Lifeline Funding v. Johnston CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 2014
DocketD063745
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lifeline Funding v. Johnston CA4/1 (Lifeline Funding v. Johnston 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
Lifeline Funding v. Johnston CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 5/21/14 Lifeline Funding v. Johnston 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

LIFELINE FUNDING, LLC, D063745

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2011-000701164- CU-FR-EC) CARTER JOHNSTON et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

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

Wohlfeil, Judge. Affirmed.

The Law Office of Richard L. Knight and Richard L. Knight for Defendants and

Appellants.

Jones Day and Edward P. Swan, Jr., for Plaintiff and Respondent.

Plaintiff Lifeline Funding, LLC doing business as Us Claims (Lifeline), a

litigation funding company, provided litigation funding to defendants Deborah

Tumlinson and Douglas Tumlinson (together, the Tumlinsons) at the request of their

attorney, defendant Carter Johnston. That funding was sought for litigation the Tumlinsons and Johnston represented they filed related to damages their home in

Ramona suffered as a result of a wildfire.

Lifeline thereafter filed a lawsuit against the Tumlinsons and Johnston claiming

that the Tumlinsons, through Johnston, misrepresented that they had settled their case

against SDG&E for $2.49 million, and also that Johnston falsely represented that he acted

as their attorney in that litigation. After a four-day bench trial, the court found the

Tumlinsons and Johnston liable for fraud and the Tumlinsons liable for conversion and

breach of contract, awarding Lifeline $1,559,119 in compensatory damages, as well as

punitive damages in the amount of $6,000 against Johnston and $60,000 against the

Tumlinsons.

On appeal, the Tumlinsons and Johnston assert that (1) the court erred in finding

liability for fraud because Lifeline did not reasonably rely on their misrepresentations, (2)

there is no substantial evidence to support liability for conversion, (3) there is no

substantial evidence to support liability for punitive damages, (4) the court erred in

denying Deborah Tumlinson's request to fire her attorney during trial, and (5) the court

erred in refusing to continue the trial when she was hospitalized. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Lifeline is a litigation funding company based in Moorestown, New Jersey. The

Tumlinsons lived in a home in Ramona, California. After a wildfire damaged their

residence, the Tumlinsons joined litigation related to the fire that was brought against

SDG&E. After their original attorney, Gerald Singleton, terminated his representation of

2 the Tumlinsons due to their failure to respond to his requests for information, they

represented themselves in propria persona. At no time did Johnston represent the

Tumlinsons during that litigation.

Despite the fact that Johnston did not represent the Tumlinsons during the SDG&E

litigation, he applied for litigation funding from Lifeline on behalf of the Tumlinsons. In

applying for the funding, Johnston repeatedly misrepresented that he was the Tumlinsons'

attorney in the SDG&E litigation. In applying for the funding, Johnston and the

Tumlinsons falsely represented that they had settled their case against SDG&E for $2.49

million.

Lifeline undertook an investigation prior to authorizing the funding for the

Tomlinsons' litigation. Their representative, Rudolph DeGeorge II, spoke with Johnston

on the phone, and Johnston confirmed the representations he had previously made and

described the mediation conference that resulted in the alleged settlement. DeGeorge

also spoke on the phone with Mrs. Tumlinson, who provided the Tumlinsons' social

security numbers so that Lifeline could ensure that the Tumlinsons had no judgments or

liens that would prevent the litigation funding. Mrs. Tumlinson confirmed Johnston's

representations concerning the settlement.

Johnston and the Tumlinsons also sent Lifeline pleadings purportedly from the

SDG&E litigation with the attorney caption whited out to conceal the identity of their

former attorney as their representative in that litigation. They also sent Lifeline a draft

settlement agreement with a signature page that represented Johnston was their attorney.

3 The draft agreement contained a handwritten note from Mrs. Tumlinson stating that she

and Mr. Tumlinson had initialed the agreement and sent it to SDG&E.

Based upon those representations, Lifeline agreed to provide over $700,000 in

funding to the Tumlinsons, in exchange for the Tumlinsons selling to Lifeline an interest

in the $2.49 million settlement they had reached with SDG&E. They have not repaid

those funds.

B. Procedural Background

In October 2011 Lifeline filed a complaint against Johnston and the Tumlinsons,

alleging fraud, conversion, breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith

and fair dealing. Prior to trial, the Tumlinsons and Johnston agreed to waive their right to

a jury trial.

Thereafter, Lifeline brought a motion seeking to disqualify Johnston as the

Tumlinsons' counsel based upon the fact he was also named as a defendant in the case.

The Tumlinsons opposed the motion, asserting they made an "informed decision" to

retain him as counsel and that disqualification would force them to "seek other counsel

and bring a new attorney up to date at great expense." Based upon the Tumlinson's

position, the court denied Lifeline's motion.

However, on the first day of trial the Tumlinsons asked to fire Johnston and find

new counsel. The court denied the motion as a delay tactic. Thereafter, Mrs. Tumlinson

claimed to be ill. On the second day of trial, Mrs. Tumlinson claimed to have fainted

outside the courtroom and the court continued the trial until the following day while she

and Mr. Tumlinson went to the hospital. On the third and fourth days the court refused to

4 continue the trial further while the Tumlinsons chose to remain at the hospital and were

represented in court by Johnston. The court permitted Johnston to present as testimony

the Tumlinsons' depositions, to the extent they did not invoke the Fifth Amendment.

At the conclusion of trial, the court found the Tumlinsons and Johnston liable for

fraud, and the Tumlinsons liable for conversion and breach of contract, and issued a

statement of decision detailing its findings. In doing so, the court concluded that the

Tumlinsons and Johnston made false or misleading representations with knowledge of

their falsity, and that Lifeline actually relied on those representations. On the issue of

whether Lifeline's reliance was reasonable, the court found the evidence to be conflicting.

The court noted that (1) had Lifeline conducted its own search of the SDG&E litigation

file, it would have discovered that Johnston was not the Tomlinsons' attorney; (2) if

Lifeline had requested a fully executed settlement agreement defendants could not have

produced one; and (3) Lifeline's own investigation revealed that the Tumlinsons had tax

liens of over $50,000.

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