Vaca v. Wachovia Mortgage Corp.

198 Cal. App. 4th 737, 129 Cal. Rptr. 3d 354, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1100
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 2011
DocketNo. G044107
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 198 Cal. App. 4th 737 (Vaca v. Wachovia Mortgage Corp.) 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
Vaca v. Wachovia Mortgage Corp., 198 Cal. App. 4th 737, 129 Cal. Rptr. 3d 354, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1100 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[740]*740Opinion

IKOLA, J.

Plaintiff Ligia Jaqueline Vaca, as trastee of the trust for the benefit of the minor children Martin Hinojosa, Paula Hinojosa and Pamela Hinojosa, appeals from a judgment entered after the court sustained a demurrer to her complaint without leave to amend. The court found plaintiff’s claims were time-barred.

We agree and affirm. The complaint shows plaintiff’s fraud and related causes of action accrued by June 2005. The limitations periods expired no later than June 2008 and June 2009, but she did not file this suit until July 2009. Plaintiff fails to allege any continuing wrong that would have delayed the start of the limitations periods. And while plaintiff does allege defendants’ identities1 were fraudulently concealed, defendants are not equitably estopped from asserting the statute of limitations—plaintiff discovered their identities at least one year before the limitations periods expired.

FACTS

The Second Amended Complaint

Plaintiff commenced this action in July 2009. After the court sustained demurrers to the initial complaint and a first amended complaint, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. She asserted causes of action for aiding and abetting fraud, breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, and unjust enrichment. She also asserted causes of action for unfair and unlawful business practices. She alleged the following facts.2

Plaintiff and her estranged husband (husband) have three minor children. During the marriage, husband created false credit histories for the children. Husband then used the children’s identities to carry out fraudulent transactions on two real properties.

The Cherokee Property

Husband’s mother (mother-in-law) purchased the house at 2102 Cherokee in Tustin, using husband and plaintiff’s community property. Mother-in-law [741]*741then sold the house to two of the children for a profit in June 2000. The children bought the house with a mortgage—at an artificially inflated interest rate—from defendants. Husband prepared a grant deed transferring all interest in the property to one of the children. Husband then obtained a refinance mortgage in that child’s name—at an artificially inflated rate—from defendants’ predecessor in June 2001. Husband later prepared a grant deed transferring £¿1 interest in the property to his corporation. The corporation refinanced the mortgage with a lender run by husband and mother-in-law, then executed a grant deed transferring all interest in the property to mother-in-law.

The Palermo Property

Husband used two of the children to purchase a house at 2151 Palermo, Tustin in October 2001. The children obtained a mortgage from defendants’ predecessor. Husband later prepared a grant deed transferring all interest in the property to his corporation. The corporation refinanced the loan with a lender run by husband and mother-in-law, then sold the property in August 2003 to mother-in-law, who obtained a mortgage from defendants’ predecessor.

Discovery of Alleged Wrongdoing

Plaintiff discovered the fraudulent transactions during a 2004 dissolution action, and filed a fraud action against husband and mother-in-law in June 2005. In the fraud action, husband and mother-in-law admitted the relevant facts concerning the fraudulent transactions. The parties settled the fraud action—husband and mother-in-law agreed to pay off the children’s credit cards, give the Cherokee property to a trust for the children, and provide funds to plaintiff to pay off the Cherokee mortgage. Husband and mother-in-law transferred the Cherokee property to the trust, but otherwise failed to perform. Mother moved to enforce the settlement, and judgment was entered against husband and mother-in-law on May 1, 2007. Husband and mother-in-law satisfied the judgment in October 2007 and the action was dismissed.

Meanwhile, in May 2007, husband told plaintiff that defendants “knew what he was doing in terms of using his children’s identities to fraudulently procure loans in their names,” but “ ‘they do not care so long as the bills are paid.’ ” Husband was a real estate professional who had developed “long-term business relationships” and “personal friendships” with defendants’ local loan officers and managers. They knew husband, plaintiff, and the children— and knew the children were minors. Husband told them he had falsely told [742]*742plaintiff he was purchasing the properties in trust for the children. Defendants’ representatives knowingly allowed husband to use the children’s fraudulent credit histories to obtain mortgages on the two properties “to unjustly enrich themselves”—presumably through the artificially inflated interest rates.

Plaintiff could not have discovered any sooner defendants’ knowing participation in the fraud. “During the Fraud Action extensive discovery was taken, including depositions. During discovery and during the course of the Fraud Action, [husband, his companies, and mother-in-law] never identified Defendants as persons having knowledge of the relevant facts.” And during the fraud action, plaintiff “contacted each of the Defendants on more than a dozen occasions seeking assistance from them concerning this ongoing fraud. . . . Defendants . . . refused to take any action and refused to assist [plaintiff] in any way.”

The Demurrer

Defendants demurred on several grounds, including the statute of limitations. Defendants asked the court to take judicial notice of documents including the complaint, judgment, and acknowledgement of satisfaction of judgment from the fraud action, the trust documents, and the recorded instruments tending to show mother-in-law refinanced the Palermo property with another lender in 2007, which foreclosed on the property in 2008 and sold it to another buyer.

Plaintiff opposed, contending the action was not time-barred for two reasons. First, plaintiff contended defendants’ wrongful conduct continued past the issuance of the fraudulent mortgages in 2000 and 2003. She asserted the Palermo property was sold in 2007, which was when “the Trust lost all right to that trust property and was thus financially damaged as a result of the breach of trust.” And she asserted defendants still refuse to transfer mother-in-law’s loan on the Cherokee property to the trust or allow the trust “to pay for the mortgage in the ordinary manner.” Second, plaintiff contended defendants’ identities were fraudulently concealed, despite her reasonably diligent discovery efforts. Plaintiff asserted she “specifically demand[ed] the names of all persons with knowledge of the facts” during discovery, but husband and mother-in-law “perjured themselves.” She further asserted she had “requested both orally and via subpoena all relevant documents and information [from defendants] relating to the fraudulent loans,” but defendants “failed to identify their own role in the fraud.”

[743]*743The court sustained the demurrer to all causes of action without leave to amend. It found plaintiff “certainly knew [of the fraud] when she filed the second suit in 2005, the one the plaintiff calls the ‘fraud suit.’ []Q But three years before July 27, 2009—which is when today’s case was filed—only gets plaintiff back to 2006.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 Cal. App. 4th 737, 129 Cal. Rptr. 3d 354, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaca-v-wachovia-mortgage-corp-calctapp-2011.