S.E v. Car Wash v. Aminpour CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 28, 2013
DocketB238823
StatusUnpublished

This text of S.E v. Car Wash v. Aminpour CA2/8 (S.E v. Car Wash v. Aminpour CA2/8) 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
S.E v. Car Wash v. Aminpour CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/28/13 S.E.V. Car Wash v. Aminpour CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 EIGHT

S.E.V. CAR WASH, INC., et al., B238823

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC408205) v.

SAIED “STEVE” AMINPOUR et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Elizabeth Allen White, Judge. Affirmed as modified.

KO Legal, and Kimberly Olson; Westrup Klick and R. Duane Westrup, for Appellants.

No appearance for Respondent.

__________________________ Plaintiffs and appellants S.E.V. Car Wash, Inc., S.E.V. Investments LLC, Shagen Galstanyan, Armanouch Ter-Galstanyan, Vahe Ter-Galstanyan and Edwin Ter- Galstanyan (collectively S.E.V. or the S.E.V. plaintiffs) appeal from the judgment entered in favor of S.E.V. and against defendants and respondents Saied Aminpour, Gadi Emein, Freydon Esmaili and Glendale Colorado Investments, Inc. (collectively Glendale or the Glendale defendants) on the complaint, and against S.E.V. and in favor of Glendale on the cross-complaint. S.E.V. contends the trial court prejudicially erred by: (1) failing to issue a written statement of decision; (2) incorrectly calculating usury damages; (3) awarding Glendale Colorado Investments prejudgment interest; and (4) denying S.E.V.‟s new trial motion. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1

The multi-million dollar sale of several car washes is at the center of this litigation. Briefly summarized, plaintiff S.E.V. Car Wash, Inc. owned and operated several car washes including those known as Alessandro and Sunnymead, which were located on real property owned by plaintiff S.E.V. Investments LLC. Plaintiffs Shagen Galstanyan, Armanouch Ter-Galstanyan, Vahe Ter-Galstanyan and Edwin Ter- Galstanyan were officers and directors of both companies.2 Defendants Gadi Emein and Said Aminpour owned defendant Glendale Colorado Investments, Inc. (Glendale Investments); Aminpour was also a loan officer at Wilshire Bank. Defendant Freydon Esmaili purchased the Alessandro car wash from S.E.V. and had also agreed to purchase Sunnymead, but that transaction was canceled by S.E.V.

1 Glendale has not filed a respondent‟s brief so we are without benefit of its view of the facts. Although California Rules of Court, rule 8.220(a) gives us discretion to accept as true Car Wash‟s statement of facts, we need not do so. (See Stoner v. Williams (1996) 46 Cal.App.4th 986, 990 [court need not exercise option to accept as true facts stated in appellant‟s opening brief where those facts are not set forth in an unbiased manner].)

2 To avoid confusion, we refer to the Galstanyans by their first names.

2 In September 2006, the S.E.V. plaintiffs were in escrow to purchase a courier business known as Tele-Car, and the real property upon which it was located. When they could not obtain a loan from Wilshire Bank for the full purchase price of Tele-Car, S.E.V. followed loan officer Aminpour‟s advice that plaintiffs obtain a hard money loan from Glendale Investments for the $1.5 million shortfall.3 On February 27, 2007, S.E.V. executed a $1.5 million promissory note in favor of Glendale Investments (the First Glendale Promissory Note). The note carried an interest rate of 12 percent per annum and was secured by trust deeds on five S.E.V. properties, including Alessandro and Sunnymead; it was payable in interest-only payments of $15,000 per month until March 1, 2008, when the full loan would become due and payable. From the $1.5 million loan proceeds, S.E.V. paid Glendale a fee of $75,500. In September 2007, anxious to raise funds to pay off the First Glendale Promissory Note, S.E.V. entered into an agreement to sell the Alessandro car wash for $8 million and the Sunnymead car wash for $7.4 million in separate transactions to defendant Esmaili. During the delayed Alessandro escrow, the First Glendale Promissory Note became due and payable. Feeling pressured to pay off that note, S.E.V. succumbed to Esmaili‟s demands to reduce the Alessandro purchase price to $5.3 million. When Esmaili was unable to raise that amount, S.E.V. agreed to carry back a promissory note for the $1,900,000 short fall (the First Esmaili Promissory Note), as well as a promissory note for approximately $90,000 in closing costs that Esmaili could not cover (the Second Esmaili Promissory Note); Esmaili promised to personally guarantee both notes. S.E.V. agreed to pay Aminpour, who falsely represented that he was a licensed real estate broker, an $110,000 commission on the sale of the Alessandro car wash. That commission was paid through escrow to FEMI Consulting, Inc., which was owned by Emein (and co-owned with Aminpour of Glendale Investments). The Alessandro sale closed in or about late August, early September 2008. Glendale received $345,000 from the proceeds of the Alessandro sale. Of that amount,

3 The S.E.V. plaintiffs had a long relationship with Aminpour, whom plaintiff Vahe thought of as a mentor. Aminpour also owned a car wash.

3 $300,000 was applied to reduce the principal of the First Glendale Promissory Note to $1.2 million and the $45,000 balance was a “non-principal payment” on a new $1.2 million loan dated August 27, 2008 (the Second Glendale Promissory Note).4 The Second Glendale Promissory Note carried a 12 percent interest rate and stated that it was due and payable on March 1, 2008 (which was five months before it was executed). When Esmaili did not make payments on the First and Second Esmaili Promissory Notes, S.E.V. could not make its payments on the Second Glendale Promissory Note. In November 2008, Glendale threatened to foreclose on the four properties securing the Second Glendale Promissory Note. The S.E.V. plaintiffs came to the conclusion that Aminpour, Emein and Esmaili had conspired to fraudulently induce S.E.V. to agree to the terms of the First and Second Glendale Promissory Notes, the Alessandro sale, the First and Second Esmaili Promissory Notes and to pay Aminpour an unlawful broker commission. S.E.V. filed its original complaint in this action on February 20, 2009. On August 11, 2009, it filed the operative first amended complaint (the complaint) for conspiracy to commit fraud, fraud, cancellation of written instrument, breach of promissory notes, breach of written guaranty, declaratory relief, injunctive relief, quiet title and constructive trust. On August 6, 2010, the trial court denied without prejudice S.E.V.‟s motion to file a second amended complaint. In March 2011, it denied Glendale‟s motion to strike the complaint. On April 4, 2011, Glendale filed a cross-complaint which S.E.V. answered. A six-day bench trial commenced on July 21, 2011. The parties stipulated that: (1) a $75,500 “non-principal payment” was made to Glendale relating to the $1.5 million note (i.e. the First Glendale Promissory Note); (2) a $45,000 “non-principal payment” was made to Glendale through the closing of the Alessandro sale; and (3) S.E.V. made interest payments to Glendale in the amount of $255,000 (no dates for those interest payments were specified). On July 28, 2011, after hearing all of the evidence, the trial

4 Emein testified that he understood the loan to be a continuation of the old loan, not a new loan.

4 court granted S.E.V.‟s motion to amend the complaint to add a usury claim. The parties agreed to a briefing schedule for written closing arguments.

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