Salute v. Siminski CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2025
DocketB327416
StatusUnpublished

This text of Salute v. Siminski CA2/4 (Salute v. Siminski CA2/4) 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
Salute v. Siminski CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/24/25 Salute v. Siminski CA2/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

PATRICIA M. SALUTE, B327416

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. LC105088) v.

CAMERON SIMINSKI,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Valerie Salkin, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Jay W. Smith and Jay W. Smith for Plaintiff and Appellant. Hayden & Kassel, Glenn M. Hayden for Defendant and Respondent. This case involves a dispute over the ownership of a Tarzana home. Respondent Cameron Siminski inherited the home when she was a young child. Siminski’s mother, appellant Patricia Salute, told Siminski that Salute owned the home. Salute also behaved as though the home were hers, using it as collateral for six-figure loans beginning while Siminski was still a minor. When Siminski was 19 and experiencing mental health challenges, Salute got her to sign “tax paperwork” that was in fact a grant deed transferring the property from Siminski alone to Salute and Siminski as joint tenants. Salute subsequently used the home as collateral for two sizeable loans without Siminski’s knowledge; one of the loans led to the recordation of a $405,000 deed of trust against the property. Six years later, Salute filed the instant action against Siminski, asserting causes of action for partition of the property, breach of oral contract, and declaratory relief. Siminski promptly filed a cross-complaint against Salute, asserting causes of action for quiet title, cancellation of instrument, and declaratory relief. The lender holding the deed of trust, PennyMac Loan Services, LLC, intervened in the proceedings, and Siminski asserted claims against it. Siminski and PennyMac ultimately settled on the first day of trial; pursuant to that settlement, Siminski agreed that PennyMac’s deed of trust was a valid first position lien against the property. After a bench trial of Salute’s and Siminski’s claims against each other, the trial court found that Salute was not credible and that she obtained Siminski’s signature on the grant deed through fraud and undue influence. It further found that Siminski rebutted the presumption that she knew or should have known what she was signing, and had neither actual nor constructive

2 notice of Salute’s malfeasance until Salute filed the action against her. The trial court accordingly concluded that Siminski’s claims were not barred by the statute of limitations. It also rejected Salute’s contention that Siminski’s claims were precluded by her settlement with PennyMac. The trial court found the grant deed voidable, declared the transfer void, and entered judgment in favor of Siminski. Salute now contends the court should have partitioned the property and entered judgment in her favor. She argues that Siminski was a legally competent adult when she signed the grant deed and therefore had actual or inquiry notice of the alleged fraud long before she filed her claims, which are barred by the statute of limitations. Salute alternatively contends that Siminski’s pretrial settlement with PennyMac constitutes a judicial admission that the deed of trust is valid, and therefore that the grant deed preceding it is also valid. We reject Salute’s contentions and affirm the judgment. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Although Salute “does not concede” that she defrauded or unduly influenced Siminski, she does not meaningfully challenge the trial court’s factual findings. We accordingly draw the following facts largely from the trial court’s statement of decision. Siminski is the daughter of Salute and the late James Siminski, who never married. James died in 1994, when Siminski was four years old. James left the Tarzana home to Siminski; at the time, it was encumbered only by a $3,633 lien. The probate court named Salute as Siminski’s guardian and authorized her to live in the home with Siminski and her older children from a previous relationship until Siminski turned 21.

3 Salute never told Siminski that Siminski was the owner of the home. Instead, she told Siminski that James had left the home to both of them, and Siminski would inherit the property upon Salute’s death. Salute also referred to the house as “her house” around others, including her sister Barbara Cody. After Cody corrected Salute and said it was “Cameron’s house,” Salute prevented Cody from seeing Siminski. Salute told Siminski that Cody “hated her” and did not allow Siminski to have a relationship with Cody. The trial court found Cody’s testimony to this effect “chilling,” and characterized Salute’s actions as “a decades-long effort to wrongfully withhold ownership of the [home] from Defendant Siminski.” In March 2007, while Siminski was still a minor, Salute “obtained a $250,000.00 line of credit, secured against the Property and pocketed over $100,000.” “Thereafter, Salute used the Property as a security to back four subsequent loans on September 27, 2007, October 3, 2007, April 13, 2009, and January 12, 2010. Salute used the proceeds of each loan to pay off the previous loan and either kept the additional proceeds or gave the money to her older children. Siminski received none of the proceeds.” The court found that Salute treated Siminski “differently from her half-brothers” in other ways as well, including giving them their own bedrooms while Siminski “needed to share her space,” and requiring Siminski to park on the street “because the driveway was reserved” for them. Salute also rented out rooms of the home to “various third-party tenants,” including a college professor who testified that Salute “became visibly upset” when anyone but her retrieved or distributed the mail and “made clear that no one else was allowed

4 to collect and distribute the mail.”1 Siminski also testified she was not allowed to get the mail. On October 3, 2007, Salute “arranged for transfer of the [home]’s title from Siminski to Salute.” After the transfer triggered a property tax reassessment, Salute transferred the property back to Siminski via quitclaim deed in 2008. Siminski was not aware of either transfer. In late 2008, when Siminski was 19, she attempted suicide and was hospitalized in a psychiatric ward. “When she was released, no one from her family, including her mother, Salute, was willing to pick her up from the hospital.” “Both before and after the suicide attempt, Salute consistently belittled Siminski, both to Siminski directly and in conversations, at least one of which Siminski overheard, with Salute’s other children.” Salute also isolated Siminski from extended family members who desired relationships with her, including Cody and Siminski’s paternal half-sister. The trial court found that Salute “engaged in an extended pattern of behavior designed to isolate Siminski” and “ensure that Siminski would have no social support system other than Salute.” The court further found that these efforts were effective, giving Salute a deep “hold” on Siminski “during a vulnerable time in Siminski’s life.” It was against this backdrop that in February 2009, shortly after Siminski’s release from the hospital, “Salute directed Siminski to sign a grant deed, which gifted the Property from Siminski alone to Salute and Siminski as joint tenants (the 2009 transfer). Salute falsely told Siminski that Siminski was signing

1 Siminski testified that after Salute moved out of the home in 2018, she found some of the professor’s bank statements that Salute had hidden and failed to give him.

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Bluebook (online)
Salute v. Siminski CA2/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salute-v-siminski-ca24-calctapp-2025.