Lydig Construction v. Martinez Steel , 234 Cal. App. 4th 937 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 2/26/15
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    LYDIG CONSTRUCTION, INC.,                          D066854
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                         (Super. Ct. No. CIVVS1301232)
    MARTINEZ STEEL CORPORATION,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, Michael
    A. Sachs, Judge. Affirmed.
    Cohen & Lord, Karen D. Maher, James F. Boyle and Nairi S. Gruzenski for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Gibbs Giden Locher Turner Senet & Wittbrodt, Richard J. Wittbrodt and Sara H.
    Kornblatt for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    The plaintiff and respondent in this construction contract dispute, Lydig
    Construction, Inc. (Lydig), was the general contractor on a large public works project.
    Defendant and appellant, Martinez Steel Corporation (Martinez), was the original steel
    supply subcontractor on the project. Lydig sued Martinez for additional costs Lydig
    incurred by virtue of the fact Martinez failed to supply steel for the project in a timely
    manner and Lydig, with the public agency's approval, had been required to replace
    Martinez as the steel supplier.
    Shortly after Lydig filed its complaint against Martinez, Lydig moved for a right
    to attach order and a writ of attachment. In support of its motion, Lydig presented the
    trial court with its business records and declarations from its employees. The evidence
    Lydig presented set forth the circumstances that gave rise to Lydig's claims against
    Martinez and the amount of its claims. Martinez opposed Lydig's motion and presented
    the trial court with declarations from one of its employees that set forth its contention
    Lydig owed it for, among other items, steel Martinez had delivered to the project. In
    addition, shortly before the hearing on Lydig's motion, Martinez filed a cross-complaint
    in which it alleged claims that, if successful, would entirely offset Lydig's claims against
    it.
    The trial court granted Lydig's motion for a right to attach order and issued writs
    of attachment in the amount of $203,315. Martinez filed a timely notice of appeal and, as
    we explain, we reject Martinez's contention on appeal that its cross-complaint, as a matter
    of law, prevented the trial court from issuing a writ of attachment against it. We also
    reject Martinez's contention that Lydig's application for a writ of attachment was not
    supported by substantial evidence.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 2010, Lydig was the successful bidder on a project to expand San Bernardino
    County's (the county) Adelanto Detention Center (the project) and entered into a contract
    2
    with the county to complete the project. Lydig's bid was based in part on a
    subcontractor's bid it had received from Martinez for reinforcing steel (rebar) needed to
    complete the project. After it was awarded the general contract on the project, Lydig
    entered into a subcontract with Martinez, which was effective on January 14, 2011.
    Although the terms of the subcontract required that Martinez provide Lydig with
    payment and performance bonds that would protect Lydig in the event Martinez was
    unable to meet the requirements of the subcontract, Martinez was unable to do so. In lieu
    of the required bonds, Lydig agreed to take a personal guaranty from Martinez's owner.
    In February 2012, Lydig became concerned about Martinez's ability to perform the
    terms of the contract. At that point, Martinez was unable to obtain raw steel from its steel
    supplier other than on a cash basis. In light of that circumstance, Lydig took it upon itself
    to purchase steel from the supplier and arrange to ship the steel to Martinez for
    fabrication as rebar and installation at the project by Martinez employees. Lydig
    intervened in this manner from February 2012 until June 2012.
    In June 2012, Lydig discovered that 100,000 pounds of steel it had purchased and
    delivered to Martinez for use on the expansion project had been diverted by Martinez to
    other projects where Martinez was obligated to provide rebar. In response to this
    discovery, Lydig began obtaining rebar from another supplier and, for 10 days in June
    2012, Lydig used Martinez employees to install the substituted rebar at the expansion
    project.
    In June 2012, Lydig also began a formal process to replace Martinez as its rebar
    subcontractor. In August 2012, the county conducted a hearing on the issue and
    approved termination of Martinez's subcontract. The county hearing officer found:
    3
    "Martinez Steel has failed to perform its sub-contract in that it is unable to procure the
    steel to be fabricated into rebar and installed on the project, required by the sub-contract.
    [¶] . . . [¶] Martinez Steel has also failed to perform its sub-contract in that it has not
    been able to, and admits that it cannot, provided the payment and performance bonds
    required by the sub-contract. [¶] . . . [¶] Lydig has presented credible evidence, in
    significant respects unrefuted or admitted by Martinez Steel to be true, supporting its
    contention that the sub-contractor is untrustworthy and lacks the capacity to satisfactorily
    perform the scope of work." Thereafter, Lydig entered into a contract with another rebar
    supplier.
    In March 2013, Lydig filed a complaint against Martinez and its owner in which it
    alleged that Martinez had breached the terms of the subcontract and that, a result of the
    breach, Lydig had experienced more than $200,000 in damages. In April 2013, Lydig
    filed its application for a right to attach order and writs of attachment. As we have
    indicated, Lydig's application was supported by declarations from Lydig's employees and
    its business records, which set forth in some detail its intervention in paying for steel and
    its discovery of the diversion of steel by Martinez. Included in its supporting documents
    was a verified copy of the county hearing officer's finding permitting Lydig to terminate
    Martinez's subcontract and obtain needed rebar from another supplier.
    On May 14, 2013, Martinez and its owner filed their answers to the complaint and
    opposition to Lydig's attachment application. Martinez's opposition was supported by a
    declaration from one of its employees, Harry Williams. Williams's declaration did not
    dispute the specific factual contentions set forth by Lydig in its application. With respect
    to Martinez's performance of the contract and Lydig's unhappiness with it, Williams's
    4
    declaration stated that Lydig had kept a retention amount on payments due on the
    contract and that, "[r]ather than arranging to pay Martinez Steel, and in an effort to avoid
    paying the amount due and owing, [Lydig] asserted various pretexts to substitute another
    subcontractor for Martinez Steel. However, Martinez Steel had worked on the Project for
    nearly two years[] and had never missed a single pour of concrete." Williams's
    declaration also asserted that Lydig owed Martinez for work Martinez performed after
    Martinez's contract was terminated and only billed by Martinez on a September 30, 2012
    invoice.
    The Williams declaration also disputed the validity of change orders submitted by
    Lydig that documented deductions from amounts owed to Martinez because Lydig was
    required to purchase rebar from third parties following termination of Martinez's contract.
    Rather than setting forth any factual basis for his contention that the change orders were
    invalid, Williams's declaration simply stated: "These are unapproved Change Orders to
    which Martinez Steel will not agree and will vehemently dispute at trial." Williams's
    declaration also asserted that Martinez delivered more than 200,000 pounds of steel that
    Lydig had not accounted for in its application for a right to attach order.
    Lydig filed a reply to Martinez's opposition. In its reply, Lydig submitted a further
    declaration from one of its employees, which stated that many concrete "pours" on the
    project had to be delayed because of Martinez's failure to timely deliver rebar, and
    records which showed that, by virtue of the rebar Lydig had obtained from third parties,
    Lydig did not owe Martinez any retained amounts. Lydig also submitted a
    contemporaneous log it kept of the steel delivered by Martinez. The log showed that in
    fact Martinez had not delivered the 200,000 pounds of steel Williams had alleged in his
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    declaration.
    By way of stipulation, on May 20, 2013, Martinez was permitted to file a cross-
    complaint in which Martinez alleged that it was owed for rebar it had fabricated and
    installed at the project and that those amounts were greater than the amounts Lydig
    alleged in damages. On the same day Martinez filed its cross-complaint, the trial court
    conducted a hearing on Lydig's attachment application. After the arguments of the
    parties, including in particular Martinez's contention that its claims offset Lydig's claims,
    the trial court took the application for an attachment under submission. Thereafter, the
    trial court granted the application with respect to Martinez only and in the amount of
    $203, 315. Lydig then obtained writs of attachment for Riverside, Los Angeles and San
    Bernardino counties.
    Martinez filed a timely notice of appeal from the order granting the right to attach.
    DISCUSSION
    I
    In its principal argument on appeal, Martinez argues that because, as alleged, the
    claims set forth in its cross-complaint exceed the amount Lydig claims it is owed, the trial
    court had no power to grant Lydig's application for a right to attach order. We disagree.
    A. Standard of Review
    "It is well settled, of course, that a party challenging a judgment [or order] has the
    burden of showing reversible error by an adequate record." (Ballard v. Uribe (1986) 
    41 Cal. 3d 564
    , 574.) Importantly, "'[a] judgment or order of the lower court is presumed
    correct. All intendments and presumptions are indulged to support it on matters as to
    which the record is silent . . . .' (Orig. italics.) [Citation.]" (Rossiter v. Benoit (1979) 88
    
    6 Cal. App. 3d 706
    , 712.) It is also well settled that where, as here, a trial court has ruled on
    an application for a writ of attachment, and its ruling is based on its resolution of factual
    conflicts in the affidavits submitted by the parties, its determination of the facts will not
    be disturbed on appeal. (Loeb & Loeb v. Beverly Glen Music, Inc. (1985) 
    166 Cal. App. 3d 1110
    , 1120.)
    B. Writs of Attachment
    The procedures and grounds for obtaining orders permitting prejudgment writs of
    attachment are governed by Code of Civil Procedure1 section 481.010 et seq. Generally,
    an order of attachment may be issued only in an action for a claim of money that is based
    upon an express or implied contract where the total amount of such claim is a fixed or
    "readily ascertainable" amount not less than $500. (§ 483.010, subd. (a).)
    Before an attachment order is issued, the court must find all of the following: (1)
    the claim upon which the attachment is based is one upon which an attachment may be
    issued; (2) the applicant has established "the probable validity" of the claim upon which
    the attachment is based; (3) the attachment is not sought for a purpose other than the
    recovery on the claim upon which the request for attachment is based; and (4) the amount
    to be secured by the attachment is greater than zero. (§ 484.090.) In order to establish
    the probable validity of its claim, the applicant must show that it is more likely than not it
    will obtain a judgment against the defendant (or counter-defendant) on its claim.
    (§ 481.190.)
    An application for a right to attach order must be supported by an affidavit or
    1      All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
    7
    declaration showing that the applicant, on the facts presented, would be entitled to a
    judgment on the claim upon which the attachment is based. (§ 484.030.) The affidavit or
    declaration must state the facts "with particularity." (§ 482.040.) Except where matters
    are specifically permitted to be shown upon information and belief, each affidavit or
    declaration must show that the affiant or declarant, if sworn as a witness, can testify
    competently to the facts stated therein. (Ibid.) This means that the affiant or declarant
    must show actual, personal knowledge of the relevant facts, rather than the ultimate facts
    commonly found in pleadings, and such evidence must be admissible and not
    objectionable.
    All documentary evidence, including contracts and canceled checks, must be
    presented in admissible form, generally requiring proper identification and
    authentication, and admissibility as nonhearsay evidence or under one or more of the
    exceptions to the hearsay rule, such as the business records exception. (Ahart, Cal.
    Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments and Debts (The Rutter Group 2014) ¶¶ 4:145–
    4:156, pp. 4-35–4-38 (rev. #1, 2010).)
    A prejudgment attachment may secure the amount of the claimed indebtedness as
    well as estimated costs and allowable attorney fees. (§ 482.110, subd. (b).) Importantly,
    however, the amount to be secured by an attachment shall be reduced or offset by the
    "amount of any indebtedness of the plaintiff [or counterclaimant] that the defendant [or
    counter-defendant] has claimed in a cross-complaint [or the original complaint] filed in
    the action if the defendant's [or counter-defendant's] claim is one upon which an
    attachment could be issued." (§ 483.015, subd. (b)(2), italics added.)
    "[Section] 483.015 does not explicitly require more than a filed cross-complaint or
    8
    contract defense in an answer that would itself support an attachment. However, to
    sustain reduction in a writ amount, most courts require that defendant [or counter-
    defendant] provide enough evidence about its counterclaims [or claims] and/or defenses
    to prove a prima facie case." (Ahart, Cal. Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments and
    Debts, supra, ¶ 4:64 at p. 4-18 (rev. #1, 2010).) "Courts are generally suspicious of
    vague, unsupported counterclaims and defenses." (Ibid.; see Pos-A-Traction v. Kelly-
    Springfield Tire Co. (C.D.Cal. 1999) 
    112 F. Supp. 2d 1178
    , 1183.)
    C. Analysis
    Contrary to Martinez's contention on appeal, in order to obtain the offset permitted
    by section 483.015, Martinez was required to establish the probable validity of its
    offsetting claims against Lydig. (See Ahart, Cal. Practice Guide: Enforcing Judgments
    and Debts, supra, ¶ 4:64 at p. 4-18; see also Pos-A-Traction v. Kelly-Springfield Tire 
    Co., supra
    , 112 F.Supp.at p. 1183.) This is the clear implication of the phrase "claim is one
    upon which an attachment could be issued" as set forth in section 483.015; it is also
    required as a matter of simple practicality. If, by virtue of making claims that are not
    probably valid, a defendant could obtain an offset against a plaintiff's claim that is
    probably valid, a defendant could always and quite easily defeat a plaintiff's right to a
    prejudgment attachment. We do not believe that in adopting our state's prejudgment
    attachment procedures the Legislature intended to effectively deprive litigants of the right
    to such prejudgment relief.
    The trial court implicitly found that Martinez did not establish the probable
    validity of its offsetting claims. We note that the factual basis for Martinez's claims,
    though presented in a fairly conclusory manner in Williams's declaration, was set forth in
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    Martinez's opposition to Lydig's attachment application. In granting Lydig's application,
    notwithstanding that opposition, the trial court plainly found Martinez's factual
    presentation unpersuasive. We also note that, on the record, the trial court took note of
    the offsetting claims, asked the parties to argue with respect to their impact on Lydig's
    motion and, at the close of the hearing, indicated it would be considering the
    documentation provided by the parties. Where, as here, the record is otherwise silent
    with respect to what the trial court considered, we must presume it considered all the
    pertinent matters presented to it and ruled in favor of the prevailing party. (Rossiter v.
    
    Benoit, supra
    , 88 Cal.App.3d at p. 712.)
    Like the trial court, we find that Martinez failed to establish the probable validity
    of its claims. In particular, with respect to its claim that it was entitled to credit for
    retained amounts and for 200,000 pounds of steel, Martinez provided no proof other than
    Williams's conclusory declaration, which, in turn, was rebutted both by Lydig's
    accounting records and contemporaneous logs provided by Lydig. In short, Lydig's
    documents entirely undermine the validity of Martinez's claims.
    II
    Martinez also argues that Lydig failed to establish the validity of its claims. As we
    have indicated, Lydig provided both declarations and documentation that fully support
    the validity and amount of its claims.
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    DISPOSITION
    The orders appealed from are affirmed. Lydig to recover its costs of appeal.
    BENKE, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HALLER, J.
    McDONALD, J.
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Document Info

Docket Number: D066854

Citation Numbers: 234 Cal. App. 4th 937

Filed Date: 2/26/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023