Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
DocketG050004
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3 (Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3) 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
Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 8/27/15 Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

LEE MARKS,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G050004

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00459265)

ANGELE LASALLE et al., OPINION

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert J. Moss, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed with directions in part. Law Office of Frank W. Battaile and Frank W. Battaile for Defendants and Appellants Angele Lasalle and Angeline Dao. Arent Fox, Victor P. Danhi, Steven A. Haskins and George N. Koumbis for Defendants and Appellants First Recovery Repossession Services, Inc. and Barry Shapiro. Law Offices of Andrew D. Weiss and Andrew D. Weiss for Plaintiff and Appellant Lee Marks. I. PROLOGUE This case has the makings of a classic film noir story, though thankfully, despite animosity so thick between two of the parties the trial judge made a specific finding on it, no one has been murdered. The plaintiff is an actor. The actor has a fiancée. The fiancée has a younger sister. The younger sister has a bad gambling habit. She used to have a domestic partner who enabled that habit. In better days the two were high rollers. They would get free rides on private jets. They owned a fabled black credit card. They drove a Range Rover. The partner owned a Bentley. They lived in a house in Huntington Beach. But those were better days. To raise $40,000 for a Las Vegas poker tournament the domestic partner hocked her 2006 silver Bentley to the actor. The partner expected the younger sister would win big and they would be able to repay the money and redeem the Bentley. It didn’t happen. The forty grand was lost in Vegas. Nine months later, the partner sold off the Bentley to the actor in return for another $51,880 cash infusion for, as it turned out, yet more unsuccessful gambling. Well, at least the actor thought the deal was a sale. The partner thought they had a lease agreement. That is, the partner thought the actor or his fiancée would pay the partner a monthly payment equal to the payments the partner had to make to the finance company. Then what was the $51,880 for? And since, in January 2011, the actor had the car and wasn’t making “lease” payments to the partner, she decided to get the car back from him. She first employed an unlicensed repossession agent, but his attempts were aborted when the actor confronted him late at night. A few months later she contacted a licensed repossession agent – the “repo man” in this nascent drama. He eventually succeeded. The day after the repo man seized the car it was returned to the partner. She then met her mother at a local BMW dealer, where she gave the Bentley to the dealer, and the mother received credit from the Bentley toward a Porsche. We had descended from film noir to reality TV.

2 The actor sued the partner, the repo man, and the mother for conversion. The judge held the partner and the repo man liable for the value of the Bentley on the theory they had converted the actor’s property. The judge let the mother off the hook because she had no idea her daughter no longer owned the Bentley. The partner and the repo man now appeal from the portion of the judgment holding them liable, and the actor cross-appeals from the portion of the judgment letting the mother go. We affirm the judgment in favor of the actor as against the partner and the defense judgment in favor of the mother. We also grant a stipulation for reversal of the judgment against the repo man and his company. As we explain below, nonparties or the public will not be affected by such a reversal. And the reasons for the reversal readily outweigh (particularly in this case) whatever erosion of the public trust that might result from the stipulated nullification of the trial court judgment as to the repo man and his company. II. FACTS Half the story here is sorting out the characters. Plaintiff Lee Marks has been a police officer. He is now an actor and a model, and has appeared in several movies.1 Marks has a fiancée who is referred to in the briefs as “Linh Luu.”2 Linh has a younger sister who is referred to as “Tho” (or sometimes Tho Luu).3 The parties to this appeal all agree that Tho has had a serious gambling problem, though on occasion she has won large amounts of money. She won $300,000 in a tournament in 2008. Since 2000, Tho has been in a relationship with her former domestic partner, defendant Angele T. Lasalle.4 The degree to which Lasalle herself has had a serious gambling problem is not clear, but there is no dispute she accompanied Tho to Las Vegas on many weekends.

1 Including 2003’s Hood Angels, where, perhaps somewhat ironically given the events in this case, he played a character being car jacked. ( [as of Aug. 3, 2015].) 2 Also known as Nhut Minh Luu. Because Linh Luu has a sister, to avoid confusion we will refer to her and her sister by their first names, no disrespected is intended. 3 Full name being Minh Tho Si Luu. 4 We follow her own appellant’s brief and spell her name without capitalizing the S.

3 Lasalle, in turn, has a mother, defendant Angeline Dao, who is a dermatologist, for whom Lasalle has worked since 1998 as an office manager. But the true protagonists in this drama are defendant Barry Shapiro – the “repo man” to whom we have referred above – who owns First Recovery Repossession Services, Inc., a licensed repossession company,5 and the main character around which this appeal revolves: a 2006 silver Bentley. The Bentley made its entrance in 2008 when Lasalle bought it from a Newport Beach auto dealer for $135,000. It was the second car in the Tho-Lasalle household. The other one was a Range Rover. In terms of the applicable standard of review, Lasalle does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence. Her appeal, rather, is twofold: (1) she contends it was an abuse of discretion to deny a continuance of trial to allow her to furnish discovery on a LASIK6 procedure she had on April 9, 2010, and (2) it was an abuse of discretion not to admit evidence of certain guilty pleas entered into by Linh in the mid-to-late 1990’s. Because Lasalle argues a continuance was necessary so that she could present what was essentially an alibi defense to the $51,880 contract – the alibi being she had LASIK surgery the day she signed the contract – we must set forth the competing stories of the parties: (1) Marks’ story: At trial, plaintiff Marks presented a consistent easy-to- follow narrative. By 2008, he considered Linh his wife, though they have never married nor had he, by the time of trial, actually proposed. In July 2009, he loaned Linh’s sister Tho and Tho’s domestic partner Lasalle, $40,000 for a tournament in Las Vegas.7 From

5 Because there is an alter ego issue raised in this appeal, when we refer to Shapiro and his corporation collectively, we will call them “First Recovery-Shapiro” to remind readers they are separate entities. Otherwise we refer to them individually as the context demands. 6 “LASIK” is the commonly used name for “laser assisted in situ keratomileusis.” 7 Marks testified he was by then somewhat in awe of the high-roller lifestyle led by Linh’s sister Tho and her partner Lasalle. He gave some examples at trial: The four of them (Marks, Linh, Tho, and Lasalle) were given special treatment at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, complete with their own private elevators. They got better seats at a boxing match than Denzel Washington, who sat behind them.

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Marks v. Lasalle CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-lasalle-ca43-calctapp-2015.