Estate of Kwong CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2016
DocketA140437
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Kwong CA1/4 (Estate of Kwong CA1/4) 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
Estate of Kwong CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 2/24/16 Estate of Kwong CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

Estate of STANLEY CHONG KWONG, Deceased.

LARRY KWONG et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, A140437 & A141290 v. (San Francisco City & County JENNIFER SHUK-HAN KWOK as Super. Ct. No. CGC-10-499028) Executrix et al., Defendants and Appellants.

I. INTRODUCTION This appeal arises from an action brought by Lau Kwong (Lau) and her son Larry Kwong (Larry) against the estate of her son Stanley Kwong (Stan). Lau sought an accounting of Stan’s management of her property, and to recover title to three properties. Larry sought an accounting on behalf of his brother Harry’s estate, which Stan also managed.1 Stan managed all of Lau’s finances over a period of nearly 30 years, and Lau’s assets were used for the down payment on two properties and for a share of the down payment on a third property. At the time of his death, Stan had assets worth in excess of

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to members of the Kwong family by their first names. No disrespect is intended.

1 $14 million. He left his entire estate to his wife, Jennifer Shuk-Han Kwok (Kwok), and nothing to his mother, Lau. After a nine-day bench trial, the trial court ultimately rejected Lau and Larry’s resulting trust theory, but instead found Lau had established a loan relationship with Stan. As a result, the court held Lau and Larry were entitled to interest on the loans made to Stan, proceeds from the property rents, and proceeds from the various refinancings, all with compound interest. The court awarded Lau more than $4.5 million. The court awarded Larry more than $196,000. On appeal, Kwok claims the trial court erred in: (1) not making the proper deduction from amounts owed; (2) applying compound interest to the base amount awarded; (3) holding Kwok and Stan’s company, California Financial Mortgage Corporation (California Financial) individually liable; and (4) failing to allocate the debt among the defendants.2 We affirm. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Evidence at Trial Lau emigrated from China to San Francisco in 1948 to join her husband Chong Kwong (deceased) (Chong). They had four children: Larry, Jeanne, Harry (deceased), and Stan (deceased). Lau does not read or write English and speaks only the Chinese dialect of Longdu. Lau and Chong both worked seven days a week as night janitors, and Lau also worked in sewing factories to support their family. They lived frugally and saved small amounts of money allowing them ultimately to purchase two apartment buildings in San Francisco: in 1976 they purchased 343 Walnut Street (Walnut building), and later in 1981 they purchased 1248 Union Street (Union building). Larry and Jeanne were originally on

2 Jeanne Kwong as trustee of the Stan Kwong Trust, joins in Kwok’s arguments challenging the amount of the judgment and the award of compound interest. She also joins in respondents’ arguments that Kwok is personally liable along with California Financial.

2 the title with Lau for the Walnut building, and Larry shared title to the Union building. Given Lau and Chong’s low salaries, Larry and Jeanne, who were professionally employed, were listed on the titles to make it easier to qualify for loans. Larry testified that his parents’ “life savings” were used as a down payment on the Walnut building and they owned the property, even though he was listed on the deed. Larry later conveyed his interest in both properties to Stan. Lau, Larry, and Jeanne all believed that Lau solely owned the Union building. The source of the down payment was Lau’s funds along with small amounts from Jeanne and Larry. But, there also was conflicting evidence that Jeanne contributed $10,000, Larry contributed $15,000, and Stan contributed $47,500 to purchase the Union building. Stan formed California Financial in the early 1980’s, and he was its sole shareholder and director. Through California Financial, he invested in real estate and ran a mortgage brokerage business. Kwok worked at California Financial and took over the business after Stan’s death. According to Lau, Stan also purchased a building on Van Ness Avenue (Van Ness building) using her funds as a down payment. The down payment for the Van Ness building consisted of $186,534 from Lau, $40,000 from Harry (or Harry and Stan jointly), and the remainder from Stan. Stan and California Financial held the title to the Van Ness building, but Lau claimed a 42 percent interest and Harry claimed a 9 percent interest. The title to the Walnut building and Union building transferred many times among the family members. At the time of Stan’s death, the title to the Walnut building was held one-third by Lau, one-third by Stan, and one-third by Jeanne (although Jeanne later quitclaimed her one-third share to Lau).3 Stan held a 1/20th interest in the Union

3 At the time of Stan’s death, Jeanne possessed a one-third interest in the Walnut building. In January 2010, she transferred her interest to Lau via quitclaim deed. The deed, however, is unrecorded, but the trial court concluded this did not affect the validity of the deed. The trial court found Lau owned a two-thirds interest in the Walnut building.

3 building and Lau held the rest. Record title to the Van Ness building was in the name of Stan and California Financial. During the 30 years leading up to the underlying litigation, money was distributed to Larry, Jeanne, Harry, and Stan. Lau gave Larry $100,000 for renovations on his home. After Larry transferred his interest in the Walnut building and Union building to Stan, Lau gave Larry roughly $170,000 to be used as a down payment on another property. Jeanne was also given approximately $62,000 to assist with the down payment on a property. She paid back some of the amount and interest, but the remaining $50,000 plus interest was a gift from Lau. Lau also gave Jeanne roughly $100,000 for improvements on Jeanne’s home. Stan accumulated a large real estate portfolio worth as much as $20 million. Upon his death, Stan bequeathed all of his holdings to his wife, Kwok, pursuant to his estate plan. B. Procedural History and Trial Results Initially, respondents filed a probate action after Stan’s death. Both Lau and Harry’s estate filed claims against Stan’s estate, and those claims were rejected by the probate court. Thereafter, they filed the underlying civil action. The operative pleading was the second amended complaint (SAC), which alleged causes of action to establish a resulting trust, for an accounting, constructive trust, conversion, financial elder abuse, and to quiet title. The plaintiffs in the underlying action were Lau individually and as trustee of the “Lau Kwong Trust ,”and Larry as both trustee of the Lau Kwong Trust and administrator of the “Estate of Harry C. Kwong.” The named defendants were Kwok as the executor of Stan’s estate, the trustee of the “Stanley Kwong and Jennifer Kwok Revocable Trust,” the trustee of the “Stanley Kwong Marital Trust” and other trusts, Kwok individually, Jeanne as a trustee of the Stan Kwong Trust, and California Financial. California Financial was included as a defendant in causes of action in the SAC specifically for an accounting and resulting constructive trusts for all three properties. The SAC alleged Stan conveyed his interest in the Van Ness building to California

4 Financial and it collected rents and profits from the property for the benefit of Lau and Harry.

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