Souch v. McCormick CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 13, 2023
DocketA163857
StatusUnpublished

This text of Souch v. McCormick CA1/3 (Souch v. McCormick CA1/3) 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
Souch v. McCormick CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 10/13/23 Souch v. McCormick CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

CHARLOTTE SOUCH et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A163857 v. MARTIN McCORMICK et al., (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. SCV-266109) Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiffs Charlotte Souch and Houses 4 Homes, LLC (H4H) (collectively plaintiffs) appeal after the trial court granted defendants’ motion for a terminating sanction against Souch due to her failure to comply with discovery orders. On appeal, plaintiffs contend the court’s imposition of a terminating sanction constituted an abuse of discretion because the sanction (1) was punitive; (2) placed defendants in a better position than they would have been in had they obtained the sought-after discovery; and (3) deprived Souch of due process. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1 Plaintiffs allege that Souch is the sole managing member of H4H, which owns two properties on Green Meadow Road and Vista Court in

1 The records designated by plaintiffs for inclusion in the clerk’s transcript do not include key filings, including the operative first amended complaint and most of the papers filed in connection with defendants’

1 Sebastopol. Defendant Banrion Corporation, doing business as McCormick & Co. Homes and Loans (McCormick & Co.), is a mortgage broker and the general partner of defendant Max-Y Company, L.P. (Max-Y), a diversified financial marketing company engaged in residential mortgage banking. Defendant Martin McCormick is the president of McCormick & Co. Hereafter we will refer to McCormick, McCormick & Co., and Max-Y collectively as defendants. Plaintiffs’ allegations included all of the following. In January 2019, they obtained first and second loans from Max-Y, brokered by McCormick & Co., to purchase the Green Meadow Road property, and also refinanced a loan on the Vista Court property. Defendants knew that plaintiffs obtained the Green Meadow Road property as an investment property to renovate and sell, and defendants promised to provide additional funds for the renovation so long as plaintiffs could justify the amounts already spent. Defendants also promised that the loan on Green Meadow Road would cover the entire purchase, and that the loan on Vista Court was a cash-out loan that would immediately net Souch at least $80,000. These representations were allegedly false, as the loan on Vista Court did not net an extra $80,000 in cash after the refinance, and the loan on Green Meadow Road was insufficient to cover the purchase price. Needing more money for renovations, plaintiffs requested and received two construction loans from defendants, but when plaintiffs requested a third draw of $119,000, defendants refused to provide more than $75,000 and required plaintiffs to put Vista Court up for sale. Defendants further

sanctions motion. (See Discussion, pt. A, post.) The following details have been gleaned from the original complaint, the trial court’s order on the sanctions motion, and the respondents’ appendix.

2 misrepresented that the loans on Green Meadow Road could not be refinanced because they were cross-collateralized, when in fact, they were not. Had plaintiffs known this, they would have refinanced those loans. Plaintiffs allege that due to a lack of funding, they were unable to complete renovations in time for the summer selling season, and they eventually defaulted on the loans. In December 2019, defendants recorded notices of default on the Green Meadow Road and Vista Court properties. Max-Y filed a cross-complaint against plaintiffs, alleging that Souch made material misrepresentations in her loan applications regarding H4H’s fitness. The matter was set for trial on September 3, 2021. A. Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions In June 2021, defendants brought a motion for issue, evidence, terminating, and monetary sanctions against Souch.2 The motion was based on Souch’s failure to comply with her discovery obligations and two orders of the trial court, as follows. First, in January 2021, defendants moved to compel Souch to attend a second session of her deposition and to produce requested documents after the initial session had been adjourned due to Souch’s failure to provide responsive documents. In April 2021, the trial court granted the motion and ordered Souch to appear for deposition and produce responsive documents by early May 2021, and awarded defendants $1,620 in monetary sanctions. Souch failed to comply with the April 2021 order.

2 The following month, defendants filed an amended motion requesting that sanctions be imposed against H4H as well. However, after granting the sanctions motion, the trial court would later clarify that sanctions were imposed only on Souch, not H4H.

3 In December 2020, defendants propounded form interrogatories, special interrogatories, and document production requests on both plaintiffs, and requests for admission on H4H. When plaintiffs failed to provide responses by the indicated deadline, defendants moved to compel responses and to have the requests for admission deemed admitted by H4H. Prior to the hearing on the motion, plaintiffs served responses to the written discovery, but H4H’s responses were not verified. In June 2021, the trial court denied the motion as moot as to Souch, but granted the motion as to H4H and ordered that H4H provide full and complete responses to the written discovery no later than June 17, 2021. The court ordered Souch and her counsel, jointly and severally, to pay defendants $1,035 in monetary sanctions in connection with the motion to compel. Additionally, the court ordered that the requests for admissions be deemed admitted as to H4H, and that Souch and her counsel pay defendants $892 in monetary sanctions. Plaintiffs did not provide timely, verified discovery responses as ordered. Furthermore, despite the multiple monetary sanctions orders against Souch and her counsel set forth in the April and June 2021 orders, no sanctions were paid. Based on the foregoing, defendants argued that Souch’s willful noncompliance with the April and June 2021 orders justified a terminating sanction (or alternatively, issue and evidence sanctions), and additional monetary sanctions against her. Defendants also noted in their sanctions motion that the discovery responses Souch had previously served (which rendered the prior motion to compel moot as to her) were “woefully deficient and no responsive documents were produced,” and thus, they were bringing a separate motion to compel Souch to provide further responses to form interrogatories, special interrogatories, and requests for production.

4 Though the sanctions motion and motion to compel further responses were initially calendared for different days, the trial court continued the hearing on the sanctions motion to the same day as the motion to compel further responses: August 25, 2021. In its ruling continuing the sanctions motion, the trial court stated: “Unless Plaintiff starts participating . . . in this case forthwith, the Court is inclined to grant this motion [at] the August 25, 2021 hearing.” The court also continued a motion to withdraw filed by plaintiffs’ counsel to the August 25 hearing date. Defendants filed notices of plaintiffs’ nonopposition to both the sanctions motion and the motion to compel further responses. In advance of the continued hearing, defendants’ counsel, Rachel Dollar, filed a declaration setting forth her unsuccessful efforts to meet and confer on the motion to compel further responses.

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Souch v. McCormick CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/souch-v-mccormick-ca13-calctapp-2023.