Filed 11/18/14 Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
JUANITA CORTEZ, H037631
(Santa Clara County
Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 1-08-CV114484)
v.
JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.,
Defendant and Respondent.
By this action plaintiff Juanita Cortez seeks reformation of certain instruments
concerning title to, and encumbrances upon, a residence she has occupied since 1999.
The gist of her complaint, as relevant here, is that in 2003, in the course of seeking to
refinance the home, and with the knowledge of the lender, she transferred record title to
her daughter with the understanding that it would be deeded back to her upon completion
of the refinancing. The daughter thereafter failed, and ultimately refused, to reconvey the
property. When she encountered financial difficulties, plaintiff sought to renegotiate the
loan, but the loan servicer—defendant Chase Home Finance, LLC (Chase)—refused to
recognize any ownership interest in plaintiff. After certain proceedings in bankruptcy,
plaintiff filed an amended complaint in this action against the daughter, Chase and
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company (Deutsche Bank), as assignee of the loan,
seeking to reform the 2003 title and loan documents to reflect what plaintiff contends was
the true intent of the parties, which was to reserve or restore plaintiff’s ownership interest
in the property. The trial court entered judgment on demurrer, holding that plaintiff’s
claims against Chase and Deutsche Bank were barred by the statute of limitations and
that the facts constituting grounds for reformation were not stated with sufficient
particularity. We have concluded that plaintiff has failed to allege or even allude to facts
justifying her five-year delay in seeking to vindicate her rights. We will therefore affirm
the judgment.
BACKGROUND
Since a demurrer tests only the sufficiency of a complaint to state a cause of action
or defense, the operative facts must be found within its four corners, subject to two
exceptions: The court may consider facts of which it properly takes judicial notice, and it
may consider other factual assertions by the pleader insofar as they may reflect upon his
or her ability to amend the pleading to cure any defects found in it.
We are here concerned with the second amended complaint, in which plaintiff
alleged that in 1999, she and her late husband purchased a property, which has been her
principal residence ever since, on Calpella Drive in San Jose. In or around August 2003,
plaintiff and her husband orally agreed with their daughter, defendant Anna Serrano, that
they would convey the property to her to facilitate refinancing. Plaintiff would continue
to live in the house and would “pay the mortgage payments, taxes, and other costs
associated with maintenance.” Serrano agreed to quitclaim her title back to plaintiff
“when the refinancing was accomplished.”
Plaintiff alleges that the lender in the anticipated refinancing, People’s Choice
Home Loan Inc. (People’s Choice),1 “knew of the foregoing refinancing arrangement”
1
In this action plaintiff persistently refers to this entity as “Peoples Choice.” It
appears on all the loan documents, defendants’ pleadings, and plaintiff’s own bankruptcy
pleadings, as the more grammatically conventional “People’s Choice.”
2
and “understood, intended and agreed that although for a time during and shortly after the
refinancing of the Calpella property defendant Serrano would become the legal owner
thereof, plaintiff was at all times the equitable owner; would be restored to full legal
ownership by defendant Serrano once the new loan had been recorded and; [sic] plaintiff
would become responsible to repay said refinanced loan as owner of the Calpella
property. . . . [A]s servicer and trustee respectively for defendant People[’]s Choice
relating to this loan, defendants Chase and Deutsche Bank became bound by the
understanding, intention and agreements of defendants People[’]s Choice regarding
plaintiff’s status as legal and equitable owner of the Calpella property.”
It appears from documents of which the trial court took judicial notice that on
August 15, 2003, Serrano executed a deed of trust for $440,000 on the Calpella property,
naming People’s Choice as lender.2 Serrano also apparently took a second loan, for
$100,000, as reflected in a second deed of trust, also in favor of People’s Choice.3
Plaintiff and her husband conveyed the property to Serrano by grant deed on
August 22, 2003.4 All three of these instruments—the grant deed, the first deed of trust,
and the second deed of trust—were recorded on September 9, 2003.
According to plaintiff, she asked Serrano “within several months of the
refinancing” to convey the property back to her. Serrano acknowledged an intention to
do so. But so far as the complaint shows, nothing further happened with respect to title
until, on October 8, 2007, Serrano executed a grant deed deeding the property to herself
2
The underlying note was not before the trial court, but is an exhibit to one of the
bankruptcy filings of which plaintiff requests judicial notice on appeal.
3
Although the second deed of trust is not clearly described in the complaint, the
trial court took judicial notice of it at defendants’ request in support of their demurrer to
the first amended complaint.
4
Neither party has made an issue of the apparent fact that the loan documents
were executed a week before the deed conveying the property to Serrano.
3
and plaintiff as joint tenants. Plaintiff does not state when this deed was delivered or
otherwise made known to her, but it was not recorded until March 13, 2008.
Meanwhile, plaintiff alleges, she had contacted defendant Chase, as “People[’]s
Choice[] loan servicer, . . . in an attempt to modify her loan and to avoid the Calpella
property becoming further entangled in defendant Serrano’s financial affairs.” In March
2008, representatives of Chase advised her to “stop making the mortgage payments so
that the Calpella property would be in default, which, they said, was a prerequisite to
making an application for loan modification. Acting on this request, Cortez ceased
making payments on the loan in 2008 and then made application to defendant Chase for a
loan modification.”5
In the meantime, according to the second amended complaint, a dispute had arisen
between plaintiff and Serrano concerning a second property—a duplex on Skylark Drive
in San Jose. Plaintiff alleges that she and Serrano agreed to purchase this property in
July 2006 as a joint venture in which plaintiff would furnish a down payment of some
$175,000—the proceeds from her sale of another property—and Serrano would manage
the duplex while living in one of the units and paying all expenses of ownership. Title
was to be jointly held, and until “May of [sic] July of 2008” plaintiff believed it was
jointly held. Plaintiff alleges that she first learned otherwise in July 2008, but that cannot
be correct, for she filed the original complaint in this action—alleging that Serrano had
“failed and refused to execute a deed conveying a one-half interest in the [Skylark]
Property to plaintiff”—on June 10, 2008.
5
One of many chronological discrepancies in the complaint appears here:
Plaintiff alleges that when Chase gave this advice it was acting as “loan servicer for
defendant Deutsche Bank.” But she elsewhere alleges that the loan was not assigned to
Deutsche Bank until July 2008—four months later. In this instance the confusion may be
understandable, since the assignment—of which the court took judicial notice in
connection with an earlier demurrer—was executed on September 19, 2003, but not
recorded until July 25, 2008.
4
In her original complaint plaintiff sought relief only in connection with the
Skylark property. The record contains some indication that Serrano answered the
complaint and cross-complained in July 2008. Apparently, however, further proceedings
were stayed on March 22, 2009, when Serrano filed a bankruptcy petition.6 Plaintiff
alleges that she asked Serrano around that time to quitclaim the Calpella property to her,
but Serrano refused. In February 2010, after initiating adversary proceedings in the
bankruptcy court concerning her claims to both properties, plaintiff, through counsel,
repeated her demand that Serrano quitclaim the Calpella property to her. Serrano replied
that she would do so only if plaintiff would abandon her claims respecting the Skylark
property.
In May of 2010, the bankruptcy court issued an order abstaining from adjudication
of plaintiff’s claims against Serrano. On June 10 the court granted relief from the
automatic stay, freeing plaintiff to pursue her claims in state court insofar as they did not
seek monetary relief. On June 22, plaintiff moved to file an amended complaint in this
action, adding causes of action concerning the Calpella property and joining Chase and
Deutsche Bank as defendants. In responding to Serrano’s opposition to the motion,
plaintiff’s counsel explained that the reason for the amendments was that Chase had
6
Plaintiff has requested that we take judicial notice of the petition and other
matters, including the complaint and consent judgment in an action by the United States
and various state governments against numerous financial companies including Chase.
Except as we may expressly refer to certain documentary exhibits to the bankruptcy
filings, we deny the request on the ground that the materials presented have no apparent
relevance to any issue before us. The federal complaint and judgment, in particular, have
no apparent tendency to show either that plaintiff has stated a cause of action for
reformation against these defendants or that she can amend her complaint to do so. For
similar reasons we reject plaintiff’s contention that the trial court erred by denying
judicial notice of a congressional subcommittee’s report on “real property mortgage
lending practices and their connection with mortgage backed securities . . . between 2004
and 2008.” Plaintiff directs us to nothing in the reports having more than a peripheral
bearing on any of the questions presented here.
5
“refused to deal with plaintiff on a loan modification workout without a particular written
consent form from defendant, which defendant refused to give unless plaintiff dropped
her lien claims on Skylark.” The trial court granted the motion.
The resulting pleading—the first amended complaint—named Chase and Deutsche
Bank in three causes of action. The first cause of action, directed to all defendants, was
designated as one “To Reform Title To the Calpella Property.” In it plaintiff alleged that
Serrano orally agreed with plaintiff to place the property in her name for purposes of
refinancing and to then restore title to plaintiff. She then alleged that, “[w]ithout
knowledge of the true facts and in reliance on defendant Serrano’s false representations,”
she “was deceived and misled” into transferring title. She further alleged that her
reliance was justified and reasonable. Finally she alleged that despite a demand in March
of 2009 that she restore title to plaintiff, Serrano had refused to do so. In the associated
segment of the prayer, she sought “reformation of the grant deed to the Calpella property
to reflect the true intent of the parties, which is that Cortez has sole legal and equitable
ownership interest in the Calpella property.”
In the ninth cause of action, also directed to all defendants, plaintiff sought to quiet
title to the Calpella property against Serrano and any persons claiming through her. In
the eleventh cause of action plaintiff sought declaratory relief against all defendants
concerning both properties.
Chase and Deutsche Bank demurred to the three causes of action naming them.
Plaintiff asserted no argument against the demurrer with respect to the ninth cause of
action (quiet title). The trial court sustained the demurrer as to that cause of action
without leave to amend on the ground that it was unopposed. The court also sustained
the demurrer as to the first cause of action (reformation), with leave to amend, on the
ground that it failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court
overruled the demurrer as to the eleventh cause of action (declaratory relief), explaining
6
that “[t]o be entitled to declaratory relief, a party need not establish that it is also entitled
to a favorable judgment.”
Plaintiff then filed the second amended complaint, which is the pleading now
before us. It differed from its predecessor, most importantly, by including a paragraph to
the effect that People’s Choice had known of and acceded to the arrangement by which
Serrano would temporarily take record title for purposes of securing refinancing, and
would then reconvey title to plaintiff.7 Defendants again demurred, asserting as grounds
that (1) the first cause of action (reformation) failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a
cause of action, in that it “fail[ed] to adequately allege either fraud or mistake as a basis
for the requested reformation”; (2) the first cause of action was uncertain, in that it
“fail[ed] to identify the grant deed or deeds as to which Plaintiff seeks reformation, how
the language of the grant deed(s) is/are in error, and how said deed(s) should be reformed
so as to reflect the alleged agreement of the parties”; and (3) the eleventh cause of action
(declaratory relief) failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that it
“fail[ed] to allege any actual controversy between plaintiff and Defendants.” The
supporting memorandum included an argument that even if the complaint otherwise
stated a cause of action for reformation, it “would be barred by the statute of limitations.”
7
Plaintiff alleged on information and belief “that defendant [sic] People[’]s
Choice knew of the foregoing re-financing arrangement between Cortez and Serrano.
Plaintiff is further informed and believes and on that basis alleges that at all times herein
defendant People[’]s Choice understood, intended and agreed that although for a time
during and shortly after the refinancing of the Calpella property defendant Serrano would
become the legal owner thereof, plaintiff was at all times the equitable owner; would be
restored to full legal ownership by defendant Serrano once the new loan had been
recorded and; [sic] plaintiff would become responsible to repay said refinanced loan as
owner of the Calpella property. Plaintiff is further informed and believes and on that
basis alleges that as servicer and trustee respectively for defendant People[’]s Choice
relating to this loan, defendants Chase and Deutsche Bank became bound by the
understanding, intention and agreements of defendants People[’]s Choice regarding
plaintiff’s status as legal and equitable owner of the Calpella property.”
7
In her opposition to the demurrer, plaintiff clarified that she sought reformation
“in order to correct the identity of the title holder of the property and to correct and
conform [sic] that plaintiff is a co-obligor on this loan.” Later in her memorandum
appeared the further explanation that “[t]he purpose of the First Cause of Action is to
reform both the loan documents and any title documents in connection with the loan, in
order to reflect that the true owner and the true primary borrower at the time of the loan
was plaintiff.”8 The memorandum further stated that plaintiff “wants the title documents
and loan documents reformed to reflect that at all times she held equitable title to the
property, was the equitable owner thereof and was a co-borrower on the People[’]s
Choice loans in question. . . . While the prayer is incomplete as to the identification of
each document that should be reformed relating to the title and the loan, the prayer of a
complaint is not a part of a complaint that is susceptible to a demurrer. [Citation.]”
Numerous restatements and elaborations on this theme appear.
With respect to the statute of limitations, plaintiff asserted that Serrano “kept
promising to transfer the property between 2003 and 2008,” and that it was only when
Serrano deeded her a joint tenancy interest that she realized Serrano had no intention of
performing the undertaking to reconvey fee title to plaintiff. She also noted that the
limitations period was necessarily tolled while her claims were subject to the automatic
stay that took effect when Serrano filed her bankruptcy petition on March 22, 2009.
Plaintiff stated that as to these defendants, her declaratory relief cause of action
had been re-asserted in error, and could be stricken “based upon the Vuki v. Sup. Ct.
(2010) 189 Cal.App.4th 791 case.”9
8
The memorandum then veered into the remarkable argument that Chase and
Deutsche Bank lacked “standing to demur to these allegations.” Thankfully, this
argument is not pursued on appeal.
9
In connection with her relinquishment of this cause of action plaintiff made yet
another erroneous assertion, to wit, that the declaratory relief cause of action in the
8
The trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend and struck the
eleventh cause of action “[a]t Plaintiff’s request.” In a written order the court reasoned
that (1) the complaint alleged no wrongful conduct by which defendants Chase and
Deutsche Bank could be estopped to assert the statute of limitations; and (2) plaintiff had
failed to specify what instrument failed to reflect the parties’ true intentions, or in what
respects. The court entered a judgment of dismissal. This timely appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I. Questions Presented
Insofar as defendants Chase and Deutsche Bank are concerned, plaintiff has
explicitly abandoned all but her reformation cause of action. The trial court found that
she failed to state facts sufficient to constitute such a cause of action in that (1) the claim
was barred on its face by the statute of limitations and she had failed to plead facts in
avoidance of the statute; and (2) she failed to specify what instrument she sought to
reform, the manner in which she sought to reform it, or the grounds on which reformation
was justified as against these defendants. The questions presented are whether the court
was correct in finding the plaintiff fatally defective in either of these respects, and if so,
whether it committed an abuse of discretion by not allowing plaintiff leave to amend.
II. Statute of Limitations
Defendants contend, and plaintiff does not dispute, that the governing statute of
limitations is Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision (d), which prescribes a
three year limitations period for “[a]n action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake,”
predecessor complaint had been “successfully demurred to without leave to amend.” In
fact that demurrer was overruled. It is possible that this and other such misstatements are
the product of counsel’s confusing this matter with other cases he is handling. Certainly
they appear inadvertent, since few if any of them appear calculated to improve plaintiff’s
position. Nonetheless it is incumbent on an attorney, as officer of the court, to employ
methods and procedures sufficient to prevent making misstatements of fact—even
inadvertently—to a court.
9
with the cause of action accruing upon “the discovery, by the aggrieved party, of the facts
constituting the fraud or mistake.”
The pertinent allegations, and matters ascertainable by judicial notice, are as
follows: As part of the refinancing arrangement in the late summer of 2003, Serrano
promised to reconvey title to plaintiff “when the refinancing was accomplished” or “as
soon as the refinance transaction was complete.” The refinancing was complete no later
than September 9, 2003, when the relevant instruments were recorded.10 Plaintiff asked
Serrano “within several months of the refinancing” to convey title back to her, but
Serrano failed to do so—although, the complaint alleges, she “initially acknowledged that
she intended to do so.” Four and a half years after the refinancing, in March 2008,
Serrano recorded a deed granting plaintiff a joint tenancy in the property. About a year
later, plaintiff asked Serrano to “correct[]” title to reflect plaintiff’s exclusive ownership,
but Serrano refused and, around the same time, initiated her bankruptcy proceeding.
Sometime between then and April 1, 2010, plaintiff initiated an adversary proceeding
concerning the Calpella property in bankruptcy court. So far as the present action is
concerned, plaintiff first asserted the cause of action now before us on June 22, 2010,
when she moved to amend the complaint to assert claims against Chase and Deutsche
Bank.
It thus plainly appears that “within several months of the refinancing”—i.e., by the
end of 2003 or early 2004—Serrano had failed to comply with a request to reconvey title,
in manifest violation of her alleged promise to do so “as soon as the refinance transaction
was complete.” If the cause of action accrued at that time, the time for bringing an action
10
The complaint alleges that the refinancing transaction closed on
August 12, 2003, but its chronology of these events is in many respects incoherent. In
any event, the refinancing was certainly completed no later than September 9, 2003,
when the deeds of trust—and plaintiff’s grant deed to Serrano—were recorded.
10
continued to run without apparent interruption at least until the filing of Serrano’s
bankruptcy petition on March 22, 2009, some five-plus years later. Since this exceeds
the statutory period by some two years, the cause of action would be barred.
The critical question then becomes whether the cause of action accrued at some later
time, and specifically, within the three years preceding March 22, 2009. Although the
statute states that a cause of action based on fraud or mistake accrues upon “discovery, by
the aggrieved party, of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake” (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 338, subd. (d)), it is settled that a plaintiff must exercise reasonable diligence to
discover the facts. “[T]he plaintiff must plead and prove the facts showing: (a) lack of
knowledge; (b) lack of means of obtaining knowledge (in the exercise of reasonable
diligence the facts could not have been discovered at an earlier date); (c) how and when
the plaintiff did actually discover the fraud or mistake. Under this rule, constructive and
presumed notice or knowledge are equivalent to knowledge. So, when the plaintiff has
notice or information of circumstances to put a reasonable person on inquiry, or has the
opportunity to obtain knowledge from sources open to his or her investigation (such as
public records or corporation books), the statute commences to run.” (3 Witkin, Cal.
Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Actions, § 659, p. 870.)
Ordinarily a breach of promise such as Serrano’s failure to promptly reconvey title
might be expected to put a reasonable person in plaintiff’s position on inquiry as to the
promisor’s possible lack of good faith. The plaintiff’s failure to discover the fraud or
mistake might still be excused, but this would require the allegation of additional facts
tending to have that effect. The complaint here contains no such further allegations.
Plaintiff contends otherwise, but she points to nothing in the pleading that remotely
satisfies the requirements described above. On its face all the complaint shows is that
Serrano made a promise in August 2003 which she promptly breached, after which
plaintiff took no action for over five years.
11
To be sure, the complaint contains a conclusory allegation that plaintiff’s reliance
on Serrano’s promises was reasonable. But no promises other than the original
undertaking to reconvey are alleged. Therefore this allegation must be understood as
referring only to that original promise. Assuming that plaintiff’s reliance on that promise
was reasonable when it was made, the question remains of when such reliance stopped
being reasonable in light of Serrano’s complete failure to do what she had promised.
It thus appears beyond question that the complaint is insufficient to avoid the bar
of the statute. The more difficult question is whether the trial court erred in not granting
plaintiff leave to attempt to plead facts in avoidance. It is of course the general rule that
leave to amend is liberally allowed, to the end that substantial justice may be served.
And while the question of leave to amend is said to be vested in the trial court’s
discretion, and thus subject to reversal on appeal only for an abuse of that discretion, it
has also been held that a showing sufficient to justify amendment may be made for the
first time on appeal. (Kong v. City of Hawaiian Gardens Redevelopment Agency (2002)
108 Cal.App.4th 1028, 1041-1042, quoting Careau & Co. v. Security Pacific Business
Credit, Inc. (1990) 222 Cal.App.3d 1371, 1386; see Rufini v. CitiMortgage, Inc. (2014)
227 Cal.App.4th 299, 306.) Yet plaintiff has made no such showing, either below or
here.
Plaintiff contends that if she had been permitted leave to amend, she would have
“provided facts to show that the Chase Respondents engaged in blameworthy or
inequitable conduct.” This is somewhat beside the point; the question is not how
defendants conducted themselves but when plaintiff’s cause of action accrued, which in
turn depends on when she discovered, or should have discovered, the fraud or mistake on
which her claim for reformation is based. Her allusion to “blameworthy or inequitable
conduct” echoes the trial court’s written order sustaining the demurrer; but that order
itself missed the mark in this respect. The court wrote that the complaint was barred by
12
the statute of limitations because plaintiff had “not alleged facts that would estop Chase
and Deutsche Bank from asserting the defense.” The court thus seemed to suppose that
the only way plaintiff could avoid the statute was to raise an estoppel against
defendants—which, as the court recognized, requires “ ‘ “ ‘conduct’ ” ’ ” by which the
defendant “ ‘ “ ‘has induced another into forbearing suit within the applicable limitations
period.’ ” ’ ” (May v. City of Milpitas (2013) 217 Cal.App.4th 1307, 1338, quoting
Goodman v. Kennedy (1976) 18 Cal.3d 335, 349.) But no party had mentioned the
doctrine of estoppel up to that point—and for good reason. While that doctrine can
excuse late filing of any claim, regardless of the nature of the cause of action, it has little
practical application to claims sounding in fraud of mistake, which are subject to delayed
accrual by the statute’s own terms. And while it is true that delayed discovery of a fraud
cause of action will often involve some kind of inequitable conduct by the perpetrator—
conduct that might also ground an estoppel—there is no requirement of any such
misconduct. Rather, the statute delays accrual until the plaintiff discovers, or in the
exercise of reasonable diligence should discover, the facts constituting the fraud.
The question, then, is not whether plaintiff can point to some blameworthy
conduct by defendants but whether she can allege facts justifying her own conduct in
waiting at least two years beyond the limitations period before seeking any judicial
remedy in connection with the claimed fraud or mistake. The assertedly inequitable
conduct she attributes to defendants has no apparent bearing on that question. Thus she
asserts that defendants acted inequitably by “taking [plaintiff’s] mortgage payments, but
failing to complete [loan modification] processing after she contacted them” seeking such
a modification. Such conduct could have no apparent tendency either to conceal or
disclose the fraud or mistake on which the cause of action is predicated. The same is true
of the “inequitable conduct of their agent People[’]s Choice” in “fail[ing] to acknowledge
and document what was agreed upon by the parties.” Assuming this was indeed
13
blameworthy conduct—a premise that is hardly substantiated by anything in this
record—it has no apparent bearing on the accrual of a cause of action predicated on fraud
and mistake as between plaintiff and her daughter. Nor is there any traction in plaintiff’s
attempt to impute unsavory motives to People’s Choice, i.e., that it “was only interested
in acquiring this loan in order to make profits from it for [itself] and Chase, rather than
formally recogniz[ing] what was understood to be a loan secured by [plaintiff’s]
property.”
Again, the question is not what defendants did but what plaintiff knew, or should
have known, and when, and why—or more precisely, why not sooner. Plaintiff has
offered no pertinent answer to this question. In her brief she asserts that she “did not
realize that the documents would need to be reformed until her daughter and [sic] failed
and later refused to transfer 100% of the title back to her. . . .” (Italics added.) But the
question is not when she realized that “the documents would have to be reformed,” but
when she realized that they were the products of fraud or mistake. The “failure” to which
she alludes occurred within a few months after the 2003 refinancing. She offers no
explanation for waiting five years between that failure and the express refusal that made
her realize “that her daughter never intended to voluntarily give her 100% of the legal
title.” At most plaintiff suggests that on unspecified occasions her daughter expressed, or
otherwise communicated, an intention to eventually perform the promise. But the
promise, as alleged, was that her daughter would reconvey title promptly after refinancing
was achieved. Long before five years had elapsed it should have been obvious that she
did not intend to perform the promise as formulated in the complaint, and assuming she
had no intention of performing at the beginning—as the fraud claim necessarily
supposes—there is nothing in any of plaintiff’s papers that plausibly suggests a delayed
discovery of this fact.
14
Indeed, plaintiff’s counsel makes no secret of the fact that the spur to sue was not
any new discovery or realization but the fact that Serrano was getting into serious
financial difficulty and that if the property were not placed in plaintiff’s name it might be
lost. A party cannot avoid the effect of the statute of limitations by asserting that she
lacked sufficient motivation to vindicate her rights until after the time had run. Once the
cause of action accrues, the plaintiff must act within the prescribed period, or the
opportunity to vindicate her rights will be lost. After ample opportunity in the trial court
and here, plaintiff has failed to identify additional facts that, if pleaded, might enable her
to successfully avoid the statutory bar. Accordingly, we cannot say that the trial court
abused its discretion in denying leave to amend, even though it relied on an erroneous
theory in doing so.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
15
______________________________________
RUSHING, P.J.
WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
PREMO, J.
____________________________________
ELIA, J.
16