Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 2014
DocketB249972
StatusUnpublished

This text of Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1 (Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1) 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
Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 5/29/14 Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

ANTOINETTE WEED, B249972

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. PC051354) v.

EFFECTIVE MORTGAGE COMPANY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from judgments and orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Melvin S. Sandvig, Judge. Affirmed in part and reversed in part. California Lawyers Group, Inc., Mitra Chegini and David J. Castenholz for Plaintiff and Appellant. Roger A. S. Manlin for Defendants and Respondents Effective Mortgage Company and Bijan Vaziri. Schaffer, Lax, McNaughton and Chen for Defendants and Respondents Royal Rep Realty and Houman Jahangard. _________________________________________ Plaintiff Antoinette Weed loaned money to a male friend, Jastereo Coviare, to help him appear to qualify for a home mortgage. Weed represented to the lender that she was Coviare’s cousin and that $66,000 of the money she loaned Coviare was a gift. When Coviare was unable to repay Weed, she sued Coviare’s real estate broker and mortgage lender to recover the money loaned, basing her tort claims against them on representations they allegedly had made to induce her to make the false representations and to lend Coviare money. The broker and lender defendants demurred to Weed’s second amended complaint, and the trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend on a number of grounds, including lack of causation of damages. We reverse the judgment because Weed stated causes of action on her fourth cause of action for conspiracy and her tenth cause of action for unjust enrichment. We affirm the remainder of the trial court’s orders sustaining demurrers without leave to amend to the remaining causes of action. BACKGROUND This appeal arises from the trial court’s orders sustaining demurrers to Weed’s second amended complaint without leave to amend. The parties to the action include Weed and Coviare. Defendant Sherwood Escrow is not a party to this appeal. Nor is Coviare, who appears to have defaulted. The remaining parties are the defendants whose demurrers were sustained and who are the respondents in this appeal. They consist of a real estate broker, Royal Rep Realty (Royal), and its alleged alter ego, Houman Jahangard, and a mortgage lender, Effective Mortgage Company (Effective), and its alleged alter ego, Bijan Vaziri. From the allegations of the complaint and the parties’ briefs, we infer Royal represented Coviare in purchasing his home and Effective made the home loan. Defendants are sometimes referred to as the Broker defendants and the Lender defendants. We accept the truth of the following allegations set forth in Weed’s second amended complaint. Weed met Coviare on an Internet dating site in July 2010 and started lending him money. They entered into a relationship. By November 2010 she

2 had loaned him $54,000. In that month, he told her he intended to buy a house. He asked her to lend him an additional $20,000, “which he informed her was for the purpose of showing that he had enough money in his bank account to qualify for a home loan.” She loaned him the money. On January 10, 2011, she loaned him another $66,000, “again for the purpose of showing that COVIARE had sufficient funds to obtain the home loan.” At Coviare’s request, Weed wrote on the check that the money was a “gift” when it actually was a loan. On the same day, an employee of Coviare’s real estate broker, Royal, told Weed “the reason behind identifying the sixty six ($66,000.00) thousand dollar loan as a gift rather than a loan was that borrowed monies could not be used as a down payment” on the purchase of the home. Weed experienced “apprehension” but was told by the Royal employee on January 10 “that this was a mere formality and unimportant that the gift denomination was inaccurate.” Royal and Jahangard also told her that “it was the normal custom and practice of the real estate lending industry to have a secondary source [of money] sign off on a source of funds as a gift rather than borrowed funds in order to get the transaction approved.” Also on January 10, 2011, Vaziri, on behalf of mortgage lender Effective, told Weed that the $66,000 “could not be accepted as borrowed funds unless it was turned into a gift which at that point would be acceptable as part of the completion of the COVIARE loan transaction.” Weed also signed two letters falsely stating Coviare was her cousin, having been told by defendant Jahangard and the Royal employee “[t]hat it was the normal custom and practice of the real estate lending industry to sign documents,” stating “that a borrower and a second source of income were related when they were not.” They told her “that this was part of the normal process of obtaining a home loan.” In addition, Vaziri, on behalf of Effective, asked Weed “for a great deal of personal financial information,” “inclusive of a letter from WEED’S bank . . . and a copy

3 of WEED’S IRA account” in order to complete “the loan transaction on COVIARE’S home loan, and to know where the funds were coming from.” She also alleges Vaziri told her the information “would be viewed by VAZIRI and EFFECTIVE only for the processing of the loan transaction.” Thereafter, Weed loaned additional money to Coviare. According to the second amended complaint, the total amount loaned was $267,192.78. However, at argument Weed’s counsel conceded that the total loaned consisted of $74,000 loaned before the $66,000, plus a much smaller sum loaned after the $66,000, resulting in a total loan amount of approximately $150,000. Coviare has admitted in writing to having borrowed $142,000 from Weed, which he claims he is unable to repay. All of the representations made by defendants were false. It was unnecessary for the $66,000 to be a gift. “[H]aving Plaintiff sign off as COVIARE’S cousin was not only not standard in the real estate lending industry but was wrong with the potential of exposing Plaintiff to civil liability.” It also was unnecessary for her to supply her personal and financial information. “Vaziri knew that her personal and financial information was not required for the completion of the loan transaction as long as COVIARE was able to show the funds were in his account.” “He had no intention of keeping the information confidential but intended to, and did share it with others, namely Jahangard.” Vaziri misrepresented the need for this information so he could “obtain, use and disclose” it. Indeed, Jahangard telephoned Weed after having seen her personal and financial information, soliciting her to invest in Royal, whereupon she responded that she was not interested. Weed relied on the representations of Vaziri and Effective in writing “gift” on her check and disclosing her personal and financial information. She does not expressly state she relied on Vaziri and Effective’s representations in making loans to Coviare. However, she contends that the damages caused by Vaziri and Effective include her loss of the loaned money through withdrawals from her IRA and her assumption of a home equity loan to raise money to lend Coviare.

4 Weed relied on the representations of Jahangard and Royal by writing “gift” on the check, signing the letters identifying herself as Coviare’s cousin, and lending Coviare the $66,000.

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Weed v. Effective Mortgage CA2/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weed-v-effective-mortgage-ca21-calctapp-2014.