Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 2022
DocketG059097
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil CA4/3 (Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil 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
Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 5/2/22 Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

MID-WILSHIRE HEALTH CARE CENTER et al., G059097 Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2015-00801555) v. OPINION DR. LEEVIL, LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Ronald L. Bauer, Judge. Reversed and remanded with instructions. Enestein Pham & Glass, Teri T. Pham and Matthew W. Rosene for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Law Offices of Ronald Richards & Associates and Ronald N. Richards; Law Offices of Geoffrey Long and Geoffrey S. Long for Defendant and Respondent Dr. Leevil, LLC. INTRODUCTION Mid-Wilshire Property, L.P. (Mid-Wilshire), and Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center, appeal from a judgment in favor of respondents Dr. Leevil, LLC (Dr. Leevil), and Lido Holding Company, LLC (Lido), entered after a proceeding bearing a passing resemblance to a trial took place in the superior court. This proceeding began in August 2017 and ended in November 2019. The two-year suspension was necessary because a core issue in the case – whether a late fee sought by Dr. Leevil was an unlawful penalty – was before a court in Ventura County. The record indicates that all parties and the court understood how crucial the resolution of this issue was, right up until the last day of trial in November 2019. Then it was ignored. The case and this appeal concern the foreclosure sale of commercial property belonging to Mid-Wilshire, which had secured a loan eventually owned by Dr. Leevil. Mid-Wilshire and a related company, Westlake Village Property, L.P., both owed money to Dr. Leevil, and both defaulted on their loans. Dr. Leevil noticed trustee sales for Westlake’s property in Thousand Oaks (Ventura County) and then for Mid-Wilshire’s property in Tustin. The trustee sale of the Thousand Oaks property produced a surplus of about $5 million over the Westlake debt, and $4.7 million of that amount was applied to the Mid-Wilshire debt. This is where the controversy begins. Dr. Leevil contended that some money was still owing on the Mid-Wilshire debt, and it proceeded to collect via non-judicial foreclosure on the Tustin property. Mid-Wilshire contended that applying the Thousand Oaks surplus wiped out its debt, and the foreclosure was therefore wrongful. Its lawsuit after foreclosure included Lido, the company that bought the Tustin property at the trustee’s sale, with causes of action to set aside the sale and cancel the deed on sale. The matter went back and forth between Ventura County and Orange County for several years, culminating in November 2019 in the two-day proceeding

2 described above. This proceeding had some characteristics of a trial, in that it was held in a courtroom before a judge and counsel were present. There were also some stipulated facts and some exhibits admitted into evidence by agreement of the parties. But the similarity ends there, and we must reverse the judgment. Unfortunately, we cannot construct the trial that should have taken place and then rule on it. We are not imbued with the power to do that. All we can do is send it back to the drawing board. But events that have transpired since the entry of judgment have greatly simplified the issues facing the trial court on remand. Mid-Wilshire has settled with Lido, so the causes of action in which Lido is an indispensable party will be dismissed. The cause of action for wrongful foreclosure, however, remains to be resolved, this time with the benefit of the Second District Court of Appeal’s decision on the core issue mentioned above. FACTS The facts recited here are taken in part from the amended stipulated facts filed in anticipation of the November 2019 portion of the trial and the exhibits admitted into evidence at the end of the proceeding.1 Two limited partnerships are involved: Mid-Wilshire and Westlake. Both limited partnerships owned commercial real estate, Mid-Wilshire in Tustin and Westlake in Thousand Oaks. Both limited partnerships borrowed money from TomatoBank, N.A., secured by a deed of trust on their respective real property. Both loans were extended from their original due dates to December 15, 2013, at which point both loans went into default. In September 2013, before the defaults, Westlake agreed to place another trust deed on the Thousand Oaks property to secure Mid-Wilshire’s debt. One of the facts stipulated for trial in November 2019 was that “[o]n September 16, 2013,

1 Exhibit 124 was omitted from the list of exhibits in evidence at the beginning of the reporter’s transcript. It was, however, admitted into evidence.

3 [Westlake] executed a Collateral Surety Agreement and agreed to allow a second deed of trust on the [Thousand Oaks property] to secure [Mid-Wilshire’s] obligations in connection with the Mid-Wilshire Note.” In April 2014, TomatoBank filed a suit for judicial foreclosure against Westlake and Mid-Wilshire in Ventura County Superior Court. The bank did not sue Mid-Wilshire in Orange County, but recorded a notice of default here in January 2014. In July 2014, TomatoBank assigned all its interest in the Mid-Wilshire and Westlake notes and deeds of trust, including the second deed of trust on the Thousand Oaks property, to Dr. Leevil. In August, Dr. Leevil recorded a notice of trustee’s sale for each of the two properties. Both Mid-Wilshire and Westlake declared bankruptcy in September 2014. The bankruptcy court granted Dr. Leevil relief from stay, and it foreclosed on the Thousand Oaks property in February 2015 through a non-judicial foreclosure. Just before the foreclosure sale, Dr. Leevil assigned its interest in the second deed of trust on the Thousand Oaks property to D-Day Capital, LLC.2 The foreclosure sale resulted in a surplus of over $5 million. Of that amount, the foreclosure trustee paid D-Day $4.7 million; the remainder, $604,000, went to Westlake. The amount paid to D-Day was applied to the Mid-Wilshire debt. Mid-Wilshire’s bankruptcy was dismissed in July 2015, and Dr. Leevil promptly posted a notice of trustee’s sale on the Tustin property. The property was sold to Lido for $1 million on July 22, 2015.

2 Dr. Leevil’s manager, who was also its lead counsel at trial, asserted that this expedient was made necessary by the rule prevailing at the time that a lender could not collect a judgment on a second trust deed if it was also the lender on the first trust deed. A different entity would be assigned an amount of the debt equal to the anticipated shortfall; this entity could then sue for the difference. As it turned out, however, the sale of the Westlake property resulted in a hefty surplus, so the assignment to D-Day was unnecessary. The rule changed with the Supreme Court’s opinion in Black Sky Capital, LLC v. Cobb (2019) 7 Cal.5th 156. The court held that the anti-deficiency statute, Civil Code section 580d, did not prevent a sold-out junior lienor from suing to collect its debt after a non-judicial foreclosure, even if the junior and the senior lienors were the same entity, provided that there was no evidence of loan-splitting and gamesmanship. (Id. at p. 165.)

4 Mid-Wilshire and its tenant, Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center, sued Dr. Leevil and Lido in Orange County Superior Court on July 28, 2015. They asked to set aside the trustee’s sale and cancel the trustee’s deed; they also asked for quiet title and an accounting and sued for wrongful foreclosure. A first amended complaint was filed in August.

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Bluebook (online)
Mid-Wilshire Health Care Center v. Dr. Leevil CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-wilshire-health-care-center-v-dr-leevil-ca43-calctapp-2022.