Bajan v. Mikos CA4/1 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 3/19/13 Bajan v. Mikos 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    MATTHEW BAJAN, JR., et al.,                                         D061380
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,
    v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. 37-2008-00094754-
    CU-FR-CTL)
    JAN MIKOS et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Richard E.
    L. Strauss, Judge. Reversed.
    Matthew Bajan, Jr. (Matthew) and Boguslaw Bajan (Boguslaw) (collectively
    Brothers) successfully moved for a judgment under Code of Civil Procedure section
    664.6 (section 664.6) to enforce a written settlement agreement among multiple parties,
    including Jan and Halina Mikos. The Mikoses appeal, contending the court erred in
    entering judgment under section 664.6 because the Mikoses revoked the settlement
    agreement before all parties personally signed the agreement and because the agreement
    was the result of undue influence, economic duress, and mistake.
    We conclude the judgment must be reversed because of the lack of a timely
    signature by one of the settling parties (Boguslaw). This conclusion means only that the
    settlement agreement is not enforceable through the expedited section 664.6 procedure.
    It does not preclude the enforcement of the written settlement agreement through other
    procedural means, including an amendment of the pleadings or an independent breach of
    contract action. Based on our holding, we do not reach the Mikoses' undue
    influence/mistake contentions and omit a full discussion of these contentions in the
    opinion.
    RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The parties' participation in the multi-party settlement arose from the Brothers'
    lawsuit against Jan and Halina Mikos and the estate and trust of Henry Lisowski (the
    Mikos/Lisowski lawsuit). In their lawsuit, the Brothers alleged the Mikoses and
    Lisowski engaged in wrongful conduct (including fraud and forgery) to alter their father's
    will and unlawfully converted their father's estate assets that should have gone to the
    Brothers. The Brothers also alleged these defendants were responsible for their father's
    death. They alleged they first discovered the wrongful conduct by the Mikoses and
    Lisowski when a police detective contacted them with relevant information while the
    detective was investigating the death of Lisowski's wife (Rosa). Lisowski was thereafter
    convicted of murdering Rosa, and Lisowski committed suicide while awaiting sentencing
    for Rosa's murder.
    2
    Numerous other individuals also sued Lisowski's trust and estate, including Rosa's
    survivors (who brought a wrongful death lawsuit) and various creditors and other
    claimants.
    On October 4, 2011, numerous parties who had claims against the Lisowski estate
    and trust engaged in a lengthy mediation of all claims asserted in the various lawsuits,
    including the Brothers' action against the Mikoses and Lisowski, and the wrongful death
    action brought by Rosa's survivors. The all-day mediation was conducted by attorney
    Douglas Barker. The Mikoses were physically present at all times and were represented
    by counsel. Matthew was physically present, but Boguslaw, who is a judge in Poland,
    was not present. However, the same counsel represented both Brothers, and Boguslaw
    was in telephone contact with Matthew and counsel during the settlement negotiations.
    All other parties and their counsel were physically present except Jessica Ramos, Rosa's
    adult daughter.
    At the end of that day (October 4), all parties agreed to a detailed comprehensive
    multi-party written settlement agreement entitled "AGREEMENT OF SETTLEMENT
    AND MUTUAL GENERAL RELEASE" (Settlement Agreement). The Settlement
    Agreement contained provisions making clear the agreement was intended as a final
    resolution of all disputes and controversies between and among the parties. The
    Settlement Agreement allowed the parties to sign the agreement in counterparts, and each
    party represented that he or she reached agreement with the assistance or advice of
    counsel, had made an investigation into the facts, and understood the contents of the
    agreement.
    3
    Under the written settlement terms, the Brothers agreed to release their claims
    against the Mikoses (including waiving a prior monetary sanctions award) in exchange
    for the Mikoses' transferring their home into an irrevocable trust which provided the
    Mikoses with a life estate with the remainder to the Brothers upon the death of both
    Mikoses. The Settlement Agreement also contained numerous detailed provisions about
    all parties' rights to the assets of the Lisowski estate and trust.
    The Settlement Agreement was signed on October 4, 2011 by: (1) the executor of
    Lisowski's estate (and the executor's counsel); (2) the successor trustee and beneficiary of
    Lisowski's trust (and his counsel); (3) Matthew, who signed the agreement twice: once in
    his individual capacity and once "as agent under power of attorney for Boguslaw Bajan";
    (4) the Brothers' counsel; (5) the Mikoses; (6) the Mikoses' counsel; (7) Rosa's adult son;
    (8) the guardian ad litem for Rosa's two minor children; and (9) the guardian ad litem's
    counsel.1
    About two weeks later, on October 17, the Mikoses notified the court and the
    Brothers' counsel by letter that they intended to revoke or rescind their consent to the
    Settlement Agreement. They claimed their agreement to the settlement resulted from
    1      Although Jessica Ramos (Rosa's adult daughter) was not present at the time of the
    signing, there is evidence showing she signed and dated the Settlement Agreement later
    that evening. Based on the court's order, we presume the court found this evidence
    credible and find substantial evidence in the record supporting this conclusion. We thus
    omit further discussion of the Mikoses' claim that Jessica did not timely sign the
    agreement.
    4
    "undue influence and mistake" and that they did not understand the alternatives and
    consequences of the settlement before signing the agreement.
    Two weeks later, on November 2, the Brothers filed a motion under section 664.6,
    requesting the court enter judgment on, and enforce, the Settlement Agreement. The
    Brothers attached the Settlement Agreement that contained personal signatures from all
    parties, except for Boguslaw's personal signature. As noted, Matthew had signed the
    Settlement Agreement on behalf of Boguslaw. The Brothers also submitted the
    declaration of their counsel who stated that during the multi-party settlement
    negotiations, the Mikoses were represented at all times by their own attorney and the
    Mikoses' attorney was fully aware of the relevant facts through litigation motions and
    extensive discovery.
    The Mikoses opposed the motion. They argued the Settlement Agreement was not
    enforceable under section 664.6 because two of the parties (Jessica Ramos and
    Boguslaw) did not personally sign the agreement, arguing that "case law clearly holds
    that in order to be entitled to the expedited relief under [section] 664.6, all parties must
    personally sign." Relying on paragraph 3.1 of the Settlement Agreement, they also
    argued that they revoked the agreement before it became effective. Paragraph 3.1 states:
    "This Agreement shall become immediately effective at the time that this Agreement is
    signed by all of the parties set forth above . . . ."
    The Mikoses also requested the court to rescind the agreement because it was the
    product of undue influence, economic duress, and mistake of fact. In support of this
    5
    argument, they submitted their lengthy declarations in which they said they are elderly,
    not in good health, and were unfairly pressured to sign the Settlement Agreement.
    In reply, the Brothers argued the Mikoses' October 17, 2011 revocation letter was
    ineffective because it was communicated after the Settlement Agreement was fully
    executed on October 4, 2011. They also submitted a new copy of the Settlement
    Agreement with Boguslaw's personal signature, dated November 8, 2011. This new copy
    of the Settlement Agreement contained an additional typewritten signature line at the
    bottom of page 9 with Boguslaw's signature. The Brothers also submitted a copy of a
    notarized "SPECIAL POWER OF ATTORNEY" document, executed on September 28,
    2011 by Boguslaw, in which Boguslaw authorized Matthew to act on his behalf with
    respect to the Mikos/Lisowski litigation.
    The Brothers additionally submitted their counsel's declaration who stated in
    relevant part: "At the [October 4] mediation, it was explained to the mediator . . . and
    counsel for the various parties, that [Matthew] had authority by virtue of a Special Power
    of Attorney which had been signed and notarized, to represent his brother Boguslaw's
    interests at the mediation. A copy of the Power of Attorney was provided to all counsel
    who requested it. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . During the mediation, [Matthew] phoned his brother
    [Boguslaw] in Poland, and spoke with him concerning the offers and counter offers that
    were being made, both with respect to the claims against Mr. and Mrs. Mikos, and the
    Lisowski trust and estate. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [After the mediation, the Settlement Agreement]
    was sent by Federal Express to Boguslaw in Poland. He signed and returned the
    Agreement."
    6
    After considering the parties' written submissions and holding a hearing, the court
    granted the Brothers' motion to enforce the settlement and entered judgment on the
    Settlement Agreement under section 664.6.
    The Mikoses appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    The Mikoses contend the court erred in enforcing the written Settlement
    Agreement under section 664.6 because: (1) the agreement was not personally signed by
    Boguslaw before the Mikoses revoked the agreement; and (2) the settlement must be
    vacated because of undue influence, economic duress or mistake of fact. Because we
    conclude the first argument has merit we do not reach the second argument.
    I. Summary of Applicable Legal Principles
    The Legislature enacted section 664.6 to provide an expedited procedure to
    enforce a settlement agreement executed during pending litigation. (Weddington
    Productions, Inc. v. Flick (1998) 
    60 Cal.App.4th 793
    , 809.) The procedure is available
    only when "certain requirements that decrease the likelihood of misunderstandings are
    met." (Levy v. Superior Court (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 578
    , 585 (Levy); Conservatorship of
    McElroy (2002) 
    104 Cal.App.4th 536
    , 548-549.) Section 664.6 is not the exclusive
    procedure for enforcing a settlement agreement. (Levy, 
    supra,
     10 Cal.4th at p. 586, fn.
    5.) Even when the statutory procedure is unavailable, a party may enforce a settlement
    agreement through other means such as a motion for summary judgment or a breach of
    contract action. (Ibid.; Gauss v. GAF Corp. (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 1110
    , 1122
    (Gauss).)
    7
    Section 664.6 provides, in relevant part: "If parties to pending litigation stipulate,
    in a writing signed by the parties outside the presence of the court or orally before the
    court, for settlement of the case, or part thereof, the court, upon motion, may enter
    judgment pursuant to the terms of the settlement." (Italics added.)
    In Levy, the California Supreme Court defined the statutory term " 'parties' " to
    mean "the specific person or entity by or against whom legal proceedings are brought."
    (Levy, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 583.) Under this definition, the court held that a written
    settlement agreement is unenforceable under section 664.6 unless a party "personally"
    signs the agreement. (Id. at p. 584.) Because the settlement agreement in Levy was
    signed by the litigant's attorneys but not by the litigant personally, the court held the
    agreement could not be enforced under the summary procedure of section 664.6. (Id. at
    p. 586.) Under this holding, an attorney's signature does not satisfy the signature
    requirement even if the party gave his or her attorney the specific authority to enter into
    the settlement. (See id. at pp. 583-584.)
    In interpreting section 664.6 in this manner, the Levy court reasoned that
    "settlement is such a serious step that it requires the client's knowledge and express
    consent." (Levy, 
    supra,
     10 Cal.4th at p. 583.) The court further observed that a party-
    signature requirement will "tend[ ] to ensure that the settlement is the result of their
    mature reflection and deliberate assent. This protects the parties against hasty and
    improvident settlement agreements by impressing upon them the seriousness and finality
    of the decision to settle, and minimizes the possibility of conflicting interpretations of the
    8
    settlement. [Citations.] It also protects parties from impairment of their substantial rights
    without their knowledge and consent." (Id. at p. 585, fn. omitted.)
    California courts have since strictly applied Levy's holding and have consistently
    declined to recognize any exceptions to the rule that litigants themselves must sign a
    written settlement agreement to permit enforcement under section 664.6. (Gauss, supra,
    103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1116-1123; Sully-Miller Contracting Co. v. Gledson/Cashman
    Construction, Inc. (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 30
    , 37 (Sully-Miller); Williams v. Saunders
    (1997) 
    55 Cal.App.4th 1158
    , 1162-1164 (Williams); Murphy v. Padilla (1996) 
    42 Cal.App.4th 707
    , 716.) Under these holdings, section 664.6 is not available to enforce a
    settlement agreement if a party did not personally sign the agreement, even if the
    agreement was signed by the party's agent and the party expressly authorized the agent to
    enter into a settlement on its behalf. (See Gauss, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1116-
    1122; Williams, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1162-1164.) Moreover, the statutory
    requirement of a "writing 'signed by the parties' " means all the parties to the settlement
    agreement, including "the parties seeking to enforce the agreement under section 664.6
    and against whom the agreement is sought to be enforced." (Harris v. Rudin, Richman &
    Appel (1999) 
    74 Cal.App.4th 299
    , 305.)
    II. Analysis
    The Brothers acknowledge Levy's party-signature requirement is a prerequisite to
    section 664.6 enforcement and recognize that Boguslaw did not initially personally sign
    the Settlement Agreement. However, they argue the Settlement Agreement was
    nonetheless enforceable under section 664.6 because: (1) Matthew signed the agreement
    9
    on Boguslaw's behalf under a written and notarized power of attorney; and (2) any
    insufficiency in satisfying the party-signature requirement was remedied when Boguslaw
    signed the Settlement Agreement about one week after the Brothers filed their section
    664.6 motion.
    Under well settled law, neither argument has merit.
    First, the fact that Matthew signed the settlement agreement under a power of
    attorney is insufficient to satisfy Levy's personal-signature requirement. The Special
    Power of Attorney signed by Boguslaw grants Matthew the power to act as Boguslaw's
    "attorney-in-fact . . . for the purpose of representing [Boguslaw] . . . in all aspects of the
    [Mikos/Lisowski] litigation" and provides Matthew "full authority to act in any manner
    necessary. . . , including the power to prosecute, settle and otherwise resolve the litigation
    . . . ." Under California law, a person acting under a written power of attorney generally
    has "the same rights and privileges that would be accorded the principal if the principal
    were personally present and seeking to act." (Prob. Code, § 4300.)
    Relying on the broad language of the Special Power of Attorney and California
    law governing powers of attorney, the Brothers argue that because Matthew had the full
    written authority to bind Boguslaw to the Settlement Agreement and act on his behalf in
    the litigation, Matthew's signature should be sufficient to satisfy section 664.6's party-
    signature requirement.
    Although the argument is persuasive when considered in isolation, we must
    evaluate the factual and legal issues in the specific statutory context in which this case
    arises. A person acting under a written power of attorney is essentially acting in the role
    10
    of an authorized agent. (See Prob. Code, § 4051.) As with a contract signed under a
    power of attorney, a contract signed by an agent with authority to act on the principal's
    behalf is binding on the principal. (Civ. Code, §§ 2316, 2330, 2337.) However, the Levy
    court and its progeny have made clear that an agency relationship—even an express
    one—is insufficient to satisfy section 664.6's party-signature requirement. The courts
    have consistently rejected traditional agency analysis with respect to the enforceability of
    a settlement agreement under the section 664.6 procedure. (See Critzer v. Enos (2010)
    
    187 Cal.App.4th 1242
    , 1255 [" 'Levy . . . prevent[s] respondents from relying on agency
    principles to satisfy the requirements of section 664.6' "]; Gauss, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 1118-1119; Williams, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1162-1164.) Even where a
    party gives a third party the specific power to settle a matter on his or her behalf, the
    courts have held the third party's signature on a settlement document is insufficient to
    permit enforcement under section 664.6. (Gauss, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1118-
    1119.)
    In this regard, this case is indistinguishable from Gauss, supra, 
    103 Cal.App.4th 1110
    . In Gauss, the defendant expressly authorized in writing a third party entity to act
    as its exclusive agent in the defense and settlement of asbestos-related claims alleged
    against it. (Id. at p. 1113.) When the plaintiff sought to enforce a settlement agreement
    signed by the specially designated agent, the Court of Appeal held that a settlement
    agreement signed by the designated agent on the defendant's behalf could not be enforced
    under section 664.6 because it had never been signed by the defendant personally. (Id. at
    pp. 1116-1123.) Noting that "Levy itself holds that the signature of a duly authorized
    11
    attorney, who acts as an agent of the client [citation] does not suffice to permit
    enforcement of a settlement under section 664.6" (id. at p. 1119), the Gauss court stated
    that "[s]ection 664.6, as construed by the Supreme Court in Levy, simply does not permit
    the use of its summary, expedited procedures to enforce a settlement agreement signed
    only by a party's agent." (Id. at p. 1121.)
    Similarly, in Williams, the court held that even assuming the defendant (who was
    out of the country) expressly gave authority to her husband and codefendant to settle the
    case on her behalf, the lack of the defendant's personal signature on the settlement
    agreement precluded enforcement under section 664.6. (Williams, supra, 55 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 1160, 1162-1164; see also Murphy v. Padilla, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p. 716
    [Levy precludes reliance on agency principles to satisfy the requirements of the statute].)
    The Brothers argue that a conclusion that section 664.6 is unavailable here would
    "undercut and abrogate the statutory scheme created by the [L]egislature regarding
    powers of attorney," particularly where the absent party is "aged, or disabled, or lives in
    another country."
    Although this policy argument is compelling, we are required to enforce statutes
    as they are written and as they are interpreted by the California Supreme Court. Under
    the holding and rationale of Levy, a party—and not the party's agent—must sign the
    settlement agreement for the agreement to be enforceable under the expedited procedures
    of section 664.6. To the extent this result is inconsistent with other important public
    policies, we are bound by the holdings of our high court. Moreover, underlying the
    Brothers' policy argument is their suggestion that the Levy rule unfairly eradicates
    12
    California's power-of-attorney rules. This premise is faulty. The Levy rule does not
    affect the full enforceability of a settlement agreement executed by an attorney-in-fact
    under a power of attorney. The rule instead precludes only one statutorily-created
    procedural vehicle for enforcing a settlement agreement. Moreover, this is not a case
    where the party was incapacitated in the sense that he could not have executed the
    settlement agreement in a timely fashion. The record shows that Boguslaw was involved
    in the settlement discussions through the telephone and there was no evidence that he did
    not have the ability to promptly provide a signature through technological or other means
    (e.g., fax machine or email or rapid mail service).
    The Brothers alternatively contend the court properly granted their section 664.6
    motion because the record shows that all parties eventually signed the agreement.
    However, it is undisputed that Boguslaw's signature was not obtained until after the
    Mikoses gave written notice that they were revoking their acceptance of the agreement
    and several weeks after the Brothers moved for enforcement of the agreement under
    section 664.6. The Mikoses' revocation of their consent to the agreement eliminated the
    manifestation of mutual consent that is required by section 664.6. The Mikoses' letter
    revoking their consent before all party-signatures had been obtained on the written
    Settlement Agreement precluded enforcement under the expedited procedure of section
    664.6.
    One of the purposes underlying Levy's strict party-signature requirement is to
    minimize at a summary hearing the possibility of conflicting interpretations of the
    settlement agreement and of the validity of each party's acceptance of the agreement.
    13
    (See Levy, 
    supra,
     10 Cal.4th at p. 585.) In this case of an initial signature by an agent
    followed by an attempted contract revocation by the opposing side, the court was
    required to resolve various preliminary factual questions related to the contractual
    enforcement issues, such as the nature and scope of the agency and the validity of the
    revocation. The Legislature did not intend the expedited section 664.6 procedure to be
    used as a substitute for contract enforcement actions. The unilateral addition of
    Boguslaw's signature after the Mikoses had revoked their consent and after the Brothers
    had filed their section 664.6 motion did not bring this matter within section 664.6's strict
    statutory requirements. (See Sully-Miller, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 37.)
    In this regard, the Brothers' reliance on Elyaoudayan v. Hoffman (2003) 
    104 Cal.App.4th 1421
     (Elyaoudayan) is unhelpful. Under section 664.6, a settlement
    agreement is enforceable if parties to pending litigation personally sign the settlement
    agreement or the parties personally stipulate to the settlement before the court. In
    Elyaoudayan, an oral settlement agreement was recited on the record before the court and
    was personally consented to by some, but not all, of the parties. (Elyaoudayan, supra, at
    pp. 1424-1425.) The parties who were not present in the courtroom later signed a
    stipulation attaching a transcript of the court proceeding at which the settlement was
    recited. (Id. at p. 1426.) The Court of Appeal held that, because "[a]ll parties agreed to
    the settlement in one form or the other or both," it was enforceable under section 664.6
    notwithstanding the " 'mix and match' approach to the manner of agreement." (Id. at p.
    1432.)
    14
    We agree with this principle. But in Elyaoudayan, unlike here, there were no facts
    showing that a party sought to revoke the agreement before the remaining parties'
    personal signatures were obtained on the transcript of the oral hearing. The issue here is
    whether obtaining a party's signature after the opposing parties had revoked their consent
    is sufficient to allow enforcement under section 664.6. Applying well settled law in this
    state, enforcement under section 664.6 is not permitted under these circumstances.
    Provost v. Regents of University of California (2011) 
    201 Cal.App.4th 1289
     is also
    distinguishable. Provost held that when a party to pending litigation is a corporation or
    other similar entity that must act through individuals, the entity may appoint an employee
    (with appropriate knowledge and position) as the "authorized representative" of the party
    and section 664.6's party-signature requirement is satisfied if this representative signs the
    settlement agreement. (Provost, supra, at pp. 1296-1297.) In so holding, the Provost
    court distinguished Gauss, by explaining that in Gauss the corporate party appointed a
    third party agent, rather than a corporate employee, as the authorized representative in the
    litigation and settlement negotiations. (Provost, supra, at p. 1296.) Provost is
    inapplicable here because each of the Brothers is an individual rather than an entity. As
    in Gauss and Williams, an agent's signature on a settlement agreement is insufficient to
    satisfy section 664.6's personal signature requirement, even if the agent was specifically
    provided with settlement powers and even if the agent was a codefendant in the action.
    Our conclusion that the lack of Boguslaw's timely personal signature precludes
    enforcement under section 664.6 does not mean the Settlement Agreement is invalid or
    unenforceable. " '[T]he statutory procedure for enforcing settlement agreements under
    15
    section 664.6 is not exclusive. It is merely an expeditious, valid alternative statutorily
    created. [Citation.] Settlement agreements may also be enforced by motion for summary
    judgment, by a separate suit in equity or by amendment of the pleadings . . . .' " (Gauss,
    supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 1122.)
    We emphasize that the issues whether the parties' consent to the Settlement
    Agreement was properly manifested and whether the agreement is binding on the
    Mikoses under California law are not before us. Specifically, our conclusion that
    Matthew's signature on behalf of his brother was inadequate to permit enforcement under
    section 664.6 has no relevance to the issue whether Matthew had the lawful authority to
    sign the Settlement Agreement on Boguslaw's behalf, thus binding the parties under
    contract principles and rendering the Mikoses' revocation invalid. The record supports
    that Boguslaw gave Matthew the specific authority under the power of attorney to handle
    all aspects of the litigation, including settling the litigation. Moreover, Boguslaw
    personally participated in the settlement negotiations by telephone. Additionally, there is
    substantial evidence supporting the court's implied finding that when the Mikoses signed
    the agreement they were represented by counsel and had the time to reflect and consider
    the settlement terms.
    16
    DISPOSITION
    Judgment reversed. Each party to bear its own costs.
    HALLER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    NARES, J.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D061380

Filed Date: 3/19/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021