Zamora v. Clapp CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 2023
DocketC095440
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zamora v. Clapp CA3 (Zamora v. Clapp CA3) 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
Zamora v. Clapp CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/5/23 Zamora v. Clapp CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Calaveras) ----

DAVE ZAMORA, C095440

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 16CV41649)

v.

CLYDE CLAPP,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Clyde Clapp appeals a judgment after a bench trial finding he breached fiduciary duties owed to Gus Zamora and that those breaches also constituted financial abuse of an elder; the trial court’s order that certain property be sold and the proceeds distributed to plaintiff as specified in the judgment; and an award of attorney’s fees and costs to plaintiff. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In November 2007, Gus Zamora, his son Dave Zamora, and Clyde Clapp purchased a single-family home on a five-acre parcel in Valley Springs, California, as an

1 investment.1 The plan was that each party would own a one-third interest in the property. The purchase price was $415,000, and each party contributed $46,000 towards the down payment. A loan for the remaining amount was obtained in Clyde’s name alone, and the monthly payment was around $2,000. The deed of trust was also in Clyde’s name alone. The parties disagree about why the loan and the deed were solely in Clyde’s name, and about when Gus and Dave learned of this fact. According to Clyde, the loan was in his name alone because Gus and Dave had credit issues and the lender would only lend to him. Clyde also contends Gus and Dave knew about this from the beginning. Dave contends his credit was excellent, and although he knew early on that the loan was only in Clyde’s name, Clyde assured him that all three names would be on the deed. The parties rented out the single-family home for around $1,500 a month, which was not enough to cover the mortgage, taxes, and maintenance. Each party thus agreed to contribute around $300 a month to make up the difference. A joint checking account was opened by Gus and Clyde to handle the property’s income and expenses.2 The parties planned to build a second rental unit on the property. Work on the second unit began shortly after the property was purchased, and proceeded slowly. At some point, the parties agreed Gus would pay for the materials to build the second unit, and the labor would be supplied by Dave and Clyde. According to Gus, once the second

1 We refer to Gus, Dave, and Clyde by their first names to avoid confusion and for consistency’s sake. We note that Gus died in 2018, prior to trial and before his deposition could be taken, and Dave was appointed his successor in interest and executor of his estate, and was substituted in as plaintiff. Gus’s version of events thus comes from the allegations in the verified complaint and the trial testimony of Dave (and others). 2 Clyde complains several times that the trial court found he was the “sole signator” on the checking account, when the evidence showed it was a joint account in both his name and Gus’s name and Gus (and Dave) signed checks on the account. The trial court’s statement that Clyde was the sole signatory appears in its description of the parties’ contentions, not in its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and it does not appear the statement affected the findings and conclusions.

2 rental unit was completed, he would receive all rental proceeds until he was fully reimbursed for materials. Clyde disputes this. According to Clyde, in late 2012, Gus told him he wanted out of the partnership because he was funding most of Dave’s interest in the property and Dave wasn’t paying him back. Gus then stopped making payments on the property and stopped funding construction of the second rental unit. Clyde and Dave shared equally in paying expenses on the property until mid-2013, when Dave also stopped making payments. Thereafter, Clyde made all payments on the property. Clyde contends that once Gus and Dave stopped making payments on the property, he became the sole owner and Gus and Dave no longer had an interest in it. Around this time, and unbeknownst to Gus and Dave, Clyde refinanced the loan on the property, again in his name only, which reduced the monthly payments to around $1,500. According to Gus, in mid-2013, when the second rental unit was close to completion, Clyde told him that he and Dave did not need to make monthly payments on the property for a while because there was enough money in the bank to cover expenses. In mid-2014, Gus and Dave claim they asked Clyde if they needed to start making payments again, and he told them they no longer had an interest in the property and they owed him around $24,000 in order to be caught up on their portion of expenses. Dave claims he told Clyde that he and Gus would pay their portion of what was owed but they needed to see receipts; Clyde refused, and said he didn’t have to show them anything. Gus claims it was around this time that he first learned Clyde’s name was the only name on the deed. When Dave contacted Clyde to ask him to put their names on the deed, he would not return Dave’s phone calls. Beginning in or around January 2016, the second unit was rented for 10 months for $900 a month. Clyde did not let Gus know the second unit was rented, and did not give him any portion of the rent.

3 Gus filed this lawsuit in May 2016, shortly after learning the second unit was rented. He asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, financial abuse of an elder pursuant to the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15600 et seq.) (Elder Abuse Act), fraud, promissory estoppel, and constructive trust. Following a bench trial, and at Clyde’s request, the trial court issued a statement of decision. The trial court found Gus, Dave, and Clyde formed a joint venture in 2007 to purchase the property and build a second rental unit on it, that Gus never withdrew from the joint venture, and that it continued at least through 2016, when this lawsuit was filed. It also found that participants in a joint venture are fiduciaries with respect to each other, and that Clyde breached his fiduciary duties to Gus and Dave in three respects: (1) by allowing the property to be titled in his name alone without informing Gus and Dave or obtaining their permission; (2) by unilaterally refinancing the property in 2013 in his name alone without Gus and Dave’s knowledge or permission; and (3) by secretly renting the second unit in 2016 and collecting approximately $9,000 in rent without sharing it with Gus and Dave. The trial court also found that, regardless of whether Gus and Dave’s names were on the deed, Clyde held the property under a constructive trust on behalf of all three parties. The trial court ordered that the property be sold, and “the proceeds distributed in accordance with the original agreement, 1/3 to Clyde, and 2/3 to Plaintiff Gus Zamora’s estate.” The trial court noted that both sides made claims for reimbursement against each other but found those claims “roughly balance out and will be reflected in the value of the property upon sale with the exception of the $9,000 rental of the second unit which Clyde withheld from his partners. Two-thirds (2/3) of this amount ($6,000) will be withheld from Clyde’s portion of the proceeds and paid to Plaintiff as an offset.” Finally, the trial court found that Gus was 82 years old in 2007, when the joint venture was formed, and that “Clyde’s intentional and repeated violations

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