Judge: Jon R. Takasugi, Case: 21STCV15111, Date: 2023-08-08 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 21STCV15111 Hearing Date: August 8, 2023 Dept: 17
Superior Court of California
County of Los Angeles
DEPARTMENT
17
TENTATIVE RULING
|
AMY SOZA
vs. NISSAN NORTH
AMERICA, INC. |
Case
No.: 21STCV15111 Hearing Date: August 8, 2023 |
Plaintiff’s motion for
reconsideration is GRANTED.
On 4/21/2021, Plaintiff Amy Soza
(Plaintiff) filed suit against Nissan North America, Inc. alleging violations
of the Song-Beverly Act.
On
3/20/2023, the Court granted Defendant’s motion to compel arbitration of
Plaintiff’s Complaint.
Now,
Plaintiff moves for reconsideration of the Court’s ruling based on a change in
law.
Discussion
Plaintiff
seeks reconsideration of the Court’s 3/20/2023 ruling based on the recently
published decision Martha Ochoa v. Ford Motor Company (2023) Cal.Ct.App.
The
Court agrees reconsideration is warranted.
Typically,
a motion for reconsideration must be brought within 10 days of entry of the
order. However, CCP section 1008, subdivision (c), provides “If a court at any time determines that there has been
a change of law that warrants it to reconsider a prior order it entered, it may
do so on its own motion and enter a different order.”
Here, the Court’s previous ruling was based on a
conclusion that
Defendant could enforce the arbitration agreement under a theory of equitable
estoppel. This was based on a conclusion that Song-Beverly claims: (1)
necessarily rely on the underlying contract, given that if a plaintiff did not enter into the RISC,
he or she would not have received the Subject Vehicle or the corresponding
warranties and certifications from the defendant; and (2) all directly relate
to the condition of the vehicle and thus are intimately founded in and
intertwined with the underlying contract and the condition of the vehicle
bought subject to that contract.
However,
in Ochoa, the
Court of Appeal directly addressed the manufacturer’s standing vis-à-vis the
Sales Contract and equitable estoppel in the newly published Martha Ochoa v.
Ford Motor Company (2023) Cal.Ct.App. In rejecting the car manufacturer’s
right to enforce the Sales Contract’s arbitration agreement under a theory of
third-party beneficiary or equitable estoppel, the Court wrote:
We agree with the trial court that FMC [Ford] could not compel
arbitration based on plaintiffs’ agreements with the dealers that sold them the
vehicles. Equitable estoppel does not apply because, contrary to FMC’s
arguments, plaintiffs’ claims against it in no way rely on the agreements. FMC
was not a third party beneficiary of those agreements as there is no basis to
conclude the plaintiffs and their dealers entered into them with the intention
of benefitting FMC.
As
such, Ochoa
reaches the opposite conclusion as Felisilda and concludes than an
automaker may not compel arbitration based on the arbitration clause contained
in the selling dealership’s contract. Given that this was the precise basis for
compelling arbitration, the Court finds that new law justifies a
reconsideration of the Court’s previous order granting the motion to compel.
Based
on the foregoing, Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration is granted.
It is so
ordered.
Dated:
July , 2023
Hon. Jon R. Takasugi
Judge of the
Superior Court
Parties who intend to submit on this tentative must
send an email to the court at smcdept17@lacourt.org
by 4 p.m. the day prior as directed by the instructions provided on the court
website at www.lacourt.org. If a party submits
on the tentative, the party’s email must include the case number and must
identify the party submitting on the tentative.
If all parties to a motion submit, the court will adopt this
tentative as the final order. If the department
does not receive an email indicating the parties are submitting on the
tentative and there are no appearances at the hearing, the motion may be placed
off calendar. For more information, please
contact the court clerk at (213) 633-0517.