Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 2023
DocketD080447
StatusUnpublished

This text of Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1 (Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1) 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
Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 12/22/23 Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

OVERLAND DIRECT, INC., D080447

Intervener and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2011-00071216- CU-OR-EC) ESOLA CAPITAL INVESTMENT, LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents;

A&S PARK BOULEVARD, LLC,

Objector & Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Eddie C. Sturgeon, Judge. Motion to dismiss denied; requests for judicial notice granted in-part and denied in-part. Reversed. Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, Benjamin G. Shatz, and Benjamin E. Strauss; and Philip A. Metson for Objector and Appellant. Blanchard, Krasner & French, Alan Kipp Williams, John F. Whittemore; Williams Iagmin, Jon R. Williams; Law Offices of George Rikos and George D. Rikos for Intervener and Respondent. No appearance for Defendants and Respondents. This appeal involves a complex set of real estate dealings gone awry in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, spawning contentious litigation in multiple courts. Cutting through the thicket of claims, this appeal ultimately turns on whether the trial court acted within the scope of the operative complaint in intervention in voiding three instruments pertaining to a parcel of real property in Van Nuys, California (the Friar property). The trial court voided these instruments following an uncontested trial at which the two named defendants, Daniel Tepper and Esola Capital Investment, LLC (Esola) failed to appear. It later amended that judgment to include the parcel numbers of the affected properties. We conclude the court exceeded the scope of the operative pleading, rendering the Amended Judgment void as to the named defendants. Nonparty A&S Park Boulevard, LLC (A&S) was sufficiently affected by the Amended Judgment, which resulted in foreclosure on its property, to bring this voidness claim. Accordingly, we reverse and remand, directing the trial court to set aside the Amended Judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

While the dealings between the parties are admittedly complex, the facts needed to resolve this appeal are relatively few. Overland Direct, Inc. (Overland), a subsidiary of Overland Direct (Israel), Ltd. (Overland-Israel), made loans to California property owners secured by liens on real property. The loans were funded by Israeli bondholders who were represented by Aurora Fidelity Trust (Aurora). In the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, deeds of trust securing Overland’s loans were assigned to Esola and its owner, Daniel Tepper. Overland claimed the assignments were fraudulent, prompting litigation in multiple courts to adjudicate competing property

2 claims.1 Broadly speaking, this appeal involves the alleged assignment of two deeds of trust, one concerning the Friar property and the other concerning a different property in El Cajon, California.

A. Background Facts

Overland loaned Michael Cartwright $960,000 in 2007. The note was secured by a first deed of trust on real property owned by his business, Cartwright Termite & Pest Control, LLC in El Cajon (the Cartwright

property).2 That same year Overland also made a $1.3 loan to Sarkis Grigoryan to construct a 14-unit apartment building on the Friar property. This one-year loan matured in May 2008 and was secured by a first deed of trust on the property. Following the global financial crisis, Aurora hired Tepper as its agent to liquidate Overland’s assets. Overland ended up assigning its deeds of trust to Tepper’s company, Esola. This included the first trust deeds on the Friar and Cartwright properties. Esola, in turn, assigned the Friar property note and deed of trust to A&S Park Boulevard, LLC (A&S) in 2011 for $600,000. A&S foreclosed on the note in 2012 and became the fee simple owner of the Friar property after submitting the winning bid at a trustee’s sale.

1 We grant A&S’s November 15, 2022 request for judicial notice of two volumes of pleadings and orders, as well as Overland’s May 9, 2023 request for judicial notice of additional case filings and recorded deeds of trust. (Evid. Code, § 452, subds. (d), (h); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.252(a).) Because they are unnecessary to our analysis, we deny the remaining requests for judicial notice filed by the parties on September 15, September 25, and October 2, 2023 in response to the court’s first request for supplemental briefing. (See Arce v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. (2010) 181 Cal.App.4th 471, 482.) 2 In 2009, Overland assigned a one-third interest in the note to a third party. That assignment has no relevance for these proceedings. 3 After Cartwright Termite defaulted in 2010, Esola attempted to foreclose. Cartwright Termite responded by filing this case, which we refer to as the “Cartwright action,” against Tepper and Esola in 2011. Eventually the court dismissed all but the cause of action for declaratory relief. When in 2013 the court determined that Cartwright Termite lacked standing to sue Esola and Tepper for fraud, Michael Cartwright set out to acquire Overland

from the bankruptcy estate of supposed owner Doron Ezra.3 In 2013, Cartwright purchased “the Estate’s interest, if any” in Overland for $15,000. Having acquired Ezra’s “if any” shares in Overland, Cartwright as Overland filed a series of complaints. In this action, it filed a complaint in intervention against Esola, Tepper, and Citivest Financial Services, Inc. (Citivest) for fraud and declaratory relief. This original complaint, filed in January 2016, sued Tepper and Esola for fraudulent conduct in relation to two assignments of the Cartwright property deed of trust. The complaint in intervention did not name A&S as a party or reference the Friar property; the only property referenced was the Cartwright property. As will become apparent, Overland claims that its January 2016 complaint in intervention was superseded by a “First Amended Cross-Complaint in Intervention,” seeking much broader relief, filed by Cartwright on behalf of Overland in March 2016 in a coordinated action, Payan v. Cartwright Termite & Pest

3 The parties dispute whether Ezra, the president of Overland, owned any stock in the company at the time he filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. Standing is an issue we do not resolve in this appeal, and we therefore spend little time on the underlying contested facts. 4 Control (Super. Ct. San Diego County, No. 37-2013-00049616-CU-OR-CTL)

(the Payan action).4 Cartwright qua Overland also filed two other cases against Esola and Tepper that did name A&S as a party and reference Overland’s assignment of

the Friar property deed of trust.5 The LA Friar action sued Esola, Tepper, A&S, and Wells Fargo for quiet title, declaratory relief, conversion, and fraud. In addition, Cartwright as Overland substituted A&S as a Doe defendant in the SD Friar action, a previously filed case before Judge Sturgeon in San Diego seeking largely the same relief. A&S moved to disqualify Judge Sturgeon from the SD Friar action (Code Civ. Proc., § 170.6), prompting the case to be reassigned to Judge Wohlfeil. Eventually the LA Friar action was also transferred to Judge Wohlfeil and consolidated with the SD Friar action.

B. Phase 1 Trial

In August 2016, Judge Sturgeon conducted a one-week bench trial on Cartwright Termite’s sole remaining cause of action for declaratory relief.

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Overland Direct v. Esola Capital Investment CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overland-direct-v-esola-capital-investment-ca41-calctapp-2023.