Pomer v. Temmerman CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 2024
DocketH050191
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pomer v. Temmerman CA6 (Pomer v. Temmerman CA6) 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
Pomer v. Temmerman CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 3/15/24 Pomer v. Temmerman CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

MARSHALL I. POMER, H050191 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 18CV00404)

v.

ROBERT E. TEMMERMAN, JR., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Marshall I. Pomer appeals from a judgment following the trial court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication and later granting of defendants Robert E. Temmerman, Jr. and Temmerman, Cilley & Kohlmann, LLP’s (TCK) motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication. As is relevant to this appeal, the parties’ motions were directed at Pomer’s cause of action for fraudulent concealment, in which he alleged that Temmerman and TCK, who represented him as a beneficiary of his mother’s trusts, failed to disclose their attorney-client relationship with the corporate trustee. Although the defendants failed to meet their initial burden of showing that disclosure of their relationship with the trustee was not required here, they did establish as a matter of law that Pomer suffered no resulting damage. Because Pomer cannot prevail on a common law fraudulent concealment cause of action without proving damages, we affirm the judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. The Complaint

In February 2018, Pomer sued Temmerman and TCK, pleading causes of action for legal malpractice, fraud by concealment, breach of fiduciary duty, and dual representation. Pomer alleged the following in the complaint. Pomer’s mother, Frances Pomer,1 was co-trustee under the Sydney R. Pomer Revocable Trust Agreement, together with the Northern Trust Bank of Florida (Northern Trust), and the terms of the agreement gave Frances power of appointment. Frances was also settlor and trustee of a trust under the Frances Pomer 2000 Irrevocable Trust Agreement. On moving from Florida to California in 2005, Frances sought legal advice on matters including the selection of a new corporate trustee in California to replace Northern Trust. After Pomer and Frances jointly consulted Temmerman and TCK, Pomer signed a written fee agreement with TCK and Frances retained separate counsel. To Pomer, TCK recommended Borel Bank & Trust (now known as Boston Bank, the name we will use for consistency) as a successor corporate trustee, a recommendation Pomer conveyed to his mother, who then appointed Boston Bank as the new corporate trustee. Pomer alleged, however, that TCK had a conflict of interest, given its loyalties to both Pomer and Boston Bank, and that TCK concealed the dual representation and the conflict of interest. “Thus,” Pomer alleged, “Defendants facilitated the imposition of excessive fees by Boston Bank and its attorneys.” B. The Motions for Summary Judgment/Summary Adjudication

In December 2020, Pomer moved for summary judgment against Temmerman and TCK, but confined the motion to the fraudulent concealment cause of action, specifying

1 Because she shares a surname with Pomer, we refer to Pomer’s mother by her first name for clarity.

2 that “[t]he other causes of action in the complaint are hereby forfeited.” In the alternative, Pomer sought summary adjudication of the defendants’ “duty to disclose [their] concurrent representation” of Boston Bank. The trial court denied Pomer’s motion. Several months later, Temmerman and TCK moved for summary judgment. 1. Defense Evidence2

Temmerman and TCK began representing Pomer in May 2009, agreeing to represent only him and not Frances, who then obtained separate representation. Pomer’s stated objectives were: (1) the removal of Northern Trust as co-trustee of the Sydney R. Pomer Revocable Trust because of its refusal to pay Frances’s legal and living expenses; (2) the appointment of a new corporate co-trustee, protecting Frances’s power of appointment; (3) assurances that Frances’s legal fees and living expenses were paid moving forward; (4) reimbursement for loans Pomer had made to Frances for in-home care expenses; and (5) the eventual removal of Frances as co-trustee. On May 19, 2009, Pomer e-mailed Christine Kouvaris, an associate attorney at TCK, mentioning two “pressing matters”: (1) Northern Trust’s refusal to pay for his mother’s legal and living expenses; and (2) removal of his mother as co-trustee. Kouvaris e-mailed Pomer, stating that his mother could exercise her power under the trust agreement to remove Northern Trust as trustee but would need to appoint a new corporate trustee. Kouvaris recommended Boston Bank, and also mentioned three other banks as possible options. After a meeting with a trust officer at Boston Bank, Pomer told Kouvaris that Boston Bank would be fine, stating also that he “might talk to a couple of other potential trustees, but I think that having a trustee that your firm knows well is important.” 2 We focus on the evidence provided in connection with the defendants’ motion. We note, however, that the evidence presented in connection with Pomer’s motion was largely indistinguishable.

3 When Kouvaris recommended Boston Bank to Pomer, it had recently become a TCK client. About six months later, Boston Bank succeeded Northern Trust as co-trustee and in 2011 became the sole trustee under the Sydney R. Pomer Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Agreement.3 TCK and Temmerman never represented Boston Bank in any matter related to Pomer. In March 2015, Pomer e-mailed Kouvaris to complain that Boston Bank was delaying distribution of trust assets, and he expressed an interest in suing the bank for breach of fiduciary duty and for reimbursement for some of the trustee and legal fees. Kouvaris replied that Temmerman felt Boston Bank’s plan to seek court approval of the intended distribution was reasonable, given potential litigation due to the disinheritance of Pomer’s sister. Kouvaris also disclosed that TCK represented Boston Bank in other matters and could not take an adverse position to it.4 Pomer responded that, “in case Boston [Bank] persists in delaying,” he would accept Kouvaris’s offer to refer him to other counsel who could represent him in litigation against the trustee. The next month, TCK notified Pomer that they were closing his file. In July 2015, the probate court entered an order approving attorney fees and trustee fees for Boston Bank, with the attorney fees reduced from the bank’s request. 2. Pomer’s Evidence in Opposition

In opposing the defense motion, Pomer disputed the following: (1) whether Boston Bank had participated in the filing of a petition seeking confirmation of Frances’s power of appointment; (2) whether Kouvaris had “recommended” corporate trustees 3 Boston Bank at some point succeeded Frances as sole trustee of her Frances Pomer 2000 Irrevocable Trust, as well. 4 In the e-mail, Kouvaris claimed to have previously told Pomer that Boston Bank was a TCK client; in opposition to TCK’s motion, Pomer declared that he first learned of the representation in the March 2015 e-mail. Kouvaris did not submit a declaration in support of the motion, and TCK provided no evidence that they disclosed their representation of Boston Bank before Kouvaris’s March 2015 e-mail.

4 other than Boston Bank or just mentioned them as options; (3) whether he expressed that it was important for the trustee to have a “good relationship” with TCK or instead had stated that having a trustee that TCK “knows well” is important; (4) whether there were foreseeable adverse consequences; and (5) whether Temmerman and TCK refused to communicate with Boston Bank on Pomer’s behalf. C. Judgment and Appeal

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