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Filed 1/7/09
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL - FOURTH APPELLATE
DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
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TRITEK
TELECOM, INC.,
Petitioner,
v.
SUPERIOR
COURT OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY,
Respondent,
_________________________________
CHIK-LUN MAK,
Real Party in Interest.
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D053073
(San Diego
County Super. Ct. No. 37-
2008-00080152-CU-WM-CTL)
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PETITION
for a writ of mandate challenging an order of the Superior Court of San
Diego County, Yuri Hofmann, Judge. Petition granted.
The Gomez
Law Group and Alvin M. Gomez for Petitioner.
No
appearance for Respondent.
The Law
Offices of Shawn A. McMillan and Shawn A. McMillan; Kathryn E. Karcher
for Real Party in Interest.
Although
corporate directors have an "absolute right" to "inspect and copy all
[corporate] books, records and documents of every kind" (Corp. Code,
§ 1602), including documents protected by the attorney-client privilege,
we conclude
that a corporate director does not have
the right to access
documents covered by the attorney-client privilege that were generated
in defense of a suit for damages that the director filed against the
corporation. (All undesignated statutory references are to the
Corporations Code unless otherwise specified.) As such, we grant the
petition and direct the trial court to conduct further proceedings to
determine whether: (1) the requested documents are covered by the
attorney-client privilege and (2) if the requested documents are
privileged, whether
an exception exists
or there was an express or implied waiver of the privilege.
FACTUAL AND
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Tritek
Telecom, Inc. (Tritek) is a
California
corporation with two equal shareholders, Andre Rerolle and Prospect
Development Inc. (Prospect), a company solely owned by Chik-Lun Mak.
Tritek initially had three members on its board of directors, Alvin Ly,
Rerolle and Mak. In May 2007, Rerolle and Mak hired L. Michael Wilson
of the Apollo Law Group to act as Tritek's corporate counsel in relation
to Ly's resignation from the board, leaving Rerolle and Mak as the sole
members of Tritek's board of directors.
The
following month, conflicts arose between Rerolle and Mak regarding the
operation of Tritek and management responsibilities. Mak claimed, among
other things, that Rerolle improperly locked him out of Tritek
facilities, stopped paying his salary and misappropriated Tritek
assets. In turn, Rerolle claimed that Mak engaged in numerous corporate
improprieties.
Mak and
Prospect sued Tritek, Rerolle and others, alleging various causes of
action and seeking return of their $410,000 investment and damages
against all defendants. (Prospect Development, Inc. v. Tritek
Telecom, Inc., (Super. Ct. San Diego County, 2007, No.
37-2007-00072571-CU-MC-CTL (the shareholder action).) The shareholder
action was assigned to the Honorable Ronald S. Prager. Tritek later
filed a cross-complaint against Mak, Prospect, Ly and others alleging,
among other things, that Mak breached his fiduciary duties to and
defrauded the corporation. Wilson initially represented Tritek and
Rerolle in the shareholder action, but Judge Prager granted a motion to
disqualify him as counsel, noting that Wilson removed himself as counsel
for Tritek and finding that Wilson had previously given advice to both
Mak and Rerolle and was now precluded from representing one against the
other.
Mak and
Prospect later filed a complaint against Tritek and Rerolle, seeking the
removal of Rerolle as a director for Tritek (which is pending before
Judge Prager) and a separate petition for the appointment of a
provisional director which was assigned to the Honorable Joan M. Lewis.
Judge Lewis has since entered a judgment appointing Richard M. Kipperman
as a provisional director of Tritek.
Mak filed
the instant petition under section 1603 against Tritek, Rerolle and
Wilson, seeking to enforce his right as a director of Tritek to inspect
Tritek's books and records and the matter was assigned to the Honorable
Yuri Hofmann. Tritek, Rerolle and Wilson answered, asserting the
petition sought attorney-client privileged documents generated by Tritek
and Rerolle in defense of Mak's related actions. Tritek also raised the
attorney work product doctrine. After Mak
dismissed Wilson and Rerolle, the trial court tentatively granted the
petition, stating that
Tritek's evidentiary
showing was insufficient to justify withholding the documents and noting
that Tritek had previously given Mak access to the requested documents
and this "seemingly render[ed] the privilege objections moot."
At a
hearing on the ruling, the trial court denied Tritek's requests for an
evidentiary hearing and for judicial notice of additional documents.
The trial court concluded that Tritek failed to meet its burden to show
cause why the records should not be produced and adopted its tentative
ruling.
After Mak
filed a proposed judgment and proposed peremptory writ of mandate,
Tritek objected to them on the ground they ordered disclosure of
confidential attorney-client communications generated by Tritek in
defense of litigation brought by Mak in other related actions.
Wilson substituted
out as Rerolle's attorney and objected to the proposed judgment and writ
because they ordered disclosure of confidential attorney-client
communications between himself and Rerolle. Rerolle also objected to
the proposed judgment and writ on the same grounds and suggested
submitting a privilege log. The trial court took no action on the
objections, entered the proposed judgment and issued the peremptory writ
of mandate.
Among
other things, the judgment ordered Tritek to produce: (1) the entire
content of the Apollo Law Group case files relating to the shareholder
action and any other matters for which Apollo Law Group has been
consulted or employed by Tritek; (2) all communications between Apollo
Law Group and any officer, director or employee of Tritek; and (3) any
case files evidencing Tritek's involvement in any litigation.
Tritek sought
writ review of the judgment, arguing the trial court abused its
discretion by failing to continue the evidentiary hearing and ordering
disclosure of documents covered by the attorney-client privilege and
attorney work product doctrine. We stayed production of the documents
and the subsequent judgment and issued an order to show cause why the
relief sought should not be granted. During the pendency of this
proceeding, the parties settled the underlying case; however, they
requested a decision on the unresolved legal issue presented in this
writ proceeding.
(Mak's
requests for judicial notice of various documents in the related actions
are granted. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d).) Tritek's request to
strike portions of Shawn A. McMillan's declaration is denied.)
DISCUSSION
I. General Legal
Principles
A client
has a privilege to refuse to disclose, and to prevent another from
disclosing, a confidential communication between the client and his or
her lawyer unless the privilege is waived. (Evid. Code, § 954.) A
corporation is a "client" protected by the attorney-client privilege (Evid.
Code, §§ 175, 951; D.I. Chadbourne, Inc. v. Superior Court (1964)
60 Cal.2d 723, 736) and a "confidential communication" includes "a legal
opinion formed and the advice given by the lawyer in the course of that
[attorney-client] relationship." (Evid. Code, § 952.) Once a party
establishes that a privilege applies, the burden shifts to the party
opposing the privilege to demonstrate that the privilege did not apply,
that an exception existed, or that there was an express or implied
waiver. (Evid. Code, §§ 405, 917, subd. (a); Titmas v. Superior
Court (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 738, 745.)
Corporate
directors owe a fiduciary duty of care to the corporation and its
shareholders and must serve "in good faith, in a manner such director
believes to be in the best interests of the corporation and its
shareholders[.]" (§ 309, subd. (a).) Although it is generally presumed
that the directors of a corporation are acting in good faith (Katz v.
Chevron Corp. (1994) 22 Cal.App.4th 1352, 1366), a court is required
to defer to the business judgment only of disinterested directors.
(See, e.g., Gaillard v. Natomas Co. (1989) 208 Cal.App.3d 1250,
1265-1266.) "[A] director is independent when he is in a position to
base his [or her] decision on the merits of the issue rather than being
governed by extraneous considerations or influences. [Citation.]" (Katz
v. Chevron Corp., supra, 22 Cal.App.4th at p. 1367.)
Corporate
directors also have the "absolute right" at any reasonable time to
inspect and copy all corporate books, records, and documents of every
kind (§ 1602) and a court may enforce this right "with just and proper
conditions." (§ 1603.) This right "represents a legislative judgment
that directors are better able to discharge [their fiduciary] duties if
they have free access to information concerning the corporation." (Havlicek
v. Coast-to-Coast Analytical Services, Inc. (1995) 39 Cal.App.4th
1844, 1852.) The absolute right, however, is subject to exceptions and
may be denied where a disgruntled director announces his or her
intention to violate his or her fiduciary duties to the corporation,
such as using inspection rights to learn trade secrets to compete with
the corporation. (Id. at pp. 1855-1856.)
II. Analysis
Initially, we note that four separate but related matters were assigned
to three different judges and there is a possibility of conflicting
rulings on discovery matters. There are rules to prevent this. (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 3.300.) Accordingly, the presiding judge of the
superior court is directed to send this petition and any pending related
matters to one judge.
On the
merits, Tritek does not dispute Mak's right to inspect general corporate
documents; rather, it contends that the trial court's ruling was
overbroad because it encompassed documents protected by the
attorney-client privilege. We agree.
Mak filed
this action to enforce his inspection rights as a director after
he filed the shareholder action against Tritek and Rerolle in his
individual capacity as a shareholder to vindicate his personal rights.
Accordingly, Mak is not a disinterested director and the presumption of
good faith does not apply. Additionally, enforcing Mak's "absolute"
inspection rights in this case is problematic because it gives him
access to documents he could not obtain via discovery in the shareholder
action.
Although
Mak is still a Tritek director, his filing of the shareholder action
makes him Tritek's adversary. Mak cannot take off his "shareholder's
hat" and swap it for his "director's hat" and claim an absolute right to
access all corporate documents. In this situation, a court may properly
limit a director's inspection rights because the director's loyalties
are divided and documents obtained by a director in his or her capacity
as a director could be used to advance the director's personal interest
in obtaining damages against the corporation. (La Jolla Cove Motel
and Hotel Apartments, Inc. v. Superior Court (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th
773, 787-788 [corporate counsel has no duty to disclose privileged
information to dissident director with which the corporation has a
dispute].)
Accordingly, we conclude that a corporate director does not have
the right to access
documents that are covered by the attorney-client privilege and were
generated in defense of a suit for damages that the director filed
against the corporation. Although the trial court noted that Tritek had
given Mak access to corporate documents and this production "seemingly"
rendered the privilege objections moot, Mak presented no evidence
showing Tritek had produced attorney-client privileged documents in
response to his earlier request. Thus, the trial court had no factual
basis on which to conclude Tritek had waived its right to assert the
attorney-client privilege.
Furthermore, Wilson
and the Apollo Law Group jointly represented Rerolle in the shareholder
action for a period of time and Rerolle properly asserted his individual
attorney-client privilege.
Mak is not entitled to any documents covered by Rerolle's individual
attorney-client privilege. Finally, while it is unlikely that Tritek
has documents covered by the attorney work product doctrine that would
not also be covered by the attorney-client privilege, the trial court
should allow the parties to address the application of this doctrine.
Under
these circumstances, the trial court is directed to conduct
further proceedings
to determine whether: (1) any of the requested documents are covered by
the attorney-client privilege or
attorney work product
doctrine, and
(2) if the requested documents are privileged, whether
an exception exists
or there was an express or implied waiver of the privilege.
DISPOSITION
Let a writ of mandate
issue directing the superior court to vacate its May 12, 2008,
judgment and peremptory writ of mandate and to conduct further
proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. The
presiding judge of the superior court is further directed to transfer
this matter to one judge. Tritek is entitled to its costs in this writ
proceeding. The stay issued on May 12, 2008, will be vacated when the
opinion is final as to this court.
McINTYRE, J.
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
AARON, J.

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