Marriage of Daly and Zhang CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 2025
DocketB336657
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marriage of Daly and Zhang CA2/7 (Marriage of Daly and Zhang CA2/7) 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
Marriage of Daly and Zhang CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 1/23/25 Marriage of Daly and Zhang CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

In re Marriage of BRIAN B336657 DALY and HONG LU ZHANG. (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BD591027)

BRIAN DALY,

Petitioner,

v.

HONG LU ZHANG,

Respondent;

EVIE P. JEANG et al.,

Appellants. APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Patricia Nieto and David I. Wasserman, Judges. Affirmed. Gemmill, Baldridge & Yguico and Carlos V. Yguico for Appellants Evie P. Jeang and Ideal Legal Group. Provinziano & Associates and Alphonse F. Provinziano for Petitioner Brian Daly. Salisbury, Shaw, Lee & Tsuda and Lee W. Salisbury and Jason Jen-See Lee for Respondent Hong Lu Zhang. ____________________

INTRODUCTION

This marital dissolution action between Hong Lu Zhang and Brian Daly took a bad turn, but not because of anything either of them did. As part of their separation, Zhang and Daly sold their family residence and agreed Daly’s attorneys, Evie P. Jeang and her law firm Ideal Legal Group, would hold the sale proceeds (approximately $4.8 million) in the firm’s client trust account until Zhang and Daly finalized their property settlement. Years later, Zhang discovered Jeang misappropriated more than $2.5 million of the sale proceeds. Zhang filed a “complaint in joinder” against Jeang in the marital dissolution action and sought an accounting and a constructive trust. After a trial on the complaint in joinder (at which counsel for Jeang presented no defense and made only one objection), the court ruled Jeang “committed fraud and malfeasance” and awarded Zhang and Daly approximately $2.5 million in damages, $1.6 million in prejudgment interest, plus attorneys’ fees and costs.

2 Jeang appeals from the judgment. She has forfeited most of her arguments, however, by failing to raise them in the family court. Jeang’s remaining arguments lack merit. Therefore, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Daly filed a petition for marital dissolution in 2013. Zhang and Daly sold the family home in 2015, and the sale yielded net proceeds of $4,831,126. Zhang and Daly agreed Jeang would hold the sale proceeds in her firm’s client trust account until Zhang and Daly finalized their financial settlement. Jeang received the sale proceeds in September 2015 and placed the funds in a client trust account at Bank of America. Over the next 20 months, funds were steadily withdrawn from the client trust account, including more than $275,000 in credit card payments, $550,000 in withdrawals, $900,000 in account transfers, and $1 million in checks. The client trust account was closed in May 2017, and the remaining balance (just over $2.5 million) was withdrawn. In October 2021 counsel for Zhang asked Jeang for an accounting of the proceeds from the sale of the residence. Jeang had apparently opened a new client trust account at East West Bank, and Jeang gave counsel for Zhang a redacted document purporting to be a bank statement for that account showing a balance of $4,557,046 as of September 30, 2021. In February 2022 the court ordered Jeang to make several disbursements from the sale proceeds and to transfer the remaining proceeds to counsel for Zhang. Jeang did not comply. In March 2022 the family court ordered East West Bank to transfer $3,976,257 (the minimum amount due Zhang and Daly after accounting for various party- and court-approved

3 disbursements from the sale proceeds) from Jeang’s client trust account to counsel for Zhang’s client trust account. East West Bank transferred $1,999,750. In July 2022 counsel for Zhang discovered that the September 2021 East West Bank statement Jeang had provided was forged and that Jeang’s client trust account held only $288,560 at the end of September 2021.1 Counsel for Zhang filed a motion to join Jeang in the dissolution proceedings, arguing Jeang and her law firm were indispensable parties because the court would not be able to identify, locate, and distribute all of the community property unless Jeang and her firm were parties subject to the court’s jurisdiction. Zhang alleged in the proposed complaint in joinder that Jeang “diverted, withheld, spent, [stole], misappropriated and/or otherwise converted at least $2,307,375” of the sale proceeds; asserted causes of action for conversion and fraud; requested an accounting and a constructive trust; and sought compensatory and punitive damages. Jeang opposed the motion for joinder, arguing the family court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the tort claims in the proposed complaint in joinder. In response, Zhang withdrew her causes of action for conversion and fraud and her request for punitive damages. The court granted the motion to join Jeang to the dissolution action, and counsel for Zhang filed the amended

1 Jeang had also purchased—in cash—a home in South Pasadena in 2017 for $1,398,000, a condominium in San Francisco in 2018 for $780,000, and a home in Las Vegas in 2021 for $359,000. The total cost of these real estate purchases ($2,537,000) is remarkably close to the amount of sale proceeds misappropriated from Jeang’s client trust account.

4 complaint in joinder. Meanwhile, Daly substituted new counsel for Jeang, and Zhang and Daly stipulated the court could award compensatory or punitive damages to Zhang and Daly jointly, to the extent those damages related to community property assets. The court bifurcated the trial on Jeang’s alleged misappropriation of funds. Daly submitted a trial brief asserting Jeang not only misappropriated the sale proceeds, but also covered up her wrongful conduct by, among other things, refusing to comply with multiple court orders, attempting to dismiss the case without his knowledge, moving to quash subpoenas to East West Bank, and filing a frivolous motion to recuse one of the judges hearing the case. Daly argued that Jeang, as his lawyer, owed him professional and fiduciary duties, which she breached by misappropriating the sale proceeds and concealing her wrongful conduct. Citing Civil Code section 3336,2 Daly asked the family court to rule Jeang wrongfully converted approximately $2 million from Zhang and Daly and to award compensatory damages and prejudgment interest. Daly also asked the court to impose $50,000 in sanctions against Jeang under Family Code section 271 because of her bad faith litigation conduct. And Daly filed a brief seeking relief from approximately

2 Civil Code section 3336 provides: “The detriment caused by the wrongful conversion of personal property is presumed to be: [¶] First—The value of the property at the time of the conversion, with the interest from that time, or, an amount sufficient to indemnify the party injured for the loss which is the natural, reasonable and proximate result of the wrongful act complained of and which a proper degree of prudence on his part would not have averted; and [¶] Second—A fair compensation for the time and money properly expended in pursuit of the property.”

5 $53,000 in discovery sanctions the court imposed against him based on Jeang’s conduct. Zhang filed a trial brief, arguing (as Daly had) Jeang misappropriated the sale proceeds. Zhang asked the court to award Zhang and Daly approximately $2.5 million in compensatory damages and to award Zhang attorneys’ fees and costs as a sanction against Jeang. In November 2023 the family court held a trial on the complaint in joinder.

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