Kirkeby v. Kahn CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 2025
DocketD083388
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kirkeby v. Kahn CA4/1 (Kirkeby v. Kahn 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
Kirkeby v. Kahn CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 6/9/25 Kirkeby v. Kahn 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

GLENN KIRKEBY et al., D083388

Plaintiffs and Respondents,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2017- 00032731-CU-BT-NC) ANNE KAHN et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Earl H. Maas III, Judge. Affirmed. Decker Law, James Decker, and Griffin Schindler for Defendant and Appellant. Law Offices of Robert A. Ball, Robert A. Ball, and John M. Donnelly for Plaintiffs and Respondents.

In this appeal, her third from the underlying lawsuit, Anne Kahn and an entity controlled solely by her, Anne Kahn, Inc. (Kahn, Inc.), challenge the trial court’s order distributing $1,578,111 to Glenn and Anastasia Kirkeby in partial satisfaction of a judgment in their favor against their former business partner and Kahn’s ex-husband, Lawrence Burns. Burns defrauded the Kirkebys out of millions of dollars and the Kirkebys obtained a judgment against him for $9,111,648. The funds that were distributed were proceeds from the sale of property that Burns, using a limited liability company later adjudged his alter ego, purchased with money embezzled from the Kirkebys. On appeal from the distribution order, Kahn contends reversal is required because the judgment against Burns is void under Code of Civil

Procedure section 580.1 Alternatively, Kahn argues the order must be reversed because the property was formerly owned by an entity controlled by Burns, and not Burns himself; the property was awarded to Kahn under her marital settlement agreement with Burns; and the Kirkebys did not, as the trial court determined, have a valid lien on the property. Kahn further asks this court to “order restitution to [her] of any funds received by the Kirkebys” from the proceeds of the property sale. As we explain, we reject Kahn’s claim that the judgment is void. Further, we hold the trial court’s decision to distribute the funds to the Kirkebys was otherwise proper. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2 A. Initial Litigation & Stipulated Injunctions The Kirkebys filed suit against Burns in 2017, alleging he defrauded them and embezzled from their business. The lawsuit was also filed derivatively on behalf of MHCD, LLC, an entity jointly owned by the

1 Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 Additional facts concerning the underlying dispute are set forth in our earlier opinions deciding Kahn’s prior two appeals in this case. (See Kirkeby v. Kahn (Sept. 17, 2024, D082333) [nonpub. opn.] and Kirkeby v. The Crosby Clinic, LLC (January 13, 2025, D083640 [nonpub. opn.].) 2 Kirkebys and Burns. In January 2018, the Kirkebys filed their First Amended Complaint (FAC) against Burns and various other entities alleged to be controlled by Burns, including NSI Services LLC (NSI), which the FAC

referred to as the “Crosby Center Entities.”3 The FAC alleged the Kirkebys started a drug and alcohol abuse rehabilitation facility in 2002 shortly after meeting Burns. Burns claimed to be a licensed attorney and experienced business manager, who would help them operate the business. The FAC alleged that, unbeknownst to the Kirkebys, Burns misappropriated funds, assets, business opportunities, and real estate (including the property underlying this appeal) through his management of the rehabilitation center, known as the Crosby Center. In 2014, the Kirkebys discovered Burns was embezzling the business’s assets

and contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation.4 The complaint also alleged Burns and the Crosby Center Entities were each other’s alter egos, and specifically that NSI was used as a shell to defraud the Kirkebys and MHCD. In October 2019, MHCD filed a cross-complaint, which alleged similar claims against Burns, Kahn, and the same Crosby Center Entities. In addition, the complaint contained a cause of action for quiet title, asserting

3 The complaint named as the other entity defendants: The Crosby Clinic, LLC; Interlawus, LLC; AAE Alcohol Rehab Service Center; AAE Crosby Center; AAE Women Eating Disorder Center; Dream Catcher Detox Center, Inc.; KBY Properties, LLC; Crosby Recovery Foundation; AAA National Credit Reporting, Corp.; Internet Creative Marketing, Inc.; Stonegate Investment Group, LLC; Applied Psychology Systems, LLC; The Neuroscience Institute; and L Burns Research Institute.

4 The Kirkebys assert in their brief that Burns and Kahn are each facing over 40 felony criminal charges in a case pending in San Diego Superior Court. 3 that Burns and the Crosby Center Entities’ concealment, misappropriation, and diversion of MHCD’s assets resulted in the defendants wrongfully obtaining title to two properties in Escondido, one located on Camino De Las Lomas (the Camino Property) and one located on Circle R Way (Circle R Property). MHCD sought adjudication of its ownership rights in the properties, and to quiet title in the two properties in its favor. At the same time, MHCD filed notices of pendency of action with the San Diego County

recorder for the properties.5 On December 10, 2019, MHCD, Burns, several entities controlled by Burns that were named parties in the litigation, including NSI, and Kahn entered into a stipulation for each property that enjoined its transfer. Under the stipulations, the parties “agree[d] not to, and [were] enjoined from, encumbering, impairing, selling, transferring, conveying, or otherwise assigning the real estate and improvements ... during the pendency of this lawsuit.” In addition, the stipulations permitted the Crosby Clinic and NSI to seek refinancing of the Circle R Property, which faced foreclosure. MHCD agreed to dismiss its quiet title claim without prejudice and release the notices of pendency filed for each property to allow for the refinancing of the Circle R Property using the Camino Property as collateral. The stipulations were signed into orders by the trial court on December 17, 2019. B. Violations of the Stipulated Injunctions & Receivership Despite the stipulated injunction orders precluding transfer or encumbrance of the properties, on November 3, 2020, Burns encumbered the Camino Property with a deed of trust in the amount of $200,000. A little over

5 Also in October, the trial court struck the answers to the FAC of many of the entity defendants, including NSI, for failure to retain counsel, and entered defaults against them. 4 a month later, on December 14, 2020, Burns conveyed title in the Camino Property from the Crosby Clinic to “Larry Burns Trustee of the Xanadau Dominican Irrevocable Trust – 2020” and conveyed title in the Circle R Property from NSI to “Larry Burns Trustee of the Xanadau Dominican Irrevocable Trust – 2020.” This prompted the Kirkebys, on March 1, 2021, to record the stipulated injunction orders on the Camino and Circle R Properties with the county recorder. The following month, Kahn, Inc. filed a complaint against Burns in San Diego County Superior Court, Anne Kahn, Inc. v. Burns, Case No. 37-2021- 0001811-CU-BC-NC. Kahn, Inc. alleged it “was in possession and control” of the Circle R Property. Specifically, that an entity called Health Care Investments, Inc. transferred the property by grant deed to NSI on February 4, 2019, and that on April 4, 2019, NSI and Kahn, Inc. “entered into an implied-in fact contract granting Kahn, Inc. the exclusive right to operate” the Circle R Property. Kahn, Inc.

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