Herttua v. American Commercial Equities Three CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 2015
DocketD066377
StatusUnpublished

This text of Herttua v. American Commercial Equities Three CA4/1 (Herttua v. American Commercial Equities Three CA4/1) 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
Herttua v. American Commercial Equities Three CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 12/16/15 Herttua v. American Commercial Equities Three CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

NEIL HERTTUA, D066377

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2013-00043406- CU-OR-CTL) AMERICAN COMMERCIAL EQUITIES THREE, LLC,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,

Joan M. Lewis, Judge. Affirmed.

Mirch Law Firm, Kevin J. Mirch, Marie C. Mirch and Erin E. Hanson for Plaintiff

and Appellant.

Samuels, Green & Steel and Glen R. Segal for Defendant and Respondent. I.

INTRODUCTION

Appellant Neil Herttua filed this action against American Commercial Equities

Three, LLC (ACE). In a first amended complaint, Herttua alleged claims styled as quiet

title, accounting, preliminary injunction, and fraud. All of Herttua's claims arise from his

contention that ACE improperly attempted to satisfy a judgment that it had obtained

against his mother, Rita Herttua (Rita), by effectuating a sheriff's sale of certain real

property (the Property) in which Herttua was living and that Herttua claimed belonged

solely to him.

ACE demurred to the complaint on several grounds, including that none of

Herttua's claims alleged facts sufficient to state a cause of action. The gist of ACE's

demurrer was that it had properly effectuated a sheriff's sale of Rita's interest in the

Property. ACE supported its demurrer with a request for judicial notice in which ACE

requested that the court take judicial notice of various documents filed in an action

between ACE and Rita, including the trial court's ruling authorizing the sheriff's sale of

Rita's interest in the Property, the notice of sheriff's sale, and the sheriff's deed

demonstrating the completion of the sale of the Property to a third party. The trial court

granted the request for judicial notice and sustained ACE's demurrer without leave to

amend. The trial court reasoned that the judicially noticed documents demonstrated that

ACE possessed no interest in the Property, that Herttua failed to state facts demonstrating

a relationship between him and ACE that could give rise to a claim for an accounting,

2 that the cause of action for injunctive relief to enjoin the sale of the Property was moot in

light of the completion of the sale of the Property, and that the cause of action for fraud

failed because Herttua did not allege that ACE had made fraudulent statements to him on

which he relied.

On appeal, Herttua claims that each of his claims properly stated a cause of action

against ACE and that the trial court erred in taking judicial notice of a deed related to the

Property for the purpose of determining the owner of the Property. Herttua also claims

that he could amend the complaint to state several additional causes of action. We affirm

the judgment.1

1 There is considerable ambiguity in the record as to whether Herttua appears in this action solely in an individual capacity, or in his capacity as a trustee for a trust. The first amended complaint named Herttua and an entity called the "Herttua Irrevocable Trust" as plaintiffs. However, the trust was not a proper party to the action, because the "trustee, rather than the trust, is the real party in interest" in an action involving a trust. (Moeller v. Superior Court (1997) 16 Cal.4th 1124, 1132, fn.3.) The trial court entered a judgment of dismissal as to both Herttua and the "Herttua Irrevocable Trust." Herttua and an entity called the "Herttua Irrevocable Trust" filed separate notices of appeal. Herttua's opening brief is unclear as to whether it is being offered on behalf of Herttua solely in his individual capacity or also in his capacity as the trustee of a trust. While the caption refers solely to Herttua as "plaintiff and appellant," other portions of the briefing are ambiguous. In his reply brief in this court, Herttua contends that, in both the trial court and on appeal, he was acting in both his individual capacity and "as Trustee of the Herttua Family Revocable Trust." (Italics added.) Yet, in his opposition to ACE's demurrer, Herttua contended that he was acting on behalf of "himself and as the trustee [of] the Herttua Irrevocable Trust," and he requested "leave to amend to clarify that Neil Herttua is the trustee of the Herttua Irrevocable Trust." (Italics added.) As noted above, neither the first amended complaint, the judgment, nor the notice of appeal state that Herttua is acting as a trustee. Further, Herttua's briefing is entirely unclear as to which trust, if any, he purports to be acting on behalf. Under these circumstances, we conclude that Herttua, in his individual capacity, is the only appellant properly before this court. In any event, all of the reasons that we provide in the text for affirming the judgment as to Herttua individually would also apply if we were to 3 II.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The first amended complaint

In April 2013, Herttua and the Herttua Irrevocable Trust2 filed a first amended

complaint against ACE. All of the claims in the first amended complaint were premised

on Herttua's contention that he was the sole owner of the Property and that ACE was

improperly attempting to effectuate a sheriff's sale of the Property. Herttua contended

that Rita and her husband Richard Herttua (Richard) transferred title to the Property to

the Herttua Revocable Living Trust in 1996. Herttua further contended that upon

Richard's death in 1996, Rita had transferred ownership of the Property to Herttua.

Alternatively, Herttua contended that he had obtained ownership of the Property by way

of adverse possession.

Herttua further alleged that ACE had obtained a judgment against Rita and a

company called Apache Trading, Inc. in a separate action. 3 Herttua contended that ACE

was improperly attempting to effectuate a sheriff's sale of the Property in order to satisfy

the judgment. In a cause of action for quiet title, Herttua requested that the court "enter

title to the [Property] in the name of [Herttua] as the sole owner . . . ." In a cause of

action for accounting, Herttua requested that the court order ACE to account for other

conclude that Herttua, acting in his capacity of a trustee to either trust, were an appellant in this court. 2 Although the first amended complaint named the Herttua Irrevocable Trust as a plaintiff, Herttua is the only appellant before this court. (See fn. 1.)

3 The complaint is replete with extraneous factual allegations pertaining to the action involving Rita and ACE. 4 property obtained by ACE to satisfy the judgment because "[w]ithout a proper accounting

. . . it is impossible to determine the amount of the remaining judgment, if any." In a

cause of action styled as a claim for "injunctive relief," Herttua requested that the court

enjoin the then impending sheriff's sale of the Property. Finally, in a cause of action for

fraud, Herttua alleged that "Fraudulent Writs of Seizure and Execution were obtained

which did not include amounts already paid" on the judgment.

B.

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