Remington v. Wade CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 2024
DocketH050667
StatusUnpublished

This text of Remington v. Wade CA6 (Remington v. Wade 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
Remington v. Wade CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 3/22/24 Remington v. Wade CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

JON REMINGTON et al., H050667 (Santa Clara County Plaintiffs and Respondents, Super. Ct. No. 17CV310715)

v.

STEPHEN R. WADE,

Defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiffs1 sued Sierra Land Associates, LLC seeking a declaratory judgment establishing their title to real property on the ground that Sierra failed to exercise its unassignable option to purchase the property. Stephen R. Wade was Sierra’s counsel, one of its two controlling members, and, as revealed on the eve of trial, Sierra’s assignee as to the disputed option. On this revelation, the parties stipulated Wade was the real party in interest for the defense. Prevailing at trial, plaintiffs secured a judgment and fee award against Sierra. Wade appeals from the latter order adding him as a judgment

1 By the time of trial, the plaintiffs were Jon Remington, Diane Brandenburg as trustee of (1) the Jackson Lee Brandenburg Separate Property Trust and (2) the Taylor Ann Brandenburg Separate Property Trust, and Karen D. Brandenburg as trustee of her revocable trust. debtor, contending the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction and abused its discretion under Code of Civil Procedure section 187.2 We affirm. I. BACKGROUND Sierra owned real property subject to a loan evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a deed of trust. Wade began representing Sierra by 2011, when Sierra filed for bankruptcy. In 2013, facing nonjudicial foreclosure on the property, Sierra claimed the loan was usurious. To resolve the dispute, Sierra entered a settlement agreement with Remington; Drew Winkler; Commercial Estate Management, LLC; Eric Brandenburg, Trustee of the Eric Brandenburg Separate Property Trust dated August 14, 2001; and Karen D. Brandenburg. As Sierra’s counsel, Wade was privy to the settlement negotiations and was named in the settlement agreement as a person entitled to copies of certain notices. Under the settlement agreement, Sierra executed in favor of Remington and the Brandenburgs a deed in lieu of foreclosure, which was recorded on August 5, 2013. In return, Remington and the Brandenburgs entered an option agreement with Sierra. Under the option agreement, Sierra acquired the nonassignable right to purchase the property for $300,000 within three years. Failure to timely exercise the option, failure to pay the $300,000 by the close of a 60-day escrow, or assignment of the option before the close of escrow would constitute a default. Sierra provided Remington and the Brandenburgs a quitclaim deed, which they would be entitled to record if Sierra defaulted. In early 2015, Wade learned that Sierra’s two members lacked “the financial wherewithal to pursue development of the property.” So Wade agreed to “fund [development] at least through the entitlement of the property,” and one of the members then assigned his membership interest to Wade.

2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 Later that year, after Wade balked at the amount he would need to invest in the property, Sierra’s other member and its manager/former member orally agreed that Sierra would assign the option to him. The assignment required Wade to assume all of Sierra’s obligations under the option agreement. Sierra did not then disclose any assignment to plaintiffs. Neither did Wade, who as Sierra’s counsel instead notified Remington and the Brandenburgs that Sierra was exercising the option.3 When no one paid the purchase price, Remington and the Brandenburgs instructed the title company to record the quitclaim deed. Wade objected. The deed went unrecorded. In 2017, Remington, Lee Brandenburg as successor trustee of the Eric Brandenburg Separate Property Trust dated August 14, 2001, and Karen D. Brandenburg sued Sierra, asserting causes of action for breach of the option agreement and declaratory relief establishing their title to the property.4 Sierra, represented only by Wade, answered the complaint in 2018, after an unsuccessful motion for change of venue. Sierra’s answer made no reference to assignment of the option agreement. Rather, Sierra’s central defenses in the case were that the settlement agreement was a disguised security device or an equitable mortgage and that plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest improperly refused to extend the escrow period. In 2019, Sierra, represented only by Wade, responded to plaintiffs’ form interrogatories. The responses identified Wade, as Sierra’s attorney, as an individual with personal knowledge of each of Sierra’s affirmative defenses.

3 When Sierra exercised the option, the assignment had been made orally, but had not been reduced to writing. It was not reduced to writing until later in 2016, but the written assignment had a backdated effective date in 2015. 4 During the litigation, Lee Brandenburg passed away and Karen D. Brandenburg transferred her interests to a revocable trust.

3 The day before the 2021 trial, plaintiffs’ counsel informed Wade that Sierra had been suspended by the California Secretary of State and the California Franchise Tax Board. Counsel advised Wade that plaintiffs would move in limine for an order barring Sierra from presenting any defense at trial. At that, Wade disclosed the assignment. The first day of trial, the parties stipulated that Wade, as Sierra’s assignee, was “the Real Party in Interest to this action as Defendant.” When plaintiffs later noted that their written motion in limine to disqualify Sierra remained pending, Wade moved to substitute himself for Sierra as the party defendant. Plaintiffs opposed the request on the ground that Sierra had no right to assign the option. Rather than rule on Wade’s motion, the court left the issues presented by plaintiffs’ motion in limine “hanging,” citing ambiguity as to when Sierra was suspended, whether Sierra could reinstate itself, and ultimately whether “we . . . have to mess around with whether they’re assignments, or non-assignments or otherwise.” Plaintiffs withdrew their motion in limine the next day, after the close of evidence. The court never ruled on Wade’s motion to substitute himself for Sierra as a party. The trial court found for plaintiffs on their declaratory relief cause of action.5 The court determined that the settlement agreement was neither a disguised security interest nor an equitable mortgage but an absolute transfer of title. Further, the court found that Sierra forfeited its option by failing to properly exercise it. Alternatively, the court found that Sierra’s assignment to Wade, if valid, was an “outright violation of the option agreement” that negated Sierra’s exercise of the option. The trial court entered a declaratory judgment for plaintiffs and against Sierra. The court declared that plaintiffs hold all legal and equitable title in the property and required Sierra to assist in executing and recording necessary documents. The judgment

The court found that plaintiffs “seem[ed] to have . . . abandoned” their claim for 5

money damages.

4 provided for plaintiffs to recover their legal costs according to proof. Never having been formally made a party, despite his stipulated status as Sierra’s assignee and real party in interest, Wade was not named in the judgment. After entry of the judgment, plaintiffs filed a memorandum of costs and a motion for attorney fees. Neither Sierra nor Wade opposed.

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Remington v. Wade CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remington-v-wade-ca6-calctapp-2024.