Moore v. Hill

188 Cal. App. 4th 1267, 116 Cal. Rptr. 3d 140
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 2010
DocketA117526, A118678
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 188 Cal. App. 4th 1267 (Moore v. Hill) 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
Moore v. Hill, 188 Cal. App. 4th 1267, 116 Cal. Rptr. 3d 140 (Cal. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion

JENKINS, J.

In these consolidated appeals, plaintiff Jennifer Moore (Moore) appeals two orders of the trial court in her ongoing case against Richard Hatfield (Hatfield), financial corporations controlled by Hatfield, and numerous persons holding promissory notes issued by those corporations. In case No. A117526, Moore appeals the judgment entered in favor of respondents, Tomas Hill and E.J. Pean (jointly Hill and Pean), on Moore’s derivative causes of action after the trial court granted Hill and Pean’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. In case No. A118678, Moore appeals the trial court’s order finding that a settlement agreement between respondents and other promissory noteholders, and Hatfield, was entered in good faith pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 877.6 1 For reasons explained below, *1271 we shall affirm the trial court’s order in case No. A117526 and reverse the trial court’s order in case No. A118678. 2 3

Factual Background

Jennifer Moore and Richard Hatfield were involved in an intimate relationship that lasted approximately 13 years. During the course of their relationship, a company named Alliance Financial Capital, Inc., was founded in 1994 with Richard Hatfield as its president. AFC engaged in the business of factoring receivables, i.e., purchasing accounts receivable from its customers at a discount, collecting the receivables, and making a profit on the difference between the discounted rate paid and the receivables collected.

To finance the operations of AFC, Hatfield borrowed large sums of money from numerous individual lenders (collectively, Lenders) against promissory notes (the Notes) signed by Hatfield as president of AFC. The Notes were secured against the assets of AFC and personally guaranteed by Hatfield. A majority of the Lenders were elderly persons who loaned portions of their retirement funds to AFC in return for the Notes. Hatfield offered the Lenders very attractive rates of interest: Respondents Hill and Pean, for example, loaned AFC $200,000 and over $750,000 on promissory notes bearing interest rates of 10 percent and 11 percent, respectively.

In 2004, Hatfield informed Lenders that AFC could not remain competitive if it continued to raise capital by issuing the Notes to individual lenders at rates of previously offered interest. To maintain profitability, AFC would need *1272 to restructure in order to fund operations through a bank line of credit at a lower interest rate. To obtain the bank line of credit, Hatfield created Alliance Finance Capital Holdings, Inc. (AFCH), with Hatfield as its sole stockholder. The function of AFCH was to acquire and hold the indebtedness of AFC. Hatfield assured the Lenders that this corporate restructuring would increase the profitability of AFC and enhance the security of the Notes held by the Lenders. Hatfield also informed the Lenders that the terms of the Notes held by AFCH “will be the same as your original note.” Interest payments on the Notes held by the Lenders ceased on or around June 1, 2006.

Hatfield also owned or controlled other business entities, including Industry Funding Corporation (IFC). IFC held a lending license issued by the State of California but the license lapsed because Hatfield did not renew it. IFC has been suspended for failure to pay the minimum California corporate franchise tax. In addition, Hatfield formed Alliance Business Capital, Inc. (ABC), as a vehicle for making asset-based loans. Hatfield owns a portion of the stock in ABC and the remaining stock is held by Robert Brophy, who managed the company’s asset-based lending operations.

After the relationship between Moore and Hatfield ended, Moore filed a Marvin 4 action in family court claiming an ownership interest in AFC and other property. Subsequently, the Marvin action resulted in a finding by the family court that Moore and Hatfield held themselves out to the world as married during their 13-year relationship. The family court also determined that all assets, including shares in Hatfield’s companies, were to be divided equally “subject to any ‘separate’ property interest Hatfield may be able to establish . . . that existed before the ‘marriage ceremony.’ ”

Procedural Background

A. Moore’s Complaint and Related Cross-complaints

On July 26, 2006, Moore filed a third amended complaint (complaint) against Hatfield, the above described corporations and all the Lenders, including respondents Hill and Pean. The first cause of action in the complaint alleged that the promissory notes held by the Lenders “are usurious and in violation of the California Constitution, Article XV, Section 1(2).” On behalf of AFC, Moore sought to recover all payments made to the Lenders as interest on the promissory notes, to reduce the amount claimed by the Lenders as principal “by all interest credited as increased principal,” and damages in the form of three times the amount of all interest payments to *1273 Lenders in the year preceding the filing of the action. In the second and related cause of action, Moore sought declaratory relief that the interest rate provisions of the promissory notes are null and void under the usury clause of the California Constitution.

In the complaint, Moore also alleges several other causes of action against Hatfield. As pertinent here, Moore alleges in her sixth cause of action that she is the holder of at least one-third of AFC’s outstanding shares and that Hatfield, “who is in control of AFC, has been guilty of persistent fraud . . . and unfairness toward Moore by treating AFC as his alter ego in violation [of] corporate statutes and for his exclusive benefit, thereby depriving Moore of her rights as a shareholder to share in the profits and earnings of AFC, while retaining such earnings and profits for his exclusive use and benefit.” For relief on the sixth cause of action, Moore sought a court order winding up and dissolving AFC and its related financial corporations.

On June 28, 2006, respondents Hill and Pean filed a cross-complaint against Hatfield and his financial corporations. 5 In their cross-complaint, Hill and Pean allege that interest rates on the Notes were presented to the Lenders by representatives of AFC and/or AFCH and were not negotiated by the Lenders. Based on Hatfield’s alleged nonpayment of interest and principal on the Lenders’ Notes, Hatfield’s subordination of their Notes to other security interests, and his transfer of assets between his financial corporations, Hill and Pean asserted several causes of action against Hatfield and the corporations, including breach of written and oral contracts, fraud and concealment, fraudulent conveyance, and conversion.

On September 29, 2006, John Culver, a Lender and noteholder, individually and as trustee of the John Culver 401k Plan, filed a cross-complaint (Culver cross-complaint) against Hatfield, Moore, and Hatfield’s financial companies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 Cal. App. 4th 1267, 116 Cal. Rptr. 3d 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-hill-calctapp-2010.