Morgan Creek Residential v. Kemp

63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 232, 153 Cal. App. 4th 675, 63 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 507, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1209
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2007
DocketC053098
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 232 (Morgan Creek Residential v. Kemp) 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
Morgan Creek Residential v. Kemp, 63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 232, 153 Cal. App. 4th 675, 63 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 507, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1209 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

SIMS, J.

In this case involving claims of equitable contribution and subrogation, plaintiff Morgan Creek Residential appeals from a judgment of dismissal, following the sustaining of a demurrer without leave to amend, in favor of defendants Earl S. Kemp and Richard A. Haws. 1 Plaintiff contends its complaint states a claim for equitable contribution from co-obligors and for subrogation under the California Uniform Commercial Code (undesignated section references are to the California Uniform Commercial Code) for monies paid by plaintiff pursuant to a letter of credit. 2 As we shall explain, plaintiff is not entitled to contribution from the guarantors because the liabilities of an applicant 3 of a letter of credit, on the one hand, and the guarantors, on the other, are not equal. We shall also conclude plaintiff is not *679 entitled to subrogation under the California Uniform Commercial Code. We shall therefore affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

In the operative pleading—the “FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT FOR UNJUST ENRICHMENT, MONEY PAID, EQUITABLE CONTRIBUTION FROM CO-OBLIGORS, AND SUBROGATION”—plaintiff alleged as follows:

Plaintiff is a land developer formerly entitling and developing real estate in a residential development known as Morgan Creek. Defendants are developers and/or merchant builders engaged in entitling and developing real estate and/or homes for sale to the public in the Morgan Creek Development.

One of the planned amenities of the Morgan Creek Development was a golf course, golf club and clubhouse (the Amenities) to serve the surrounding developments. The ownership of the Amenities was in Morgan Creek Golf Club, LLC (the Golf Club), the members of which were West Placer Golf, LLC, Stonebridge Golf JV, LLC (Stonebridge), and the Stonebridge Group (TSG). Defendant Kemp was a principal of TSG. Defendant Haws was a principal of Stonebridge and TSG. The other individuals named as defendants were principals of defendant Lakemont Homes, which was the managing member of West Placer Golf, LLC. These Lakemont defendants are not parties to this appeal.

During the course of development, the Golf Club applied for a $10 million loan from Citicapital Commercial Corporation (Citicapital) in order to complete the golf course. As a condition of the loan, Citicapital required loan guarantees from all of the named defendants. The guarantees were as follows: Kemp up to the sum of $800,000; Haws up to the sum of $800,000; Lakemont Homes up to the sum of $1.6 million; and the individual Lakemont principals up to the sum of $400,000 each. The written guarantees, totaling $4,800,000 were submitted to Citicapital.

Citicapital subsequently advised the Golf Club, through its members West Placer Golf, LLC, Stonebridge and TSG, that the guarantees were insufficient. The Golf Club, through its members, requested that plaintiff loan or advance additional sums in order to complete the golf course. Plaintiff agreed and advanced and loaned the sum of approximately $2.8 million to West Placer Golf, LLC, the operating member of the Golf Club, to complete the golf course.

*680 Additionally, at the request of the Golf Club and defendants, plaintiff obtained and underwrote an unconditional letter of credit in the sum of $1.4 million for the benefit of Citicapital, as security for the loan. The issuing bank was Northern Trust Bank. The terms of the letter of credit allowed Citicapital to call the letter of credit upon any default in the loan from Citicapital to the Golf Club.

The Golf Club’s $10 million loan application to Citicapital was thereafter reduced to $6.5 million. Citicapital approved the $6.5 million loan (the Loan), and the Golf Club commenced construction of the golf course. The Loan was secured by a note and deed of trust on the real property and personal property comprising the golf course and other Amenities (the Property).

In July 2004, several unpaid contractors filed mechanic’s liens against the real property on which the golf course was being built. As a result of this and other issues, Citicapital gave notice of the Loan default and opportunity to cure. The Golf Club, through its members, failed to take any action to cure the Loan default.

Citicapital then called the letter of credit and was paid the sum of $1.4 million by Northern Trust Bank. As a result of the contractual relationship with Northern Trust Bank, plaintiff was required to and did immediately provide the sum of $1.4 million to Northern Trust Bank to satisfy the draw on the letter of credit.

The $1.4 million drawn down on the letter of credit and obtained by Citicapital was used to reduce the outstanding principal of the Loan from $6,173,738.68 to $4,773,738.68. It was not used to cure the default under the Loan. As a result of the draw on the letter of credit and reduction of the outstanding principal of the Loan, the amount of remaining secured debt on the Property was reduced to an amount substantially equal to the fair market value of the Property.

After the draw on the letter of credit and reduction of the outstanding principal of the Loan by $1.4 million, the Lakemont defendants entered into an agreement with Citicapital, pursuant to which the Lakemont defendants sold the assets of the Golf Club, including the Property, to themselves— taking ownership in a new entity known as Step Golf Associates, LLC—and obtained restated and restructured financing from Citicapital in a loan amount already reduced by the $1.4 million draw on the letter of credit, in the sum of approximately $4.7 million (the New Loan).

The first two counts of the complaint, which are not at issue in this appeal, alleged unjust enrichment and money paid as against the Lakemont defendants.

*681 The third count, against all defendants, was for equitable contribution from co-obligors. It alleged that, in obtaining and underwriting an unconditional letter of credit in the sum of $1.4 million as security for the Loan, plaintiff became a co-obligor and/or coguarantor with defendants up to the sum of $1.4 million of the total guaranteed loan sum of $6.2 million on behalf of the Golf Club for the benefit of Citicapital. Plaintiff has disproportionately paid its share of the guarantee of $6.2 million and, by reducing the principal of the New Loan for which it has no obligation, has benefited defendants to the extent that their guarantee or proportionate share thereof has been reduced. Plaintiff’s $1.4 million pro rata share of the $6.2 million loan guarantee is only 22 percent. 4 In paying $1.4 million as a result of the draw on the letter of credit, plaintiff paid substantially more than its 22 percent proportionate share of the total amounts paid by the guarantors to Citicapital following the Loan default. Plaintiff alleged that equity and justice require that the coobligor defendants contribute to the $1.4 million payment made by plaintiff in proportion to their percentage of total guarantee so that plaintiff is not unjustifiably penalized and defendants are not unjustly enriched.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 232, 153 Cal. App. 4th 675, 63 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 507, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-creek-residential-v-kemp-calctapp-2007.