Lei v. Yan CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2023
DocketA164796
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lei v. Yan CA1/3 (Lei v. Yan CA1/3) 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
Lei v. Yan CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/2/23 Lei v. Yan CA1/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

CRYSTAL LEI, et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, A164796 & A165373 v. TINA YAN, (San Francisco City & County Super. Ct. No. CGC- Defendant and Appellant. 14-565831)

For nearly a decade, plaintiffs Crystal Lei and Bryant Fu (collectively plaintiffs) have sought redress for disbarred attorney Demas Yan’s pattern of filing meritless litigation against them, and his efforts — with the assistance of his mother Tina Yan — to avoid paying his creditors.1 Plaintiffs have been impeded by Tina’s litigation gamesmanship. Here, Tina challenges the trial court’s second amended judgment awarding plaintiffs injunctive and monetary relief on their cause of action for “constructive fraud, conspire to defraud, and fraudulent transfers” brought pursuant to the Uniform Voidable

We refer to family members sharing a surname by first name, 1

intending no disrespect. Demas — who is not a party to this appeal — is mentioned only where necessary. 1 Transactions Act (UVTA; Civ. Code, § 3439 et seq.; undesignated statutory references are to this code). We affirm. On our own motion, we impose sanctions of $8,500 against Tina and her counsel, William Leeds Disston, Jr., for filing a frivolous appeal. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs’ dispute with Demas and his family members has a lengthy history.2 It originates in part from a judgment obtained by Charles Li in a professional negligence lawsuit against Demas, and Li’s subsequent discovery that Demas had transferred residential property located on 23rd Avenue in San Francisco (the property) to various limited liability companies and to family members to thwart Li’s efforts to enforce the judgment. In 2014, Li filed a complaint to set aside the transfers for actual and constructive fraud, and he obtained a judgment against several defendants — including Demas, Tina, and Demas’s father, Cheuk Tin Yan — setting aside the transfers and declaring Demas the sole owner of all legal and equitable title or interest in the property (Li action). This court affirmed the judgment, holding there was no evidence Demas’s parents gave their son reasonably equivalent value in exchange for an ownership interest in the property. (Li, supra, A149849.)

2 Our factual summary is not intended to be exhaustive. We incorporate by reference our decisions in three unpublished opinions in prior appeals arising out of Demas and Tina’s conduct: Li v. Chiu (May 31, 2018, A149849) (Li), Lei v. Yan (Mar. 29, 2021, A158641) (Lei I), and Li v. Chiu (Aug. 1, 2022, A163866). Having done so, we deny as moot Tina’s request for judicial notice of the Li opinion. Tina has been declared a vexatious litigant. She has filed at least eight appeals and one writ petition in this court, all of which have been decided adversely to her. 2 In 2014, plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against Demas and several others, including Demas’s parents and 547 Investments, LLC.3 The complaint alleged a cause of action for malicious prosecution — premised on Demas’s pattern of filing frivolous and meritless litigation against plaintiffs — and a claim for “constructive fraud, conspire to defraud, and fraudulent transfers” under the UVTA. The UVTA claim alleged Demas knew his lawsuits against plaintiffs “would fail” and “final judgments adverse to [him] would eventually be issued,” so he and codefendants engaged in a conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs by “shifting and secreting assets among themselves” and effectuating a fraudulent transfer of the property. The UVTA cause of action also alleged the “conspiracy to defraud claim [was] predicated upon the claim for fraudulent transfer” and that “a person other than the debtor or transferee who conspires with others to effectuate a fraudulent transfer may be held jointly liable for the creditor’s damages.” Plaintiffs sought injunctive and monetary relief. At a 2019 bench trial — at which Tina did not appear — the trial court found for plaintiffs on their malicious prosecution claim. On the UVTA claim, however, the court determined plaintiffs had not proven codefendants transferred the property with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud Demas’s creditors; the court also concluded the doctrine of collateral estoppel did not apply based on the Li action because it was not clear whether identical factual issues were at stake in both proceedings. The court entered judgment for plaintiffs on their malicious prosecution claim and for codefendants on the UVTA claim. Plaintiffs appealed.

3We collectively refer to Demas’s parents and 547 Investments, LLC as codefendants. 3 We reversed the judgment for codefendants on the UVTA cause of action and remanded “the matter for further consideration of plaintiffs’ remedies under the UVTA.” (Lei I, supra, A158641.) We concluded codefendants were collaterally stopped from contesting liability on the UVTA claim pursuant to the judgment in the Li action. (Lei I, A158641.) In reaching this conclusion, we rejected codefendants’ argument that the issues were not identical because the property transfer had been set aside in the Li action, “and hence, the codefendants no longer possessed the property for purposes of plaintiffs’ UVTA claim.” (Ibid.) This contention, we explained, erroneously conflated “the disposition of the Li action with the issues in common between that action and the instant matter.” (Ibid.) Additionally, we held the voidance of the transfer did not entitle codefendants to judgment on the UVTA claim, noting the “UVTA provides for transferee liability, subject to good faith transferee protections that the codefendants failed to satisfy in the Li action.” (Lei I, supra, A158641.) We explained that “plaintiffs, as tort claimants harmed by [Demas’s] meritless prosecutions . . . , were ‘creditors’ within the meaning of the UVTA,” and that when Demas and codefendants transferred the “property . . . to defraud [his] creditors, this adversely impacted the claims of Li and plaintiffs.” (Ibid.) Additionally, we determined the “voidance” of the property transfer did not preclude plaintiffs from obtaining “other relief under the UVTA.” (Ibid.) As we observed, “[r]emedies under the UVTA include not only avoidance of a fraudulent transfer, but an attachment or other provisional remedy against the transferred asset, appointment of a receiver to take charge of the transferred asset or other property of the transferee, and— particularly relevant here—‘[a]n injunction against further disposition by the debtor or a transferee, or both, of the asset transferred.’ The phrase ‘or both’

4 necessarily means that some form of injunctive relief remains available against both the debtor and transferee regardless of who currently holds the transferred asset, and plaintiffs here specifically requested injunctive relief as a remedy for the fraudulent transfer.” (Lei I, supra, A158641, internal citations omitted.) We continued: “Because the codefendants were precluded from relitigating their transferee liability under the UVTA regarding the . . . property, the judgment against plaintiffs was in error.” Thus, we reversed the judgment in favor of codefendants and remanded the matter for “further consideration of plaintiffs’ remedies under the UVTA.” We noted there was some uncertainty whether the property was in foreclosure, and we left “it to the trial court on remand to determine appropriate further relief, if any, based on the status” of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
Lei v. Yan CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lei-v-yan-ca13-calctapp-2023.