Critzer
v. Enos (2010), Cal.App.4th
[No.
H033913. Sixth Dist. Aug. 30, 2010.]
DAVID
CRITZER et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. JERRY ENOS et al., Defendants and Respondents.
(Superior
Court of Santa Clara County, No. CV034156, James P. Kleinberg, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Duffy, J., with Rushing, P.J., and Elia, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Greene,
Chauvel, Descalso & Minoletti; A.K. Abraham and Kenneth M. Weinfield for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Law
Offices of Jelinch & Rendler, Frank A. Jelinch for Defendant and Respondent Jerry Enos.
Law
Offices of Tamara T. Costa, Tamara T. Costa for Defendant and Respondent Darien A. Tung.
Borton
Petrini, Mark W. Shem for Defendant and Respondent Northpoint Homeowners Association. {Slip Opn. Page 2}
OPINION
DUFFY, J.-
David
and Margaret Critzer, owners of a townhome in a Cupertino project known as Northpoint, and their neighbor, Jerry
Enos, had a dispute concerning a window installed in Enos's upstairs bathroom in February 2004. The Critzers
ultimately brought suit against Enos, Darien A. Tung (Enos's successor-in-interest), and Northpoint Homeowners
Association (HOA). After it was assigned out to trial, the lawsuit was purportedly settled in January 2008, and
its terms were recited on the record. Three of the five parties gave their personal consent in court to the
purported settlement. Months later, after the parties reached an impasse concerning the appropriate language for
a formal written agreement, the HOA brought a motion to enforce settlement under Code of Civil Procedure 664.6.
fn. 1 The court
initially entered an order denying the Crtizers' request to insert three conditions in a formal agreement;
requiring the parties to exchange language for a written agreement; and indicating that if the parties could not
agree, it would select the appropriate settlement agreement from draft agreements submitted by the parties. After
the parties were unable to reach an accord concerning the language of the agreement, the court entered an order
enforcing settlement, holding that the HOA's version of the written agreement accurately reflected the parties'
settlement, and declaring it binding on all parties.
The
Critzers contend on appeal that the order enforcing settlement must be reversed. They argue that the court, by
adjudicating controversies between the parties concerning the language in the formal settlement agreement,
exceeded its authority under section 664.6. The HOA asserts in response
fn. 2 that the order is
nonappealable and therefore should be dismissed. The HOA contends that if the matter is considered on the merits,
the Critzers' proposed terms were not among those agreed upon by the parties, and the written agreement enforced by
the court accurately reflected the parties' settlement that had been placed on the record.
We
conclude that the order enforcing settlement finally determined the rights of the parties and therefore we will
amend the order to include an appealable judgment. (Hines v. Lukes (2008)
167 Cal.App.4th 1174,
1183.) We thus hold that the matter is appealable. We conclude further that because there was neither an oral
settlement all parties personally agreed upon, nor a written settlement agreement signed by all of the parties, the
court lacked authority under the summary procedure of section 664.6 to enforce any settlement. Accordingly, we will
reverse.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The
Critzers filed this action on January 19, 2005. In their second amended complaint of in or about July 2007, they
alleged seven causes of action, namely, negligence against the HOA; private nuisance against Enos and Tung;
invasion of privacy {Slip Opn. Page 3} against Enos and Tung; breach of contract (the covenants, conditions and
restrictions [CC&Rs] applicable to Northpoint) against all defendants; breach of equitable servitudes
against all defendants; breach of fiduciary duty against the HOA; and declaratory relief against all defendants.
fn. 3
The
Critzers alleged in the second amended complaint that in December 2003, Enos submitted an application to the HOA
for approval of the proposed installation of a second story bathroom window, the HOA approved it, and Enos
thereafter submitted an application to the City of Cupertino for a building permit which was approved.
fn. 4 They alleged
further that as a result of the installation of the window that is directly east of the Critzers' living room
window, Enos was thereby afforded an eye-level, direct view of the Critzers' entire living room to the farthest
interior wall of that room, and conversely, the Critzers were thereby afforded a direct view from their living room
of Enos's master bathroom. The Critzers claimed that they received no notice (as required under the CC&Rs) of
the application for, or approval of, the installation of Enos's window. {Slip Opn. Page 4}
The
case was assigned out to the Honorable James P. Kleinberg for jury trial on January 28, 2008. The matter was
taken off calendar after the terms of a purported settlement were recited on the record two days later (the
Settlement).
fn. 5 In August, 2008,
the HOA filed a motion to enforce settlement pursuant to section 664.6. The Critzers opposed the motion. After a
hearing, Judge Kleinberg made an order on December 5, 2008, denying the Critzers' request to include specified
language in the written agreement and requiring the parties to exchange settlement language. The court ordered
further that if the parties could not agree, it would then select one version from competing settlement agreements
submitted by the parties. Judge Kleinberg thereafter made a further order that acknowledged a continuing conflict
concerning the settlement language, and concluded that the written agreement proposed by the HOA "conforms to and
accurately memorializes the terms of the settlement reached by the parties and is consistent with the Court's
rulings in this matter . . . [and would be ordered] binding on all parties as an Order of this Court." The Critzers
filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
I.
Notice of Appeal and Appealability
A.
Notice of Appeal
Before
addressing the HOA's contention that the Critzers' challenge to the order below is not appealable, we discuss a
procedural quirk that, although not raised by the parties, must be considered because it is fundamental to the
question of whether we may consider this appeal. The notice of appeal filed February 23, 2009, refers to and
attaches the court's order filed January 30, 2009 (January 30 order), in which the court found that {Slip Opn.
Page 5} the HOA's draft of the settlement agreement accurately memorialized the parties' Settlement and declared
it binding on all parties as a court order. The problem, however, is that the January 30 order contained the
caption and case number for another action involving the parties and the City of Cupertino. It is evident from
our review of the superior court's Web site (see http://www.sccsuperiorcourt.org) that the January 30 order was
filed in that related action on January 30, 2009--when that case was pending on appeal before this court (see
fn. 4, ante)--but was not filed in this case.
fn. 6 The trial court
apparently became aware of this problem, since it subsequently filed an order in this action, using the correct
caption and case number, on February 23, 2009 (February 23 order), which had the same text as the January 30 order
except for the preamble: "This Order is identical in content to that Order of January 30, 2009 mistakenly filed in
Critzer v. City of Cupertino, No. 1-06-CV-066535." The February 23 order differed from the January 30 order
in one other respect in that it failed to attach as an exhibit the HOA's version of the settlement agreement that
the court was enforcing. Accordingly, the court filed an amended order on February 25, 2009, that was identical to
the February 23 order except for the inclusion of the proper exhibit.
"[I]t
is and has been the law of this state that notices of appeal are to be liberally construed so as to protect the
right of appeal if it is reasonably clear what appellant was trying to appeal from, and where the respondent
could not possibly have been misled or prejudiced." (Luz v. Lopes (1960)
55 Cal.2d 54,
59; see also D'Avola v. Anderson (1996)
47 Cal.App.4th 358,
361-363 [court liberally construed notice of appeal containing wrong case number of another case previously
dismissed by appellant but properly referring to {Slip Opn. Page 6} order being challenged]; Cal. Rules of Court,
rule 8.100(a)(2) [appeal notice "must be liberally construed"].)
Clearly,
the Critzers' appeal is substantively from the court's order finding the HOA's draft agreement to have
accurately memorialized the parties' Settlement and declaring it binding on all parties. The fact that the order
at first contained the wrong caption and was filed in a related case in which no motion was pending at the time
fn. 7 does not alter
the fact that it is "reasonably clear what [they were] trying to appeal from" (Luz v. Lopes, supra,
"55 Cal.2d at p. 59), and the HOA is neither prejudiced nor misled from our liberal construction of the notice of
appeal to embrace the February 23 order correctly filed in this action. Therefore, we will liberally construe the
notice of appeal to embrace a challenge of the February 23 order, as amended on February 25.
fn. 8 {Slip Opn. Page
7}
B.
Appealability
The
HOA contends that this case should be summarily disposed of because the order being challenged by the Critzers
is not appealable. It claims that the order is neither a final judgment nor a final order and is hence not
reviewable on appeal. The HOA contends that the Critzers' proper remedy, which they failed to employ, was a
motion for reconsideration.
fn. 9 The Critzers
respond that the order being challenged finally adjudicated all of the claims in the action and was therefore
appealable.
"A
reviewing court has jurisdiction over a direct appeal only when there is (1) an appealable order or (2) an
appealable judgment. [Citations.]" (Griset v. Fair Political Practices Com. (2001)
25 Cal.4th 688,
696 (Griset).) Regardless of whether an appealability challenge is raised, "[t]he existence of an appealable
judgment is a jurisdictional prerequisite to an appeal. A reviewing court must raise the issue on its own
initiative whenever a doubt exists as to whether the trial court has entered a final judgment or other order or
judgment made appealable by Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1. [Citations.]" (Jennings v. Marralle
(1994)
8 Cal.4th 121,
126-127.)
In
Viejo Bancorp, Inc. v. Wood (1989)
217 Cal.App.3d 200,
206-208 (Viejo Bancorp), the court held that a motion under section 664.6 to enforce a settlement reached in
prior litigation may not be brought in a subsequent action. The Viejo Bancorp court first addressed whether
the judgment under which the court purported to grant the plaintiff's motion to enforce a settlement reached in
prior litigation was "appealable even {Slip Opn. Page 8} though it [did] not finally conclude the new action."
(Id. at p. 205.) The court concluded that the matter was appealable: " 'Although the law relating to
appealability speaks in terms of orders or judgments,' it is well established 'that it is not the label but rather
the substance and effect of a court's judgment or order which determines whether or not it is appealable.
[Citation.]' [Citation.] Here, it is clear the trial court intended to effect a final judgment in the old action.
Since the intended substance and effect of the judgment is to finally dispose of the old action, the judgment is
appealable under Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (a). It is also appealable even though we
ultimately conclude the judgment is void." (Ibid.; see also Pangborn Plumbing Corp. v. Carruthers &
Skiffington (2002)
97 Cal.App.4th 1039,
1046, fn. 3.)
In
arguing here that the court's order enforcing settlement is not appealable, the HOA relies on Doran v.
Magan (1999)
76 Cal.App.4th 1287 (Doran).
In Doran, the court held that an order denying a section 664.6 motion is a nonappealable interlocutory
ruling. (Doran, at pp. 1292-1294.) The court explained, "It is the substance and effect of the adjudication,
and not the form, which determine if the order is interlocutory and nonappealable, or final and appealable.
[Citation.] If no issues in the action remain for further consideration, the decree is final and appealable. But if
further judicial action is required for a final determination of the rights of the parties, the decree is
interlocutory. [Citation.] The decree will not be appealable 'unless it comes within the statutory classes of
appealable interlocutory judgments.' [Citations.]" (Id. at p. 1293.) The Doran court therefore held
that an order denying a motion to enforce a settlement agreement is not "a final judgment, but rather denial
of a motion for judgment. The denial of the motion, rather than finally disposing of the action, expressly leaves
it open." (Ibid.)
Doran
does
not control our decision here for the obvious reason that it concerned the denial of a motion under
section 664.6, while the court here granted the HOA's motion to enforce settlement. Thus, we find that
Viejo Bancorp, supra, {Slip Opn. Page 9} 217 Cal.App.3d at page 205, holding that a judgment on an order
granting a motion to enforce settlement under section 664.6 is appealable, is controlling.
It
is true that the court, in its order granting the HOA's motion to enforce settlement, did not formally use the
word "judgment" as provided under the statute. (See § 664.6 ["the court, upon motion, may enter judgment
pursuant to the terms of the settlement"].) " 'A judgment is final "when it terminates the litigation between
the parties on the merits of the case and leaves nothing to be done but to enforce by execution what has been
determined." ' [Citations.]" (Sullivan v. Delta Air Lines, Inc. (1997)
15 Cal.4th 288,
304.) As the high court has further explained: " 'It is not the form of the decree but the substance and effect of
the adjudication which is determinative. As a general test, which must be adapted to the particular circumstances
of the individual case, it may be said that where no issue is left for future consideration except the fact of
compliance or noncompliance with the terms of the first decree, that decree is final, but where anything further in
the nature of judicial action on the part of the court is essential to a final determination of the rights of the
parties, the decree is interlocutory.' [Citations.]" (Griset, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 698.)
Here,
"the substance and effect of the adjudication, and not the form" (Doran, supra, 76 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1293), demonstrate that the court's order granting the HOA's motion finally disposed of the litigation. There
was nothing left for the court to do other than enforce its order, and the HOA, notwithstanding its urging that
the order is not final, identifies no further matters to be determined in the case. The Second District Court of
Appeal (Division Three), recently addressing similar circumstances, held: "The court here granted the motion [to
enforce settlement] under Code of Civil Procedure section 664.6, but failed to enter a formal judgment. Absent a
formal entry of judgment, an appellate court may amend an order to include a judgment if the effect of the order
is to finally determine the rights of the parties in the action. [Citation.] We conclude that the {Slip Opn.
Page 10} effect of the order here was to finally determine the rights of the parties in this action by enforcing
the settlement agreement. Accordingly, we will amend the order to include an appealable judgment so as to
expedite appellate review." (Hines v. Lukes, supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 1183, citing Griset,
supra, 25 Cal.4th at pp. 698-700.)
We
therefore conclude that, although it would have been preferable for the court to have disposed of the HOA's
motion by entering judgment as specified in section 664.6, the order here finally determined the rights of the
parties. Therefore, "we will amend the order to include an appealable judgment so as to expedite appellate
review." (Hines v. Lukes, supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 1183.)
II.
Motions to Enforce Settlement Under Section 664.6
The
Second District Court of Appeal, Division Two, has succinctly described the nature of motions brought pursuant
to section 664.6: "Section 664.6 was enacted to provide a summary procedure for specifically enforcing a
settlement contract without the need for a new lawsuit. [Citations.] . . . Although a judge hearing a section
664.6 motion may receive evidence, determine disputed facts, and enter the terms of a settlement agreement as a
judgment [citations], nothing in section 664.6 authorizes a judge to create the material terms of a
settlement, as opposed to deciding what terms the parties themselves have previously agreed upon."
(Weddington Productions, Inc. v. Flick (1998)
60 Cal.App.4th 793,
809-810; see also Terry v. Conlan (2005)
131 Cal.App.4th 1445 [court
erred in granting section 664.6 motion where record demonstrated no meeting of minds concerning material terms of
settlement].)
The
trial court's factual findings on a motion to enforce a settlement under section 664.6 "are subject to limited
appellate review and will not be disturbed if supported by substantial evidence." (Williams v. Saunders
(1997)
55 Cal.App.4th 1158,
1162.) In instances involving questions of law, including the construction and application of the statute, the
trial court's decision is not entitled to deference and will be subject to {Slip Opn. Page 11} independent review.
(Ibid.) For example, where the principal claim of error "raises a question of law concerning the
construction and application of section 664.6[, . . .] it requires independent review. [Citations.]" (Gauss v.
GAF Corp. (2002)
103 Cal.App.4th 1110,
1116 (Gauss), fn. omitted.)
III.
Whether Purported Settlement Is Enforceable Under Section 664.6
The
record discloses that when the Settlement was recited on the record on January 30, 2008, two of the five parties
did not personally give their consent to it. Because this raises a serious question as to whether the statutory
requirements of enforcing a settlement under section 664.6 were satisfied, we address the issue below.
Additionally, in view of the fact that the apparent absence of the parties' personal consent to the oral
Settlement was not a focal point of either the Critzers' opposition to the motion below or of their appeal, we
also address below whether any enforceability argument should be deemed forfeited.
fn. 10
A.
Enforceability of Purported Settlement
Section
664.6 provides as follows: "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. If requested by the parties, the
court may retain jurisdiction over the parties to enforce the settlement until performance in full of the terms
of the settlement." {Slip Opn. Page 12}
The
Supreme Court has addressed the meaning of the term "parties" in the context of whether a section 664.6 motion
may be brought to enforce a settlement for which there was a purported written agreement that was not signed by
all litigants themselves, but was signed by attorneys on behalf of their clients. (See Levy v. Superior
Court (1995)
10 Cal.4th 578 (Levy).)
After observing that the statute requires a stipulation by the "parties" to pending litigation, the court concluded
the term "parties" must be interpreted literally to mean the litigants themselves. (Id. at p. 586.) Although
the term "party" is recognized in other contexts as including the litigant's attorney of record (e.g., § 437c), the
court determined the Legislature intended "a narrower meaning" for the word, "namely the specific person or entity
by or against whom legal proceedings are brought. [Citations.]" (Levy, supra, at p. 583.) The court
reasoned that, unlike other steps an attorney takes in managing a lawsuit, settlement ends the lawsuit and is thus
"such a serious step that it requires the client's knowledge and express consent. [Citation.]" (Ibid.) In
holding that enforcement of a settlement pursuant to section 664.6 requires the personal assent of the litigants
themselves, the court reasoned: "[I]n 1981[,] . . . the Legislature enacted section 664.6, which created a summary,
expedited procedure to enforce settlement agreements when certain requirements that decrease the likelihood of
misunderstandings are met. Thus the statute requires the 'parties' to stipulate in writing or orally before the
court that they have settled the case. The litigants' direct participation tends 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 settlement. [Citations.] It also protects
parties from impairment of their substantial rights without their knowledge and consent. [Citation.]" (Levy,
at p. 585, fn. omitted.) Because one of the parties in Levy did not personally sign the settlement
agreement, the Supreme Court {Slip Opn. Page 13} concluded that the purported settlement agreement confirmed in
writing by the parties' attorneys could not be enforced under the procedural mechanism of section 664.6.
(Levy, at p. 586.)
fn. 11
Johnson
v. Department of Corrections (1995)
38 Cal.App.4th 1700 (Johnson)
addressed whether the Levy requirement under section 664.6 of the parties' personal approval of a written
settlement agreement applied equally to oral settlements recited before the court. In Johnson, after the
case was assigned out to trial, a settlement was recited on the record with counsel present. (Id. at pp.
1703-1704.) Because the purported oral settlement was never acknowledged on the record by the plaintiff himself,
the court, following Levy, held that the trial court erred in enforcing it under section 664.6, reasoning:
"Settlement negotiations were handled by the parties' attorneys and the court. While the attorneys orally agreed to
the settlement during judicially supervised negotiations, and thus orally stipulated to the agreement 'before the
court' [citations], [the] plaintiff never personally informed the court that he accepted the terms of this
agreement. Absent this personal involvement, the agreement is not enforceable under section 664.6."
(Johnson, at pp. 1707-1708.) In so holding, the court rejected the defendants' argument that Levy
applied only to written settlement agreements for which enforcement under section 664.6 was sought, and did not
apply to oral settlements recited in open court. (Johnson, at p. 1708; see also Wackeen v. Malis
(2002)
97 Cal.App.4th 429,
440 [section 664.6 requires oral consent in court or the signature of the parties themselves; consent by attorneys
or spouses insufficient].) {Slip Opn. Page 14}
Similarly,
in Murphy v. Padilla (1996)
42 Cal.App.4th 707 (Murphy),
we rejected the argument that an oral settlement agreement ratified by the party's attorney, acting as the party's
agent, was enforceable under section 664.6. "The Levy and Johnson opinions appear to reject
traditional agency analysis, which holds that ' "the client as principal is bound by the acts of the attorney-agent
within the scope of his actual authority (express or implied) or his apparent or ostensible authority; or by
unauthorized acts ratified by the client." ' [Citation. ¶ . . . ¶] In the underlying case, Levy and
Johnson prevent respondents from relying on agency principles to satisfy the requirements of section 664.6.
Accordingly, if appellant did not personally agree to the alleged oral settlement before Judge Bonney, an
additional ground exists for concluding that enforcement under section 664.6 was improper." (Id. at p. 716,
fn. omitted.)
Since
Levy, several cases have addressed the question of whether all parties must personally assent to a
settlement in order for it to be enforceable under section 664.6, or whether it is sufficient that the party
against whom the settlement is being enforced need to have personally assented. In Harris v. Rudin, Richman
& Appel (1999)
74 Cal.App.4th 299,
303 (Harris), the plaintiff in a legal malpractice suit against a law firm and five individuals sought to
enforce a purported written settlement agreement that consisted of a letter of counsel which two of the individual
defendants had signed "under a notation reading '[a]ccepted and agreed.' " The letter agreement was not signed by
the plaintiff or by the other defendants. (Ibid.) The trial court denied the plaintiff's motion to enforce
the settlement because "the statutory prerequisites of section 664.6 had not been satisfied . . . [in that] not all
of the parties in the action had signed the [l]etter." (Ibid.) The court in Harris affirmed. In so
holding, the court rejected the plaintiff's arguments that "[1] the statute's requirement of a 'writing signed by
the parties' does not expressly require all the parties in the action to sign the settlement agreement [and
2] . . . section 664.6 [is similar] to the statute of frauds requiring only the 'part[ies] to be {Slip Opn. Page
15} charged' to sign the writing. (See Civ. Code, § 1624.)" (Id. at p. 304.) The Harris court held:
"We read the statute's requirement of a writing 'signed by the parties' to require the signatures of the parties
seeking to enforce the agreement under section 664.6 and against whom the agreement is sought to be enforced.
Although there is no direct authority interpreting the term 'parties' in such a way, such an interpretation is
consistent with our Supreme Court's opinion in Levy[, supra,] 10 Cal.4th [at p.] 585." (Id. at
p. 305.)
Similarly,
in Sully-Miller Contracting Co. v. Gledson/Cashman Construction, Inc. (2002)
103 Cal.App.4th 30 (Sully-Miller),
a purported written settlement agreement was signed by the plaintiffs; however, because they did not receive the
contemplated consideration in a timely manner, they revoked their offer to settle, and the trial court granted the
remaining parties' motion to enforce the purported settlement. (Id. at pp. 33-35.) The appellate court
concluded that this was error. Citing Harris, supra, 74 Cal.App.4th at pages 304-306, it observed
that the provisions of section 664.6 could be invoked to enforce a written settlement agreement only if it has been
signed by all parties. (Sully-Miller, at p. 37.) "We conclude that a party cannot satisfy section 664.6's
signature requirement simply by adding its signature to a document that does not call for it. The purpose of
section 664.6's signed writing requirement--to provide unequivocal proof of the parties' intent to enter a binding
settlement--would be frustrated if courts enforced written agreements pursuant to that section where, as here, the
agreement only contemplates the signature of one party. Section 664.6 requires the parties' signatures because
'settlement is such a serious step that it requires the client's knowledge and express consent. [Citation.]'
[Citation.] A party's signature fails to convey such knowledge and consent unless it is contained in a document
that was clearly intended by that party to be a binding settlement agreement. [¶] Because of its summary nature,
strict compliance with the requirements of section 664.6 is prerequisite to invoking the power {Slip Opn. Page 16}
of the court to impose a settlement agreement. The ad hoc addition of a party's signature that was neither
contemplated in the original document nor bargained for is simply insufficient to render the document enforceable
under section 664.6." (Id. at p. 37.)
Finally,
in Gauss, supra,
103 Cal.App.4th 1110,
the defendant in consolidated appeals argued that the trial court had erred in granting section 664.6 motions to
enforce settlement because the defendant had not personally signed the settlement agreements; rather, they were
signed by the defendant's agent, its attorney. (Id. at pp. 1112-1113.) The appellate court--citing, inter
alia, Levy, supra,
10 Cal.4th 578,
Harris, supra,
74 Cal.App.4th 299,
Sully-Miller, supra,
103 Cal.App.4th 30,
and Murphy, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th 707--concluded that because there was no writing indicating the
defendant's consent to settle, the purported written settlement was not enforceable under section 664.6.
(Gauss, at pp. 1116-1121.)
Here,
the record demonstrates that the oral Settlement the HOA sought to enforce was recited in open court on the
record on January 30, 2008. The previous day, the court recited the terms of a settlement on the record, and the
Critzers' attorney and Tung's attorney each added clarifications to the recital. No party voiced his/her/its
assent on the record on January 29. On January 30, after the HOA's attorney recited the terms of the Settlement,
and after a clarification from Tung's counsel, the court obtained the consent of David Critzer, Margaret
Critzer, and Tung. The court indicated that Enos was not present, but Enos's attorney, Frank Jelinch, indicated
that he had authority for his client, had spoken with him, and Enos was "agreeable." There was no consent to the
Settlement given by the HOA; indeed, the record does not reflect whether a representative of the HOA was present
at the January 30 hearing.
The
HOA's motion to enforce settlement pursuant to section 664.6 brought in August 2008 contained the assertion that
the parties had settled the case on January 30, 2008, and recited the terms of the Settlement by reference to
the matters contained in {Slip Opn. Page 17} reporter's transcript. The motion clearly indicated that the
Settlement was reached on January 30 and that it was enforceable under section 664.6. We therefore conclude
that--addressing the issue without reference to whether the contention may have been forfeited (see pt. III.B.,
post)--the oral Settlement was not enforceable under section 664.6. Plainly, there was no personal
consent to the recited terms of the Settlement by two of the five parties, the HOA and Enos. Any claim that the
Settlement was nonetheless effective because it was expressly consented to by Enos's agent (Jelinch), and
perhaps impliedly consented to by the HOA's agent (attorney Mark Shem, who recited the terms of the Settlement),
lacks merit. Under Levy, supra,
10 Cal.4th 578, in
order for a settlement to be enforceable under section 664.6, the consent to settlement must have been given by the
party, personally, and courts have rejected agency arguments posed to circumvent the party-consent requirement.
(See Gauss, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1118-1119; Murphy, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at
p. 716 & fn. 7.) Additionally, the fact that the Critzers gave their personal consent to the terms of the oral
Settlement--as the parties against whom the Settlement is being enforced--does not obviate the necessity of the
personal consent of the remaining parties, including the HOA and Enos. (Harris, supra, 74 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 304-305.) Moreover, there is no basis for making a distinction between oral settlements and written
settlements: Both forms of settlements, in order to be enforceable under section 664.6, require the personal
consent of all parties. (Johnson, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at p. 1708.)
The
HOA claims--in both its brief and supplemental letter brief (see fn. 10, ante)--that under Elyaoudayan
v. Hoffman (2003)
104 Cal.App.4th 1421 (Elyaoudayan),
the oral Settlement was enforceable because it was later formally agreed to by the HOA and Enos when a draft
agreement was prepared by the HOA's counsel and signed {Slip Opn. Page 18} separately by the HOA and Enos.
fn. 12
Elyaoudayan is distinguishable and does not support the HOA's argument. There, an oral settlement was
recited on the record and was personally consented to by some, but not all, of the parties. (Id. at p.
1426.) The two parties who did not give their consent at the hearing later signed a stipulation attaching the
transcript of the court proceedings in which the settlement was recited. (Ibid.) The Elyaoudayan
court held that because "[a]ll parties agreed to the settlement in one form or the other or both" (id. at p.
1432), it was immaterial that some of the parties merely signed the agreement attaching the court transcript while
others gave their oral consent in court.
Here,
neither the HOA nor Enos orally consented at the hearing to the Settlement. Likewise, neither the HOA nor Enos
gave its or his subsequent written consent by signing a writing attaching the reporter's transcript (reciting
the Settlement terms). The fact that a representative of the HOA--some three and one-half months after the oral
Settlement--signed a formal document prepared by its counsel (entitled "Mutual Release of All Claims and
Settlement Agreement and Covenant Not to Sue")--does not alter the circumstances that, unlike in
Elyaoudayan, the HOA neither orally agreed to the Settlement at the time nor agreed in writing by signing
a document attaching the court transcript reciting the terms of the Settlement. Similarly, the fact that Enos
signed a {Slip Opn. Page 19} version of a written settlement agreement on a date unknown--which version
apparently differed from the version signed by the HOA--does not change the fact that Enos neither orally
consented to the Settlement on January 30 nor signed a document attaching the court transcript that contained a
recital of its terms.
Moreover,
we reject the HOA's assertion in its supplemental letter brief that Elyaoudayan is controlling because by
signing the written settlement agreement, the HOA and Enos agreed in writing to the same terms that were recited
in court on the record and orally agreed to months earlier by the Critzers and Tung. While in a superficial
sense, this argument may seem plausible--because the later written agreement incorporated the essential terms
that were recited in January and in some sense merely represented the formalized agreement that often follows
after the parties reach an oral settlement of a case at a settlement conference--there are very real differences
between the written agreement and the prior oral Settlement agreed to by three of the parties. These include the
following provisions found in the written agreement that are not in the oral Settlement: (1) the release does
not apply to a related civil writ action; and (2) any ambiguity or dispute about the interpretation of the
agreement is to be construed to the fullest extent possible as effecting a release of the Critzers' claims
(i.e., a clause favoring defendants). Also, the provision in the written agreement concerning Judge Kleinberg
retaining continuing jurisdiction is significantly broader than what was recited in the oral Settlement.
fn. 13 Accordingly,
because there were differences between the oral Settlement {Slip Opn. Page 20} and the terms of the written
settlement agreement later signed by the HOA and Enos, unlike the circumstances in Elyaoudayan "[a]ll
parties [did not] agree[] to the settlement in one form or the other or both." (Elyaoudayan, supra,
104 Cal.App.4th at p. 1432.)
Finally,
the HOA argues in its supplemental letter brief that the HOA's personal consent was not needed to enforce the
settlement because the HOA was being defended under a general liability insurance policy, and it is generally
the case that "the named party does not have the right to consent to any settlement made on its/his/her behalf."
In support of this position, the HOA cites Fiege v. Cooke (2004)
125 Cal.App.4th 1350 (Fiege).
There, the court, relying extensively on Robertson v. Chen (1996)
44 Cal.App.4th 1290,
1293-1296, held that where the settlement was orally agreed to by the plaintiff and the defendants' insurers (but
not the insureds), and the policies provided that the insurers could settle without the insureds' consent and could
bind the insureds to the settlement, the plaintiff could not thereafter escape from the settlement being enforced
under section 664.6 because of the absence of the insureds' oral consent. (Fiege, at pp. 1353-1355.) The HOA
argues that "[s]ince defense counsel indicated [the HOA's] approval of the settlement on the record, pursuant to
Fiege, [the HOA] party approved of the settlement in open court."
There
are three problems with this argument. First, the HOA does not cite to any portion of the record that
demonstrates that the HOA was being defended under a general liability insurance policy under which the HOA gave
its insurer the right to settle without the HOA's consent and the right to bind the insured to the settlement.
Second, the record {Slip Opn. Page 21} from the Settlement recited on January 30, 2008, does not reflect the
agreement of the insurer (let alone the insured, HOA) to its terms. It is unclear whether the insurer was
even present in court when the terms were recited. Thus, even were the record to have demonstrated that the HOA
was insured under an insurance policy that permitted settlement by the insurer alone, there was no consent by
the insurer. (Cf. Fiege, supra, 125 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1355-1356 [concluding that insurer agreed
to oral settlement when its representatives were in court, heard the settlement recited, and did not object
after the court asked if anyone had addenda or disagreements with its terms].) Third, even if Fiege
applied here to eliminate the problem of the absence of the HOA's personal consent, the HOA's argument does not
address the problem of the absence of Enos's personal consent to the oral settlement.
We
therefore conclude that the oral Settlement recited in court on January 30, 2008, could not be enforced under
section 664.6 because it was not personally consented to by two of the parties.
B.
Possible Forfeiture of Contention
The
absence of all parties' consent to the Settlement and the consequent enforceability issue notwithstanding, we
must consider whether any challenge that the Critzers may raise to the court's order on this basis is forfeited.
This requires a review of the Critzers' arguments both below and on appeal.
In
their written opposition to the HOA's motion to enforce below, the Critzers did not argue that the Settlement
was unenforceable because of the absence of consent by the HOA and Enos. Their opposition was to the effect that
(a) the proposed settlement language in the formal settlement documents prepared by the HOA's counsel after
January 30 were heavily slanted toward defendants; (b) the court should not enforce a settlement that contains
terms that are unjust to the Critzers; and (c) if the court could not resolve the parties' disputes concerning
settlement language, the court should enforce the {Slip Opn. Page 22} Settlement terms as limited to what was
recited on the record on January 30. At the hearing, the Critzers' counsel, A. K. Abraham, argued principally
that there were a number of matters that had been inserted in the draft settlement agreement that had not been
part of the Settlement recited in court. Abraham, however, noted that not all of the parties had given their
assent when the Settlement was recited on the record and raised a question as to whether the matters recited in
court were subject to enforcement under section 664.6. Abraham argued: "The difficulty is that had we
articulated the entire settlement terms on the record. [Sic.] And had the record been truly a 664.6
settlement, which it was not inasmuch as the HOA's representative was not there to affirm the terms, that would
have been one thing. Rather, what the Court and the parties did . . . was to give the broad strokes of a
settlement agreement and allow the parties then time to work out primarily boilerplate issues. . . ."
On
appeal, the Critzers observe in passing that "[n]either Enos nor the HOA were [sic] present at the time
of the January 30, 2008 hearing. . . . Nor did the HOA consent to all of the terms at that time through its
counsel, but rather agreed to have its [b]oard of [d]irectors consider some of the terms for approval at a later
meeting. . . . Both the HOA and Enos subsequently signed off on the enlarged written settlement agreement which
the court directed the HOA's attorney to draft. . . ." Further, although the Critzers' position here is that the
January 30 Settlement was "skeletal" and that the parties all contemplated that further "specific terms and
conditions [needed] to be fleshed out by counsel in subsequent discussions," they do not address frontally the
issue that we have discussed above: namely, whether the failure of all parties to consent to the terms of the
Settlement, of itself, precludes enforcement under section 664.6. But the Critzers do note: "Moreover, because
two of the defendants were not present and thus never stipulated to the settlement read into the court
record--but later signed a document containing numerous additional terms--they cannot be said to have agreed to
the same {Slip Opn. Page 23} provisions as the other parties. . . . Since the parties here did not all agree to
the same terms, [section] 664.6 is, as a matter of law, inapplicable to the 'agreement' which defendants seek to
enforce. . . ."
It
is a fundamental proposition that " '[a]n appellate court will ordinarily not consider procedural defects or
erroneous rulings, in connection with relief sought or defenses asserted, where an objection could have been but
was not presented to the lower court by some appropriate method . . . .' [Citation.]" (Doers v. Golden Gate
Bridge etc. Dist. (1979)
23 Cal.3d 180,
184-185, fn. 1.) Likewise, an appellant's failure to raise an issue on appeal may result in a forfeiture of the
issue. (Children's Hospital & Medical Center v. Bonta (2002)
97 Cal.App.4th 740,
777.)
Here,
although the Critzers could have been more expansive in their discussion of whether the absence of consent by
all parties precluded enforcement of the Settlement under section 664.6, we conclude that they raised the issue
sufficiently below and before this court to preclude its forfeiture. Moreover, "when the issue involves
undisputed evidence and raises a pure question of law, we may consider it for the first time. [Citation.]"
(Burckhard v. Del Monte Corp. (1996)
48 Cal.App.4th 1912,
1918 [court addresses legal question of whether absence of party's signature on writings confirming settlements
precluded enforcement under section 664.6, despite party's failure to raise issue at trial].) We therefore conclude
that it is appropriate to consider whether the oral Settlement is enforceable under section 664.6 despite the
absence of the personal consent of the HOA and Enos.
C.
Conclusion
The
fact that not all of the parties gave their personal consent to the Settlement precluded the court from granting
a motion to enforce under section 664.6, even though the Critzers themselves personally consented to the oral
Settlement. (Harris, supra, 74 Cal.App.4th at p. 303; Johnson, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1707-1708.) While on the {Slip Opn. Page 24} surface, this result may seem to exalt form over substance,
the statute is clear and "[b]ecause of its summary nature, strict compliance with the requirements of section
664.6 is prerequisite to invoking the power of the court to impose a settlement agreement."
(Sully-Miller, supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 37.) Moreover, "[t]he litigants' direct participation
tends 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
settlement. [Citations.] It also protects parties from impairment of their substantial rights without their
knowledge and consent. [Citation.]" (Levy, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 585, fn. omitted.) The
controversy here in which the parties have differing views on the substance of the actual settlement exemplifies
the rationale for requiring the personal consent of all parties for an enforcement proceeding under section
664.6, as explained in Levy.
fn. 14
DISPOSITION
The
order granting the motion to enforce settlement pursuant to section 664.6, amended to constitute a final
appealable judgment (Hines v. Lukes, supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 1183), is reversed.
Rushing,
P.J., and Elia, J., concurred.
FN 1. Further
statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.
FN 2. The
respondents herein are the HOA, Enos and Tung. Only the HOA filed a brief; Tung filed a joinder in that brief, and
Enos submitted a letter to this court in which he "concur[red], in its entirety, with the [HOA's] responding
brief." For simplicity, we will refer to the contentions in response to the appeal as being those of the HOA.
FN 3. The
record includes only a proposed (but signed) second amended complaint that was attached as an exhibit to the
Critzers' motion for leave to file that pleading, as well as answers to the second amended complaint of the HOA,
Tung, and Enos that were filed after the date noticed for hearing on said motion. We therefore infer that the court
in fact granted the Critzers' motion and that the second amended complaint was the operative pleading.
FN 4. The
Critzers filed a separate petition for writ of mandamus that involved the defendants herein, as real parties in
interest, and the City of Cupertino, as defendant, that concerned the City's approval of the building permit for
the installation of Enos's window. An appeal was taken from the court's denial of the writ petition and we affirmed
the judgment in that other action in Critzer et al v. City of Cupertino (Dec. 21, 2009, H032801 [nonpub.
opn.]). We have taken judicial notice of our opinion in that other suit because it "help[s] complete the context of
this case." (Flatley v. Mauro (2006)
39 Cal.4th 299,
306, fn. 2.)
FN 5. We
use "Settlement" as a term of art to refer to the purported oral settlement of the parties recited in open court on
January 30, 2008. In using this term, we do not imply that the Settlement is one that was legally enforceable as
such under section 664.6, or under any other procedural mechanism available for the enforcement of settlements.
FN 6. Although
there does not appear to be a docket entry for its filing in this action, the January 30 order, for reasons that
are unclear, nonetheless appears in the clerk's transcript in this case.
FN 7. Indeed,
since an appeal was then pending in this court in that related action (Critzer et al v. City of Cupertino,
supra, H032801), the trial court lacked jurisdiction at the time to enter an order such as the one at issue
here. (See § 916; Varian Medical Systems, Inc. v. Delfino (2005)
35 Cal.4th 180,
189-190.)
FN 8. The
record is silent as to whether the February 23 notice of appeal was filed prior to the February 23 order. Were this
the case, it could be argued that the appeal notice divested the trial court of jurisdiction to enter the February
23 order. (See § 916.) It is clear, however, that the trial court originally intended to enter its order in this
case on January 30, 2009, and that, but for an erroneous caption and case number, this would have occurred.
Therefore, since it is clear that the appellate challenge is in substance to the misfiled January 30 order, and
although neither the February 23 order nor the amended order of February 25 specifically recited that its entry was
nunc pro tunc, we will deem both orders to have been entered nunc pro tunc as of January 30, 2009. (See Norton
v. City of Pomona (1935)
5 Cal.2d 54, 62
[where party was entitled to judgment, but, through no fault of party, it was not entered, court may enter judgment
nunc pro tunc to date it should have been entered]; Bed, Bath & Beyond of La Jolla, Inc. v. La Jolla Village
Square Venture Partners (1997)
52 Cal.App.4th 867,
884, fn. 11 [appellate court deemed order to have been entered nunc pro tunc].)
FN 9. The
HOA cites no authority for this proposition and we therefore disregard it. (Dabney v. Dabney (2002)
104 Cal.App.4th 379,
384: "We need not consider an argument for which no authority is furnished.") In any event, the argument makes
little sense, because a motion for reconsideration could only have been brought by the Critzers if their challenge
to the order was based upon "new or different facts, circumstances, or law . . . ." (§ 1008, subd. (a).) There is
nothing in the record to suggest that there was such a statutory basis for the Critzers' having moved for
reconsideration of the order.
FN 10. Both
parties acknowledged in their briefs that not all parties gave their formal consent at the time to the oral
Settlement, but they did not elaborate on the potential legal effect of this circumstance upon the enforceability
of the Settlement under section 664.6. Accordingly, we requested that the parties submit supplemental letter briefs
on both the substantive issue and on whether the question should be deemed forfeited. We have considered those
supplemental briefs in reaching our conclusions in this opinion.
FN 11. In
so holding, the court observed that there are procedural devices other than a motion under section 664.6, such as
summary judgment or a separate action, that may be available for the enforcement of a settlement. (Levy,
supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 586, fn. 5.)
FN 12. The
respondent's brief filed by the HOA is noncompliant in that it fails to contain any proper citations to the
appellate record-either the clerk's or reporter's transcript-supporting matters referred to in the court below.
(See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(C) [matters referenced from the record in appellate briefs must be
supported "by a citation to the volume and page number of the record where the matter appears"].) In instances
where an appellate brief's noncompliance with this rule is substantial, the court may order the brief stricken.
(Doppes v. Bentley Motors, Inc. (2009)
174 Cal.App.4th 967,
990.) We have nonetheless overlooked this noncompliance and have considered the contentions and factual assertions
made by the HOA in its brief.
FN 13. In
the oral Settlement, it was recited: "In the event there is a dispute as to the opaqueness and design of the
window, it will be referred to [Y]our Honor for final adjudication on that issue." It was further recited: "The
Court again will retain jurisdiction to effectuate the terms of the settlement, again, on the issues of the opacity
of the glass as well as the design if there is a dispute." The written agreement signed by the HOA and Enos, on the
other hand, provided: "The Santa Clara County Superior Court, the Honorable James Kleinberg, shall have continuing
jurisdiction over the parties and this litigation to finalize, execute and enforce the terms and conditions of this
release. Further, the court shall retain jurisdiction to decide any issues regarding the opaqueness of the proposed
glazing for the awning window to be installed and the design of such glazing should the parties be unable to reach
an agreement. The Court shall also retain jurisdiction to resolve any disputes on the type of lattice tresses
through noticed motion."
FN 14. We
summarily deny the HOA's separate motion for sanctions pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.276, in which
the HOA contends that the Critzers and their counsel are pursuing an appeal that is frivolous. In light of our
conclusion that the matter must be reversed, the appeal herein is not frivolous.
|