California Court of Appeal Aug 19, 2014 No. D063027Unpublished
Filed 8/19/14 Angelica Textile Services v.Park CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
COURT OF APEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
ANGELICA TEXTILE SERVICES, INC., D063027
Plaintiff and Appellant,
v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2010-00097967- CU-BT-CTL) JAYE PARK et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Joan M.
Lewis, Judge. Reversed.
Carothers DiSante & Freudenberger, Brent M. Giddens and Dan M. Forman for
Plaintiff and Appellant.
Cooley, Seth A. Rafkin, Kraig D. Jennett and Lindsay P. Parker for Defendants
and Respondents.
In the trial court, judgment was entered in favor of defendants and respondents
Emerald Textiles, LLC (Emerald) and Jaye Park (Park) on plaintiff and appellant
Angelica Textile Services, Inc.'s (Angelica) tort claims and its closely related claims
under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA). The trial court's judgment was based on
its determination that Angelica's tort claims were displaced by UTSA and a later jury
verdict finding that Angelica failed to establish the existence of any actionable trade
secrets. In addition to finding Angelica had no trade secrets, the trial court determined
1568, 1571-1574 [interpreting Civ. Code, § 1354]; Gilbert v. National Enquirer, Inc.
(1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 1273, 1276-1277 [action for commercial appropriation under Civ.
Code, § 3344].) As Emerald and Park argue, we may not simply mechanically apply the
definition of "prevailing party" set forth in the cost statute, Code of Civil Procedure
section 1032. (Graciano, at p. 153.) Rather, in assessing litigation success, "'[c]ourts
should respect substance rather than form, and to this extent should be guided by
"equitable considerations." For example, a party who is denied direct relief on a claim
may nonetheless be found to be a prevailing party if it is clear that the party has otherwise
achieved its main litigation objective. [Citations.]'" (Castro, at pp. 1019-1020, quoting
Hsu v. Abbara (1995) 9 Cal.4th 863, 877.)
At this point, as a pragmatic matter, because the bulk of Angelica's claims, which
are closely related to its unsuccessful trade secrets claim, have not yet been finally
resolved, neither we nor the trial court are in a position to determine whether Emerald
and Park are the prevailing parties: at this point, neither we nor the trial court are able to
determine whether Angelica has, on a practical level, realized its litigation aims.
As we interpret Angelica's litigation aims, Angelica would like to be compensated
for what it believes was Emerald's and Park's wrongful use of its resources and Park's
efforts in establishing a competing enterprise. Although Angelica's trade secrets claim
was plainly a material part of its overall litigation strategy, as we pointed out in Angelica
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I, quite apart from its trade secrets claim, Angelica had a number of viable claims based
on its allegation that, while still employed at Angelica, Park violated his duty of loyalty
to Angelica: "In particular, we note that as an officer of Angelica, Park owed the
corporation a fairly broad duty of loyalty: '"Corporate officers and directors are not
permitted to use their position of trust and confidence to further their private interests.
While technically not trustees, they stand in a fiduciary relation to the corporation and its
stockholders. A public policy, existing throughout the years, derived from a profound
knowledge of human characteristics and motives, has established a rule that demands of a
corporate officer or director, peremptorily and inexorably, the most scrupulous
observance of his duty, not only affirmatively to protect the interests of the corporation
committed to his charge, but also to refrain from doing anything that would work injury
to the corporation, or to deprive it of profit or advantage which his skill and ability might
properly bring to it, or to enable it to make in the reasonable and lawful exercise of its
powers."' [Citation.]" (Angelica I, supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at p. 509.) At the very least,
until the trial court determines whether Park breached his duty of loyalty to Angelica,
and, if he did, whether he and Emerald must compensate Angelica, there is no realistic,
let alone practical, method of determining whether Angelica has achieved its litigation
aims.
We reject Emerald and Park's contention we should determine their rights to
attorney fees solely by reference to their success in defeating Angelica's trade secrets
claim. Although under Civil Code section 1717, subdivision (a), when a contract
9
provides for attorney fees for claims on the contract, such a narrow, claim-based
determination of who is a prevailing party is required, when, as here, attorney fees are
provided by statute, and the statute does not provide such a limitation on the definition of
prevailing party, we should look at all the claims made in the case and determine, looking
at the litigation in its entirety, which if any party prevailed in the action. In this regard,
the reasoning and holding in Maynard v. BTI Group, Inc. (2013) 216 Cal.App.4th 984,
992-994 (Maynard) is helpful.
In Maynard, the parties entered into a listing agreement with respect to the sale of
the plaintiff's business and, after the defendant failed to obtain appropriate security for
the purchase price and the eventual buyer went into bankruptcy leaving a portion of the
sale price unpaid, the plaintiff sued the defendant for both breach of contract and
negligence. Although the plaintiff's breach of contract theories were rejected by the trial
court, she prevailed on her negligence theory and recovered a judgment for $24,000. In
posttrial proceedings, the trial court awarded the plaintiff her attorney fees under an
attorney fees provision, which provided them to "[t]he prevailing party in the event of
arbitration or litigation" without any limitation to contract causes of action. (Maynard,
supra, 216 Cal.App.4th at pp. 989, 993.) On appeal, the defendant argued it should have
been awarded its fees because it prevailed on plaintiff's breach of contract claims.
Because of the breadth of the attorney fees agreement, the trial court found the right to
attorney fees was not governed by Civil Code section 1717 and, hence, not limited to the
plaintiff's contract claims. (Maynard, at pp. 993-994.) Rather, the court found that the
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"plaintiff was the prevailing party since she obtained a net recovery in the action, albeit
under a negligence rather than a breach of contract cause of action. This construction
comports with the 'ordinary or popular sense' of the term 'prevailing party,' since plaintiff
recovered from [the defendant] the balance of the purchase price of her business, which
was the sole objective of her lawsuit, regardless of the theory on which she prevailed.
[Citation.] [The defendant] may have won a battle, but plaintiff won the war and is the
prevailing party . . . within 'the meaning a layperson would ascribe' to 'prevailing party.'
[Citation.] Since the controlling attorney fee clause entitles the prevailing party in
litigation concerning 'any dispute' to recover its attorney fees, the trial court properly
awarded plaintiff her attorney fees and denied [the defendant] its fees." (Id. at p. 994.)
Similar to the agreement in Maynard, Civil Code section 3426.4 does not define
prevailing party in terms of success made on UTSA claims and instead refers to costs
incurred in "preparation . . . of the case by the prevailing party." (Italics added.) This
language suggests to us that although successful litigation of a trade secrets claim is a
prerequisite to obtaining a fee award, as in Maynard, determination of who was the
prevailing party in the "case" requires that the trial court consider from a practical
perspective which party, if either, was successful in achieving its litigation goals, after
considering how all the parties' respective claims, including its non-UTSA claims, were
resolved. As Angelica points out, it would be entirely inequitable if, because it asserted
an unsuccessful trade secrets claim, Angelica was effectively deprived of any
compensation on what may prove to be a successful and closely related claim growing of
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Park's allegedly disloyal and unlawful conduct.
Contrary to Emerald and Park's argument on appeal, nothing we said in Graciano,
supra, prevents a court from looking at the overall result achieved in litigation in
determining whether a party was the prevailing party for purposes of awarding statutory
attorney fees. In Graciano, the jury returned a partial verdict awarding the plaintiff
$11,191.40 on her cause of action for violation of the Automobile Sales Finance Act,
Civil Code section 2981 et seq., and finding the defendant had acted with malice,
oppression and fraud. Following return of the partial verdict, and before the jury fixed an
amount of punitive damages, the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff $45,000 in
exchange for dismissal of her remaining claims. The trial court awarded the plaintiff
only a small portion of the attorney fees the plaintiff requested on the grounds that the
defendant had prevailed on the dismissed causes of action, including ones for which
attorney fees were not available. We found multiple flaws in the trial court's analysis,
including, in particular, its apparent determination that under Code of Civil Procedure
section 1032 the defendant was the prevailing party on the dismissed causes of action and
its conclusion this result somehow justified a substantial reduction in the award of
attorney fees. (Graciano, supra, 144 Cal.App.4th at pp. 152-153.) We stated: "The
relevant inquiry, however, was simply whether as a practical matter [the plaintiff] was the
prevailing party with respect to her [statutory] causes of action." (Id. at p. 152.) In
reaching this conclusion, we did not, as Emerald and Park contend, prevent a trial court
from considering the overall result of litigation, including the practical impact of success
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on nonstatutory claims; rather, we merely held the trial court erred in Graciano in
focusing on the defendant's technical success on the dismissed claims and its finding that
the technical success somehow was equivalent to the plaintiff's very real success, as a
practical matter, on her statutory claims.1
In sum then, because Angelica's closely related non-UTSA claims are now
pending in the trial court, it is not possible to make any practical assessment of which
party achieved its litigation goals. Thus, it is not possible to determine that Emerald and
Park were the prevailing parties in the case within the meaning of Civil Code section
3426.4.
B. Bad Faith
On this record, even if we limit our consideration to Emerald and Park's success
on Angelica's trade secrets claim, we must reverse the order awarding attorney fees. By
its terms, fees are available under Civil Code section 3426.4 when a litigant either
prosecutes or defends a trade secrets claim "in bad faith." "Bad faith" under Civil Code
section 3426.4 requires "objective speciousness of the plaintiff's claims and its subjective
misconduct in bringing or maintaining a claim for misappropriation of trade secrets."
1 Contrary to Emerald and Park's contention, the federal district court's order in Computer Economics, Inc. v. Gartner Group, Inc. (S.D.Cal. 1999) 50 F.Supp.2d 980 does not provide any authority or rationale for interpreting Civil Code section 3246.4 in the narrow manner Emerald and Park suggest. In Computer Economics, the court determined that the defendant had prevailed on the plaintiff's single contract claim; although the court also found that the plaintiff's trade secrets claim had been asserted in bad faith, the court made no determination with respect to whether as a practical matter the defendant had achieved its litigation objectives. Because Computer Economics did not discuss or consider the issue presented here, to wit, which party, as a practical matter, succeeded in achieving its litigation goals, it is not helpful here. 13
(Gemini Aluminum Corp. v. California Custom Shapes, Inc. (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 1249,
1262-1263; see FLIR Systems, Inc. v. Parrish (2009) 174 Cal.App.4th 1270, 1275.)
Speciousness is not as high a standard as frivolousness under Code of Civil Procedure
section 128.5, but nonetheless the litigant's conduct must be more than mere negligence.
(Gemini Aluminum Corp. v. California Custom Shapes, Inc., supra, at p. 1261.) The
litigant's "'conduct must be at least reckless or grossly negligent, if not intentional and
willful.'" (Ibid.) With respect to the subjective element of bad faith, there must be proof
that the "'action or tactic is being pursued for an improper motive.'" (Id. at p. 1263.)
Although the fact Angelica's trade secrets claim survived Emerald and Park's
motion for summary judgment would tend to suggest there was some factual basis for it,
the jury's rejection of the claim and statements from Angelica officials to the effect that at
the time the action was initiated it had not yet identified any misappropriated trade secrets
may be sufficient to support a finding of objective speciousness. (See FLIR Systems, Inc.
v. Parrish, supra, 174 Cal.App.4th at p. 1277.) The difficulty at this point is with the
element of subjective bad faith. As we have indicated, in finding subjective bad faith the
trial court relied on statements attributed to Angelica's former CEO to the effect that
Angelica would litigate Emerald out of business. Considered in the light of a sole
unsuccessful trade secrets claim, this statement would plainly support a finding of
subjective bad faith. However, at this point, in addition to the unsuccessful trade secrets
claim, Angelica's potentially meritorious breach of loyalty and related claims are
unresolved. In the event Angelica prevails on those claims, a finding that it had an
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improper purpose in pursuing those valid claims would be something of a non sequitur.
While it is no doubt improper to pursue invalid claims for the purpose of injuring an
opponent, we are aware of no case which subjects a litigant to an award of attorney fees
or other sanction for merely pursuing what turns out to be valid claims. Thus, success on
the pending claims may cast Angelica's former CEO's alleged statements in a far different
light; one that does not warrant an award of attorney fees. Given these circumstances, the
award of attorney fees cannot be sustained.
DISPOSITION
The order awarding Emerald and Park their attorney fees and costs is reversed
without prejudice to their right to pursue them in the trial court following resolution of
Angelica's remaining claims.
Each party to bear its own costs of appeal.
BENKE, Acting P. J.
WE CONCUR:
NARES, J.
McINTYRE, J.
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AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court reversed an award of attorney fees under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA) because the underlying litigation, including non-UTSA claims, remained unresolved, making it premature to determine the prevailing party or whether the trade secrets claim was pursued in bad faith.
Issues
Whether a party is a 'prevailing party' under Civil Code section 3426.4 when non-UTSA claims remain pending.
Whether an award of attorney fees for bad faith prosecution of a trade secrets claim can be sustained when related non-UTSA claims are still being litigated.
Disposition. reversed
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“In sum then, because Angelica's closely related non-UTSA claims are now pending in the trial court, it is not possible to make any practical assessment of which party achieved its litigation goals.”
“The order awarding Emerald and Park their attorney fees and costs is reversed without prejudice to their right to pursue them in the trial court following resolution of Angelica's remaining claims.”