Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 2014
DocketH037631
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6 (Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6) 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
Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 11/18/14 Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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.

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Cortez v. JP Morgan Chase Bank CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortez-v-jp-morgan-chase-bank-ca6-calctapp-2014.