Williamson v. Brooks, 1/31/17 CA2/6
Plaintiff sued former trustees for breaching various fiduciary duties, including duty to keep her informed. Plaintiff alleged that if she had been better informed by the trustees she could have received trust distributions earlier and would have been able to save her house. The trial court rejected all of her claims, and further held that a beneficiary cannot recover for lost opportunity as part of damages. Held: Affirmed.
Her theories in the case didn’t match reality: Father created a family trust and distributed a certain number of shares in his company to subtrusts in favor of each of his adult children, including plaintiff. He made his attorney and accountant the initial trustees. Plaintiff was informed of the subtrust by her father as early as 2008 and 2009, but she didn’t act to gather more information. Moreover, in 2012, father realized if plaintiff became an owner of the company she might harm the company. He fired her for refusing to perform any work and also exercised his right to purchase the shares back from plaintiff’s subtrust. His company replaced the shares with a handsome promissory note, which called for monthly payments of over $6k.
After plaintiff was terminated, she wasn’t able to keep her home, at least on the terms that she preferred. She quitclaimed the home to her sister, who had helped her buy the house, and moved to a place that she had always wanted to live. Also in 2012, she contacted the then-trustees, who provided her with documents and worked with her to begin making monthly payments under the promissory note. After they resigned as trustees, the successor trustee sued them, alleging that they failed to keep plaintiff informed. If they had done what they were supposed to do, plaintiff says she could have kept her home.
The court rejected all of her claims. Even if the trustees had breached a duty to keep her informed (which the court said didn’t happen), plaintiff didn’t want to keep the house because she thought it was toxic, she rejected offers by the family that would have allowed her to keep it, and the house was underwater. Substantial evidence supported the trial’s court’s decision. Plaintiff claims that the trustees should have provided more information also fell flat: The basic duty of the trustee is to inform the beneficiary of the existence of the trust and their status as beneficiaries so they can exercise their rights to secure more information. Finally, no California case says that beneficiaries can recover the value of lost opportunities to the beneficiary.
9th Cir. Says No to Class Settlement that Provides No Benefits to the Absent Class Members
Ugly Day for Perfect 10 When the 9th Cir. Finds Copyright Claims against Giganews Unappealing
Usenet users (who are organized around topics of interests called “newsgroups) can post articles (text files that each have a unique Message-Id) to a bulletin board; copyrighted material like video, images, and music (called binary files) can be encoded into the “article.” Usenet servers will automatically propagate articles to surrounding servers that furnish access to that newsgroup, as long as the providers have entered into a “peering” agreement. The Giganews browser, Mimo, is used by its customers to find and access articles and to decode and display content, which includes an enormous amount of copyrighted material. Users control what is posted and shared, and the control exercised by Giganews is minimal (like preventing duplicate posts, or deleting newsgroups related to child-porn).
Samsung’s In-the-Box Arbitration Agreement Not Enforceable Because Customer Didn’t have Notice
Karaoke Tracks Lead to Imitation Lanham Act Claims
Generally, the Lanham Act provides two separate causes of action: 1) claims for infringing a registered mark (called a section 32 claim); and, 2) broadly speaking, claims for unfair competition, like misstating the origin of goods, whether a mark is registered or unregistered (called a section 43 claim). Both claims turn on whether there is a likelihood of consumer confusion.
iPhone Owners Have Antitrust Standing to Sue Apple for Allegedly Monopolizing Market for iPhone Apps
Procedural footnote: Apple filed four 12(b)(6) motions. Its later motions raised arguments that had been omitted from its earlier motions, to which the plaintiffs objected. Acknowledging a Circuit split, 9C sided with those Circuits who say the trial court has the discretion to consider successive 12(b)(6) motions for the sake of judicial economy.
When One Hunter is armed with Penal Code 632 and the other with anti-SLAPP, Who Wins?
FCRA Violation Held to be Willful, Despite Being an Issue of First Impression
Trial Court’s Ruling On Choice Of Law Is Equivalent To An In Limine Ruling, And Can Be Revisited As A Case Develops
Chen v. L.A. Truck Centers, 1/18/17, 2DCA/8
Trial “Begins” When Jury Trial Panel (the venire) are Impaneled and Sworn for Purposes of Voir Dire
Stueve v. Buchalter Nemer, 1/19/17, 4DCA
Certain members of the Stueve family, heirs to the Alta Dena fortune, sued various attorneys and law firms for claims like fraud. A panel of 75 prospective jurors were impaneled and sworn a few days before the five year anniversary of the filing the case. The voir dire process extended past the five year anniversary. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss under CCP section 583.310 (an “action shall be brought to trial within five years after the action is commenced against the defendant.”). The trial court granted the motion. Held: Reversed.
In an action tried to a jury, the action is brought to trial when the jury is impaneled and sworn. The word “impaneled” is not defined by statute. Relying on Black’s Law Dict., the court said it generally means: “The act of the clerk of the court in making up the list of jurors who have been selected for the trial of a particular cause. All the steps of ascertaining who shall be the proper jurors to sit in the trial of a particular case up to the final formation.” Moreover, the statutes dealing with voir dire refer to prospective jurors as being in a panel (a word that is not used to refer to the jurors who are chosen to try to the case); and prospective jurors must be “sworn,” albeit for purpose of answering voir dire.
The court’s conclusion had a lot of support. For example, a Supreme Court decision from the 1800s held that impaneling the jury was part of the trial. A DCA case from 1958 and one from 1983 held that the impaneling of the venire constitutes bringing the matter to trial for purposes of the five year rule. In fact, in the 1958 DCA case, in very similar circumstances, the court reversed a trial court’s dismissal based on the five year rule, holding that “brought to trial” includes when the parties commence the examination of prospective jurors and the impanelment of the jury.
In dismissing the Stueve case, the trial court relied on a 1982 Supreme Court case of Hartman v. Santamarina. In Hartman, there was no voir dire; 12 jurors were simply impaneled and sworn to try the case as part of a charade to beat the five year rule (one of the trial counsel was engaged elsewhere). The SC held that when the actual jurors are impaneled and sworn to try the case, the trial begins. Here, 4DCA here held that the ruling in Hartman did not exclude the finding, based on more than 100 years of precedent, that trial also begins where the venire are impaneled and sworn for purpose of answering voir dire.