Filed 9/9/14 Skordoulis v. Fidelity National Title Co. CA4/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
JOHN SKORDOULIS, D065947
Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and
Appellant,
(Super. Ct. No. INC091596)
v.
FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE CO. et al.,
Defendants and Respondents;
DAVID SALEHINIA et al.,
Defendants, Cross-complainants and
Appellants,
MAUREEN A. CHODOSH et al.,
Plaintiffs and Respondents.
APPEAL from a judgment and a postjudgment order of the Superior Court of
Riverside County, Harold W. Hopp, Judge. Judgment affirmed; postjudgment order
denying attorney fees reversed in part.
John Skordoulis, in pro. per., for Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Appellant John
Skordoulis.
Larry Joe Lichtenegger for Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants.
Crawford Weinstein and Henry Gold Weinstein for Plaintiff and Respondent
Maureen Chodosh.
W. Raymond Bengert for Plaintiff and Respondent Penny A. Bengert.
I.
INTRODUCTION
Appellant John Skordoulis appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants
Fidelity National Title Co.; S.B.S. Trust Deed Network; Donald S. Albright, Jr.; Robert
S. Cuva; Mary V. Cuva; William E. Gammons; Arno W. Heckrodt; Shannon E. James;
Salvatore P. Maiorana; Lany K. Martell; Linda Miller; James Miller; Michael Gene
Moeller; Patricia L. Moeller; George W. Piercy; Juliet F. Piercy; Gordon M. Robertson;
Peggy Roth, and David Salehinia.1 The individual defendants appeal from a
postjudgment order of the court denying their motion for attorney fees from plaintiffs and
respondents Maureen A. Chodosh and Penny A. Bengert.
We affirm the trial court's judgment. However, we reverse the trial court's
postjudgment order insofar as the order denied the individual defendants attorney fees
from Chodosh and Bengert.
1 We will refer to the noncorporate defendants—i.e., all of the defendants except
Fidelity National Title Co. and S.B.S. Trust Deed Network—as "the individual
defendants."
2
II.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
This appeal arises from an action filed by Skordoulis against the defendants after
the defendants initiated nonjudicial foreclosure of property that Skordoulis owned in the
Palm Springs area (the Palm Springs property). Skordoulis contended, among other
things, that the individual defendants were not entitled to enforce a promissory note (the
Note) that Skordoulis had executed in favor of Cedar Funding, Inc., to obtain a loan to
purchase to the Palm Springs property, despite the fact that the individual defendants had
each purchased a fractionalized interest in the Note from Cedar Funding, Inc. Cedar
Funding, Inc. was a company created by David A. Nilsen, who, at the time the loan was
originated, was a licensed real estate broker. Nilsen arranged, negotiated, and serviced
real estate loans, doing business as Cedar Funding, as distinguished from Cedar Funding,
Inc., including the loan at issue in this case. After Skordoulis obtained the loan, he
obtained separate additional loans from plaintiffs Chodosh and Bengert, both of which
were also secured by the Palm Springs property.
On the first day of trial, the parties presented the trial court with an "Omnibus
Stipulation of Facts." With one exception, all of the facts necessary to the court's legal
decision as to whether the defendants were entitled to enforce the promissory note against
Skordoulis were included in the Omnibus Stipulation of Facts. The single remaining
factual issue was whether Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, had held and
3
serviced the promissory note, or rather, whether Cedar Funding, Inc., was the entity that
had done so.
The stipulated facts, as presented by the parties, were as follows:
"1) David A. Nilsen, dba Cedar Funding, operated a mortgage loan
business in Monterey, California. . . . David A. Nilsen was a
California licensed real estate broker doing business as Cedar
Funding . . . ;
"2) David A. Nilsen was the sole shareholder and President of Cedar
Funding, Inc. Cedar Funding, Inc. was never a licensed California
real estate broker[;]
"3) On January 18, 2006, Skordoulis filled out a formal application
for a loan of $925,000 to purchase the land which is the subject of
this action ('Loan #5197,' or the 'land loan') . . . ;
"4) As part of the Loan #5197 transaction, the parties executed
certain loan-related documents . . . ;
"5) On January 19, 2006, Loan #5197 funded at Fidelity National
Title . . . with the execution of the $925,000 Note to Cedar Funding,
Inc. . . . and the recording of the Deed of Trust . . . ;
"[¶] . . . [¶]
"8) Between February 1, 2006 and September 1, 2006, Loan #5197
was sold and assigned to Defendants herein on the dates and in the
amounts shown below . . . :
"[¶] . . . [¶][2]
"11) In connection with each Defendant['s] investment, he or she
received a loan package evidencing his or her individual purchase of
a fractionalized interest in Loan #5197 in substantially the same
form as that received by Donald S. Albright, Jr. . . . Each loan
2 The parties included a chart showing each individual defendant's fractional interest
in the loan and the date of that investor's investment.
4
package included a cover letter from David A. Nilsen, broker, on
Cedar Funding letterhead, an unexecuted Lender Serv[icing]
Agreement, a Lender Purchaser Disclosure Statement, a title report,
an appraisal, and copies of John Skordoulis's Loan Application, [the]
executed $925,000 Promissory Note and first Deed of Trust, and
Cedar Funding, Inc.'s unexecuted Endorsement of Note and
unexecuted Assignment of Deed of Trust[;]
"12) On or about September 7, 2006, David Nilsen, as president of
Cedar Funding, Inc., executed two assignments of the $925,000 Note
and first Deed of Trust in Loan #5197 to the [majority of
Respondents]. These Assignments were recorded in the office of the
County Recorder for Riverside County on July 11, 2007 . . . . On
May 19, 2008, David Nilsen, as president of Cedar Funding, Inc.,
executed the final assignment to the Cuvas, which was recorded in
the office of the County Recorder for Riverside County on
September 9, 2008 . . . ;
"[¶] . . . [¶]
"16) On August 15, 2007, Skordoulis executed the documents
necessary for an extension of the due dates for Loan #5197 & 5309
with a further advance under the second Deed of Trust in the amount
of $800,000 . . . ;
"17) On November 6, 2007, Plaintiff Penny A. Bengert loaned
Skordoulis $200,000 . . . on a Promissory Note . . . secured by a 4th
Trust Deed against the subject property . . . ;
"18) On February 13, 2008, Plaintiff Maureen A. Chodosh loaned
Skordoulis $100,000.00 on a Promissory Note . . . secured by a 3rd
Trust Deed against the subject property . . . ;
"19) On May 26, 2008, Cedar Funding, Inc. filed for bankruptcy
protection;
"20) On July 28, 2008, W. Raymond Bengert and Plaintiff Penny A.
Bengert loaned Skordoulis $100,000.00 on a Promissory Note
. . . secured by a 5th Trust Deed against the subject property . . . ;
"21) Loan #5197 went into default on August 1, 2008;
5
"22) None of the Defendants has possession of the original $925,000
Note or has ever seen a signed endorsement of the Note, nor, as of
the beginning of trial, know[s] of its whereabouts but present
counsel claims to continue to look for it[.]"
After the defendants filed a notice of default and moved forward with a plan to
nonjudicially foreclose on the Palm Springs property, Skordoulis filed a complaint to
attempt to prevent the foreclosure. Ultimately, the issue at trial came down to whether
the defendants had the right to enforce the Note, since none of them was in possession of
the Note. Business and Professions Code section 10233.2 permits a licensed real estate
broker to maintain possession of a note on behalf of a lender or purchaser if that broker
has undertaken to service the loan, such that the lender may still enforce the terms of a
note despite not having actual possession of it. The very narrow factual issue in dispute
between the parties was whether Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Finding, who was a
licensed real estate broker, was the party who had undertaken to service the loan, or
rather, whether Cedar Funding, Inc., a corporation that Nilsen had formed that was not a
licensed real estate broker, had serviced the loan. Skordoulis contended that Cedar
Funding, Inc., the entity that was not a licensed real estate broker, had undertaken the
servicing of his loan, and that under the applicable statute, this fact prevented the
defendants from enforcing the Note and foreclosing on the Palm Springs property.
The trial court heard testimony from David A. Nilsen, on behalf of the defendants.
Skordoulis offered the testimony of David Judd, a forensic accountant, in support of his
contention that it was Cedar Funding, Inc., and not Nilsen, that serviced the loan.
6
Nilsen testified, inter alia, that his business, doing business as Cedar Funding, was
"arranging loans between borrowers and lenders, also brokering real estate transactions,
also building properties, and selling them."
In 2003, Nilsen made the decision to form Cedar Funding, Inc., an entity separate
from Nilsen's "dba" (i.e., Cedar Funding), the business of which was to be a holding
company to hold loans that Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, had brokered, in the
name of Cedar Funding, Inc. as lender. Loans made after the formation of Cedar
Funding, Inc., would name the corporation as the loan beneficiary, rather than Nilsen's
brokerage business, Cedar Funding. "[O]ne was a licensed real estate broker, the dba,
and the other one was a holding company for my loans and deeds of trust between the
borrowers and lenders." Cedar Funding, Inc., "operat[ed] as a lender" and owned some
real estate, but was not involved in "arranging, negotiating, or selling, or servicing any of
the loans . . . ."
The loan to Skordoulis was negotiated, arranged and sold by Nilsen, doing
business as Cedar Funding. According to Nilsen, after the loan was funded, Nilsen,
doing business as Cedar Funding, serviced the loan on behalf of the defendants.
Nilsen also testified that where the name "Cedar Funding" appears on documents,
it is a reference to the "dba," and where "Cedar Funding, Inc." appears, it is a reference to
the lender.
Nilsen was not asked during his deposition about the location of the original
promissory note. At trial he stated that he recognized a copy of the Note at issue.
7
As a result of Skordoulis's default on the loan, Fidelity National Title Co. recorded
a "Notice of Default and Election to Sell under Deed of Trust" in the Riverside County
Recorder's office on October 15, 2009. A "Notice of Trustee's Sale," also filed in the
Riverside County Recorder's office, indicated that the trustee, SBS Trust Deed Network,
planned to sell the Palm Springs property on February 24, 2010. The unpaid balance on
the loan as of the date of the "Notice of Trustee's Sale" was $1,247,190.93.
B. Procedural background
Skordoulis filed a complaint against the defendants on December 2, 2009. He
alleged claims for fraud and deceit, cancellation of a written instrument, recovery of
usury interest, and conspiracy, and sought injunctive relief from the foreclosure.
Approximately a month after filing his complaint, Skordoulis sought a temporary
restraining order and requested a preliminary injunction, seeking to prevent Fidelity
National Title and SBS Trust Deed Services from completing a nonjudicial foreclosure
for the benefit of the individual defendants on the Palm Springs property. Judge Randall
D. White denied the application for a temporary restraining order, but set a hearing on
Skordoulis's request for a preliminary injunction on a date in March 2010.
Chodosh and Penny Bengert filed a complaint in a separate action on February 18,
2010, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, and also seeking to enjoin the nonjudicial
foreclosure of the Palm Springs property. Chodosh and Bengert sought to enjoin the
nonjudicial foreclosure on the ground that if the property were to be sold, they would
suffer irreparable injury because the sale would "cause Plaintiffs' subordinate deeds of
8
trust against the property to be valueless." They claimed that a sale would be "wrongful"
and should be enjoined because the Note was usurious, the notice of default was
defective, and the Note and notice of default were void for other reasons, as well,
including that the defendants had breached the terms of the notes and deeds of trust
pertaining to the Palm Springs property.3 Like Skordoulis, Chodosh and Bengert sought
a temporary restraining order to prevent the nonjudicial foreclosure from being
completed. After full briefing on Chodosh and Bengert's request for a temporary
restraining order, Judge Harold W. Hopp granted the request and enjoined a trustee's sale
of the Palm Springs property as of February 23, 2010.
Judge White denied Skordoulis's request for a preliminary injunction on March
18.4 On that date, Skordoulis moved to consolidate the action that he had initiated with
the action initiated by Chodosh and Bengert.5 Skordoulis and Chodosh each sought to
have the entire action referred to Judge Hopp; Skordoulis questioned Judge White's
3 Skordoulis apparently obtained a second loan from Cedar Funding, Inc. and/or the
individual defendants, pursuant to a second promissory note and secured by the Palms
Springs property through a second deed of trust. There were allegations in Skordoulis's
original complaint, as well as in the initial Chodosh/Bengert complaint, that Cedar
Funding, Inc. and/or the defendants had failed to fully fund that loan. Ultimately, the
issues at trial did not involve this second loan.
4 Judge White issued a formal order after hearing on April 16. The text of that order
is substantively the same as that of the court's minute order entered on March 18.
5 In the meantime, on March 16, Judge Hopp held a hearing on Chodosh and
Bengert's request for a preliminary injunction. Upon the conclusion of the hearing, Judge
Hopp granted the request for a preliminary injunction. Judge Hopp issued a formal order
with respect to the preliminary injunction on April 1.
9
neutrality in his motion to consolidate, and Chodosh formally moved to disqualify Judge
White.6
Judge White granted Skordoulis's motion to consolidate, and the consolidated
action was assigned to Judge Hopp. As a result of Judge Hopp's order granting the
Chodosh/Bengert request for a temporary restraining order, Skordoulis effectively
obtained the relief that he had unsuccessfully sought before Judge White.7
Skordoulis filed a second amended complaint,8 and the case proceeded to trial.
Certain documents in the record establish that at some point, the individual defendants
filed a cross-complaint seeking judicial foreclosure.9
6 It is unclear why or how Chodosh had any basis for filing the document titled
"Maureen Chod[o]sh's Peremptory Disqualification" in which she challenged Judge
White, stating, "Hon. Randall D. White, Judge of the above entitled court, before whom
the trial of the aforesaid action or special proceeding is assigned, is prejudiced against me
or my interests, so that affiant cannot have a fair or impartial trial or hearing before said
Judge." Prior to that point, Judge White had presided over the proceedings related only
to the Skordoulis action, not the Chodosh/Bengert action. To the extent that Chodosh's
challenge to Judge White was based on his ruling against Skordoulis in Skordoulis's
action, this supports our conclusion in part III.B., post, that Skordoulis, Chodosh and
Bengert's interests in these actions were the same.
7 Judge White ruled on Skordoulis's request on the merits. There is no indication in
the record that Judge White denied relief on the ground that Judge Hopp had granted the
same relief in the Chodosh/Bengert action.
8 The record does not include a copy of Skordoulis's first amended complaint. In
the second amended complaint, which is titled "SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT OF
JOHN SKORDOULIS . . . ," Skordoulis asserted causes of action for "Fraud and Deceit";
"Declaratory Relief" seeking a "judicial declaration that the Assignees are not persons
entitled to enforce the First Promissory Note . . . by foreclosing their respective interests
in the First Deed of Trust"; "Declaratory Relief" seeking "a judicial determination of
10
Just before trial, the parties informed the court that the plaintiffs, i.e., Skordoulis,
Chodosh, and Bengert, intended to seek adjudication of the following claims/issues:
(1) that the defendants were not entitled to enforce the Note and Deed of Trust because
they did not possess the Note and/or it had not it been indorsed to them; (2) that the Note
was usurious and/or the Note and Deed of Trust were void; and (3) that the plaintiffs
were entitled to a permanent injunction to prevent the defendants from foreclosing.
The parties filed an "Omnibus Stipulation of Undisputed Facts" on May 9, 2012.
Trial began that day before Judge Hopp. After two days of testimony on the factual issue
whether Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, had held and serviced the promissory
note, or rather, whether Cedar Funding, Inc., was the entity that had done so, and after
receiving further briefing from the parties, the court took the matter under submission.
On May 31, 2012, Judge Hopp issued a minute order indicating that the court was
ruling in favor of the defendants and against Skordoulis on the "2nd Amended Complaint
of John Skordoulis." The minute order stated, "Parties agree all remaining causes of
action/complaints are no longer in dispute and shall be dismissed."10 The court issued a
whether the loan is usurious and as to the principal amount due, if any, on the loan as of
the date of trial"; "Cancellation of First Deed of Trust and to Quiet Title"; "Conspiracy";
"Injunctive Relief," seeking to prevent the sale of the property; "Set Aside Transfer From
Insolvent Debtor"; and "Unjust Enrichment."
9 The cross-complaint is not in the record on appeal.
10 The minute order later specifically states "1st Amended Consolidated complaint of
CONSOLIDATED CASE INC10001354 dismissed with prejudice," and "Cross
Complaint filed 02/08/2012 of GORDON ROBERTSON dismissed with prejudice." The
11
formal document titled "Ruling on Submitted Matter—Trial" on June 1. In that
document, the trial court set out detailed findings and rulings. Among the findings that
the court made are the following:
"The Court finds that Mr. Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding,
not Cedar Funding, Inc., the corporation he controlled, served as the
broker and servicer of the note. Further, the Court finds that, under
the terms of California Business and Professions Code [section]
10233.2, delivery of the note to the defendants was complete when
Mr. Nilsen, the broker who was servicing the note, received it.
Finally, the Court finds that, based upon the evidence received at
trial, the note was lost or misplaced and that defendants may enforce
i[t] pursuant to California Commercial Code section 3309."
The court signed the judgment on August 9, 2012. The judgment sets forth certain
of the trial court's findings, including the following:
"3. The Note was subsequently serviced by David A. Nilsen, a
licensed real estate broker. Several months later, Defendants/Cross-
Complainants herein purchased fractionalized interests in the Note.
Thereafter, Nilsen and Defendants/Cross-Complainants each
executed an agreement whereby Nilsen would and did continue to
service the loan evidenced by the Note and retained the single
original of the Note. Nilsen caused to be recorded three
Assignments of the Note and Deed of Trust covering the interests of
each of the Defendants/Cross-Complainants herein, each of which
[was] recorded in the official records of Riverside County . . . .
"4. Under the terms of California Business and Professions Code
[section] 10233.2, delivery of the note to the defendants was
complete when Mr. Nilsen, the broker who was servicing the note,
received it. Based upon the evidence received at trial, the original
note was lost or misplaced but Defendants/Cross-Complainants are
entitled to enforce it pursuant to California Commercial Code
section 3309.
record does not contain either the "1st Amended Consolidated complaint" or the "Cross
Complaint."
12
"5. On August 1, 2008, the Note became due and by virtue of the
non-payment of Plaintiff John Skordoulis, . . . it went into default."
The court entered judgment in favor of all of the defendants on the combined
Skordoulis and Chodosh/Bengert complaints, and in favor of the individual defendants on
the "Cross-Complainants' Cross-Complaint."11 The court awarded the individual
defendants the full amount due under the note, including unpaid interest, late charges, and
nonjudicial foreclosure costs, totaling $1,534,548.77. The court further granted the
individual defendants' request for judicial foreclosure, ordering the sale of the Palm
Springs property, and permitting judgment and execution against Skordoulis for any
deficiency that remains after the sale of the Palm Springs property.
The individual defendants/cross-complainants filed a motion for attorney fees,
seeking fees from Skordoulis, as well as from Chodosh and Bengert. All three parties
opposed the motion. In December 2012, the trial court granted the individual
defendants/cross-complainants' motion for $130,662 in attorney fees as to Skordoulis, but
denied the request as to Chodosh and Bengert.
Skordoulis filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment, and the individual
defendants/cross-complainants filed a timely notice of appeal from the court's order
denying an award of attorney fees against Chodosh and Bengert.
11 The record does not reveal any reason for the conflict between the apparent
dismissal of the cross-complaint in late May 2012, and the court's judgment in favor of
the cross-complainants on the cross-complaint in August 2012.
13
III.
DISCUSSION
A. Skordoulis's appeal
Skordoulis contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the defendants
have the legal right to enforce the Note. According to Skordoulis, there is insufficient
evidence to support the trial court's factual findings that David A. Nilsen, doing business
as Cedar Funding, and not Cedar Funding, Inc., had serviced the loan, that the Note was
lost or misplaced, and that the defendants are assignees who are entitled to enforce the
Note.
The main factual issue at trial was whether David Nilsen, doing business as Cedar
Funding, had held and serviced the loan, or rather, whether Cedar Funding, Inc., was the
entity that had serviced the loan. David Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, was a
licensed real estate broker, whereas Cedar Funding, Inc. was not. As we explain below,
the answer to this question was relevant to a determination as to whether the defendants
had a legal right to enforce the terms of the Note.
Generally, a " '[p]erson entitled to enforce' an instrument means (a) the holder of
the instrument, (b) a nonholder in possession of the instrument who has the rights of a
holder, or (c) a person not in possession of the instrument who is entitled to enforce the
instrument pursuant to Section 3309 or subdivision (d) of Section 3418. A person may be
a person entitled to enforce the instrument even though the person is not the owner of the
instrument or is in wrongful possession of the instrument." (Com. Code, § 3301.) It was
14
undisputed that at the time of trial, none of the defendants possessed the Note, none had
seen a signed indorsement of the Note, and none knew the whereabouts of the Note.
Commercial Code section 3309 sets out the circumstances under which a note may
be enforced if the note has been misplaced, lost, or stolen:
"(a) A person not in possession of an instrument is entitled to
enforce the instrument if (1) the person was in possession of the
instrument and entitled to enforce it when loss of possession
occurred, (2) the loss of possession was not the result of a transfer by
the person or a lawful seizure, and (3) the person cannot reasonably
obtain possession of the instrument because the instrument was
destroyed, its whereabouts cannot be determined, or it is in the
wrongful possession of an unknown person or a person that cannot
be found or is not amenable to service of process.
"(b) A person seeking enforcement of an instrument under
subdivision (a) shall prove the terms of the instrument and the
person's right to enforce the instrument. If that proof is made,
Section 3308 applies to the case as if the person seeking enforcement
had produced the instrument. The court may not enter judgment in
favor of the person seeking enforcement unless it finds that the
person required to pay the instrument is adequately protected against
loss that might occur by reason of a claim by another person to
enforce the instrument. Adequate protection may be provided by
any reasonable means."
The trial court had to find that the defendants were "in possession of the
instrument and entitled to enforce it when loss of possession occurred," within the
meaning of Commercial Code section 3309, in order to rule in their favor. On review, we
determine whether there is substantial evidence to support such a finding. It is
undisputed that none of the defendants ever had actual possession of the Note at any
point in time. However, Business and Professions Code section 10233.2 allows for a real
15
estate broker to retain possession of a note or collateral loan instruments while permitting
the lender, or those having an interest in the note, to have perfected possession of the
instrument. Business and Professions Code section 10233.2 provides:
"For the purposes of Division 3 (commencing with Section 3101)
and Division 9 (commencing with Section 9101) of the Commercial
Code, when a broker, acting within the meaning of subdivision (d) or
(e) of Section 10131 or Section 10131.1, has arranged a loan or sold
a promissory note or any interest therein, and thereafter undertakes
to service the promissory note on behalf of the lender or purchaser in
accordance with Section 10233, delivery, transfer, and perfection
shall be deemed complete even if the broker retains possession of the
note or collateral instruments and documents, provided that the deed
of trust or an assignment of the deed of trust or collateral documents
in favor of the lender or purchaser is recorded in the office of the
county recorder in the county in which the security property is
located, and the note is made payable to the lender or is endorsed or
assigned to the purchaser." (Italics added.)
Under Business and Professions Code section 10233.2, if the person who retained
the note "undertook to service the promissory note" on behalf of the defendants, then the
defendants may be said to have "possessed" the note, despite the fact that a broker had
actual possession of it at the time it was lost.12 At trial, the parties disputed whether
Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, a licensed real estate broker, had held and
serviced the Note, or rather, whether Cedar Funding, Inc., which is not a licensed real
estate broker, was the entity that had serviced the Note.
12 None of the plaintiffs contends that the Note was not assigned to the defendants, or
that the assignment was not recorded. (See Bus. & Prof. Code, § 10233.2 ["provided that
the deed of trust or an assignment of the deed of trust or collateral documents in favor of
the lender or purchaser is recorded in the office of the county recorder in the county in
which the security property is located, and the note is made payable to the lender or is
endorsed or assigned to the purchaser"].)
16
Skordoulis contends on appeal that the great weight of the evidence demonstrates
that the entity that in fact had been servicing the loan in question was Cedar Funding, Inc.
He points to evidence in the record that suggests that Cedar Funding, Inc. serviced the
Note, including the testimony of his expert, forensic accountant David Judd. However,
Skordoulis fails to acknowledge the abundant other evidence in the record that supports
the trial court's specific finding that Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, and not
Cedar Funding, Inc., had serviced the loan.
In reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we must view all
factual matters in favor of the prevailing party and in support of the judgment. "An
appellate court ' "must presume that the record contains evidence to support every finding
of fact . . . ." ' [Citations.] It is the appellant's burden, not the court's, to identify and
establish deficiencies in the evidence. [Citation.] This burden is a 'daunting' one.
[Citation.]" (Huong Que, Inc. v. Luu (2007) 150 Cal.App.4th 400, 409.) " 'A party who
challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support a particular finding must summarize
the evidence on that point, favorable and unfavorable, and show how and why it is
insufficient. [Citation.]' [Citation.]" (Ibid., italics omitted.) All conflicts in the evidence
must be resolved in favor of the judgment. (Nestle v. Santa Monica (1972) 6 Cal.3d 920,
925-926.)
We must start from the presumption that the record contains sufficient evidence to
support the court's findings of fact. Although Skordoulis refers to a number of items of
evidence to support his position that it was Cedar Funding, Inc. that had serviced the
17
loan, he fails to summarize all of the evidence presented to the court, both favorable and
unfavorable to the judgment, as to which entity and/or individual had serviced the loan.
On this basis alone, we could affirm the judgment. (See Myers v. Trendwest Resorts, Inc.
(2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 735, 749, fn. 1 [when an appellant fails to set forth all of the
material evidence, a claim of insufficient evidence is waived or forfeited].) However, we
will detail just some of the evidence presented at trial that supports the trial court's
finding that Nilsen, doing business as Cedar Funding, serviced the loans.
Nilsen testified that he, doing business as Cedar Funding, had serviced the loan.
He explained that Cedar Funding, Inc. was the beneficiary of the loan, not the servicer.
All of the loan servicing agreements state that Cedar Funding, not Cedar Funding, Inc.,
was the servicing agent. When directly asked during his deposition, Nilsen testified that
Cedar Funding, Inc. had not serviced the loan. The trial court was entitled to credit
Nilsen's testimony.
In his reply brief, Skordoulis raises for the first time the contention that even if
there is substantial evidence to support the trial court's finding that Nilsen, doing business
as Cedar Funding, and not Cedar Funding, Inc., serviced the loan for the defendants, at
some point Nilsen's broker's license was suspended, and ultimately revoked, such that he
was no longer a licensed real estate broker. According to Skordoulis, this means that the
exception provided in Business and Professions Code section 10233.2, regarding the
servicing of a Note by a licensed broker, would not apply to permit the defendants to
enforce the note. Skordoulis maintains that in order to be a person "entitled to enforce,
18
the note must be held and the loan serviced continually by a licensed real estate broker,"
and that the "exceptions for persons not in possession and lost documents [sic] exist only
where a (presently) licensed broker (presently) holds the note."
Not only does Skordoulis raise this complicated and fact-specific issue for the first
time in his reply, he also fails to present any authority to support the contention, and
offers no argument as to why his interpretation of the statute is reasonable. Arguments
raised for the first time in an appellant's reply brief are deemed forfeited, and we
therefore decline to address this issue. (See, e.g., Habitat & Watershed Caretakers v.
City of Santa Cruz (2013) 213 Cal.App.4th 1277, 1292, fn. 6 ["[a]rguments presented for
the first time in an appellant's reply brief are considered waived"]; Holmes v. Petrovich
Development Co. (2011) 191 Cal.App.4th 1047, 1064, fn. 2 ["argument is forfeited"
where "it is raised for the first time in [appellant's] reply brief without a showing of good
cause"]; Dietz v. Meisenheimer & Herron (2009) 177 Cal.App.4th 771, 801 [claims
raised for first time in reply are forfeited unless good reason has been shown for failure to
raise them earlier].)13
Finally, Skordoulis also raises for the first time in reply the contention that the trial
court's finding that the note had been sufficiently delivered to the final two investors,
Robert S. Cuva and Mary V. Cuva, was erroneous because the assignment to them
occurred two days after Nilsen's broker's license was suspended. This is another fact-
13 By raising this contention for the first time in a reply brief, Skordoulis has
prevented the defendants from having the opportunity to address the issue, and prevented
this court from having the benefit of briefing from both parties.
19
intensive issue, and one that does not appear to have been presented to the trial court. We
therefore decline to address this issue, as well, on the ground that Skordoulis has forfeited
the issue by failing to raise it in his opening brief.
B. The individual defendants' cross-appeal
After obtaining a judgment in their favor, the individual defendants moved for an
award of attorney fees against Skordoulis, as well as against Chodosh and Bengert. The
trial court granted the request for attorney fees as to Skordoulis, but denied it as to
Chodosh and Bengert. On appeal, the individual defendants argue that Chodosh and
Bengert engaged in a "collaborative effort" with Skordoulis to obtain a temporary
injunction to prevent the nonjudicial foreclosure of the Palm Springs property.
Specifically, the individual defendants assert that Chodosh and Bengert sought a
restraining order against enforcement of the Note and deed of trust, such that even though
they were not signatories to these contracts, they brought claims " 'regarding the
enforcement, interpretation or rescission' " of a contract. According to the individual
defendants, an attorney fee award may be entered against Chodosh and Bengert despite
the fact that they are nonsignatories to the contracts at issue, and is mandatory in this case
under Code of Civil Procedure section 1717.
20
1. Additional background
In their complaint against SBS Trust Deed Network and unnamed Doe defendants,
Chodosh and Bengert asserted two "causes of action": (1) declaratory relief, and (2)
injunctive relief.14
In seeking declaratory relief, Chodosh and Bengert alleged that Skordoulis entered
into a written contract with Cedar Funding, Inc. regarding the loan at issue in this case.
They further alleged that Fidelity National Title Co. recorded a Notice of Default and
election to sell the Palm Springs property in the official records of the County of
Riverside. Chodosh and Bengert asserted that the Note was "usurious," that the Notice of
Default was defective, and/or that the Note and Notice of Default were "Void for Other
Reasons." The specific declaratory relief that they sought in their complaint was a
declaration: "1. that the Notice of Default is defective and void, and 2. that . . . Article 15,
[section] 1 of the California Constitution bars interest or and [sic] charges from being
charged or paid on the First Promissory note." With respect to the injunctive relief
sought in the complaint, Chodosh and Bengert sought to prevent the sale of the Palm
Springs property through a nonjudicial foreclosure. Chodosh and Bengert also requested
"reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred in this action."
14 Both "causes of action" identified in the Chodosh/Bengert complaint are actually
claims for relief, not assertions of a primary right. (See Hernandez v. City of Pomona
(2009) 46 Cal.4th 501, 526 [" 'The violation of one primary right constitutes a single
cause of action, though it may entitle the injured party to many forms of relief, and the
relief is not to be confounded with the cause of action, one not being determinative of the
other' [citation]"].)
21
In an attempt to ward off the pending trustee's sale, Chodosh and Bengert moved
for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction. Although a judge had
denied Skordoulis's request for a temporary restraining order to prevent the trustee's sale
from occurring, the Chodosh/Bengert case was assigned to a different judge, and this
judge granted Chodosh and Bengert's request for a temporary restraining order. As a
result, the trustee's sale did not take place, and this litigation continued to go forward with
respect to the Palm Springs property.
Skordoulis's case was later consolidated with the Chodosh/Bengert case.
Ultimately, the entire matter appears to have proceeded to trial on a single cause of
action—the second cause of action in the "Second Amended Complaint of John
Skordoulis, " which was a request for declaratory relief that "the Assignees . . . are not
persons [who are] entitled to enforce the First Promissory Note [¶] . . . by foreclos[ing]
their respective . . . interest under the First Deed of Trust.15
After trial, the court entered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the
"Plaintiffs," stating that "Plaintiffs shall take nothing by their Complaints and judgment is
entered thereon in favor of Defendants . . . . Plaintiffs' request for a permanent injunction
15 It is unclear why this matter did not proceed on a cause of action in a consolidated
complaint, or how Chodosh and Bengert remained plaintiffs, given that the operable
complaint appears to be one filed by Skordoulis, individually. In its minute order filed
after trial, the court ruled that the consolidated complaint was dismissed, with prejudice.
Despite this statement in the minute order, as we explain in the text, the ultimate
judgment entered by the court addresses multiple "Complaints" and finds against the
"Plaintiffs." The parties raise no issue in this regard. We raise these matters only to
provide a clearer picture of the procedural posture of this case in the trial court.
22
against the enforcement of the Note by Defendants is denied. Defendants are the
prevailing parties as to the Complaints and are entitled to their reasonable attorney's fees
and costs as provided in said promissory note and deed of trust."
The individual defendants then moved for an award of attorney fees from all three
plaintiffs in the consolidated case. Chodosh and Bengert opposed the motion for attorney
fees, arguing that they "are not parties to any contracts with the Defendant investors or
their assignor, Cedar Funding, Inc.," and further asserting that "the claims alleged in
[their complaint] are not claims regarding the enforcement, interpretation or rescission of
any contract that was at issue here."
During oral argument on the motion for attorney fees, the trial court began by
asking counsel for Chodosh and Bengert, "Your clients sued on the note claiming it was
not enforceable. There is an attorneys' fees provision. Why should they not have to pay
attorney fees?" Counsel responded, "They were not assignees of the party to the note."
The trial court continued, "But they are suing on the note. They brought a claim under
the note. They even included in their complaint [a] request for attorney fees, and the only
basis for attorney fees could be the note, right?" The remainder of the argument centered
on whether Chodosh and Bengert, as nonsignatories to either the Note or deed of trust,
could be liable for the individual defendants' attorney fees in this action.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court granted the individual defendants'
motion for attorney fees as to Skordoulis, awarding them $130,662. However, the court
denied the motion as to Chodosh and Bengert. The individual defendants cross-appealed
23
solely on the issue whether Chodosh and Bengert are liable for attorney fees in this
action. In response to the individual defendants' opening brief, plaintiff Chodosh filed a
response brief, in which Bengert later joined.
2. Analysis
"Generally, the trial court's determination of the prevailing party for purposes of
awarding attorney fees is an exercise of discretion, which should not be disturbed on
appeal absent a clear showing of abuse of discretion. [Citations.] But the determination
of the legal basis for an attorney fee award is subject to independent review." (Kim v.
Euromotors West/The Auto Gallery (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 170, 176.)
Unless authorized by either statute or agreement, attorney fees ordinarily are not
recoverable as costs. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1021; D'Amico v. Board of Medical Examiners
(1974) 11 Cal.3d 1, 24-27.) Both the Note and the deed of trust securing the Note at
issue in this case contain attorney fees provisions, which provide for an award of
reasonable attorney fees in favor of the lender/note holder.16
16 The Note provides, "If the Note Holder has required me to pay immediately in full
as described above, the Note Holder will have the right to be paid back for all its costs
and expenses to the extent not prohibited by applicable law. Those expenses include, for
example, reasonable attorney's fees."
The deed of trust provides, "If Borrower fails to perform the covenants and
agreements contained in this Deed of Trust, or if any action or proceeding is commenced
which affects Lender's interest in the Property, including but not limited to proceedings
by the Lender to obtain relief from stay in any bankruptcy proceeding which would
prohibit Lender enforcing its rights under the Deed of Trust, then Lender, at Lender's
option, may make such appearances, disburse such sums, including reasonable attorney's
fees, and take such action as is necessary to protect Lender's interest. . . . [¶] Any
amounts disbursed by Lender pursuant to this paragraph 7, with interest thereon,
24
Civil Code section 1717 was enacted to establish mutuality of remedy where a
contractual provision makes recovery of attorney fees available for only one party
(International Industries v. Olen (1978) 21 Cal.3d 218, 223), and to prevent oppressive
use of one-sided attorney fees provisions (Coast Bank v. Holmes (1971) 19 Cal.App.3d
581, 596-597). That statute provides, in pertinent part:
"In any action on a contract, where the contract specifically
provides that attorney's fees and costs, which are incurred to enforce
that contract, shall be awarded either to one of the parties or to the
prevailing party . . . whether he or she is the party specified in the
contract or not, shall be entitled to reasonable attorney's fees in
addition to other costs." (Civ. Code, § 1717, italics added.)
As a general rule, attorney fees are awarded under Civil Code section 1717 only
when the lawsuit is between signatories to the contract. (Real Property Services Corp. v.
City of Pasadena (1994) 25 Cal.App.4th 375, 379-380 (Real Property).) However, under
some circumstances, the Civil Code section 1717 reciprocity principles will be applied in
actions involving signatory and nonsignatory parties. (Real Property, supra, at p. 380.)
Civil Code section 1717 refers to its application "[i]n any action on a contract"
(italics added), thereby including any action where it is alleged that a person is liable on
a contract, whether or not the court ultimately concludes he or she is a party to that
contract. "California courts liberally construe the term ' " 'on a contract' " ' as used within
[Civil Code] section 1717. [Citation.] As long as the action 'involve[s]' a contract it is
including but not limited to payment of delinquent taxes and assessments, insurance
premiums due, and delinquent amounts owed to prior lien holders, shall become
additional indebtedness of Borrower secured by this Deed of Trust."
25
' "on [the] contract" ' within the meaning of [Civil Code] section 1717." (Dell Merk, Inc.
v. Franzia (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 443, 455; see Hastings v. Matlock (1985) 171
Cal.App.3d 826, 841; Care Constr., Inc. v. Century Convalescent Centers, Inc. (1976) 54
Cal.App.3d 701, 706 ["as long as the action here involved a contract it was 'on a contract'
and within Civil Code section 1717"].)
In Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson (1979) 25 Cal.3d 124 (Reynolds Metals), the
Supreme Court concluded that nonsignatory defendants, who were sued on a contract as
if they were parties to it, were entitled to attorney fees upon prevailing in the action
pursuant to Civil Code section 1717: "Its purposes require [Civil Code] section 1717 be
interpreted to further provide a reciprocal remedy for a nonsignatory defendant, sued on a
contract as if he were a party to it, when a plaintiff would clearly be entitled to attorney's
fees should he prevail in enforcing the contractual obligation against the defendant."
(Reynolds Metals, supra, at p. 128.)
Reynolds Metals cited with approval the opinion in Babcock v. Omansky (1973) 31
Cal.App.3d 625 (Babcock), in which a defendant prevailed against an allegation that she
was liable as a coventurer or partner with another defendant who had executed a
promissory note that provided for attorney fees. Concluding that the nonsignatory
defendant was entitled to attorney fees under Civil Code section 1717, the Babcock court
reasoned that the language of that provision was sufficiently broad to include persons
who had not signed the contract, but were sued on the note and found not to be parties to
it. (Babcock, supra, at pp. 633-634.)
26
Although Reynolds Metals and Babcock involved signatory plaintiffs suing
nonsignatory defendants, a corollary rule has evolved for the reverse situation.
"Regarding nonsignatories to a contract with an attorney fees provision, the courts have
developed the following rule: 'Where a nonsignatory plaintiff sues a signatory defendant
in an action on a contract and the signatory defendant prevails, the signatory defendant is
entitled to attorney fees only if the nonsignatory plaintiff would have been entitled to its
fees if the plaintiff had prevailed.' " (Cargill, Inc. v. Souza (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 962,
967 (Cargill), quoting Real Property, supra, 25 Cal.App.4th at p. 382.)
Thus, if Chodosh and Bengert would have been entitled to attorney fees if they
had prevailed on their complaint, the individual defendants are entitled to their attorney
fees as the prevailing parties.17 At least "[t]wo situations may entitle a nonsignatory
party to attorney fees." (Cargill, supra, 201 Cal.App.4th at p. 966.) "First is where the
nonsignatory party 'stands in the shoes of a party to the contract.' [Citation.] Second is
where the nonsignatory party is a third party beneficiary of the contract." (Ibid.)
Chodosh and Bengert's claims against the individual defendants were not their
individual claims. Rather, they were Skordoulis's claims, brought by Chodosh and
Bengert, as junior lienholders. In fact, the very absence of a contract between Chodosh
17 Although Chodosh and Bengert's original complaint did not name the individual
defendants, it did assert claims against multiple Doe defendants, and identified the trustee
as the named defendant. As the litigation progressed, it became apparent that the claims
of all of the plaintiffs were in fact against the senior lienholders, i.e., the individual
defendants, who were the real parties in interest, as the owners of the Note, and those
asserting the power to foreclosure pursuant to the deed of trust in order to enforce the
Note.
27
and Bengert and the individual defendants demonstrates that Chodosh and Bengert had
no independent standing to challenge the Notice of Default, or the terms of the Note, yet
this is precisely what they attempted to do in filing their complaint. Chodosh and
Bengert have not presented any authority, and this court has found none, that would
permit a junior lienholder to prevent a nonjudicial foreclosure by a senior lienholder.18
18 When a debtor (such as Skordoulis) defaults on a secured real property loan, the
lender beneficiary, like the defendants in this case, may institute nonjudicial foreclosure
proceedings to trigger a trustee's sale of the realty to satisfy the obligation. (Civ. Code,
§ 2924 et seq.) The beneficiary, like any other party, may bid cash, offering more or less
than the balance due on the debt. (See, e.g., Pacific Inland Bank v. Ainsworth (1995) 41
Cal.App.4th 277, 280.) In such an instance, a junior lien (or liens) will be extinguished at
the foreclosure sale unless the successful bidder purchases at a price sufficiently high to
pay off both the senior lien and the junior lien(s). (FPCI RE-HAB 01 v. E&G
Investments, Ltd. (1989) 207 Cal.App.3d 1018, 1023.)
"California's nonjudicial foreclosure scheme is set forth in [the Civil Code] . . . ,
which 'provide[s] a comprehensive framework for the regulation of a nonjudicial
foreclosure sale pursuant to a power of sale contained in a deed of trust.' " (Gomes v.
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. (2011) 192 Cal.App.4th 1149, 1154.) " 'These provisions
cover every aspect of exercise of the power of sale contained in a deed of trust.' " (Ibid.)
" 'The purposes of this comprehensive scheme are threefold: (1) to provide the
creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting
debtor/trustor; (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from wrongful loss of the property; and
(3) to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as
to a bona fide purchaser.' " (Ibid.)
It is generally understood that an individual who invests in a "second [(or third or
fourth)] deed of trust accepts all the risks of the junior position." (Friery v. Sutter Buttes
Sav. Bank (1998) 61 Cal.App.4th 869, 878.) He or she "gambles that the equity in the
property will be sufficient to cover [the] investment in a worst case scenario—a
foreclosure sale." (Ibid., italics added.)
However, there are some other possible remedies that a junior lienholder may
pursue to protect his or her interests. He or she may redeem from a senior judicial sale
(Code Civ. Proc., § 701), or may obtain a deficiency judgment after a judicial sale.
(Savings Bank of San Diego County v. Central Market Co. (1898) 122 Cal. 28; Giandeini
v. Ramirez (1936) 11 Cal.App.2d 469; see Brown v. Jensen (1953) 41 Cal.2d 193, 196.)
After a senior private sale, the junior lienholder has no right to redeem; however, he or
28
Nevertheless, when Skordoulis was unable to obtain a temporary restraining order to
prevent the pending trustee's sale, Chodosh and Bengert filed their action and were
granted the temporary relief that Skordoulis had been denied. They continued to
participate in the action, apparently pursuing their claims that the Notice of Default was
defective and void, and that the Note charged unlawful usurious interest and therefore
could not be fully enforced, in an attempt to protect their interests in their own notes that
were secured by the Palm Springs property, albeit in junior positions. They also
continued to prevent the nonjudicial foreclosure.
Chodosh and Bengert were, essentially, "standing in the shoes" of Skordoulis
when they brought this particular action against the senior lienholders. In doing so,
Chodosh and Bengert created an action that was one "on a contract" (i.e., the Note and/or
deed of trust) as that phrase has been interpreted for purposes of Code of Civil Procedure
section 1717. In stepping into Skordoulis's shoes, obtaining the temporary relief that he
she may seek a money judgment for the full amount due on the underlying junior debt
obligation when the senior lienholder conducts a nonjudicial foreclosure that extinguishes
the junior lienholder's security interest. (Roseleaf Corp. v. Chierighino (1963) 59 Cal.2d
35, 43–44.)
Again, we have found no authority that establishes the right of a junior lienholder
to prevent a nonjudicial foreclosure sale. Rather, it would appear that such a sale is to go
forward; "when there is a claim of irregularities in a foreclosure sale, the remedy is to
move to set aside the sale. (4 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (2d ed. 1989) § 9:154, pp.
505-506.)" (South Bay Building Enterprises, Inc. v. Riviera Lend-Lease, Inc. (1999) 72
Cal.App.4th 1111, 1121.) An action to set aside the sale "is not the exclusive remedy," as
"[f]raudulent actions taken by the beneficiary can [also] give rise to liability in tort."
(Ibid.) " 'When the property has been sold to a bona fide purchaser, even though the sale
cannot be avoided, the trustor or a junior lienor . . . retains the right to recover damages
from the trustee and the beneficiary of the foreclosing lien if there have been material
irregularities in the conduct of the foreclosure.' " (Ibid.)
29
had unsuccessfully sought, and in attempting to obtain further relief to which it was far
from clear that they would have been entitled, Chodosh and Bengert were suing as if they
were parties to a contract that contained an attorney fee provision. In filing suit and
challenging the validity of the Note and corresponding deed of trust and preventing the
nonjudicial foreclosure from going forward, Chodosh and Bengert effectively caused the
entire litigation to continue. By stepping into the shoes of a party to the Note and
corresponding deed of trust and challenging the validity and enforceability of those
documents, Chodosh and Bengert would have been entitled to attorney fees from the
individual defendants under the reciprocal provision of Code of Civil Procedure section
1717 if they had prevailed. Therefore, they must bear the burden of an award of attorney
fees, since they did not ultimately prevail in this action.
We conclude that the trial court erred in not awarding the individual defendants
attorney fees against Chodosh and Bengert. That portion of the trial court's postjudgment
order denying the motion for an award of attorney fees against Chodosh and Bengert is
reversed.
IV.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The postjudgment order regarding attorney fees is
reversed to the extent that the order denies the individual defendants' motion for attorney
fees from Chodosh and Bengert. The matter is remanded to the trial court to conduct
30
further proceedings as necessary, consistent with this opinion, with respect to the
individual defendants' request for attorney fees from Chodosh and Bengert. Upon the
conclusion of these proceedings, the court shall incorporate its ruling on the attorney fee
matter into an amended judgment. Plaintiffs Skordoulis, Chodosh, and Bengert shall bear
costs on appeal.
AARON, J.
WE CONCUR:
BENKE, Acting P. J.
O'ROURKE, J.
31