WA Southwest 2, LLC v. First American Title Insurance

240 Cal. App. 4th 148, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 423, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 782
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 2015
DocketG050445
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 240 Cal. App. 4th 148 (WA Southwest 2, LLC v. First American Title Insurance) 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
WA Southwest 2, LLC v. First American Title Insurance, 240 Cal. App. 4th 148, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 423, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 782 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

IKOLA, J.

This lawsuit arose from the rubble of a failed multimillion-dollar investment in commercial real estate. The trial court sustained a series of demurrers and entered judgments of dismissal as to numerous defendants. We affirm the three judgments of dismissal at issue here because the applicable statutes of limitations foreclose recovery.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiffs 1 are seven investors in Southwest Corporate Center (the Property), a three-story office building in Tempe, Arizona. The 30 defendants played various roles in acquiring the Property and marketing ownership shares therein to plaintiffs.

*151 Plaintiffs filed their initial complaint in November 2012. Three amended complaints followed in response to motion practice by defendants. This appeal does not involve the parties from whom plaintiffs actually purchased their investments, including defendant WA Southwest Acquisitions, LLC (Acquisitions). Instead, this appeal concerns three judgments of dismissal entered on May 15, 2014, in favor of four defendants (the respondents to this appeal) on the periphery of the transaction: (1) First American Title Insurance Company, which provided escrow and closing services in connection with the acquisition of the Property; (2) Hirschler Fleischer, a law firm that worked on the investment offering and prepared a tax opinion in connection therewith; (3) Trammell Crow Company (Trammell Crow), which acted as real estate broker for the original seller of the Property and then entered into a property management and leasing agreement with plaintiffs; and (4) CBRE, Inc. (CBRE), which acquired Trammell Crow and became its successor in interest. 2

For purposes of this appeal, the 13 causes of action listed in the third amended complaint can be boiled down to breach of fiduciary duty claims (against all respondents), fraud claims (against all respondents), a legal malpractice claim against Hirschler Fleischer, and a conversion claim against Trammell Crow and CBRE.

FACTS

In conducting our de novo review, we “must ‘give[] the complaint a reasonable interpretation, and treat[] the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded.’ [Citation.] Because only factual allegations are considered on demurrer, we must disregard any ‘contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law alleged ....’” (People ex rel. Gallegos v. Pacific Lumber Co. (2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 950, 957 [70 Cal.Rptr.3d 501].)

By stipulation, the parties agreed to the authenticity of certain operative documents that were in plaintiffs’ possession at the time of their investments, including the confidential private placement memorandum and the purchase agreements signed by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs did not object (below or here) to the use of these documents in connection with defendants’ demurrers. Like the trial court, we rely on these documents as if they were exhibits to the operative complaint. (See SC Manufactured Homes, Inc. v. Liebert (2008) 162 *152 Cal.App.4th 68, 83 [76 Cal.Rptr.3d 73] [“If the allegations in the complaint conflict with the exhibits, we rely on and accept as true the contents of the exhibits.”].) 3

Allegations of Wrongdoing

The essence of plaintiffs’ case is that they were misled (by a variety of misrepresentations and misleading statements) about the “sales load” of their investments (i.e., the fees, expenses, and commissions paid) and the risks they were required to incur as a result of their investments. According to plaintiffs, they would not have invested in the Property had they known that the total sales load percentage actually exceeded the 15 percent capital gains tax they had sought to defer by making the investments. Respondents to this appeal (i.e., an escrow company, a law firm, and two real estate broker/management firms) participated in the investment transactions and knew about plaintiffs’ sensitivity to the sales load, but did not warn or inform plaintiffs about the true nature of the investment.

Plaintiffs “had cash from a prior sale of real property with deferred long term capital gain on deposit with a qualifying intermediary which met the requirements of Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 . . . .” Syndicated tenancy in common acquisitions of real property (like the structure of the investment in the Property) can be “used to defer gain on ‘like-kind’ real property sales so the gain realized by the taxpayer-investor ... on a sale of real estate . . . can be invested on a tax deferred basis in a ‘lilce-kind’ property . . . , here the fractional interest [i]n the Property.”

A particular alleged oral misrepresentation made by certain defendants was, in substance and effect, the following: “I recommend this Southwest Corporate Center tenant in common investment because it has been subjected to thorough due diligence review, is designed and structured by experts for the tenants in common, offers long term professional experienced management and leasing and will allow you to invest more of your money in income producing property because the sales loads are less than 10% while the taxes you will have to pay if you do not timely invest will be 15%.”

From December 2005 to March 2006, plaintiffs collectively invested $5.05 million. But “[a]fter all undisclosed and misrepresented Sales Loads are considered, only $3,780,000 was available for investment, resulting in true *153 Sales Loads that exceeded 20%, i.e., a material increase” from the amount represented and “more than the 15% capital gains tax sought to be deferred.” This true sales load was supposedly hidden by way of a “double escrow.” Acquisitions acquired the Property in the first escrow, then sold it to plaintiffs in the second escrow. The purchase agreement represented that plaintiffs would each be responsible for only $3,500 in closing costs in connection with this second escrow. This disclosure about the closing costs at the second closing misled plaintiffs about the other components of the sales load they were actually paying.

A lender foreclosed on the Property on an unspecified date and the plaintiffs’ investment was lost. Plaintiffs allegedly discovered wrongdoing by defendants in September 2012 (just before the filing of the initial complaint in Nov. 2012). The discovery occurred at this time because “experts in taxation and accounting reviewed the record related to the discharge of indebtedness issue presented only by the foreclosure.” Prior to this, plaintiffs “held no suspicion as to a possible fraud because they received the described interest in the [Property, the represented cash flow and thought they had received the [Internal Revenue Code] Section 1031 benefit of deferred capital gain taxes. Plaintiffs had no cause to review the bona fides of [the] Section 1031 deferred capital gains vehicle until the Property was foreclosed upon and plaintiffs sought counsel for the negative implications of the tax reporting for a discharge of indebtedness for the tax year of the foreclosure . . . .”

Information Disclosed to Plaintiffs at Time of Investment

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 Cal. App. 4th 148, 192 Cal. Rptr. 3d 423, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wa-southwest-2-llc-v-first-american-title-insurance-calctapp-2015.