Tri Citrus v. Euclid GP Partners CA2/5 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 5/4/23 Tri Citrus v. Euclid GP Partners CA2/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    TRI CITRUS, INC.,                                               B319042
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                                                      21STCV22517)
    EUCLID GP PARTNERS, LLC,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Holly J. Fujie, Judge. Affirmed.
    Jassy Vick Carolan, William T. Um, and Jean-Paul Jassy
    for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Baker Manock & Jensen, Joseph M. Marchini, and Michael
    J. Fletcher for Defendant and Respondent.
    Tri Citrus, Inc. (Tri Citrus), a limited partner in a business
    venture, sued the venture’s general partner for failing to provide
    yearly accountings of the partnership’s affairs. The general
    partner demurred to the complaint because Tri Citrus was a
    suspended corporation and accordingly lacked capacity to
    prosecute its lawsuit. The trial court sustained the demurrer,
    and when Tri Citrus agreed it could not revive its good corporate
    standing and amend its pleading to so indicate, the court entered
    judgment for the general partner. We consider whether the trial
    court erred because Tri Citrus meets the criteria for a judicially-
    created exception to the statute prohibiting a suspended
    corporation from prosecuting a lawsuit (Rev. & Tax. Code,
    § 23301 (hereafter, “section 23301”)).
    I. BACKGROUND1
    A.     The Parties’ Partnership Agreement and Tri Citrus’s
    Complaint
    In 2005, Tri Citrus, Euclid GP Partners, LLC (Euclid), and
    nonparty Euclid Holdings LLC entered into an agreement
    creating a limited partnership, Euclid Leasing Partners, L.P. (the
    partnership). The primary purpose of the partnership was to
    acquire an agricultural packing facility from Tri Citrus and then
    1
    Our factual recitation is drawn from the complaint’s
    allegations, the parties’ partnership agreement which was
    attached as an exhibit to the complaint, and public records
    judicially noticed by the trial court. (See generally Yvanova v.
    New Century Mortgage Corp. (2016) 
    62 Cal.4th 919
    , 924 & fn. 1
    (Yvanova).)
    2
    lease the facility to a third party whose operations would
    generate income for the partnership.
    The partnership agreement designated Euclid as the sole
    general partner. Under the terms of the agreement, the general
    partner was required to keep “proper books of account.” In
    addition, the partners were entitled to access the partnership’s
    books at any time and a full and accurate accounting of the
    partnership’s affairs was to be made at the conclusion of each
    fiscal year.
    Eight years after the partnership’s formation, in April
    2013, the California Secretary of State suspended Tri Citrus.
    Less than two years later, the California Franchise Tax Board
    (FTB) suspended Tri Citrus too.
    In June 2021, while Tri Citrus was still suspended, the
    company sued Euclid and Evans AG GP, Inc. (Euclid’s alleged
    successor as general partner) for breach of contract, breach of
    fiduciary duty, accounting, and declaratory relief. Tri Citrus did
    not sue the partnership or assert that it was acting on the
    partnership’s behalf, and it sought relief for itself alone.
    Tri Citrus’s primary contention in its lawsuit was that
    defendants breached their duties under the partnership
    agreement by failing to maintain proper partnership books and to
    make available to Tri Citrus an accounting of partnership
    activities. Tri Citrus averred that “[b]eginning in May 2020,” it
    demanded without success that defendants provide it with
    financial and tax records to which it was entitled under the
    partnership agreement.2 Tri Citrus expressly acknowledged its
    2
    The complaint averred: “[T]ri Citrus has not received
    authenticated financial documents or tax information for the
    3
    suspended corporate status and alleged that defendants’ alleged
    breaches “caused [it] to fall out of good standing” and prevented it
    from regaining its “good standing status.” A footnote in Tri
    Citrus’s pleading maintained that, under Reed v. Norman (1957)
    
    48 Cal.2d 338
     (Reed), it was not barred by section 23301 from
    bringing suit.
    B.     Defendants’ Demurrer and the Trial Court’s Ruling
    Defendants demurred to the complaint, contending in the
    main that Tri Citrus lacked the capacity to sue because it was a
    suspended corporation. Defendants argued the exception
    identified by our Supreme Court in Reed was limited and applied
    only to shareholder derivative actions.3
    Tri Citrus opposed the demurrer. Its opposition retreated
    from the allegation that defendants’ breaches caused it to
    initially fall out of good standing with the California Secretary of
    State; instead, Tri Citrus maintained defendants’ liability arose
    Partnership, or the full scope of the financial information
    requested by Tri Citrus. To the extent they have provided
    limited information to Tri Citrus, [d]efendants have not
    authenticated the information, and Tri Citrus has reason to
    believe it is not genuine.”
    3
    In support of their demurrer, defendants asked the trial
    court to take judicial notice of two documents: a report from the
    Secretary of State’s office faxed to Euclid’s counsel on July 16,
    2021, indicting suspensions by the Secretary of State and FTB in
    2013 and 2015, respectively; and a printed copy of a page from
    the Secretary of State’s website, dated July 21, 2021, indicating
    Tri Citrus had been suspended by both the Secretary of State and
    FTB.
    4
    only from their failure to provide the requested accountings and
    the absence of these accountings prevented Tri Citrus from
    regaining its good standing. Tri Citrus further argued the
    exception to section 23301 created by Reed was “not limited solely
    [to] the context of a shareholder derivative action” because it read
    Reed to “stand[ ] for the general principle that courts may craft
    an equitable solution to avoid strict application of . . . section
    23301 where warranted.”
    In reply, defendants disputed Tri Citrus’s characterization
    of Reed and argued the limited exception our Supreme Court
    identified was inapplicable because, unlike the corporation in
    Reed, Tri Citrus “stopped paying its own taxes and abandoned its
    business 7 years before it ever allegedly asked for the documents
    it supposedly needs to pay its taxes.”
    In October 2021, the trial court granted defendants’
    unopposed request for judicial notice and sustained the demurrer
    with leave to amend—finding Tri Citrus lacked capacity to sue.
    The parties then stipulated to entry of judgment in favor of
    defendants because Tri Citrus could “not update its corporate
    status and, therefore, . . . will not be able to amend its
    Complaint,” and the court dismissed the action.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The trial court’s ruling was correct. Settled law requires
    dismissal of an action where a plaintiff corporation has been
    suspended, the defendant has promptly raised the plaintiff’s lack
    of capacity to sue, and the plaintiff cannot revive its status as a
    corporation in good standing. All three of these circumstances
    are present here: it is undisputed Tri Citrus is a suspended
    corporation (and has been one for years), Tri Citrus currently
    5
    lacks the ability to cure the suspension, and defendants did not
    waive the issue of Tri Citrus’s suspended status because they
    raised the matter in their initial response to Tri Citrus’s
    complaint. Furthermore, the Reed exception to the statutory
    corporate capacity to sue rules is unavailable because it applies
    only to shareholder derivative actions and Tri Citrus’s complaint
    was filed on the company’s own behalf in an attempt to exercise
    directly its rights as a corporation and a party to the partnership
    agreement.
    A.      Standard of Review
    We review an order sustaining a demurrer de novo.
    (Centinela Freeman Emergency Medical Associates v. Health Net
    of California, Inc. (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 994
    , 1010.) “[W]e accept the
    truth of material facts properly pleaded in the operative
    complaint, but not contentions, deductions, or conclusions of fact
    or law. We may also consider matters subject to judicial notice.
    [Citation.]” (Yvanova, 
    supra,
     
    62 Cal.4th at 924
    , fn. omitted.)
    Matters subject to judicial notice include “admissions in
    plaintiff’s opposition to the demurrer.” (Rodas v. Spiegel (2001)
    
    87 Cal.App.4th 513
    , 518.) We also consider exhibits incorporated
    into a complaint. (Holland v. Morse Diesel Internat., Inc. (2001)
    
    86 Cal.App.4th 1443
    , 1447.)
    B.     Section 23301 and the Reed Exception
    Section 23301 provides that “the corporate powers, rights
    and privileges of a domestic taxpayer may be suspended” if any
    tax, penalty, interest, or other liability due is not paid. (§ 23301,
    subds. (a)-(c); see also Rev. & Tax Code, § 23301.5 [similar
    provision regarding the failure to file a tax return].) Among other
    6
    things, section 23301 prohibits a corporation from prosecuting or
    defending an action “while its corporate rights are suspended for
    failure to pay taxes.” (Reed, supra, 48 Cal.2d at 343, accord, Grell
    v. Laci Le Beau Corp. (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 1300
    , 1306 [“During
    the period that a corporation is suspended for failure to pay
    taxes, it may not prosecute or defend an action”].) The purpose of
    section 23301 and its predecessor statutes is “to put pressure on
    the delinquent corporation to pay its taxes.” (Peacock Hill Assn.
    v. Peacock Lagoon Constr. Co. (1972) 
    8 Cal.3d 369
    , 371 (Peacock).)
    Although the impact of section 23301 can be “drastic” (4
    Witkin, Cal. Procedure (6th ed. 2022) Pleading, § 87), the rule is
    not absolute. A suspended corporation may, for instance,
    validate actions taken during the suspension by paying the taxes
    owed and obtaining a revival of its powers. (Peacock, supra, 8
    Cal.3d at 371; see also Cadle Co. v. World Wide Hospitality
    Furniture, Inc. (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 504
    , 512-513 [“When a
    corporation’s suspended status ‘comes to light during litigation,
    the normal practice is for the trial court to permit a short
    continuance to enable the suspended corporation to effect
    reinstatement’”].) A lack of capacity to sue is also not a
    jurisdictional bar. (Traub Co. v. Coffee Break Service, Inc. (1967)
    
    66 Cal.2d 368
    , 371.) Rather, it gives rise to a plea in abatement
    that may be waived if not raised at the earliest opportunity.
    (Color-Vue, Inc. v. Abrams (1996) 
    44 Cal.App.4th 1599
    , 1604.)
    In Reed, our high court created an equitable exception to
    section 23301. Reed was a shareholder of Norman Decorating
    Co., Inc., and filed a derivative suit alleging dissipation of
    corporate assets and naming the corporation, another
    shareholder (Norman), and the corporation’s officers and
    directors as defendants. (Reed, supra, 48 Cal.2d at 340.) During
    7
    the course of the suit, the corporation’s right to engage in
    litigation was suspended for failure to pay state taxes. (Id. at
    341.) After judgment was entered against him, Reed appealed.
    Defendants moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the
    corporation’s right to engage in litigation was suspended and the
    suspension extended to Reed because his action was derivative in
    nature. (Id. at 340-341.)
    Our Supreme Court denied the motion and distinguished
    the position of a corporation in a shareholder derivative lawsuit
    from other actions: “[I]n a stockholders derivative action, the
    corporation is forced to be a party because any recovery goes
    through the corporate channel and thus enhances the
    stockholders’ interest therein. The corporation is not attempting
    to exercise its rights as a corporation. It is being used as a
    necessary channel by the shareholders.”4 (Reed, supra, 48 Cal.2d
    at 343, 345.) The Reed Court went on to observe that in that
    particular case “[t]he books and records of the corporation are in
    the hands of the mismanaging officers according to plaintiff’s
    complaints and thus the shareholders are not in a position to
    make a return or compute the franchise tax. In such a case it is
    not equitable to permit section 23301 . . . to stand as a shield for
    protecting allegedly dishonest corporate officials.” (Id. at 343.)
    Our highest court further held that Reed should be given an
    opportunity to pay the taxes and have the corporation reinstated
    4
    In reaching its decision, Reed relied upon Weinert v. Kinkel
    (N.Y. 1947) 
    296 N.Y. 151
     [
    71 N.E.2d 445
    ], which holds that a
    “‘court may dispense with the presence of a defunct corporation in
    a derivative action, if the circumstances warrant such exercise of
    its equitable powers.’” (Reed, supra, at 343, emphasis added.)
    8
    because the defendants failed to raise the corporation’s
    suspended status prior to filing the motion to dismiss. (Id. at 344
    & fn. 3.)
    C.     Dismissal Was Required Because Tri Citrus Lacked
    the Capacity to Sue and Was Not Acting on Behalf of
    the Partnership, Making the Reed Exception to
    Section 23301 Unavailable
    Dismissal of Tri Citrus’s complaint was required because it
    was undisputed Tri Citrus was a suspended corporation—Tri
    Citrus admitted as much in its complaint and defendants
    presented unchallenged evidence to the same effect. It was also
    undisputed that Tri Citrus could not revive its good standing.5 As
    a long-suspended corporation with no immediate prospects for
    revival, Tri Citrus lacked the capacity to prosecute its claims.
    (Friends of Shingle Springs Interchange, Inc. v. County of El
    Dorado 
    200 Cal.App.4th 1470
    , 1474, 1478 & fn. 6 [affirming
    dismissal of petition without leave to amend because petitioner’s
    5
    Tri Citrus alleges defendants’ failure to provide an
    accounting prevents it from restoring its status as a corporation
    in good standing, but we disregard the conclusory allegation.
    Even if the absence of an accounting would hinder filing of what
    the complaint calls “appropriate” tax returns (though neither the
    complaint nor Tri Citrus’s opposition to the demurrer details why
    that would be so, and Tri Citrus declined the opportunity to file
    an amended pleading), there is still no apparent reason why the
    absence of an accounting would prevent the company from
    remedying at least the conditions that caused its initial
    suspension years earlier—a cause that Tri Citrus concedes was
    not attributable to defendants.
    9
    corporate powers, as raised in respondents’ demurrer and
    established by judicially noticed public records, had been
    suspended for two and a half years prior to the petition’s filing].)
    Reed does not provide a basis for holding otherwise. Unlike
    Reed, Tri Citrus was not suing on behalf of the corporate entity in
    which the parties shared an interest (i.e., the partnership) or
    otherwise claiming defendants’ alleged misconduct had injured
    the partnership; indeed, the partnership was not even named as
    a party. Instead, Tri Citrus was suing on its own behalf and, as
    such, was attempting to exercise directly its rights as a
    corporation and as a party to the partnership agreement. As a
    result, Tri Citrus’s lawsuit, unlike the one in Reed, was an
    individual action, not a derivative one. In addition, in contrast to
    Reed where the defendant shareholder and officers sought to hide
    behind a shield of corporate incapacity which they themselves
    had created during the course of the litigation, defendants—by
    Tri Citrus’s own admission in its demurrer opposition filed in the
    trial court6—did not cause Tri Citrus’s suspension, which
    occurred years before this action’s commencement. (Moore v. Hill
    (2010) 
    188 Cal.App.4th 1267
    , 1271, fn. 3 [holding Reed
    “inapposite” because “the inequity Reed sought to avoid—the
    defensive use of the nonpayment of taxes in order to avoid
    liability—does not exist here”].) Finally, unlike the defendants in
    Reed, defendants here did not sit on their rights. Instead, at the
    first opportunity to respond to Tri Citrus’s complaint, they raised
    6
    Tri Citrus conceded that it “does not allege, as Euclid GP
    claims, that Euclid GP ‘caused’ Tri Citrus to initially fall out of
    good standing with the California Secretary of State.”
    10
    Tri Citrus’s suspension as a bar to the initiation and prosecution
    of the lawsuit.
    Without the benefit of any supporting authority, Tri Citrus
    contends Reed created a “general” equitable exception which
    “easily extends beyond derivative actions.” We reject Tri Citrus’s
    contention because it is contrary to the express language and
    reasoning of Reed. Reed does not state or suggest that the
    exception it created to section 23301 was general in nature. To
    the contrary, Reed confined the basis for its exception to the
    nature of shareholder derivative actions and the specific facts
    before it. In view of the long-established policy prohibiting
    delinquent corporations from having access to California courts,
    the limited nature of the Reed exception has been recognized by
    subsequent court decisions and legal treatises. (See, e.g.,
    Casiopea Bovet, LLC v. Chiang (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 656
    , 663
    [citing Reed for the proposition that a “stockholder derivative
    action does not exercise rights of a suspended corporation, but
    uses the corporate channel to enhance stockholders’ interest in
    enforcing fiduciary [duties] of the directors of the corporation”];
    Lewis v. LeBaron (1967) 
    254 Cal.App.2d 270
    , 279-280 [construing
    Reed as providing an exception for shareholder derivative actions
    to the general rule prohibiting suspended corporations from
    prosecuting or defending lawsuits]; 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (6th
    2022) Appeal, § 88 [citing Reed for the proposition that “[t]he
    general rule [prohibiting suspended corporations from
    prosecuting or defending an action] will seldom apply to a
    shareholder’s derivative suit”].) We reach the same conclusion.
    11
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Euclid shall recover its costs on
    appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    BAKER, J.
    We concur:
    RUBIN, P. J.
    KIM, J.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B319042

Filed Date: 5/4/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/4/2023