Gray1 CPB v. SCC Acquisitions

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 2014
DocketG047429
StatusPublished

This text of Gray1 CPB v. SCC Acquisitions (Gray1 CPB v. SCC Acquisitions) 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
Gray1 CPB v. SCC Acquisitions, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 4/9/14

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

GRAY1 CPB, LLC,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G047429

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2008-0112660)

SCC ACQUISITIONS, INC., et al., OPINION

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeals from orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Charles Margines, Judge. Affirmed. Shumener, Odson & Oh, Robert J. Odson and Edward O. Morales for Plaintiff and Appellant. White & Case, Aalok Sharma and Mark E. Gustafson for Defendants and Appellants. You cross continents and spend years trying to collect a judgment for your client. Late one Friday afternoon, the debtor’s lawyer walks into your office and hands you a cashier’s check for almost $13 million, covering the entire judgment and all accumulated interest. Do you accept the check or say, “no thank you, I need to make a motion for attorney fees first?” Put another way, is a bird in the hand worth two in the bush? Gray1 CPB, LLC (Gray1), obtained a judgment against SCC Acquisitions and Bruce Elieff (collectively defendants). Almost two years later, defendants paid the amount of the outstanding judgment and accrued interest with a cashier’s check. In the interim, Gray1 allegedly incurred more than $3 million in attorney fees in an effort to enforce its judgment. The fees were largely incurred in litigating a separate action against Elieff in an effort to untangle what Gray1 asserts were a number of fraudulent transactions resulting in the placement of fraudulent liens on Elieff’s real property as part of a scheme to insulate Elieff’s properties from the judgment. According to Gray1, it was only when it appeared the separate action was imminently headed toward resolution in Gray1’s favor that defendants gave Gray1 the cashier’s check to pay the judgment. Gray1 did not immediately cash the check. It held onto the check long enough for its attorneys to file a motion for postjudgment costs, including attorney fees. Once deposited, the issuing bank honored the check. Judgment creditors who have prevailed on a contract authorizing the award of attorney fees are entitled to postjudgment attorney fees. (Code of Civ. Proc., §§ 685.040, 685.070, subd. (a)(6); all statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.) However, a motion for postjudgment costs must “be made before the judgment is satisfied in full.” (§ 685.080, subd. (a).) The trial court denied Gray1’s motion for postjudgment costs, finding the motion was made after the judgment had been fully satisfied. Gray1 appealed. In this appeal we are called upon to determine when a judgment paid with a cashier’s check is deemed satisfied.

2 In addition to opposing Gray1’s motion, defendants filed a motion of their own. They sought a determination that Gray1 unjustly failed to file a timely acknowledgment of full satisfaction of judgment. (§ 724.050, subd. (e).) The trial court denied defendants’ motion, finding defendants failed to prove damages, and concluding Gray1’s failure to file a timely full satisfaction of judgment was not without just cause. Defendants appealed from that order. I FACTS In August 2010, Gray1 obtained a judgment in excess of $9.1 million, plus interest, against defendants as a result of the defendants’ failure to make good on their guaranties of a loan made to a limited liability company owned by Elieff. (See SCC Acquisitions, Inc. v. Central Pacific Bank (2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 859, 861-862.) The written guaranties contained provisions providing for the award of attorney fees. (SCC Acquisitions, Inc. v. Central Pacific Bank (Oct. 30, 2012, G045718) [nonpub.opn.].) The judgment provided Gray1 was entitled to attorney fees and costs to be established by a cost bill or motion. By interlineation, the court amended the judgment to reflect the award of over $1.5 million in attorney fees and more than $44,000 in costs. Defendants made no payments on the judgment until June 8, 2012. On that date, defendants’ attorney hand delivered to Gray1’s attorneys a cashier’s check in the amount of $12,918,654.46 and a letter. According to the letter, the cashier’s check covered the amount of the judgment, including accumulated interest, and the judgment was now fully satisfied. The letter also demanded Gray1 immediately file a full satisfaction of judgment. Additionally, the letter contained a notice in the language of section 724.050, subdivision (b): “‘Important warning. If this judgment has been satisfied, the law requires that you comply with this demand not later than 15 days after you receive it. If a court proceeding is necessary to compel you to comply with this demand, you will be required to pay my reasonable attorney’s fees in the proceeding if

3 the court determines that the judgment has been satisfied and that you failed to comply with the demand. In addition, if the court determines that you failed without just cause to comply with this demand within the 15 days allowed, you will be liable for all damages I sustain by reason of such failure and will also forfeit one hundred dollars to me.’” Twelve days after receiving the cashier’s check, on June 20, 2012, Gray1 filed a motion for postjudgment costs, including attorney fees incurred in attempting to enforce the judgment. Gray1 alleged that in the two years following the judgment, it had incurred more than $3.1 million in attorney fees in efforts to collect on its judgment. 1 On June 22, 2012, Gray1 filed an acknowledgment of partial satisfaction of judgment. Gray1 contended it was entitled costs (including attorney fees) incurred in attempting to enforce its judgment, and therefore, the amount paid by defendants was not in full satisfaction of the judgment. Gray1 deposited the cashier’s check on June 21, 2012, the day after it filed the motion for postjudgment costs. The bank “fund[ed]” the check on June 25, 2012. Fifteen 15 days after hand delivering the cashier’s check and letter, defendants filed a motion to compel Gray1 to file an acknowledgement of full satisfaction of judgment on June 27, 2012. (§ 724.050, subd. (d).) The motion alleged defendants not only paid the judgment in full, but overpaid by more than $281,000, based on a miscalculation as to the date postjudgment interest started accumulating and “numerous collections and levies that Gray1 has evidently already made.” The court heard the parties’ respective motions on September 12, 2012. Defendants argued Gray1’s motion for postjudgment attorney fees was untimely because section 685.080 requires a motion for costs, including attorney fees permitted by section 685.040, to be filed before the judgment has been fully satisfied (§§ 685.070, subd. (b),

1 As the amount of fees reasonably incurred by Gray1 is not an issue in the present appeal, there is no need to set forth the extensive efforts Gray1 alleged it undertook to enforce its judgment.

4 685.080, subd (a)). Defendants further asserted the judgment was fully satisfied when the cashier’s check was delivered to Gray1 and accepted on June 8, 2012, almost two weeks before Gray1 filed its motion for postjudgment costs. Gray1 conceded that had defense counsel walked into Gray1’s attorney’s office and paid off the outstanding judgment with a briefcase full of cash, instead of with a cashier’s check, the judgment would have been fully satisfied that same day and Gray1 would have been prohibited from thereafter filing a motion for postjudgment costs. Gray1 argued, however, its motion was not untimely because a judgment paid by check is not satisfied until the check is ultimately honored by the issuing bank, citing section 724.010. In a five-page ruling, the court denied as untimely Gray1’s motion for postjudgment costs. The court also denied defendants’ motion for damages and sanctions (§ 724.050, subd.

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Bluebook (online)
Gray1 CPB v. SCC Acquisitions, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray1-cpb-v-scc-acquisitions-calctapp-2014.