation approach” adopted from federal case law,. the court held that “[t]he claims of Bowen and Currie involve common issues of law and fact. The nature of the contractual relationship is central to Currie’s claim; it is likewise relevant to Bowen’s claim because of the allegation Currie usurped Bowen’s business properties during the relationship. Currie’s answer to Bowen’s complaint in federal court argued for estoppel based on Bowen’s previous actions; those actions were the same as those which are the basis of Currie’s current complaint. This overlap of issues satisfies the logical relation approach to the transaction or occurrence test.”
(Currie Medical, supra,
Our conclusion that Align’s claims are logically related to Tran’s cross-complaint is also supported by cases applying Rule 13(a), governing compulsory counterclaims.
15
In language similar to that found in section 426.30, Rule 13(a) provides in part: “(1)
In General. A
pleading must state as a counterclaim any claim that—at the time of its service—the pleader has against an opposing party if the claim: [f] (A) arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim; and [f] (B) does not require adding another party over whom the court cannot acquire jurisdiction.” “A counterclaim which is compulsory but is not brought is thereafter barred [citation].”
(Baker
v.
Gold Seal Liquors
(1974)
Although other tests have been used in some instances,
16
the “logical relationship” inquiry is the preferred approach in ascertaining whether a claim arises out of the same transaction or occurrence so that it constitutes a compulsory counterclaim under Rule 13(a). (See, e.g.,
Transamerica Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Aviation Office of America
(3d Cir. 2002)
Several federal cases involving compulsory counterclaims in the context of employment disputes are useful in our consideration of the case before us. In
Klein v. London Star Ltd.
(S.D.N.Y. 1998)
Likewise, in
Automated Datatron, Inc.
v.
Woodcock
(D.D.C. 1979)
In
Pochiro, supra,
In
Currie Medical, supra,
B. Timing of Accrual of Claims
We have found that the side law business and patent misappropriation claims bore a logical relationship to the claims asserted in the Tran cross-complaint. We next address whether the temporal element for the assertion of a compulsory cross-complaint—i.e., whether Align’s claims alleged here were in existence at the time it responded to the Tran cross-complaint—was also satisfied.
Align contends that even if the claims alleged in the complaint are deemed to be related to the claims in the Tran cross-complaint, they were unknown to it at the time it answered the cross-complaint in the prior suit (on May 30, 2006) and hence, are not barred. Align points to the fact that, as alleged in the complaint, it did not become aware that Tran, while employed by Align, had filed applications for numerous patents for non-Align clients and for himself personally until it commenced an investigation in June 2006.
Tran responds that Align’s assertion that it did not discover the patent misappropriation claim until June 2006 is belied by its own allegations elsewhere in the complaint to the effect that it had learned in June 2005 that Tran had been operating a side law business while he was employed by Align. He contends that Align therefore cannot be permitted to plead a one-year ignorance of the patent misappropriation claim in order to defeat the compulsory cross-complaint statute.
We conclude that the complaint was demurrable because, on its face, the actionable conduct alleged against Tran was subject to the compulsory cross-complaint statute. As we have already observed, the current claims, if existing at the time Align answered the cross-complaint, were qualitatively ones that were compulsory and should have been raised in the prior suit. However, it cannot be determined conclusively—from the mixture and ambiguity of allegations in the complaint relating to the timing of Align’s knowledge of its claims—whether each of these claims was in existence as of May 30, 2006. Tran makes a persuasive argument that, based on the allegations appearing in the complaint, the side law business claim is barred by the compulsory cross-complaint statute because it was in existence as of May 30, 2006. Align alleged that it had received one telephone call in June 2005 from a person who stated that Tran had been his company’s intellectual property and patent attorney for three years. Align also alleged that it had “received [on dates not alleged] at least one dozen other, similar phone calls *969 from Tran’s other clients.” It also alleged that its forensic search of Tran’s company computer—performed on a date also not alleged—disclosed that Tran had used that computer to operate his side law business. Therefore, unless Align can plead—these previously pleaded facts notwithstanding—that its side law business claim had not accrued prior to May 30, 2006, it cannot state a viable claim on this basis.
Likewise, Tran’s contention that, based upon the allegations of the complaint, Align’s patent misappropriation claim accrued by May 30, 2006, appears to have merit. Align alleged that Tran misappropriated its “property by applying for patents in his own name for various methods of managing a patent portfolio, the precise job Align was paying him to do on Align’s behalf . . . .” The complaint alleged further that two examples of such patent applications were ones submitted to the U.S.P.T.O. in Tran’s own name in March and September 2004. Further, Align alleged that it had become aware by June 2005 that Tran, as a patent attorney, had represented a number of clients while he was employed by Align, and it had learned from a forensic search of his company computer—at some unspecified date after Tran’s termination—that Tran had used Align resources to prepare patent applications for non-Align clients. But Align also alleged in the complaint that it was not until June 2006 that it “analyzed the patents filed with the [U.S.P.T.O.] that list[ed] Tran and/or Tran & Associates as an attorney or agent.” It then went on to state on information and belief that Tran had filed 53 patent applications in 2004 and 2005 on behalf of his side business and only six applications on behalf of Align. The complaint, however, did not state clearly the date upon which Align became aware of, or reasonably should have learned about, these patent filings. (Cf. Civ. Code, § 3426.6 [trade secret misappropriation claim accrues, for purposes of statute of limitations, when owner discovers or reasonably should have discovered the misappropriation].) The patent misappropriation claim would have been a compulsory cross-complaint if it had been in existence as of May 30, 2006. It appeared from the allegations of the complaint that the claim did exist at that time— notwithstanding other allegations that suggested that Align may have learned of additional details concerning the claim after May 30, 2006. Accordingly, the demurrer as to the patent misappropriation claim was also properly sustained.
Tran argues that even if Align did not become aware of the separate patent filings until June 2006, its obligation to assert the patent misappropriation claim in the prior suit continued
after
it answered the cross-complaint up to the settlement of that case in October 2006. In support of this position, he
cites AL Holding Co. v. O’Brien & Hicks, Inc.
(1999)
*970
(6) In
AL Holding,
the assignee of a developer brought suit on an open book account against a consultant, the defendant.
(AL Holding, supra,
AL Holding
does not require that we conclude here that the compulsory cross-complaint statute bars the patent misappropriation claim because of Align’s failure to assert it in the prior suit between the time it answered the cross-complaint and the settlement of the case in October 2006. The compulsory cross-complaint statute plainly provides that the relevant date is “the time of serving [defendant’s] answer to the complaint . . . .” (§ 426.30, subd. (a); see also Legis. Com. com., 14B West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. 2004 ed.) foil. § 426.30, p. 476 [“Only related causes of action that exist at the time of service of the answer to the complaint on the particular plaintiff are affected by Section 426.30”].) Our high court has made it clear that under section 426.30, related claims that accrue in favor of a defendant against the plaintiff
after
it answers the complaint may be, but are not required to be, asserted in the original action.
(E. L. White, Inc. v. City of Huntington Beach
(1978)
Based upon our conclusions that (1) Align’s claims are logically related to the Tran cross-complaint and (2) the allegations of the complaint do not clearly show that any of the claims arose after Align answered the cross-complaint, we agree that the court properly sustained the demurrer.
*971 IV. Denial of Leave to Amend
In Align’s opposition to the demurrer, it noted that, even were the court to agree with Tran’s position that the complaint failed to state a cause of action, it should grant Align leave to amend “to provide additional allegations as to when it discovered the misconduct at issue.” This argument notwithstanding, the court sustained Tran’s demurrer without leave to amend. This was error.
In ruling on a demurrer, the court must grant the plaintiff leave to amend if “there is a reasonable possibility that the defect can be cured by amendment . . . .”
(Quelimane Co. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
(1998)
Align argues that it “could have amended its complaint to further clarify that the claims at issue arose after Align filed its answer to [the Tran cross-complaint].” It contends that in an amended complaint, it could have provided a clearer explanation of the timing of the discovery of the patent misappropriation claim. In addition, Align points to the fact that during oral argument below, its counsel noted that some of the patents that were relevant to its claims had not even been filed by Tran until after Align filed its answer to the cross-complaint in the prior suit. This was a fact not raised in the complaint itself. Accordingly, Align argues, it should have been given leave to amend to plead the fact that some of the patents involved in its claim against Tran were not even filed by Tran with the U.S.P.T.O. until after Align answered the Tran cross-complaint.
We conclude that Align—based upon matters it raised below and on its showing to this court in support of its position that it may be able to present a *972 viable claim—met its burden of showing that there was a reasonable possibility it could have cured the complaint’s defects through an amendment. Because it is reasonably possible that Align could amend the complaint to allege a claim against Tran that would not be barred by the compulsory cross-complaint statute, we hold that it should have been granted leave to amend. Accordingly, we find that the court abused its discretion here in denying Align leave to amend.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. The case is remanded with instructions that the court enter an order sustaining the demurrer to Align’s complaint with leave to amend.
Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P. J., and McAdams, J., concurred.
Notes
Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.
Align also sued Tran & Associates, a law firm founded by Tran that was a business organization, the form of which was unknown to Align at the time it filed the complaint. The amended judgment from which this appeal lies denotes that Tran & Associates is a fictitious business name under which Tran conducted business and that the judgment was “in favor of Bao Tran individually and dba Tran & Associates.” Since there is no dispute that Tran & Associates is merely a fictitious business name, and thus there is no separate legal entity by that name
(Pinkerton’s, Inc. v. Superior Court
(1996)
The 11 causes of action alleged in the complaint consisted of claims for breach of contract, breach of loyalty (Lab. Code, §§ 2860-2863), fraud (intentional misrepresentation), fraud (concealment), replevin, detinue, conversion, unfair and unlawful business practices (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), declaratory relief, unjust enrichment, and imposition of a constructive trust.
A demurrer admits all the truth of all facts properly pleaded.
(Aubry v. Tri-City Hospital Dist.
(1992)
The appellant’s appendix did not include the notice that specified the grounds upon which Tran’s demurrer was based. Because a demurring party must distinctly set forth the grounds upon which its objections to a pleading are based (§ 430.60), and because the notice of demurrer was thus essential to our review of this matter, on our own motion on September 25, 2009, we ordered the record augmented to include the notice of hearing on Tran’s demurrer filed with the court below. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.155(a)(1)(A).)
Align referred to the Settlement Agreement in its complaint herein. As such, it was an appropriate matter of which the court could take judicial notice.
(Ingram v. Flippo
(1999)
As alleged in the complaint in this action, the Invisalign System is Align’s “core product. . . , a proprietary method for treating crooked and misaligned teeth.”
In the order sustaining demurrer, the court granted Tran’s request for judicial notice as to the court pleadings from this action and from the prior suit (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d)), and as to the Settlement Agreement and the docket sheet from the prior suit (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (h)). It granted Align’s request for judicial notice in part as to pleadings from the prior suit (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d)); it denied the judicial notice request in part (as to press articles concerning the dispute between Align and OrthoClear and answers to interrogatories served in the prior suit). Align does not challenge the denial in part of its request for judicial notice.
The court sustained without leave to amend the demurrer of Bao Tran. It overruled the demurrer as to “Tran & Associates.” Because it was undisputed that Tran & Associates is not a separate entity (see fn. 2, ante), after the judgment was initially entered, by stipulation of the parties, the judgment was amended to reflect that it was “entered in favor of Bao Tran individually and dba Tran & Associates.”
“If the defendant omits to set up a counterclaim upon a cause arising out of the transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff s claim, neither he nor his assignee can afterwards maintain an action against the plaintiff therefor.” (Former § 439, as amended by Stats. 1941, ch. 454, § 2, p. 1751, and repealed by Stats. 1971, ch. 244, § 42, p. 389.)
Tran does not argue here that the court’s ruling was correct on the third ground it urged below, i.e., that the claims are barred under the one-year statute of limitations provided in section 340.6. He accordingly has forfeited this argument.
(Julian v. Hartford Underwriters Ins. Co.
(2005)
Align also argued below that the current claims were not barred by the compulsory cross-complaint statute because Tran & Associates was not a party to the prior suit. Although it appeared from its opening brief that Align might be reasserting this argument here, it specifically abandoned the contention in its reply.
Align asserts in its reply brief that there is no basis for Tran’s claim that Align was required under the after-acquired-evidence doctrine to have pleaded as a total or partial defense to the Tran cross-complaint the alleged misconduct of Tran described in the complaint. We refer to the potential applicability here of the after-acquired-evidence doctrine only as an identification of one of a number of factors that inform our holding that the claims as pleaded in the complaint are barred by the compulsory cross-complaint statute.
We of course acknowledge that section 426.30’s predecessor, former section 439, referred to omitted “counterclaims,” not cross-complaints. (See fn. 10, ante.) In legislation enacted in 1971, the counterclaim was abolished. (See § 428.80: “Any cause of action that formerly was asserted by a counterclaim shall be asserted by a cross-complaint.”) However, the “theory [of the compulsory counterclaim statute, former section 439] is the basis of the present compulsory cross-complaint rule . . . .” (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Pleading, § 1177, p. 607.) For the sake of simplicity here therefore, we refer to former section 439 as the predecessor to the compulsory cross-complaint statute.
“A counterclaim is any claim for relief, other than an original claim, that one party has against an opposing party.” (1 Moore’s Manual: Federal Practice and Procedure (2009) § 11.60[1], p. 11-51, fn. omitted.)
A leading authority has explained that three other tests besides the preferred logical relationship test have been utilized by some federal courts, namely, whether (1) the factual and legal issues of the claim and counterclaim are largely the same, (2) a later suit on the defendant’s claim would be subject to a res judicata bar, and (3) substantially the same evidence would be involved in presenting and refuting both the claim and counterclaim. (6 Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure, supra, § 1410, pp. 52-55; see also Friedenthal et al., Civil Procedure (2d ed. 1993) § 6.7, pp. 351-352.)
