Chu v. Gong CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 2014
DocketB246808
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chu v. Gong CA2/8 (Chu v. Gong CA2/8) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chu v. Gong CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 9/23/14 Chu v. Gong CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

TE CHUAN CHU, B246808

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. GC042879) v.

AI YING GONG et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Mary Thornton House, Judge. Reversed.

Mohammed K. Ghods and William A. Stahr for Defendants and Appellants.

Wong & Mak and Steven W. Hashimoto for Plaintiff and Respondent.

____________________________ Plaintiff and respondent Te Chuan Chu, also known as Jason Chu, is a mortgage loan broker. Defendants and appellants are Jing Gong, a real estate investor who is also known as Tammy Gong (referred to herein as Tammy Gong), and her cousin, Ai Ying Gong. Over the course of five or six years, plaintiff and Tammy Gong entered into a series of financial transactions, some individually, and some through companies they owned. Ai Ying Gong was involved in some of these transactions. She and a company owned by Tammy Gong filed a cross-complaint against plaintiff, a company he owns, and his father-in-law.1 This litigation involves a dispute over which party owes money to the other, and in what amount. In the trial court proceedings, plaintiff’s damages claims varied dramatically and without coherent explanation, from the operative pleading, to opening statement, to his trial testimony, to closing argument, to the statement of decision and the proposed forms of judgment he submitted to the court. After the court entered an initially proposed judgment, plaintiff acknowledged the damages figures were incorrect. After further proceedings, the trial court entered an amended judgment which also departs from the evidence of damages at trial. Plaintiff’s damages claims continued to shift on appeal. The proposed forms of judgment plaintiff submitted to the trial court bore little resemblance to the evidence of damages at trial, and his arguments on appeal in support of the amended judgment likewise rest on facts that are not found in the amended judgment. Finding no substantial evidence supports the damages awarded, we reverse and remand for further proceedings in conformance with this opinion. BACKGROUND 1. The Transactions Among the Parties Most of the transactions involved in this case were initiated by plaintiff and Tammy Gong individually. There was considerable evidence at trial about transactions

1 The cross-complaint was apparently dismissed during a January 2012 status conference, and the issues raised in the cross-complaint were deemed affirmative defenses. 2 that are not in dispute, and we will not recite here the facts concerning those transactions. The loan transactions that are in dispute were secured at various times with deeds of trust against three different parcels of real property that we refer to in this opinion as the “Walnut” property, the “Garvey” property, and the “Valley” property. Before we turn to a summary of the disputed transactions, we introduce the names of other individuals and entities that were involved in the transactions. In addition to Ai Ying Gong, L&G Garvey Investment, LLC filed a cross-complaint against Jason Chu, Jason Chu’s father- in-law Ming Jer Lin, and Jason Chu’s company, MFG Funding, Inc. There was considerable evidence at trial concerning “Mr. Chen,” who is not a party to this litigation, who also engaged in financial transactions with plaintiff and Tammy Gong. It is undisputed that plaintiff agreed to lend $310,000 to Tammy Gong, and he caused the funds to be transferred to her personal account. However, it is also undisputed that plaintiff and Tammy Gong agreed to secure the loan with a promissory note stating the borrower is Prelude Investment LLC, and a deed of trust against a residence at 401 Walnut Avenue in Arcadia (the Walnut property) also showing the borrower as Prelude Investment LLC. The note and deed of trust are both dated December 15, 2005. Tammy Gong signed this note on behalf of Prelude Investment LLC, payable to plaintiff and Ming Jer Lin, who plaintiff testified is his father-in-law. Plaintiff testified Tammy Gong was the borrower and her company, Prelude Investment LLC, owned the property she used to secure the loan. The note and other documents show Prelude Investment LLC is the sole borrower. Consistent with the note, the deed of trust shows the lenders are plaintiff and Ming Jer Lin. The deed of trust shows the trustee is MFG Funding, Inc. At the request of Tammy Gong, plaintiff cancelled the original note and reconveyed the Walnut property deed of trust. Tammy Gong told plaintiff she wanted to refinance the Walnut property. She offered to replace plaintiff’s deed of trust against the Walnut property with a deed of trust against undeveloped property located at 11605 Garvey Avenue in El Monte (the Garvey property), in addition to providing additional security after she refinanced the Walnut property. Plaintiff testified there was

3 not enough equity in the Garvey property to secure the entire amount of the $310,000 loan. A new note, for $300,000, and deed of trust dated December 11, 2007, superseded the original note and deed of trust. It is not disputed the $300,000 face value of the note was a typographical error, and the debt was actually $310,000. The new note was to be signed by Tammy Gong on behalf of another one of her companies, L&G Garvey Investment, LLC, but it was never signed. It was secured by a deed of trust against the Garvey property, showing L&G Garvey Investment, LLC as the borrower. Although the note is unsigned, Tammy Gong has never argued to the trial court or on appeal that foreclosure on the deed of trust against the Garvey property was barred because the underlying note was unsigned. Tammy Gong does not dispute the $310,000 debt on the ground it was secured by a note in the amount of $300,000 or on the ground the note was unsigned. In addition to this $310,000 debt, plaintiff also sought to recover $50,000 from Tammy Gong. Plaintiff testified that he paid $50,000 to a third party, Mr. Hsin-Yu Chen, on behalf of, and at the request of, Tammy Gong, in partial payment of Tammy Gong’s debt to Mr. Chen. Tammy Gong acknowledged an indebtedness to Mr. Chen, but disputed that plaintiff was entitled to recover from her $50,000 that he claimed to have paid Mr. Chen on her behalf. The record does not include any documents evidencing that plaintiff paid $50,000 to Mr. Chen in partial satisfaction of Tammy Gong’s indebtedness to him. As described below, plaintiff testified Tammy Gong’s indebtedness to him of $50,000 was included in the much greater face value of notes and deeds of trust subsequently issued by Tammy Gong’s cousin, Ai Ying Gong, and also by L&G East Valley, LLC. On January 18, 2008, defendant Ai Ying Gong gave plaintiff a note for $190,000 and a deed of trust to be recorded as a second trust deed against the Walnut property. It was undisputed that plaintiff did not lend $190,000 to Ai Ying Gong.2 Plaintiff testified

2 The cross-complaint alleged that “Chu paid no monetary or other consideration to Ai Ying Gong for the $190,000.00 promissory note. . . .” 4 that money did not “change[] hands” between plaintiff and Ai Ying Gong. Plaintiff testified the $190,000 secured loan was intended to provide additional security for repayment of Tammy Gong’s debts, since the equity in the Garvey property was not sufficient to secure the $310,000 debt.

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Bluebook (online)
Chu v. Gong CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chu-v-gong-ca28-calctapp-2014.