SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY, Plаintiff and Respondent, v. PATRICK FLANNERY, Defendant and Appellant.
No. B249616
Second Dist., Div. Five.
Dec. 16, 2014.
232 Cal.App.4th 477
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. PATRICK FLANNERY, Defendant and Appellant.
Counsel
Daneshrad Law Firm, Joseph Daneshrad; Benedon & Serlin, Gerald M. Serlin and Kelly R. Horowitz for Defendant and Appellant.
Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton, Steven O. Kramer, John A. Yacovelle, Jonathan D. Moss, Marisa B. Miller; and Marlin E. Howes for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Opinion
KRIEGLER, J.—Plaintiff and respondent Southern California Gas Company (SCGC) filed a complaint in interpleader against defendant and appellant Patrick Flannery and his former attorney. SCGC filed a motion for discharge from the interpleader action and an award of attorney fees under
Flannery contends the court erroneously concluded (1)
Flannery also contends the court erroneously granted SCGC’s Discharge Motion because (1) his due process rights were violated, (2) there is no statutory basis for the Discharge Motion, and (3) the court’s attorney fee award is not supported by substantial evidence. We reject each contention and affirm the order granting the Discharge Motion.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On March 15, 2013, SCGC filed a complaint in interpleader (the Interpleader Action) and deposited an unspecified amount with the clerk of the court. To place the Interpleader Action in context, we review the procedural history of related cases involving Flannery, his ex-girlfriend, Andrea Murray, and his former attorney, Scott Tepper.
On February 26, 2013, Flannery, Murray, and SCGC settled the Sesnon Fire Case, and the parties’ settlement was approved by the trial court. The agreement required SCGC to pay confidential but specific monetary amounts (the Settlement Funds) to (1) Flannery and his counsel, (2) Murray and her counsel, and (3) an attorney whose role is not relevant to our facts. The agreement required SCGC to pay the Settlement Funds before March 19, 2013.
On February 27, 2013, one day after the parties had settled, Tepper sent an e-mail to all counsel in the Sesnon Fire Case advising them that he was “entitled to know the amount of the settlement[, asserted] a lien equal to 33 1/3% of the settlement proceeds” and requested “assurances that my lien will be protected . . . .” He further advised that if he was not given the requested assurances, he would “apply to the court for an order requiring my lien to be protected and honored, and take such additional steps as may be necessary to enforce my lien.”
On March 6, 2013, counsel for SCGC advised Daneshrad and Tepper that in order to protect SCGC from the dispute over attorney fees, it intended to interplead the Settlement Funds unless it received “written directions signed by both of you and Mr. Flannery.” By March 13, 2013, Daneshrad and Tepper had been unable to reach agreement. In a final attempt to resolve the dispute, SCGC proposed three alternatives, conditioning the first two on obtaining agreement from both Tepper and Daneshrad: (1) one check made out to Flannery, Daneshrad and Tepper, (2) one check for two-thirds of the Settlement Funds made out to Flannery and Daneshrad and one check for one-third of the Settlement Funds made out to Flannery, Daneshrad, and Tepper, or (3) interplead the Settlement Funds. Rather than reaching an agreement, both attorneys began taking opposing stances on whether Murray also had a claim to the Settlement Funds.2 Unable to obtain agreement from Tepper and Daneshrad, SCGC filеd the Interpleader Action on March 15, 2013, identifying Tepper, Daneshrad, and Flannery as defendants and claimants, and
On March 20, 2013, once the deadline for SCGC to pay the Settlement Funds had expired, Flannery filed an ex parte motion in the Sesnon Fire Case to enforce the settlement agreement. The court ordered the parties to file an application to seal the ex parte motion and continued the matter to March 25, 2013.
On March 25, 2013, with counsel for Flannery and SCGC appearing, the court сontinued Flannery’s ex parte motion to enforce the settlement agreement to April 10, 2013, and ordered the papers supporting the ex parte motion to be returned to the parties “for safekeeping pending further hearing on ex parte, without refilling [sic] of papers.” At the same hearing, the court deemed the Interpleader Action related to the In Re Sesnon Fire Cases. The court ordered the parties to participate in a mandatory settlement conference on April 3, 2013. The parties also stipulated to use Case Home Page, the same e-service provider used in the In re Sesnon Fire Cases.
Tepper and Murray filed answers to SCGC’s interpleader complaint on March 25, 2013, and March 27, 2013, respectively. On April 3, 2013, Flannery, Murray, Tepper, and SCGC participated in a mandatory settlement conference.
On April 10, 2013, the court held a status conference in the In re Sesnon Fire Cases. The record reveals some confusion about whether Flannery’s ex parte motion to enforce the settlement agreement remained on calendar for April 10, 2013, but neither Flannery nor Daneshrad appeared. At the April 10, 2013 status conference, SCGC orally moved to be dischargеd from the Interpleader Action. The court scheduled the motion to be heard at a status conference on April 24, 2013. SCGC prepared a “Notice of Ruling re Status Conference” and served it on all parties through Case Home Page the following day.
SCGC filed the Discharge Motion on April 15, 2013, with a hearing date of April 24, 2013. The proof of service shows service through Case Home Page,
On April 24, 2013, with counsel for all parties to the Interpleader Action appearing, the court continued the hearing on SCGC‘s Discharge Motion to May 17, 2013. On May 6, 2013, SCGC, Murray, and Tepper filed separate oppositions to Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion.
At the May 17, 2013 hearing, the trial court considered SCGC‘s Discharge Motion before Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion, noting that no party had filed an opposition to the Discharge Motion. Daneshrad objected, arguing that because Flannery had not appeared in the Interpleader Action until he filed his Anti-SLAPP Motion on April 23, 2013, he did not have adequate notice of the Discharge Motion and it would violate Flannery‘s due process rights for the court to consider the motion. In responsе to the court‘s description of SCGC‘s Discharge Motion as being “unopposed,” Daneshrad stated his opposing arguments were contained in Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion. The court granted the Discharge Motion.
The trial court next provided the parties with a copy of its tentative ruling denying Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion. The court and the parties held an off-the-record discussion, after which the court noted on the record that Daneshrad was submitting on the tentative ruling. Daneshrad stated his intent to appeal the court‘s ruling on the Anti-SLAPP Motion, noting that once a notice of appeal is filed on an anti-SLAPP motion, “no further action can be taken....”
Flannery filed a notice of appeal on June 20, 2013, with respect to the trial court‘s rulings on SCGC‘s Discharge Motion and Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion.
DISCUSSION
Anti-SLAPP Statutory Scheme and Standard of Review
“A ruling on a special motion to strike under
The court‘s decision to deny Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion rested on three separate and independent grounds. First, because the interpleader complaint does not include a “cause of action,” it was not subject to a motion to strike under the anti-SLAPP statute. Second, the interpleader complaint did not “arise from” protected speeсh or conduct. Third, SCGC was likely to prevail on the merits of its interpleader complaint.
We need not engage in the first step of the anti-SLAPP analysis, and decline to address (1) whether an Interpleader Action states a cause of action and (2) whether the complaint arises from conduct subject to protection under the anti-SLAPP statute as conduct in furtherance of Flannery‘s right to petition.5 We instead proceed directly to the second step of analysis and conclude SCGC has established a probability of prevailing on the merits of the Interpleader Action, which provides an adequate basis for affirming the order of the trial court. (See Oasis West Realty, LLC v. Goldman (2011) 51 Cal.4th 811, 819 [dispensing with discussion of first step of analysis under the anti-SLAPP statute—whether complaint arises from protected conduct—because plaintiff demonstrated a probability of prevailing on its claims].)
Probability That SCGC Will Prevail in the Interpleader Action
The trial court correctly denied Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion in part because SCGC established a probability of prevailing in the current action.
The anti-SLAPP statute “poses no obstacle to suits that possess minimal merit.” (Navellier, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 93.) Instead the statute “subjects to potential dismissal only those causes of action as to which the plaintiff is unable to show a probability of prevailing on the merits (
Legal requirements for a complaint in interpleader
Flannery’s main argument is that SCGC cannot prevail because it does not meet the requirements for interpleader. Flannery contends SCGC was cоntractually obliged to pay the Settlement Funds to him and did not face a plausible threat of double vexation. We disagree.
“Interpleader is an equitable proceeding by which an obligor who is a mere stakeholder may compel conflicting claimants to money or property to interplead and litigate the claims among themselves instead of separately against the obligor. . . . After admitting liability and depositing the money or property with the court, the obligor is discharged from liability and freed from the necessity of participating in the litigation between the claimants.” (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Plеading, § 237, p. 317; see
‘The purpose of interpleader is to prevent a multiplicity of suits and double vexation. [Citation.] “The right to the remedy by interpleader is founded, however, not on the consideration that a [person] may be subjected to double liability, but on the fact that he is threatened with double vexation in respect to onе liability.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.] ‘In an interpleader action, the court initially determines the right of the plaintiff to interplead the funds; if that right is sustained, an interlocutory decree is entered which requires the defendants to interplead and litigate their claims to the funds.’ [Citation.] Then, in the second phase of an interpleader proceeding, the trial court also has ‘the power under [Code of Civil Procedure]
Double vexation
Flannery argues that SCGC cannot succeed in its Interpleader Action because it did not face a viable threat of double vexation. He attempts to analogize the competing claims faced by SCGC to those at issue in Westamerica Bank v. City of Berkeley (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 598 (Westamerica) and City of Morgan Hill v. Brown (1999) 71 Cal.App.4th 1114 (Morgan Hill). Flannery‘s arguments are unpersuasive. SCGC faced double vexation based on Flannery‘s and Tepper‘s competing claims to the Settlement Funds, and it risked being held liable to Tepper for interference with prospective economic advantage if it paid the Settlement Funds to Flannery in accordance with the settlement agreement.
In Westamerica, supra, 201 Cal.App.4th at pages 612–613, the court sustained the defendant city‘s demurrer to a bank‘s complaint in interpleader on the grounds that the bank, a purported stakeholder, faced no reasonable probability of double vexation by the city and the contractor. In reaching its
Flannery argues that, like the escrow instructions in Westamerica, the settlement agreement only obligates SCGC to pay the Settlement Funds to him and his attorney and therefore precludes SCGC’s claim of double vexation. This argument ignores the fact that Tepper had notified SCGC of a lien on any recovery in the Sesnon Fire Case. That lien, considered in light of case law establishing liаbility for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage when a settling party pays a settlement to a party in derogation of a former attorney’s lien on settlement proceeds, substantiates SCGC’s claim of double vexation. (Levin v. Gulf Ins. Group (1999) 69 Cal.App.4th 1282, 1285 (Levin).) A discharged attorney may state a cause of action for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage where a third party with notice of a lien for attorney fees pays the former client in settlement of the case without acknowledging the lien. (Ibid.) A litigant’s former attorney is entitled to recover thе reasonable value of services rendered to the time of discharge, but the right to such recovery does not ripen until the litigant prevails. (Fracasse v. Brent (1972) 6 Cal.3d 784, 792; Levin, supra, at p. 1285.) Where the attorney has a contingent fee contract with the creation of a lien in favor of the attorney upon recovery, the attorney becomes an equitable assignee of any judgment or settlement. (Levin, supra, at p. 1286.) Payment of the judgment or settlement in disregard of the lien, where the payor has knowledge of the lien, exposes the payor to a claim for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage. (Id. at p. 1287.)
Flannery also relies on Morgan Hill to argue that SCGC’s only obligation was to pay the Settlement Funds to him and that any claims asserted by Tepper or Murray were against him, not SCGC. In Morgan Hill, supra, 71 Cal.App.4th at page 1119, the city filed a complaint in interpleader with respect to unpaid attorney fees. The city acknowledged its obligation to pay the fees, but alleged it faced conflicting claims from the firm and one of the firm’s former attorneys, who now represented the city on other matters. The court reasoned the city did not state a cause of action for interpleader because the former attorney only had a claim against the firm, not against the city. “[T]he undisputed facts show that [the former attorney] has no right to collect the Fees from the City nor is she given any lien rights in those Fees.” (Id. at p. 1126) Because interpleader is designed to address “conflicting claims
No obligation to resolve conflicts between claimants
Flannery further contends SCGC could have avoided the need for interpleader by making the settlement check out to multiple parties. The existence of an alternate method for resolving the competing claims of Flannery and Tepper does not preclude an interpleader action as a viable legal option for SCGC. Flannery does not cite to any case imposing on the plaintiff in an interpleader action a duty to resolve conflicting claims by means other than interpleader. The function of an interpleader action is to eliminate the risk of incorrectly resolving conflicting claims. ” ‘[W]hen a disagreement arises as to the ownership of said property, the holder thereof has not obligated himself to settle said disagreement and deliver the property to either of said parties in the face of conflicting claims thereto.’ ” (Pacific Loan Management Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at p. 1490; see Cantu v. Resolution Trust Corp. (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 857, 876 [stakeholder not obligated to “resolve the apparent dispute without the consent of the competing claimants“].)
SCGC stated and substantiated a legally sufficient claim in interpleader because it faced double vexation for payment of the amount it had agreed to pay to settle Flannery‘s claims against it in the Sesnon Fire Case. SCGC acknowledged its obligation to pay the settlement amount, but faced conflicting claims from Flannery and Tepper, his former attorney.
Interpleader discharge
In addition to meeting the requirements for filing an interpleader action, SCGC successfully obtained a discharge and an award of attorney fees
It is undisputed that SCGC has disavowed any interest in thе Settlement Funds and has deposited the full amount with the court. Had there been a viable argument against SCGC‘s use of the interpleader mechanism provided under
Discharge and Award of Attorney Fees and Costs
SCGC disputes the appealability of the court‘s order granting the Discharge Motion. The order is appealable under Sweeney v. McClaran (1976) 58 Cal.App.3d 824, 827–828 (Sweeney) (order discharging stakeholder from liability and granting attorney fees is appealable).7
Flannery contends the order deprived him of due process because he did not have adequate notice or an opportunity to oppose SCGC‘s discharge from
Due process
The record on appeal does not support Flannery’s contention that the court’s order granting SCGC’s Discharge Motion violated his right to due process. As the California Supreme Court has emphasized, “the precise dictates of due process are flexible and vary according to context.” (Today’s Fresh Start, Inc. v. Los Angeles County Office of Education (2013) 57 Cal.4th 197, 212.) Flannery had adequate “ ‘notice of the case against him and opportunity to meet it.’ ” (Mathews v. Eldridge (1976) 424 U.S. 319, 348.)
Flannery’s counsel, Daneshrad, was present at the March 25, 2013 hearing at which the court related the Interpleader Aсtion to the In re Sesnon Fire Cases. He consented to service through Case Home Page, and therefore received notice on April 11, 2013, that SCGC had made an oral motion for discharge at an April 10, 2013 status conference and that the court had set the matter for hearing on April 24, 2013. Daneshrad also acknowledged receiving the written Discharge Motion filed on April 15, 2013.
Without citing any case authority, Flannery argues that any notice given before he made his first appearance in the Interpleader Action by filing his Anti-SLAPP Motion on April 23, 2013, was inadequate. We are unpersuaded, but even if we were to accept Flannery’s argument, when the court ordered on April 24, 2013, that the hearing on the Discharge Motion would be continued to May 17, 2013, it ensured that Flannery not only had ample notice, but an opportunity to oppose SCGC’s discharge motion. His argument that the court did not set a deadline for filing an opposition to SCGC’s motion for discharge is not well taken. (See
Even if Flannery could demonstrate inadequate notice, he does not explain how the lack of notice caused him any prеjudice, a requirement for relief on appeal. (Reedy v. Bussell (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 1272, 1289 [to seek reversal, “the appellant must demonstrate not only that the notice was defective, but that he or she was prejudiced”].) “Procedural defects which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties do not
Authority to discharge an interpleader plaintiff
Flannery contends the court lacked authority to discharge SCGC from the Interpleader Action because
Attorney fees and costs award
Flannery asks this court to reverse the lower court‘s award of attorney fees and costs under
DISPOSITION
Thе trial court‘s orders denying Flannery‘s Anti-SLAPP Motion and granting SCGC‘s Discharge Motion and award of attorney fees and costs are affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to SCGC.
Mosk, Acting P. J., and Goodman, J.,* concurred.
Appellant‘s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 1, 2015, S224024.
*Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
