Judge: Robert S. Draper, Case: 19STCV27125, Date: 2022-09-13 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 19STCV27125 Hearing Date: September 13, 2022 Dept: 78
Superior Court of
California
County of Los Angeles
Department 78
|
VICTOR MONTES, et al., Plaintiffs; vs. PAMA IV PROPERTIES, L.P., et al., Defendants. |
Case
No.: |
19STCV27125 |
|
Hearing
Date: |
September
13, 2022 |
|
|
|
||
|
[TENTATIVE]
RULING RE: PLAINTIFF
ASJA HALL BOYD’S PETITION FOR AN ORDER APPROVING COMRPOMISE OF A CLAIM FOR A
MINOR AS TO HER CHILDREN, DONOVAN BOYD, NYEMAN BOYD, AND JOSHUA BOYD. |
||
Plaintiffs’ Petitions for an Order Approving Compromise of a
Claim for a Minor are GRANTED as to all minors.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This is an action for uninhabitability of a rental property.
The Complaint alleges as follows.
Since approximately 2005, Plaintiffs Asja Hall Boyd (“Asja”)
and Shayvon Boyd (“Shayvon” and together with Asja, “Parents”) lived in a
residential unit at 15351 Woodruff Pl., Bellflower CA (the “Subject Property”)
with their children Donovan Boyd (“Donovan”), Joshua Boyd (“Joshua”), and Nyemah
Boyd[1]
(“Nyemah”, together with Joshua and Donovan “Children”, and together with
Parents “Plaintiffs).[2]
(Compl. ¶ 4.) Defendants PAMA Properties, LP, PAMA IV Properties, Inc., and
PAMA Management, Inc. (“PAMA”) managed, operated, and/or owned the Subject
Property during that time. (Compl. ¶¶ 5-7.)
During Plaintiffs’ residency, the Subject Property featured
many defects rendering it uninhabitable, including pest infestations, defective
plumbing lines, damaged utilities, and unsanitary conditions. (Compl. ¶¶
12(a-j).)
Plaintiffs suffered harm to both their property and their
person as a result of these uninhabitable conditions. (Compl. ¶ 24.)
PROCEDURAL
HISTORY
On August 1, 2019, Plaintiffs filed the Complaint asserting
nine causes of action:
1.
Breach of the Implied Warranty of
Habitability;
2.
Violation of Civil Code § 1942.4;
3.
Violation of Civil Code § 1941.1;
4.
Violation of Health & Safety
Code § 17920.3;
5.
Breach of the Covenant of Quiet
Enjoyment;
6.
Nuisance;
7.
Negligence;
8.
Negligent Infliction of Emotional
Distress; and
9.
Violation of Unfair Competition Law.
On May 4, 2020, the action was reassigned to the instant
Department 78.
On May 6, 2020, PAMA filed a Demurrer to the Complaint.
On October 26, 2020, this Court sustained the Demurrer as to
the Ninth Cause of Action and Overruled it as to the remaining causes.
On November 4, 2020, PAMA filed an Answer.
On August 16, 2022, Plaintiffs filed the instant Petitions
to Approve Compromise of Disputed Claim as to Joshua, Nyemah, and Donovan.
On August 29, 2022, Plaintiffs filed Orders to Deposit Money
into a Blocked Account as to all minors.
No Opposition has been filed.
DISCUSSION
I.
PETITION TO CONFIRM
MINOR’S COMPROMISE
Plaintiff
/ Guardian ad litem Asja Hall Boyd files Petitions to Confirm Minor’s
Compromise for her children, Joshua Boyd (7), Donovan Boyd (15), and Nyemah
Boyd (17).
An
enforceable settlement of a minor’s claim or that of a person lacking the
capacity to make decisions can only be consummated with court approval. (Prob. Code., §§ 2504, 3500, 3600 et
seq.; Code Civ. Proc., § 372; see Pearson v. Super. Ct. (2012) 202 Cal.App.4th 1333,
1337.)
“[T]he
protective role the court generally assumes in cases involving minors, [is] a
role to assure that whatever is done is in the minor’s best interests. . .
.[I]ts primary concern is whether the compromise is sufficient to provide for
the minor’s injuries, care and treatment.” (Goldberg v. Super. Ct.
(1994) 23 Cal.App.4th 1378, 1382.)
A
petition for court approval of a compromise or covenant not to sue under Code
of Civil Procedure section 372 must comply with California Rules of Court,
rules 7.950, 7.951 and 7.952. The petition must be verified by the petitioner
and contain a full disclosure of all information that has “any bearing upon the
reasonableness” of the compromise or the covenant. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
7.950.) The person compromising the claim on behalf of the minor or person who
lacks capacity, and the represented person, must attend the hearing on
compromise of the claim unless the court for good cause dispenses with their
personal appearance. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 7.952.)
An
order for deposit of funds of a minor or person lacking decision making
capacity and a petition for the withdrawal of such funds must comply with
California Rules of Court, rules 7.953 and 7.954. (Cal. Rules of Court 3.1384;
see also Super. Ct. L.A. County, Local Rules, rules 4.115-4.118.)
A. THE
SETTLEMENT
Here, Plaintiffs have
agreed to a settlement for $500,000 to be distributed between all Plaintiffs.
The funds are to be allocated to the Boyd family as shown below:
|
Name |
Gross Award |
Attorney’s Fees |
Net Award |
|
Donovan Boyd (Minor) |
$15,500.00 |
$3,875.00 |
$11,625.00 |
|
Nyemah Boyd (Minor) |
$31,000.00 |
$7,750.00 |
$23,250.00 |
|
Joshua Boyd (Minor) |
$31,000.00 |
$7,750.00 |
$23,250.00 |
|
Asja Boyd (Adult) |
$57,500.00 |
$25,875.00 |
$31,625.00 |
|
Shayvon Boyd (Adult) |
$57,500.00 |
$25,875.00 |
$31,625.00 |
Plaintiffs’ Counsel,
Jesus A. Rodriguez notes that the discrepancy between the Parents’ award and
the Children’s award is because the Children will benefit from the Parents’
award, most immediately by funding relocation costs to move from the Subject
Property. (Rodriguez Decl. ¶ 8.) Additionally, the larger award amounts are due
to compensation for loss of property, rent abatement, and other damages that
the Children did not suffer. (Ibid.)
Rodriguez also states
that the award to the Boyd Children is allocated “based on the physical
symptoms each had and their relative frequency and severity that Petitioner
believes could be attributable to substandard housing conditions at the Subject
Property. (Petition, Attachment 11b(6).)
The Court finds that
the settlement amount, in its totality, adequately compensates the Children for
their period living in the substandard housing, as no major medical conditions
were attributed to that housing. Additionally, the Court finds that the
discrepancy between the Parent’s and the Children’s awards are justified.
However, at hearing,
the Court will inquire further into the discrepancy between each minor’s award
to determine whether the differences are justified and reasonable.
B.
ATTORNEY’S FEES
As noted above, 25% of each Child’s award will be allocated
to attorney fees, while 40% of each Parent’s award will be allocated to
attorney fees. Rodriguez attaches the separate retainer agreements stating
these amounts to the petitions. (Petition, Attachment 17(a).)
In justifying these fees, Rodriguez notes that he visited
the Subject Property frequently to interview all Plaintiffs, conducted multiple
inspections with experts on the Subject Property, requested and reviewed
medical records for the minor claimants, referred minor Claimants to expert
medical examinations and bore the costs of said exams, and represented minor
claimants from the beginning, assessing Defendants’ defenses in anticipation of
naming the minors as Plaintiffs. (Rodriguez Decl. ¶ 4(a-g).)
As the Retainer Agreement states that 25% of the minors’
claims would be allocated to Attorney’s Fees, and as Rodriguez explained his
work in preparing and litigating the matter, the Court finds that the proposed
Attorney’s Fees are reasonable.
Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ Petitions to Confirm Minors’
Compromise of Claim are GRANTED.
DATED: September 13, 2022
_____________________________
Hon. Robert S. Draper
Judge of the Superior Court
[1] The Court notes that the
moving papers alternate between referring to Nyemah as Nyemah Donovan and
Nyemah Boyd. As the caption on Nyemah’s Petition uses the surname Boyd, the
Court will use this surname.
[2] This action was also
brought by the Montes family, who lived in the Subject Property. Their hearing
on Petition for an Order Approving Compromise of a Claim for a Minor was heard
and granted on September 2, 2022.