Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2023
DocketA165835
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2 (Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2) 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
Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/23 Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

STERLING PACIFIC LENDING, INC., Plaintiff and Appellant, A165835

v. (Monterey County WAYNE HOLMAN Super. Ct. No. M128502) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiff Sterling Pacific Lending, Inc. (Sterling), a real estate lender and broker, made a loan to Aromas Heritage Oaks, LLC (the LLC), secured by a deed of trust in real property. As part of that transaction, defendant Wayne Holman (Holman), the managing member of the LLC, executed a written guaranty of the loan. Sterling thereafter assigned all but a small portion of the note evidencing the loan to outside investors. When the LLC defaulted and a nonjudicial foreclosure failed to satisfy the outstanding note balance, Sterling filed this action against Holman to collect the deficiency under the guaranty. In a prior appeal, the Sixth District Court of Appeal confirmed that Holman was a guarantor of the loan and remanded the matter for a

1 determination of Sterling’s damages and any defenses asserted by Holman.1 On remand, Holman persuaded the trial court that Sterling was entitled to recover only the deficiency associated with the portion of the note retained by Sterling, and the court found that Sterling was entitled to recover $9,477 on a deficiency exceeding $1 million. We conclude that Holman’s obligation to Sterling under the guaranty required payment of the entire loan deficiency and remand for entry of judgment for the full amount. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Holman and three other persons owned 80 acres of undeveloped land in Aromas, California (the property). At some point, the four formed the LLC and transferred the property to it. In February 2008, Sterling loaned $1.3 million to the LLC under a note secured by a deed of trust to the property. As part of the transaction, each of the four members of the LLC, including Holman, executed a written “Payment Guaranty” (guaranty) of the note to Sterling. As the representations in the guaranties stated, Sterling was unwilling to make the loan based solely on the security offered by the LLC and required the execution of guaranties by its members as a condition of lending the money. The guaranties were expressly made “for the benefit of” Sterling and represented that “Guarantor has agreed to execute this Guaranty in order to guarantee to [Sterling] repayment of the Loan pursuant to the terms of the Note and each guarantor acknowledges that he or she is undertaking an independent obligation separate from that of [the LLC] to repay the Loan.” Under the terms of the guaranties, each LLC member “unconditionally guarantees and promises to pay to [Sterling] or order, on

1The appeal in this matter was originally filed in the Sixth District. The case was transferred to this court by order of former Chief Justice Cantil- Sakauye under California Rules of Court, rule 10.1000(a)(1)(C).

2 demand . . . all amounts due under the Note . . . . Guarantor’s obligations under this guaranty are irrevocable so long as any portion of the Loan remains unpaid.” Soon after Sterling funded the loan, it sold interests in the note to several investors (investors). In return for their investment, the investors were assigned a share of the note principal and interest and a partial interest in the deed of trust securing the note.2 Sterling also executed “Loan Servicing Agreements” with each of the investors, which, among other things, required Sterling to collect and distribute interest payments and to initiate and direct foreclosure on the deed of trust in the event of borrower default. Although the precise terms of the partial assignments to the investors are not clear from the appellate record, it is uncontradicted that the assignments did not convey any rights under the guaranties. A Sterling principal explained that “[a]s the servicer [of the loan], the guarantee is issued to Sterling as part of the collateral pool . . . [,] but the servicer has to be the one litigating it as necessary.” Within two years after execution of the note, the loan fell into default, and Sterling conducted a nonjudicial foreclosure sale of the property. When the foreclosure sale left a deficiency under the note of close to $1 million, Sterling brought this action under the guaranties to recover the deficiency from the LLC members. As the cause of action for breach of contract alleges,

2The primary evidence of these assignments in the appellate record appears to be the oral testimony of a Sterling principal at trial. Copies of the assignments of partial interests in the deed of trust to each investor are found in the record, but neither party has cited to copies of the remaining assignment documents, particularly including the assignments of interests in the note. We therefore have no evidence of the exact terms of those assignments.

3 “Defendants [i.e., the four guarantors] breached their Payment Guarantees when they failed to make payments after [the LLC] defaulted under the Note and to pay the deficiency which resulted from the Trustee’s Sale on or around September, 2014.” Three of the guarantors settled with Sterling, and the action went to trial against Holman alone. The primary issue at trial was the interpretation of the loan documents. Holman contended that the foreclosure sale had extinguished his debt because he was a coborrower under those documents, not a guarantor. The trial court agreed and entered judgment for Holman. The Sixth District Court of Appeal reversed the judgment. The appellate court held that the LLC was the borrower on the note, while the four individuals were guarantors of the note in their personal capacities. (Sterling Pacific Lending, Inc. v. Holman (June 24, 2019, H044662) [nonpub. opn.], at pp. 10, 16, 19 (Sterling Pacific I).) The court remanded the matter “to the trial court to determine, . . . any remaining issues, including Holman’s defenses and whether Sterling incurred damages and, if so, the amount.” (Id. at p. 20.) On remand, Holman filed a motion in limine seeking to preclude the introduction of further evidence at the continued proceeding, arguing that the Court of Appeal’s disposition “did not authorize the reopening of trial for new evidence or witnesses.” The court granted the motion over Sterling’s opposition, ruling that “[n]o further evidence or witnesses shall be allowed at the continued trial.” Following entry of the court’s order precluding further evidence, Holman filed a pre-trial brief, arguing for the first time that Sterling had standing to recover only the outstanding loan deficiency attributable to Sterling’s residual share of the note. Because Sterling had assigned interests 4 in 99.2 percent of the note, the argument left Sterling a potential recovery of .8 percent of the deficiency. Further, Holman argued that any authority Sterling might have had to bring an action on behalf of the investors had terminated because the loan servicing agreements expired by their terms upon the trustee’s sale of the property. Holman excused his failure to raise this issue at the original trial by arguing that “[t]he issue of standing can be raised at any time.” In response, Sterling argued that Holman had forfeited the issue of standing by failing to assert it as an affirmative defense.

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Bluebook (online)
Sterling Pacific Lending v. Holman CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-pacific-lending-v-holman-ca12-calctapp-2023.