Filed 11/26/13 Singh v. Wells Fargo Bank CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(San Joaquin)
----
BALBIR SINGH, C070609
Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No.
39201100257029CUORSTK)
v.
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
In this real estate case, plaintiff Balbir Singh sued two banks after he and his wife
lost a parcel of real property in a trustee’s sale. The trial court ultimately sustained the
banks’ demurrers without leave to amend and dismissed Singh’s action.
On appeal, we conclude that Singh has failed to show, with suitable legal analysis
and proper citation to the record on appeal and to appropriate legal authority, any error by
the trial court in its ruling on the banks’ demurrers. Accordingly, we affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
So far as we can discern from the rambling allegations of Singh’s second amended
complaint, aided by various documents that Singh referenced as exhibits in that
1
complaint and other documents the trial court took judicial notice of at his request, the
material facts are as follows:
In March 2009, Singh and his wife, Swaran Kaur, purchased a parcel of real
property on Daffodil Hill Street in Lathrop (the property) using the proceeds of a
$159,600 loan that Kaur obtained from defendant Provident Savings Bank (Provident)
that was secured by a deed of trust on the property. Singh did not sign the promissory
note for the loan but was a signatory on the deed of trust because he and Kaur took title to
the property as joint tenants.1
In April 2009, Kaur was advised that the servicing of the loan was being
transferred from Provident to defendant Wells Fargo Bank (Wells Fargo) and that Wells
Fargo would begin servicing the loan effective May 1, 2009.
In November 2009, a notice of default was recorded on the property based on the
alleged failure to pay the loan payment due August 1, 2009, and the subsequent
installments due thereafter, plus late charges. The notice indicated that the amount due
was $2,864.20 and would increase until the account became current. Around this same
time, Provident formally assigned its interest in the note and deed of trust to Wells Fargo.
In early December 2009, Wells Fargo returned two checks that had been tendered
because the amount of the checks -- which corresponded to the regular monthly payment
amount ($1,478.13) -- was not sufficient to cover the total amount due on the account and
thereby cure the default. Soon thereafter, Wells Fargo returned a third check -- this one
in the amount of $5,628.01 -- for the same reason. By this time, Kaur had been advised
1 Various documents relating to the loan -- for example, the final itemization of
settlement costs -- identified Singh as a borrower on the loan, but the promissory note
itself, which Singh referenced in his complaint, shows that in fact Kaur was the only
borrower.
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that $8,451.98 was due to cover the amount incurred and anticipated to be incurred by
December 30.
On December 28, 2009, Singh obtained a cashier’s check for $7,493.79 and
transmitted it to Wells Fargo. Thereafter, on February 2, 2010, Singh obtained a
cashier’s check for $1,478.13 and transmitted it to Wells Fargo. On February 24, Kaur
was provided with a reinstatement quote that showed that even with credit for those two
payments, $4,796.99 was still owed for amounts incurred and anticipated to be incurred
by March 9. Meanwhile, around this same time a trustee’s sale of the property was
noticed for March 10.
On March 9, Singh obtained a cashier’s check for $2,956.26 (twice the regular
monthly payment) and transmitted it to Wells Fargo. That check was returned to him on
March 12 with a notation that the property was sold on March 10. Soon thereafter, a
trustee’s deed upon sale was executed, and later recorded in April, transferring title to the
property to a third party who apparently purchased it for a penny more than the unpaid
debt owed on the property.
In April 2010, Kaur filed an complaint against Wells Fargo asserting 12 causes of
action related to the sale of the property. Kaur later filed a first amended complaint
alleging 14 causes of action.
In July 2010, the court sustained Wells Fargo’s demurrer to the first amended
complaint in Kaur’s action with leave to amend. Thereafter, Kaur filed a second
amended complaint, and in October 2010 the court sustained Wells Fargo’s demurrer to
that complaint without leave to amend. The formal order from that ruling was not
entered until January 4, 2011. The next day, the court denied Kaur’s motion to file a
third amended complaint and ordered the case dismissed with prejudice. Judgment of
dismissal was entered on January 14, 2011.
On January 26, 2011, Singh commenced the present action by filing a complaint
of more than 200 pages against Wells Fargo and Provident alleging 19 causes of action
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related mostly to the sale of the property.2 Five days later, Singh filed a first amended
complaint that was largely the same as the original one. Wells Fargo removed the case to
federal court because Singh’s complaint alleged a cause of action under federal law. In
July 2011, the federal court dismissed the federal claim because Singh was not a
borrower on the loan and remanded the remaining causes of action to state court.
Singh moved twice for leave to file a second amended complaint, but the court
denied both motions. Meanwhile, Provident and Wells Fargo separately demurred to the
first amended complaint. While Wells Fargo’s demurrer was still pending, the trial court
ruled on Provident’s demurrer, sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend as to the
first, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, 10th, 11th, 13th, 16th, and 19th causes of action,
and sustaining it with leave to amend as to the second, third, fourth, 12th, 14th, 15th,
17th, and 18th causes of action.
Three days before the hearing on Wells Fargo’s demurrer, Singh filed a second
amended complaint, now alleging 22 causes of action. As a result, the trial court decided
that Wells Fargo’s demurrer to the first amended complaint was moot.
Wells Fargo demurred to the second amended complaint, asserting (among other
things) that Singh’s action was barred by the doctrine of res judicata by virtue of the
judgment of dismissal in Kaur’s action. Soon thereafter, Provident demurred to the
causes of action the trial court had given Singh leave to amend and moved to strike the
causes of action the trial court had denied Singh leave to amend.
The trial court sustained Wells Fargo’s demurrer as to all of Singh’s causes of
action without leave to amend. In doing so, the court pointed out that it had previously
sustained a demurrer (Provident’s) without leave to amend as to the 11th, 12th, 13th,
2 What purported to be the 20th cause of action was merely a claim for punitive
damages.
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15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 22nd causes of action, which were numbered differently
in the first amended complaint.
Following the ruling on Wells Fargo’s demurrer, Singh did not oppose Provident’s
demurrer or its motion to strike. Accordingly, the trial court sustained the demurrer
without further leave to amend and granted the motion to strike.
The trial court entered a judgment of dismissal in favor of Wells Fargo, and Singh
timely appealed. Subsequently, the trial court entered a judgment of dismissal in favor of
Provident as well, and Singh also timely appealed that judgment.
DISCUSSION
I
Overview
In support of his appeals, Singh has filed a 140-page opening brief and 61-page
reply brief, both of which are largely incomprehensible. In challenging a judgment, the
appellant bears the burden of affirmatively demonstrating trial court error by an adequate
record. (Rossiter v. Benoit (1979) 88 Cal.App.3d 706, 712; Richard v. Richard (1954)
123 Cal.App.2d 900, 902.) The appellant must present legal analysis and supporting
authority for each point asserted and must support each argument with appropriate
citations to the record on appeal. (Duarte v. Chino Community Hospital (1999) 72
Cal.App.4th 849, 856; In re Marriage of Nichols (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 661, 672-673
fn. 3.) In addition, the appellant must present each point in its briefs under an appropriate
heading, showing the nature of the question to be presented. (Opdyk v. California Horse
Racing Bd. (1995) 34 Cal.App.4th 1826, 1830-1831, fn. 4.) This is not a mere technical
requirement, but an important rule of appellate procedure “designed to lighten the labors
of the appellate tribunals by requiring the litigants to present their cause systematically
and so arranged that those upon whom the duty devolves of ascertaining the rule of law to
apply may be advised, as they read, of the exact question under consideration, instead of
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being compelled to extricate it from the mass.” (Landa v. Steinberg (1932) 126 Cal.App.
324, 325.)
Here, the trial court ultimately sustained defendants’ demurrers to all of Singh’s
various causes of action without leave to amend for failure to state a cause of action as
well as for uncertainty.3 “On appeal from a judgment dismissing an action after
sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend, the standard of review is well settled. The
reviewing court gives the complaint a reasonable interpretation, and treats the demurrer
as admitting all material facts properly pleaded. [Citations] The court does not,
however, assume the truth of contentions, deductions or conclusions of law. [Citation]
The judgment must be affirmed ‘if any one of the several grounds of demurrer is well
taken.’ ” (Aubry v. Tri-City Hospital Dist. (1992) 2 Cal.4th 962, 966-967.) It is
important to emphasize, however, that “[o]n appeal, [the] plaintiff bears the burden of
demonstrating that the trial court erroneously sustained the demurrer as a matter of
law. . . . Because a demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint, the plaintiff must
show the complaint alleges facts sufficient to establish every element of each cause of
action.” (Rakestraw v. California Physicians’ Service (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 39, 43.)
What this means is that Singh bears the burden on appeal of persuading us, with
suitable legal analysis and proper citation to the record on appeal and to appropriate legal
authority, that his complaint was not unintelligible and that he clearly alleged therein
facts sufficient to establish every element of each cause of action he pled, and that the
trial court erred in concluding otherwise. As we will explain, Singh has not met this
burden.
3 A pleading can be deemed uncertain if it is unintelligible. (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 430.10, subd. (f).)
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II
Breach Of Oral Promise And Promissory And Equitable Estoppel
Turning to the argument section of Singh’s opening brief, the first appropriate
heading we find is one that (essentially) asserts it was error for the trial court to sustain
defendants’ demurrers to the causes of action for breach of oral contract (what Singh
calls promise) and promissory and equitable estoppel. Accordingly, we turn first to those
causes of action.
Singh alleged breach of oral contract as the fifth cause of action in his first
amended complaint, promissory estoppel as the sixth, and equitable estoppel as the
seventh. Provident demurred to those causes of action on the ground that Singh’s
allegations related to the recordation of the notice of default, the subsequent
communications regarding reinstatement, and the foreclosure sale, in which Provident
had no involvement. The trial court sustained Provident’s demurrer to those causes of
action without leave to amend. On appeal, Singh does not suggest any error in this
ruling. Accordingly, we turn to these causes of action as they were directed at Wells
Fargo in the second amended complaint (which is the focus of Singh’s argument).
In his cause of action for breach of oral contract in his second amended complaint,
Singh alleged he had a binding oral agreement with Wells Fargo that if he paid
$7,493.79, Wells Fargo would reinstate the loan and halt the foreclosure; he made that
payment; but Wells Fargo breached the agreement by failing to reinstate the loan.
In his cause of action for promissory estoppel, Singh alleged that Wells Fargo
promised to reinstate the loan if he sent a $5,628.01 check to cure the default, and he did
so, but Wells Fargo returned the check claiming it did not represent the amount due.
Singh also alleged that Wells Fargo promised to reinstate the loan if he sent a cashier’s
check for $7,493.79, which he did, and Wells Fargo accepted that check but refused to
rescind the notice of default, even though Wells Fargo also accepted the subsequent
check for $1,478.13 as well. Singh further alleged that after the notice of trustee’s sale
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was issued, Wells Fargo promised to reinstate the loan if he paid the regular monthly
payments for February and March 2010 ($2,956.26), with payment of the costs of
foreclosure to follow within 10 days, and he paid the initial amount, but Wells Fargo did
not stop the foreclosure.
Singh’s cause of action for equitable estoppel was based on the very same
allegations as his cause of action for promissory estoppel.
In demurring to Singh’s cause of action for breach of oral contract, Wells Fargo
argued that any agreement to modify the terms of a loan secured by real property must be
in writing, signed by the lender. As to the cause of action for promissory estoppel, Wells
Fargo argued that promissory estoppel cannot be employed to avoid the statute of frauds
where the borrower alleges only payment of money. Finally, with respect to the cause of
action for equitable estoppel, Wells Fargo argued that that doctrine operates only
defensively and cannot be used as a basis for affirmative relief.
With the foregoing points in mind, we turn to Singh’s arguments on appeal, but
when we do we find that his arguments do not address Wells Fargo’s points. Singh does
not argue, let alone provide any authority to support the arguments: (1) that a loan
secured by real property can be orally modified; (2) that promissory estoppel can be used
to avoid the statute of frauds when such an alleged oral modification is at issue; or
(3) that equitable estoppel can serve as a valid cause of action. In the absence of any
such, Singh has failed carry his burden of showing error in the trial court’s sustaining of
the demurrer to his causes of action for breach of oral contact, promissory estoppel, and
equitable estoppel.
III
Fraud
The next appropriate heading in Singh’s opening brief asserts that the trial court
erred in sustaining the demurrers to his causes of action based on fraud. The argument
that appears under that heading, however, which amounts to a single paragraph, does not
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speak to the concept of fraud at all. Instead, Singh contends only that the trial court
“erred in failing to conclude that the debtors’ three-month reinstatement period provided
by Civ. Code, § 2924 (time for curing default in payments on note secured by deed of
trust) had not expired.” The single paragraph argument under this heading fails to show,
with suitable legal analysis and proper citation to the record on appeal and to appropriate
legal authority, any error by the trial court in its ruling on defendants’ demurrers.
IV
Conversion
Singh next asserts that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrers “as there
was unlawful Conversion.” (Bold text and underlining omitted.) His entire argument on
this point is as follows: “Where evidence on the face of the record established
conversion as to Cashier’s Check and the interest in the real property as a matter of law
and fact, it [is] the duty of the Superior Court to set it as a conversion, and the status of
the Appellant and their legal capacity to sue are irrelevant. There was, therefore, an error
in failing to find the evidence of facts required to support for sustaining the respondents’
demurrers, and subsequent granting of dismissal was manifestly erroneous. Superior
Court did err in granting the Demurrers as to the Cause based on Conversion.”
This argument fails to show, with suitable legal analysis and proper citation to the
record on appeal and to appropriate legal authority, any error by the trial court in its
ruling on defendants’ demurrers.
V
Unjust Enrichment
Singh next asserts that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrers “as there
was unjust enrichment.” (Bold text and underlining omitted.) In support of this
assertion, however, all Singh does is describe the doctrine of unjust enrichment and then
baldly assert that the trial court erred “in failing to find the evidence of facts required to
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support for sustaining the respondents’ demurrers.” This is not sufficient to carry Singh’s
burden on appeal as previously articulated.
VI
Waiver
Without reference to any particular part of the material facts alleged in his
complaint, Singh asserts (essentially) that by accepting amounts that Singh paid without
protest, Wells Fargo waived any claim, or was estopped from claiming, that the amounts
were insufficient. In support of this argument, Singh cites Code of Civil Procedure
section 2076.4 Singh fails to explain, however, with suitable legal analysis, how this
provision supports a cause of action in his favor against Wells Fargo such that the trial
court erred in sustaining Wells Fargo’s demurrer without leave to amend. Accordingly,
Singh has again failed to meet his burden on appeal.
VII
Improper Notice Of Sale/Fraud
Singh next asserts that the trial court erred in sustaining various fraud-related
causes of action and “erred in failing to determine that Notice of Sale was improper,” but
the argument he offers in support of these assertions is unintelligible. Once again, Singh
has failed to show, with suitable legal analysis and proper citation to the record on appeal
and to appropriate legal authority, any error by the trial court in its ruling on defendants’
demurrers.
4 “The person to whom a tender is made must, at the time, specify any objection he
may have to the money, instrument, or property, or he must be deemed to have waived it;
and if the objection be to the amount of money, the terms of the instrument, or the
amount or kind of property, he must specify the amount, terms, or kind which he
requires, or be precluded from objecting afterwards.”
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VIII
Negligence
In his next heading, Singh asserts that the trial court erred in sustaining the
demurrers as to the “Cause of Negligence.” (Bold text and underlining omitted.) We
note, however, that Singh did not plead a cause of action for negligence in his complaint,
and in fact, in the body of the argument that follows under this heading, what Singh
actually asserts is that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrers as to seven
different causes of action ranging from breach of the covenant of good faith and fair
dealing to intentional infliction of emotional distress. In any event, the only argument
under this heading is as follows: “In an action by homeowner under a deed of trust to
certain real estate brought for Negligence and denying the opportunity to cure, an
essential prerequisite to challenging the foreclosure sale or in alternative the damages is
the ability to tender the amount of the indebtedness or cure the default, the Superior
Court did err as a matter of law, it did avoid to find the prerequisite that, A necessary
valid and viable tender of payment to pay all amounts to be due and owing in order to
cure their default, had made a tender sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the law and
that itself Wells Fargo received that timely and accepted that post default payment and
retained it.” Obviously, this argument does not show, with suitable legal analysis and
proper citation to the record on appeal and to appropriate legal authority, any error by the
trial court in its ruling on defendants’ demurrers.
IX
Restitution
Singh argues that the trial court erred in failing to order Wells Fargo to make
restitution for the cashier’s check he remitted to Wells Fargo. Essentially the gist of his
argument appears to be that he is entitled to restitution of the funds he remitted because
Wells Fargo did not apply them to their intended purpose, which was to cure the default.
Singh, however, does not identify any authority that supports his argument, and he does
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not point to any intelligible allegations in his complaint that stated a cause of action for
which restitution would have been an available remedy. From what we can determine
from Singh’s rambling allegations and the various documents, at best Singh sent money
to Wells Fargo believing it was enough to cure the default but it never was. While Wells
Fargo returned the initial payments as insufficient, Wells Fargo kept two later payments
and applied them against the amounts owed, but because those payments were not
enough to cure the default, the property was nonetheless sold at the trustee’s sale. Singh
fails to explain how these facts give rise to a right of restitution. Once again, he has
failed to show, with suitable legal analysis and proper citation to the record on appeal and
to appropriate legal authority, any error by the trial court in its ruling on defendants’
demurrers.
X
Evidentiary Rulings
Singh complains that the trial court’s failure to provide any explanation for its
overruling of his evidentiary objections was reversible error, but he fails to identify with
appropriate citations to the record: (1) any evidentiary objections that he made; and
(2) any rulings the court made on any such objections. Accordingly, we need not address
this point further.
XI
Promissory Estoppel Again
Having already addressed the issue of promissory estoppel as previously
discussed, Singh nonetheless spends another 20 pages arguing the issue again. In doing
so, however, Singh never addresses the argument Wells Fargo made in the trial court,
which the trial court presumably accepted: that promissory estoppel cannot be employed
to avoid the statute of frauds with respect to an alleged oral agreement to modify a loan
secured by real property where the borrower alleges only payment of money. The
following principles are relevant here:
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“A contract coming within the statute of frauds is invalid unless it is memorialized
by a writing subscribed by the party to be charged or by the party’s agent. . . .
“[A] . . . deed of trust . . . comes within the statute of frauds. . . .
“[¶] . . . [¶]
“[A forbearance agreement], though not creating, renewing, or extending [a] note
and deed of trust, d[oes] modify them. An agreement to modify a contract that is subject
to the statute of frauds is also subject to the statute of frauds. [Citations.] A modification
of a contract is a change in the obligations of a party by a subsequent mutual agreement
of the parties. . . .
“[¶] . . . [¶]
“ ‘[B]efore a party can be estopped to assert the statute [of frauds] due to the
other’s part performance, it must appear that a sufficient change of position has occurred
so that the application of the statutory bar would result in an unjust and unconscionable
loss, amounting in effect to a fraud. [Citations.] . . . The payment of money is not
“sufficient part performance to take an oral agreement out of the statute of frauds” . . . .’
“[¶] . . . [¶]
“[Also, t]he principle that full performance takes a contract out of the statute of
frauds has been limited to the situation where performance consisted of conveying
property, rendering personal services, or doing something other than payment of money.”
(Secrest v. Security National Mortgage Loan Trust 2002-2 (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 544,
552-556.)
From Secrest, it is apparent that the statute of frauds prevents enforcement of any
alleged oral promise by Wells Fargo to modify the obligations secured by the deed of
trust to which Singh was a party where Singh’s only performance was the payment of
money. While Wells Fargo cited Secrest in the trial court and cites it again on appeal,
Singh has consistently ignored that authority and the principles for which it stands. In
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doing so, Singh has again failed to demonstrate any error in the trial court’s sustaining of
the demurrers.
XII
Conversion Again
Just as he returned to the subject of promissory estoppel, Singh returns to the
subject of conversion. Just as before, however, he fails to show, with suitable legal
analysis and proper citation to the record on appeal and to appropriate legal authority, any
error by the trial court in its ruling on defendants’ demurrers. From all that can be
determined, Singh paid Wells Fargo money that was owed on the obligation secured by
the deed of trust that he had signed, but that money was never enough to cure the default,
so the property subject to the deed of trust was sold to fully satisfy the indebtedness.
Singh has failed to show that he has a legal right to recover the money he paid, albeit in
vain.5
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Defendants shall recover their costs on appeal. (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)
ROBIE , J.
We concur:
RAYE , P. J.
MURRAY , J.
5 Because we conclude Singh has failed to show any error in the sustaining of the
demurrers based on the merits of the various causes of action, we need not address
whether the trial court’s ruling could be affirmed, at least as to Wells Fargo, on res
judicata principles based on the dismissal of his wife’s substantially similar lawsuit.
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