Lissoy v. Leach

139 Cal. App. 4th 434, 42 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 2006
DocketNo. G035355
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 Cal. App. 4th 434 (Lissoy v. Leach) 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
Lissoy v. Leach, 139 Cal. App. 4th 434, 42 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

BEDSWORTH, Acting P. J.

Albert O. Lissoy, a creditor of the estate of Roberta W. Myers, deceased, appeals from a summary judgment disposing of his petition for an order pursuant to Probate Code section 850.1 Lissoy’s petition sought to recover profits from the sale of real property for the benefit of the estate’s creditors, based upon a claim the property had previously been fraudulently conveyed by Myers. The probate court determined Lissoy’s petition failed as a matter of law because: He lacked standing to pursue an order under section 850; he failed to exhaust his right to require the executor of the estate to pursue the claim under section 9653; and his claim was barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. We disagree with each of these conclusions, and therefore must reverse.

* * *

As this case was decided on summary judgment, and our review is de novo, we will recite the evidence in the light most favorable to Lissoy. (Schooler v. State of California (2000) 85 Cal.App.4th 1004, 1008-1009 [102 Cal.Rptr.2d 343].)

Most of the facts are undisputed. Lissoy is a creditor of the estate of Roberta Myers, deceased. The estate is insolvent. Lissoy’s claim against the estate was approved in the amount of $275,000, but has been satisfied only to the extent of $125,000. Myers’s debt to Lissoy stems from a business transaction in which Myers and her daughter, Diana Sheppard, had purchased a bar and restaurant business from Lissoy. When the venture proved unsuccessful, Myers and Sheppard defaulted.

Lissoy subsequently filed a lawsuit, seeking money damages from both Myers and Sheppard. Both of them later declared bankruptcy, and Lissoy’s lawsuit was stayed. Meanwhile, respondent Joe H. Leach became romantically involved with Sheppard in 1994, and they began living together in 1996.

[437]*437Myers was denied a discharge of the Lissoy debt in her bankruptcy proceeding. Shortly after that order was affirmed on appeal, in October of 1997, she sold her residence, located on Wellington Avenue in Santa Ana, to Leach. However, Myers continued to reside in the home, and there is evidence she (1) reimbursed Leach for his down payment; and (2) continued to pay the mortgage and all expenses associated with the Wellington residence. In May of 1998, Myers executed a holographic will, in which she directed that “my house [on] Wellington Ave., Santa Ana, CA in the name of Joe E. Leach is to be sold and any profits are to be divided among my four children . . . .”

Myers died in September of 1998, while her bankruptcy was still pending. Sheppard was appointed as personal representative of the probate estate. At the time of her death, Myers continued to reside in the Wellington property. In January of 1999, Leach entered into an agreement to sell the Wellington property, and the transaction was completed in March of 1999.

However, Myers’s bankruptcy case remained active, despite her death, and Lissoy received a disbursement from the bankruptcy in November of 1999. The bankruptcy case was finally closed in January of 2000. After Lissoy learned that Myers’s bankruptcy had terminated, and that she was deceased, he reactivated his civil lawsuit against her, and filed a creditor’s claim in the probate matter.

Lissoy’s creditor’s claim was eventually settled, and his claim approved by the probate court in the reduced amount of $275,000. As part of that settlement, the claim was satisfied in part, leaving an outstanding balance of $150,000, which was entered as a judgment in the civil case in February of 2002. Sheppard acknowledged in the settlement agreement that Lissoy claimed “to have standing, as an unsatisfied creditor, to file certain actions,” either within the probate proceeding or independently of it, against “third parties.” Sheppard expressly declared, however, that she “does not believe these other actions have legal merit and/or are not economically feasible to pursue.”

On December 17, 2003, Lissoy filed his verified petition against Leach pursuant to section 850, seeking an order requiring Leach to account for, and disgorge to the estate, the profits he had realized from his subsequent resale of the Wellington residence. That petition alleges most of the undisputed facts recited ante, and additionally alleges that Myers’s sale of the Wellington residence to Leach had been a sham—an intentional fraudulent scheme designed to hide that asset from Myers’s creditors. It specifically alleges that Leach was to hold the property as a “straw” for Myers, “in an intentional attempt to hinder, defraud and delay Lissoy in the collection of his claims [438]*438against Myers.” It characterizes the transaction as a “fraudulent transfer to Leach of bare legal title to the Wellington Avenue property . . . .” The petition also alleges that Sheppard—Myers’s daughter, the representative of her estate, and Leach’s live-in love, was an active participant and coconspirator in the scheme.

Leach expressly denied the fraud claims, and insisted that his purchase of the Wellington property was entirely aboveboard, unconditional and legitimate. He then moved for summary judgment, arguing that Lissoy’s claims (which he characterized as being for “enforcement of secret trust,” “breach of secret trust” and “constructive trust”) were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations.

In opposition to the summary judgment motion, Lissoy offered substantial—even compelling—evidence to support his fraudulent transfer and conspiracy allegations, consisting primarily of a lengthy declaration from another of Myers’s daughters. That daughter, a mortgage broker, declared that she had personally arranged the sale of the Wellington property to Leach, at the request of both Myers and Sheppard, and that all parties, including Leach, treated the transaction as one in name only. That daughter also arranged the subsequent sale of the Wellington property from Leach to a third party, and explained that Leach acted as essentially a “straw man” in that transaction as well, with his involvement limited to merely signing the documents.

The daughter also declared that all three of Sheppard’s siblings, herself included, had demanded in writing that Sheppard pursue Leach on behalf of Myers’s estate for the profits he had realized from the sale of the Wellington property. Sheppard ignored them.

In reply, Leach argued, for the first time, that Lissoy had no remedy at all under section 850, and that his only remedy was to make a demand under section 9653 that Sheppard pursue a claim against Leach on behalf of the probate estate.

On the date scheduled for the hearing, Lissoy objected to Leach’s introduction of a new legal argument in the reply brief, and requested additional time to respond. The court granted the request, and gave both sides an additional opportunity to brief the issues raised in the reply brief.

On the continued oral argument date, Lissoy offered the court newly discovered evidence suggesting that Sheppard and Leach were actually married, and were holding title to their own residence as “husband and wife.” After hearing oral argument, the court took the matter under submission, and subsequently granted judgment in favor of Leach.

[439]

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Related

In Re Estate of Myers
42 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 Cal. App. 4th 434, 42 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lissoy-v-leach-calctapp-2006.