Merrick v. Lau

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 2024
DocketB322994
StatusPublished

This text of Merrick v. Lau (Merrick v. Lau) 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
Merrick v. Lau, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/27/24; certified for publication 12/17/24 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

NATALIE LLOYD MERRICK, B322994

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC658090 v.

GEE LAU,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a postjudgment order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Randolph M. Hammock, Judge. Affirmed.

Buchalter, Daniel Harrison Wu and Robert Collings Little for Plaintiff and Appellant.

No appearance for Defendant and Respondent.

_____________________________ SUMMARY This case arises from a monetary dispute between mother and daughter. The daughter sued her mother and obtained a money judgment. During enforcement proceedings, the mother eventually tendered the judgment amount, prejudgment interest, and $4,239 in interest accrued on a bank account in Shanghai in which the monies had been held. The present dispute concerns whether the mother (defendant) fully satisfied the judgment. The trial court found defendant had tendered the full amount owed and granted her motion to require plaintiff to acknowledge full satisfaction of the judgment. Plaintiff appeals, contending there was no competent evidence to substantiate the amount of interest that had accrued on the Shanghai bank account. Plaintiff also contends the court abused its discretion in failing to enforce an order for a judgment debtor’s examination of defendant. Plaintiff complains about a comment by the trial court that included a gratuitous reference to plaintiff’s ethnicity and gender, which plaintiff says offended due process. We find no merit in any of plaintiff’s contentions and affirm the trial court’s order. FACTS Plaintiff Natalie Lloyd Merrick is the daughter of defendant Gee Lau. She lent her mother funds to purchase a condominium in Shanghai so that her mother could live there. After disputes over defendant’s use of the property, the two made an agreement about funds to be paid to plaintiff when the property was sold. In March 2016, Teddy Lloyd (defendant’s son and plaintiff’s brother) sold the Shanghai condominium on defendant’s behalf and placed the proceeds in his own personal bank account in China. In April 2017, plaintiff sued Mr. Lloyd and defendant to

2 recover her interest in the balance from the sale of the property “in the amount of at least $306,089.53.” In June 2019, the court found defendant breached her agreement with plaintiff. (The court found Mr. Lloyd was not liable for conversion and there was no judgment against Mr. Lloyd.) The July 22, 2019 judgment provided plaintiff was to recover from defendant “the net proceeds from the sale of the Property in the amount of $242,091.00 plus any interest accrued on the Agricultural Bank of China bank account in which the monies were held” as well as prejudgment interest from March 16, 2016. Over two years later, on October 14, 2021, plaintiff filed an application and order for defendant to appear for a judgment debtor’s examination on November 4, 2021.1 A week or so later, the case was reassigned from Judge Stuart M. Rice to Judge Randolph M. Hammock. Judge Hammock’s November 4, 2021 minute order states that defendant did not appear. The minute order also states that defendant’s “motion to stay enforcement of judgment is currently scheduled for 11/24/2021,” and on its own motion, the court continued the debtor examination hearing to the same date. The November 24, 2021 hearing concerned both defendant’s judgment debtor examination and a “Motion to Expunge

1 The court is required to make the order “upon ex parte application of the judgment creditor” if the judgment creditor has not caused the judgment debtor to be examined during the preceding 120 days. (Code Civ. Proc., § 708.110, subd. (b).)

3 Mechanics’ Lien.”2 Counsel for both parties were present. The court, on its own motion, continued the motion to expunge (“to inquire if Judge Rice is available to hear the motion”) to December 17, 2021. The minute order states there was no appearance by defendant, but “[n]otice that a bench warrant will be issued if [defendant] fails to appear is not proper.” At plaintiff’s request, the debtor examination hearing was also continued to December 17, 2021. Defendant was not present at the December 17, 2021 hearing. Both counsel were present. The court, on its own motion, continued the hearing to January 20, 2022, and ordered plaintiff “to provide the defendant with a payoff amount by the end of the year,” including a breakdown on how the amounts were calculated. Further, the order stated that if defendant “does not appear at the next hearing, this Court may issue a bench warrant.” At the January 20, 2022 hearing, both counsel appeared and so did Teddy Lloyd. Mr. Lloyd turned over two cashier’s checks and a personal check in the amounts of $308,494.91 (the judgment amount plus costs and interest to December 31, 2021), $81,117.06 (prejudgment interest), and $2,354 (interest on the bank account in China) to counsel for plaintiff. On the court’s own motion, the hearing was continued to April 22, 2022. The minute order states the court “continues to maintain jurisdiction over [defendant],” who was “ordered to appear in person or remotely at the next hearing, unless this issue is resolved in its entirety.”

2 Service of an order for a debtor examination “creates a lien on the personal property of the judgment debtor . . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 708.110, subd. (d).)

4 The following day, defense counsel sent plaintiff’s counsel two additional checks, one for the daily interest from January 1 to January 21, 2022, and the other for what he said was “the balance” of the interest on the bank account in China ($1,885), and asked plaintiff’s counsel to agree to file a full satisfaction of judgment. Plaintiff’s counsel responded with another request for “documentary proof showing the amount of interest paid” on the bank account. Two months later, on March 25, 2022, defendant filed a motion to require plaintiff to file an acknowledgement of full satisfaction of the judgment, along with declarations from defense counsel and Mr. Lloyd and accompanying exhibits, mostly the correspondence among counsel and Mr. Lloyd. Mr. Lloyd declared the interest from the bank account at Agricultural Bank of China was paid in full on January 21, 2022, by the check delivered to plaintiff’s counsel in the amount of $1,885. He said he had provided counsel with evidence from the bank of the interest rate on the account (in two documents not in English), and he attached the calculation defense counsel had provided to plaintiff’s counsel. The calculation was: judgment amount ($242,091) x annual interest rate (0.30%) x number of years (3/16/2016 to 1/20/2022) (5.833 years) = $4,236.35. Mr. Lloyd further declared that plaintiff’s counsel asked for bank statements “which I do not have and which the Agricultural Bank of China does not provide.” Plaintiff’s opposition acknowledged that defendant “tendered the purported accrued interest amount of $4,239.00 from the Agricultural Bank of China bank account,” but failed to provide any bank statements showing the accrued interest in order to substantiate the amount. Plaintiff argued it was “highly improbable and unlikely the bank does not provide bank statements,” and even assuming the interest rate on the

5 untranslated documents Mr. Lloyd provided was 0.3 percent, there was nothing to show whether it was calculated per annum or was fixed or variable. Plaintiff argued the court should deny the motion and order production of bank statements. Plaintiff also contended that the checks tendered for the judgment amount and the prejudgment interest did not satisfy the judgment because they were drawn on Mr. Lloyd’s accounts, not on defendant’s accounts. There was a hearing on defendant’s motion on April 20, 2022.

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Bluebook (online)
Merrick v. Lau, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrick-v-lau-calctapp-2024.