St. Mary v. Superior Court

223 Cal. App. 4th 762, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 517, 2014 WL 346102, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 103
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 2014
DocketH038918
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 223 Cal. App. 4th 762 (St. Mary v. Superior Court) 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
St. Mary v. Superior Court, 223 Cal. App. 4th 762, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 517, 2014 WL 346102, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 103 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

MÁRQUEZ, J.

Petitioner Lisa St. Mary (St. Mary) brought an action below for damages, alleging fraud and other claims arising out of an investment of $475,000. She sued, among others, Thomas Schellenberg and his wife, Katherine Mills. (Schellenberg and Mills are sometimes referred to herein collectively as real parties in interest.) Schellenberg and Mills each propounded requests for admissions (RFAs) directed to St. Mary, which consisted collectively of 119 individual RFAs. After making two written requests for a two-week extension to respond, and after Schellenberg denied the extension request one day after the due date for the responses, counsel for St. Mary served responses to the RFAs. They were served four days late, on *767 July 16, 2012. Four days later, real parties in interest, without any attempt to meet and confer, filed a motion (Motion) with the respondent superior court requesting that the 119 RFAs in their entirety be deemed admitted, pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 2033.280, subdivision (b). 1 The court granted the Motion as to the Schellenberg RFAs, deemed 41 of the 105 RFAs admitted, and awarded sanctions in favor of real parties in interest. The court’s order omitted any reference to the Motion to deem admitted the 14 RFAs propounded by Mills upon St. Mary.

St. Mary seeks a writ of mandate directing the superior court to vacate its order deeming the 41 Schellenberg RFAs admitted. She contends in her petition that real parties in interest’s Motion was defective in that it did not constitute a motion to compel further responses to RFAs under section 2033.290. She argues further that real parties in interest improperly included new matter for the first time in their reply papers—namely, argument directed to St. Mary’s responses to specific Schellenberg RFAs that real parties in interest claimed were deficient—and that the court granted the Motion based upon the presentation of such new arguments. St. Mary asserts that the impact of the court’s order is extremely significant because, among other things, six of the RFAs deemed admitted are specifically directed to a potential statutes of limitation defense asserted by real parties in interest.

In response, real parties in interest raise several procedural objections to the petition, including its timeliness. 2 In addition, real parties in interest assert, among other things, that St. Mary has failed to demonstrate “clear error” entitling her to relief; the statutes under which real parties in interest’s Motion was brought (§ 2033.280) and the additional statute governing motions to compel further responses to RFAs (§ 2033.290) are clear; and the untimely responses to RFAs served by St. Mary were not substantially compliant with the Code of Civil Procedure.

We conclude that respondent court erred in granting real parties in interest’s Motion by deeming admitted 41 of the Schellenberg RFAs. Accordingly, we will grant the petition and order a writ of mandamus to issue commanding respondent to vacate its order and issue a new and different order denying real parties in interest’s Motion pursuant to section 2033.280, subdivision (b) as to the RFAs propounded upon St. Mary.

*768 PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 3

I. The Complaint

St. Mary filed her complaint on April 25, 2011, alleging claims sounding in fraud against Schellenberg, Mills, and David Nilsen 4 (collectively, Defendants), arising out of the investment of her life savings of $475,000. According to the pleading’s caption, St. Mary asserts claims for breach of fiduciary duty, fraudulent concealment, conflict of interest, affirmative misrepresentation, fraudulent concealment in connection with the sale of an interest in real property, embezzlement, and a request for an accounting.

It is alleged by St. Mary 5 that after having heard a radio advertisement in December 2005 promoting investment opportunities in Cedar Funding, Inc., she called the telephone number indicated in the radio advertisement and was referred to Schellenberg, who was identified as “ ‘Director, New Business’ for Cedar Funding, and [as] a ‘Real Estate & Loan Consultant.’ ” Schellenberg provided written materials to St. Mary and later recommended that she make a loan to his wholly owned separate venture, Neo Ventures, Inc., to facilitate ongoing substantial renovations of residential property located at 214 4th Street in Pacific Grove (subject property). He represented that in. exchange for her $475,000 investment, she “would receive an undivided 92.054 % majority interest in an already existing Promissory Note and an already recorded Deed of Trust” recorded against and secured by the subject property. Schellenberg represented to St. Mary that this deed of trust would ultimately be in first priority, that the subject property would be worth $1,375,000, and that her investment would be protected.

St. Mary alleges further in her complaint that “Defendants [intended] to defraud [her] by inducing her to advance $475,000.00 for [their] personal, secret and prohibited use and enjoyment.... Instead of action for the benefit *769 of protection of [St. Mary] in a transaction lending her investment out to a third person on a safe and fully secured loan with the represented adequate equity as security, Defendants always intended to convert the proceeds of the loan to their own personal use and benefit and did so.” St. Mary alleges that she provided the funds to Defendants in January 2006 in reasonable and justifiable reliance upon their representations. By March 2007, “Defendants had fraudulently but secretly extracted $1,887,000.00” using the subject property as the basis for the financial transactions. (Original boldface underscoring omitted.) 6 St. Mary never received any security as promised, and her entire investment was lost after the bankruptcy of Cedar Funding, Inc., and the foreclosure of the subject property effectuated by a lienholder bank. She became aware of “the vast fraudulent operations of Defendants” in May 2008.

II. The RFAs and Responses

On June 7, 2012, 7 Schellenberg served by mail upon St. Mary a set of 105 RFAs, seeking that she admit or deny certain specified matters. 8 On the same date, Mills served by mail upon St. Mary a set of 14 RFAs, seeking that she admit or deny specified matters. St. Mary was therefore required to serve her responses to the Schellenberg RFAs and the Mills RFAs on or before July 12, 2012. (§§ 2033.250, 1013, subd. (a).)

On July 16—four days late—St. Mary served her responses to the Schellenberg and Mills RFAs by facsimile and mail. Prior to this tardy service of the responses, and on or before the July 12 deadline for service of the responses, counsel for St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 Cal. App. 4th 762, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 517, 2014 WL 346102, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-mary-v-superior-court-calctapp-2014.