Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, L.P.

64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 61, 153 Cal. App. 4th 1373, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 3, 2007
DocketC052082
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 61 (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, L.P.) 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
Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, L.P., 64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 61, 153 Cal. App. 4th 1373, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

NICHOLSON, J.

A real property developer and borrower of money sued its lender, claiming the interest charged on the secured loan was usurious. The trial court awarded summary judgment to the lender, ruling the loan was exempt from the constitutional usury prohibition because it was negotiated and arranged by a licensed real estate broker. The developer argues the secured loan was not exempt because the broker was in effect the lender and was negotiating on its own behalf. We disagree and affirm the judgment because the broker, although an employee of an affiliate of the lender, acted as a third party intermediary and did not negotiate the loan on his own behalf.

FACTS

Plaintiff Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC (Stoneridge), acquired real property in two phases. It borrowed $1,410,000 from WRI Investments HI LLC (WRI Investments) to purchase the first phase. This loan is referred to as Stoneridge I. It is not the subject of this action. The Stoneridge I loan documents stated the loan was “made and/or arranged by WRI Investments . . . .”

To acquire the remaining phase, Stoneridge borrowed $3,366,840 from defendant MW Housing Partners III, L.P. (Housing Partners). This loan is referred to as Stoneridge H. It is the subject of this action. It was secured by a subordinate, or second, deed of trust on the real property.

The Stoneridge II promissory note called for an effective rate of interest that exceeded 10 percent. Stoneridge owed interest at the base annual rate of 10 percent on the unpaid principal balance, plus additional interest based on a *1376 percentage of the gross sales price of each custom lot in the phase and $7,000 for each production lot in the phase.

Housing Partners, the lender on the Stoneridge II loan, is of complicated lineage. However, as will be seen, that does not obscure the answer to whether the Stoneridge II loan was exempt from the constitutional usury prohibition. Housing Partners is a California limited partnership whose sole general partner is defendant MW Housing Management III, LLC (Housing Management). Its sole limited partner is the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), an agency of the State of California. Housing Partners has no employees of its own, but is simply a funding vehicle with its own investors. It relies on others to investigate, underwrite, and arrange its loans. In this case, CalPERS provided 80 percent of the Stoneridge II loan funds.

Housing Management, Housing Partners’s general partner, is a California limited liability company comprised of two members, MacFarlane Housing, LLC (MacFarlane Housing), and WRI CP Investments III LLC (CP Investments). MacFarlane Housing also serves as an adviser to CalPERS on real estate loans and investments.

CP Investments is a State of Washington limited liability company comprised of two members, MIG Corporation and Weyerhaeuser Realty Investors, Inc. (Weyerhaeuser). Weyerhaeuser, MIG Corporation, and MacFarlane Housing provided the remaining 20 percent of the Stoneridge II loan funds not provided by CalPERS.

The Stoneridge I lender, WRI Investments, is a State of Washington limited liability company comprised of two entities, Weyerhaeuser and MIG Corporation.

Housing Management, CP Investments, and WRI Investments have no employees. Weyerhaeuser, however, has employees. Jack Marsh was a vice president and investment manager of Weyerhaeuser. At the time of these events, both Marsh and Weyerhaeuser were licensed real estate brokers. Marsh was the qualifying officer for Weyerhaeuser’s license.

Marsh negotiated the Stoneridge II loan between Stoneridge and Housing Partners, and was Stoneridge’s primary contact with Housing Partners. In that process, he analyzed the proposed transaction, structured the loan, set the interest rate and other key terms, prepared the written loan proposal, presented the proposal to Housing Partners’s participants, reviewed the loan documentation and title reports, and supervised the loan’s closing. Both Marsh and Weyerhaeuser rendered their services on the Stoneridge II loan for compensation, and in expectation of compensation.

*1377 Marsh signed the loan documentation on behalf of Housing Partners. The signature block on the loan agreement reads:

“Lender: [Housing Partners]
“By: [Housing Management]
“By: [CP Investments]
“By: [Weyerhaeuser]
“By: [John S. Marsh’s signature]
“. . . John S. Marsh
“Its Vice President”

The Stoneridge II loan agreement contains two errors. Paragraph 9.1 of the loan agreement, under the heading, “No Violation of Usury Laws,” incorrectly states the loan was “made and/or arranged by WRI Investments . . . .” WRI Investments was not the lender on the Stoneridge n loan, was not involved in negotiating or arranging the loan, and is not a licensed real estate broker.

Paragraph 9.19 of the loan agreement, a clause designed to preclude claims for brokers’ fees, provides in relevant part that “no broker other than Lender has been involved in the negotiation of the Loan . . . .” However, the lender, Housing Partners, is not a broker and has no employees.

Neither Marsh nor Weyerhaeuser provided Stoneridge with a mortgage loan disclosure statement, a document Business and Professions Code section 10240 requires a real estate broker to provide to a borrower on a secured loan negotiated by the broker. Stoneridge received no notice that Marsh or Weyerhaeuser were licensed brokers.

After paying off the Stoneridge II loan, Stoneridge filed this action against Housing Partners and Housing Management for recovery of usurious interest paid on the loan. Defendants moved for summary judgment, claiming the loan was exempt from the state Constitution’s usury prohibition pursuant to the California Constitution and Civil Code section 1916.1’s exemption of secured loans negotiated or arranged by a licensed real estate broker. 1 The trial court granted the motion for defendants and entered judgment in their favor.

*1378 Stoneridge appeals, claiming the trial court erred by (1) concluding as a matter of law Marsh negotiated and arranged the Stoneridge II loan within the meaning of the state Constitution and section 1916.1’s exemption for brokers; (2) ruling paragraph 9.l’s recital that the loan was made by WRI Investments was not conclusive and could be disregarded as an obvious mistake; and (3) admitting evidence of how the mistakes in the loan agreement occurred. We disagree with each of Stoneridge’s contentions and address them in turn.

DISCUSSION

I

Standard of Review

A trial court will grant summary judgment where there is no triable issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A defendant moving for summary judgment must prove the action has no merit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Cal. Rptr. 3d 61, 153 Cal. App. 4th 1373, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoneridge-parkway-partners-llc-v-mw-housing-partners-iii-lp-calctapp-2007.