FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 2026
DocketG064623
StatusUnpublished

This text of FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3 (FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3) 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
FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 2/11/26 FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

FHDI, LLC,

Plaintiff and Respondent, G064623

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2013- 00662581) GREGORY GRANTHAM, OPINION Defendant and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, David J. Hesseltine, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. Mario Ashraf Iskander for Defendant and Appellant. Rutan & Tucker, Ira G. Rivin and Gerard M. Mooney for Plaintiff and Respondent.

* * * The underlying case is about a loan between plaintiff and respondent FHDI, LLC, which was the lender, and defendant and appellant Gregory Grantham, who was one of numerous individuals and entities who were the borrowers. FHDI contended Grantham and other defendants committed fraud in connection with the loan. This case was originally filed in 2014. Grantham’s default was entered in 2024. Shortly before judgment was entered against him, Grantham appeared after a lengthy absence to argue the case should be dismissed under the “five-year rule” set forth in Code of Civil Procedure section 583.310.1 As we shall discuss below, we conclude the trial court correctly determined the five-year rule did not apply due to lengthy stays in the case that were not the fault of FHDI. Grantham raises several other issues, but only one of them has merit. He contends the amount of the judgment was incorrectly calculated because he was given a monetary credit based on a foreclosure sale rather than the fair market value of the property. This was error. We remand the case for the limited purpose of determining the fair market value of the property and amending the judgment to reflect proper credit for this amount. STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY This case has a lengthy history. In this section, we endeavor to give an overview of the facts and procedural history without wandering too far into the weeds. We have carefully read the briefs and thoroughly reviewed the record, and although we are omitting portions of this case’s history, we

1 Subsequent statutory references are to the Code of Civil

Procedure unless otherwise indicated.

2 are nonetheless aware of them and the full context in which this appeal presents itself. A. Relevant People and Entities, and the Loan In 2012, Kim Davis, an attorney, was working with Grantham2 and Mervyn Phelan. Davis, who was friends Henry T. Nicholas, III (Nicholas), approached Nicholas about investing with Grantham and Phelan. General counsel for Nicholas’s companies, Emilio Gonzalez, spoke with Phelan and Grantham about the potential for Nicholas to invest in a large development project in Fort Howard, Maryland. Gonazlez was told the project would provide residential, commercial, and medical facilities for veterans. In October 2012, after negotiations and due diligence, Nicholas, through FHDI, a single purpose entity, agreed to loan $6.44 million to American Life Capital, LLC (ALC). ALC was controlled by Phelan and Grantham. The parties executed, among other documents, a loan agreement and a promissory note. The terms of the note required ALC to repay the principal and any unpaid interest within one year, subject to an option to extend the maturity date by six months if there was no existing default. The loan was guaranteed by several ALC affiliates, including Workmen’s Development Group (WDG) and SLF Investment Trust (SLF). (Collectively, Phelan, Grantham, ALC, WDG, and SLF are referred to herein as the ALC defendants.) Grantham and Phelan were cotrustees of SLF. SLF executed a separate pledge agreement in favor of FHDI. SLF pledged its entire membership interest in seven limited liability companies (the pledged LLCs) as collateral for the SLF guaranty. According to the

2 Grantham is, or was, an attorney, although his license status is

unclear.

3 various documents, the seven companies were real estate and development companies, each of which owned unimproved land valued between $1.5 and $6.5 million. FHDI recorded a memorandum of pledge agreement in each jurisdiction where the property was located and UCC-1 financing statements. On October 29, FHDI began disbursing loan funds to ALC. B. Problems Arise Shortly after the loan documents were executed, FHDI began to learn of numerous issues. ALC’s borrower, the Fort Howard development entity, complained ALC had not fully funded its loan. A few weeks later, outside counsel, Emilio Gonzalez, received correspondence from an attorney claiming to represent two of the pledged LLCs. Phelan and Grantham had represented those two entities owned 92 acres of land in San Diego and San Bernardino counties, with a value of $7.3 million. According to the attorney, neither ALC, SLF, nor WDG had an ownership in either LLC. Gonzalez learned that Phelan and Grantham had transferred their interests in those two LLCs to third parties in April 2012, six months before the loan agreement between ALC and FHDI. (Because the properties continued to be owned by the LLCs, title reports obtained during due diligence did not reveal the transfers.) From FHDI’s perspective, ALC was in default on the loan less than a month after the papers had been signed, and had no right to any further proceeds. Other issues began to reveal themselves. The ALC defendants had represented in the various loan documents that no lawsuits or other actions were pending against them, the pledged LLCs, or the properties owned by the pledged LLCs. Grantham also made the same representation during the due diligence process. But at the time the loan was made, three undisclosed, fraud-based lawsuits existed against ALC (sued under its former

4 name, Preferred Senior Holding), WDG, Grantham, and/or Phelan in Maryland. None of these lawsuits were disclosed at the time of the loan. In 2014, Phelan and Grantham pleaded guilty to federal mail and wire fraud on transactions relating to one or more of the Maryland lawsuits. Each received a five-year prison term. Additionally, FHDI claimed that Phelan and Grantham misled FHDI about how a portion of the loan funds would be used. Prior to funding, they persuaded FHDI to include $214,000 in the initial loan draw to remove a deed of trust on a property owned by one of the pledged LLCs. FHDI alleged they concealed a prior commitment from the developer for a loan to pay off the same deed of trust, thereby receiving $428,000 to pay off a $214,000 obligation. After learning about the prior transfers of two of the pledged LLCs, FHDI notified Phelan and Grantham that these actions, if true, would constitute a breach. Efforts to find a solution were unsuccessful. C. FHDI Sues the ALC Defendants On July 15, 2013, FHDI filed the instant action, alleging various claims for fraud and breach of contract. FHDI immediately sought and obtained a preliminary injunction preventing the ALC defendants from transferring or encumbering the collateral. FHDI separately initiated foreclosure proceedings on the pledged collateral. There was a great deal of activity related to the foreclosure proceedings and allegations of fraudulent transfers of the collateral by the ALC defendants. We need not detail that activity here. D. Prison, COVID-19, and Further Litigation As noted above, in 2015, Phelan and Grantham began serving five-year prison sentences. In August 2016, the trial court stayed the

5 proceedings until Grantham and Phelan were released from prison, which occurred in May 2018 and July 2019, respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
FHDI v. Grantham CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fhdi-v-grantham-ca43-calctapp-2026.