SMC Speciality Finance v. Zhengfu Pictures Limited CA2/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 2022
DocketB314024
StatusUnpublished

This text of SMC Speciality Finance v. Zhengfu Pictures Limited CA2/2 (SMC Speciality Finance v. Zhengfu Pictures Limited CA2/2) 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
SMC Speciality Finance v. Zhengfu Pictures Limited CA2/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 6/23/22 SMC Speciality Finance v. Zhengfu Pictures Limited CA2/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

SMC SPECIALTY FINANCE, B314024 LLC, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 21SMCV00716) v.

ZHENGFU PICTURES LIMITED,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mark A. Young, Judge. Affirmed.

Zhong Lun Law Firm and Leodis C. Matthews for Defendant and Appellant. Raskin Gorham Anderson Law, Scott J. Tepper, and Gary J. Gorham for Plaintiff and Respondent.

****** This is a tale about the making of two movies set during World War II, which has spawned a minor skirmish of its own. A Chinese-based company agreed to help a Hollywood studio finance and distribute a film depicting World War II called Greyhound. In order to finance a second World War II film called Destroyer, the company surrendered its rights under the Greyhound contract as collateral for a short-term loan. When the company defaulted, the lender foreclosed and took title to those rights. The Chinese company and the lender have now sued each other, chiefly over the company’s postforeclosure epiphany that it did not have the power to surrender its rights under the Greyhound contract. Immediately after filing a cross-complaint, the Chinese company sought a preliminary injunction that would turn back time by nullifying the lender’s foreclosure. The trial court declined to issue the injunction. Because that was not an abuse of discretion, we affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Facts A. Distribution and financing of Greyhound Greyhound is a film set during World War II and stars Tom Hanks. In July 2017, Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisition Inc. (Sony) entered into a “co-financing and distribution” agreement for Greyhound (the Greyhound Agreement) with a Chinese company called Zhengfu Pictures Limited (Zhengfu). Under the Greyhound Agreement, Sony and Zhengfu agreed that (1) each

2 would contribute money toward the production of the film, (2) each would collect “certain additional revenues” from the film, (3) each would own a share of the film’s copyrights, and (4) Zhengfu would have a 15-year exclusive license to distribute the film in mainland China as well as the right to negotiate for the right to distribute the film in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macau. The only person Sony dealt with on behalf of Zhengfu was Alex Zhang (Zhang). Consistent with his primary role, Zhang was listed as an “executive producer” during the end credits of the Greyhound film. B. Zhengfu finances Destroyer by offering up its rights in the Greyhound Agreement as collateral Zhengfu and another Chinese company called Beijing Zhumeng Qiming Culture & Art Co., Ltd. (Zhumeng) formed a British Virgin Islands-based company called Golden Title Investments Limited (Golden Title) in order to finance another World World II film called Destroyer.1 Zhang is a principal of Golden Title. In October 2018, Golden Title signed an agreement (Bridge Loan Agreement) to obtain a shorter-term, so-called “bridge loan” of up to $5.33 million from SMC Specialty Finance, LLC (SMC Specialty). SMC Specialty is a California-based company in the business of making bridge loans to film financiers. As “collateral” for the bridge loan to Golden Title to finance Destroyer, Zhengfu granted SMC Specialty a “first-priority security interest” in all of Zhengfu’s “assets, rights and entitlements” under the Greyhound Agreement. To effectuate the use of Zhengfu’s interest in the Greyhound Agreement as

1 Interestingly, Zhumeng also participated in the financing of a third World War II film called Midway.

3 collateral for the Destroyer bridge loan, Zhengfu and SMC Specialty executed (1) an Accommodation and Security Agreement, (2) a Copyright Mortgage and Assignment, and (3) a Power of Sale and Power of Attorney. Zhang signed these documents on behalf of Zhengfu. SMC Specialty thereafter perfected its security interest by filing a UCC-1 form. C. Golden Title defaults on the bridge loan Golden Title ended up borrowing $4.305 million under the Bridge Loan Agreement and did not repay any of it. In April 2019 and again in early June 2020, SMC Specialty provided Zhengfu with written notice of its liability for Golden Title’s outstanding debt, which by early June 2020 totaled $10,353,950. In late June 2020, SMC Specialty wrote to Sony, informing it that Zhengfu had pledged its interest in the Greyhound Agreement, and asking Sony to provide its records so that SMC Specialty could receive Zhengfu’s share of the revenue stream from the movie’s distribution, which was to be released on the Apple TV+ streaming platform in July 2020. On September 21, 2020, SMC Specialty held a foreclosure sale for Zhengfu’s rights under the Greyhound Agreement, purchased those rights on a credit bid, and thus took title to those rights. D. Postforeclosure events The day after the foreclosure sale, SMC Specialty wrote to Sony, informing it of the sale and asking Sony to hold Zhengfu’s revenues in a separate account and to provide an accounting of those revenues. SMC Specialty has taken no further action to collect on Zhengfu’s rights under the Greyhound Agreement: It

4 has not sought to distribute the Greyhound film in mainland China, and it has taken no further actions to collect Zhengfu’s share of revenues currently being held by Sony and other third parties. Indeed, SMC Specialty has offered to stipulate that Sony and the other third parties may continue to collect and hold those funds until the lawsuits discussed below are resolved. Also after the foreclosure sale, Zhengfu for the first time denounced as void Zhengfu’s grant of a security interest in its rights under the Greyhound Agreement, asserting that Zhang’s position at Zhengfu was little more than as a glorified translator and go-between and, in the alternative, that Zhang had forged Zhengfu’s company seal. In response to these conflicting positions, Sony informed Zhengfu and SMC Specialty that it “has no choice but to hold payment” of the revenues owed to Zhengfu “until [Sony] can resolve the dispute between Zhengfu and SMC [Specialty] regarding which entity is the rightful beneficiary of the Zhengfu [p]ayment[s].” II. Procedural Background A. Pleadings In April 2021, SMC Specialty sued Zhengfu, and others, for declaratory relief. As pertinent here, SMC Specialty seeks a declaration that its perfected security interest in Zhengfu’s rights under the Greyhound Agreement as well as the subsequent foreclosure sale of those rights are both “valid and effective.”2

2 In the alternative, SMC Specialty also named Zhang (and Han Sanping, the principal of Zhumeng with whom it dealt) for fraud.

5 In May 2021, Zhengfu responded with a 56-page, 222- paragraph cross-complaint against SMC Specialty, Golden Title, and Zhang alleging eight different cross-claims. Among other causes of action, Zhengfu alleges three claims for declaratory relief seeking the inverse relief sought by SMC Specialty, and has also sued SMC Specialty for intentional interference with a contractual relationship, negligent interference with a prospective economic advantage, conversion, and unfair business practices. B. Zhengfu’s requests for injunctive relief 1. The TRO The day after Zhengfu filed its cross-complaint, Zhengfu filed an ex parte application for a temporary restraining order (TRO) as well as a preliminary injunction.

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