Ring v. Harmon

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 2021
DocketE075232
StatusPublished

This text of Ring v. Harmon (Ring v. Harmon) 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
Ring v. Harmon, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 12/15/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

AWANA RING,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E075232

v. (Super.Ct.No. CIVDS1901772)

RICHARD M. HARMON et al., OPINION

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Wilfred J.

Schneider, Jr., Judge. Reversed with directions.

Law Office of Adam Dolce and Adam Dolce for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Law Offices of Jeffrey A. Coleman and Jeffrey A. Coleman for Defendants and

Respondents.

Can a person who is both personal representative of a probate estate and a

beneficiary of that estate maintain in her individual capacity a claim for financial elder

abuse (or any other claims) based on allegations that she was manipulated into taking

actions as personal representative that damaged her interests as a beneficiary? The trial

court ruled that she may not, sustaining the respondents’ demurrer on the view that the

claims must be brought in the person’s capacity as the personal representative.

1 The plaintiff here, however, does not merely allege that respondents were

involved in an arms-length transaction with the estate, serving as broker and lender for a

loan secured by real property administered as part of the estate. She alleges fraud that

targeted her in her individual capacity, using probate procedures and her role as the

estate’s personal representative as an instrument to deprive her of her inheritance.

Specifically, she alleges that respondents engaged in a scheme, together with others, to

cause probate proceedings to be initiated, to arrange for her to be appointed as personal

representative of the estate, and then to induce her to enter into a loan on behalf of the

estate on predatory terms and to facilitate the diversion of loan funds both to respondents

and to those other parties. On these facts, which we hope can correctly be described as

unusual, we find the plaintiff’s financial elder abuse claim was adequately pleaded. We

therefore reverse the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff and appellant Awana Ring was approximately 80 years old when her 1 daughter Vickie Atiyeh died in November 2015. In her will, Atiyeh left a house to Ring.

Roy Scott Robb (Scott Robb) and Zachary Robb are a son and an adult grandson of Ring,

and father and son to one another. The Robbs are both named as defendants in this

action, but are not party to this appeal. The defendants and respondents here are Richard

1 In the petition for probate filed in October 2016 regarding Atiyeh’s estate, Ring’s age is listed as 81, and the complaint alleges that Ring was “in her eighties” during the relevant time period.

2 M. Harmon and the corporation TSG Financial Corp. (TSG); Ring alleges that TSG is an

alter ego of Harmon.

According to Ring, the Robbs, working together with respondents, in essence used

probate proceedings as a means to extract equity from the house to use for their own

purposes. Scott Robb, in particular, in accordance with a plan designed through

discussions with Harmon, caused a probate proceeding to be initiated regarding Atiyeh’s

estate, orchestrated Ring’s appointment as personal representative of the estate, and then

had Ring use that authority to enter into a loan to the estate secured by the house, with

respondents serving as broker and lender. In addition to the loan having predatory terms,

some of the loan funds were used to pay fees to respondents, and some were disbursed to

an estate account, but then withdrawn by the Robbs for their own purposes.

More specifically, Ring alleges that at the time the probate petition was filed, the

house was worth approximately $400,000, and it secured liens of approximately

$110,000. She alleges she was induced to enter into a $200,000 loan from respondents

on behalf of the estate, on terms requiring interest only payments at a rate of 10.99

percent and totaling $109,900.20 over five years, followed by a balloon payment of

$201,831.67, with additional penalties if there were to be a default. The proceeds of the

loan were distributed as follows: (1) approximately $137,000 to pay off debt secured by 2 the house ; (2) approximately $18,000 to respondents in the form of various fees; (3)

2 This sum includes not only the home’s first mortgage, but also an additional loan, styled as an “advance” on expected inheritance, separately arranged by Scott Robb after Atiyeh’s death.

3 $1029.08 to a title company; (4) $1,260 to an escrow company (also a defendant and

allegedly an alter ego of Harmon, though not party to this appeal) and; (5) $41,894.24 in

net loan proceeds, deposited to a bank account of Atiyeh’s estate that had been opened by

Scott Robb. Shortly after the loan proceeds were distributed, the Robbs withdrew the

loan proceeds deposited in the estate’s bank account.

In the operative second amended complaint in this lawsuit, Ring asserted claims

only in her individual capacity. The complaint includes nine causes of action asserted

against respondents: (1) “Predatory Lending”; (2) “Breach of Fiduciary Duty”; (3)

“Recission or Reformation”; (4) “Constructive Fraud”; (5) “Elder Abuse (Financial)”; (6)

“[Business and Professions] Code §§ 10240 et seq.”; (7) “[Business and Professions]

Code § 17200 et seq.”; (8) “Breach of Implied Covenants”; and (9) “Civil

Conspiracy/Aiding and Abetting.”

The trial court sustained Harmon and TSG’s demurrer to the complaint with leave

to amend, finding that all the claims alleged were properly asserted only in Ring’s

capacity as personal representative of her daughter’s estate. Briefly put, Ring did not file 3 an amended complaint, and the trial court entered judgment in respondents’ favor.

3 Ring filed a motion for reconsideration of the order sustaining the demurrer, citing authorities that she had not previously brought to the trial court’s attention. The trial court denied the motion. Ring then filed an ex parte application seeking to file a proposed third amended complaint that again asserted claims in her individual capacity. It seems she interpreted the scope of her leave to amend to be limited to the filing of a new complaint asserting causes of action against Harmon and TSG only in her capacity as personal representative of Atiyeh’s estate, but her proposed third amended complaint reasserted her causes of action in her individual capacity and included several new causes of action. The trial [footnote continued on next page]

4 In this appeal, Ring contests the dismissal of her first eight causes of action as to

respondents; she concedes that her ninth cause of action for “Civil Conspiracy/Aiding

and Abetting” was “properly dismissed.”

II. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

On appeal from a judgment based on an order sustaining a demurrer, we assume

the truth of the facts alleged in the complaint. (Pineda v. Williams-Sonoma Stores, Inc.

(2011) 51 Cal.4th 524, 528.) In addition, we consider judicially noticed matters.

(Committee for Green Foothills v. Santa Clara Board of Supervisors (2010) 48 Cal.4th

32, 42.) We accept all properly pleaded material facts but not contentions, deductions, or

conclusions of fact or law. (Evans v. City of Berkeley (2006) 38 Cal.4th 1, 6.) We

determine de novo whether the complaint alleges facts sufficient to state a cause of action

under any legal theory.

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Ring v. Harmon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-harmon-calctapp-2021.