Wertheim, LLC v. Omidvar CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 2024
DocketB323036
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wertheim, LLC v. Omidvar CA2/1 (Wertheim, LLC v. Omidvar 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
Wertheim, LLC v. Omidvar CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 2/26/24 Wertheim, LLC v. Omidvar CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

WERTHEIM, LLC, B323036

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. Nos. BC395819, v. BC598307)

O’NEIL OMIDVAR, et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, David Sotelo, Judge. Reversed. Henry J. Josefsberg for Plaintiff and Appellant. Complex Appellate Litigation Group, Jens B. Koepke, Jennifer A. Teaford for Defendants and Respondents. ___________________________________ Wertheim, LLC sued O’Neil Omidvar for interference with assignment agreements Wertheim made with a third party in 2006 and 2009. In an appeal on a related case, we observed that although the issue was not before us, both Wertheim and Omidvar essentially admitted in litigation that they acted unconscionably toward the third party. Based on this observation, the trial court granted Omidvar summary judgment, finding no triable issue existed as to whether the assignment agreements were unconscionable. We reverse. In the related appeal we did not decide any unconscionability issue. BACKGROUND A. Introduction We take the facts from plaintiff’s allegations in this litigation and from evidence presented in prior appeals, reciting them here only for context. Because this appeal comes to us after summary judgment, there have been no factual findings. Plaintiff Wertheim alleges that defendants O’Neil Omidvar and his relatives, Parviz and Oliver Omidvar, and their companies, Currency Corporation, Tiffany Ventures, LLC, Entertainment Factors, LLC, and Music Royalty Consulting, Inc. (collectively Omidvar), lent money at high interest rates to 1 elderly artists who owned royalty rights. In exchange, the artists assigned their royalties to Omidvar.

1 In prior appeals we referred to Omidvar-aligned defendants collectively as “Currency.” In this appeal we refer to them collectively as “Omidvar” to synergize with the pleadings. Although not all defendants have always appeared in the various cases between these parties, for present purposes “Omidvar” and “Currency” are interchangeable.

2 Maibell Page, 1941-2012, was the widow of Eugene Page, a highly successful songwriter, arranger and producer who died in 1998. In Currency Corp. v. Wertheim (Sept. 30, 2013, B240444) [nonpub. opn.] (Currency 2013), we noted that in earlier proceedings, Page’s daughter testified that Page was a preschool teacher until 2005, when she suffered a debilitating stroke. After her stroke, Page stopped working and for a time was incapable of managing her financial affairs. She resided in an assisted living community and received Social Security as her primary source of income. Page received periodic royalty payments from two music rights management companies, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) and Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI). ASCAP, for example, generally made payments 30 times per year. The revenue stream from Page’s 2 royalties amounted to approximately $50,000 per year. David Pullman was the principal of Wertheim, Structured Asset Sales, LLC, and the Pullman Group, LLC (collectively Wertheim). Pullman has negotiated with several of Omidvar’s borrowers, including Page, for assignment of their claims against Omidvar and reassignment of their music catalogs to Wertheim. This litigation concerns a loan Omidvar made to Page on June 2, 2006, and an assignment Page made to Wertheim four weeks later, on June 30, 2006, granting him the right to pursue her claims against Omidvar regarding the June 2 loan. In prior litigation, Wertheim argued that Omidvar’s June 2 loan agreement was unconscionable because Page was

2 We relate Page’s circumstances only for context. No factual findings have ever been made as to them.

3 incompetent when she entered into it. In a prior appeal, we observed that this argument applied with equal force to Wertheim’s June 30 assignment agreement. B. Loans and Assignments Wertheim alleges that Omidvar made numerous loans to Page, each secured by a promissory note pursuant to which Page assigned to Omidvar the royalty rights she derived from her 3 husband’s work. As an example, Wertheim alleged that on June 2, 2006, Omidvar lent Page $6,500, secured by a promissory note (the June 2006 Note), for a period of six months at an interest rate of two percent compounded every 10 days, plus an administrative fee of 10 percent, for an effective annual interest rate of approximately 107 percent. The note also provided that Page assigned her royalty rights to Omidvar. Pursuant to this provision, Page directed ASCAP to make royalty payments directly to Omidvar. 1. 2006 Assignment—Page Assigns Royalties to Wertheim On June 30, 2006, four weeks after the June 2, 2006 Note, Page, now dissatisfied with her arrangement with Omidvar, assigned any causes of action she might have against Omidvar to Wertheim, and reassigned to Wertheim the same royalty rights she had already assigned to Omidvar (2006 Assignment).

3 Defendants contend Parviz, Oliver and O’Neil Omidvar, as well as Music Royalty Consulting, Inc. and Entertainment Factors, LLC, did no business with Page.

4 2. Our Prior Characterization of Omidvar’s and Wertheim’s Dealings with Page up to 2006 In Currency 2013, supra, B240444, we observed that the June 6 Note between Omidvar and Page, and the 2006 Assignment between Wertheim and Page, were both unconscionable. We stated: “[W]e feel constrained to make an observation about this litigation that may save time for all parties and the court below. Both sides urge us to accept and enforce provisions from various agreements between them and Maibell. . . . Yet both sides [i.e., the Omidvar and Wertheim Parties] have admitted to conduct that amounts to breach of fiduciary duty and financial elder abuse. Indeed, this entire litigation . . . surrounds a three-sided effort to separate Maibell Page, an ill, incompetent senior, from her main source of income. Currency [equating here with Omidvar] admitted during the arbitration hearing that it extended loans to Maibell after she suffered a stroke and became unable to understand the loan terms, failed and was unable to account for the money it took from her, and retained her money without just cause. (It offered to return the money at the hearing.) Christopher Page [Maibell’s son] admitted he took Maibell’s money for his own and his sister’s uses, knowing Maibell was unable to understand the transactions. And Wertheim admitted it extracted financial agreements from ‘an unsuspecting elderly widow with short term memory loss, who had been institutionalized for mental illness.’ And all of the agreements were unconscionable. All were written in visually dense incomprehensible language, heavily favored their authors, and were obtained under conditions of undue influence. Currency made purportedly commercial ‘loans’ to Maibell—some

5 for under $100—at 107 percent annual interest—charged at its own undisclosed discretion—while keeping no records. Wertheim bought a royalty stream from her, worth approximately $50,000 per year, for $1,000.” However, we also observed that the issue of unconscionability was not before us. 3.

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