Hudson v. Foster ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 9/7/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    NIGEL HUDSON,                        B300017
    Plaintiff and Appellant,     (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. SP008763)
    v.
    LUCAS FOSTER,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Brenda Penny, Judge. Reversed and remanded,
    with directions.
    Law Offices of Martin L. Horwitz and Martin L. Horwitz;
    Klapach & Klapach and Joseph S. Klapach for Petitioner and
    Appellant.
    Garrett & Tully, Ryan C. Squire, Adjoa M. Anim-Appriah
    for Respondent.
    _______________________________
    A conservatee filed a motion asking the probate court to
    exercise its inherent equitable authority to set aside an order
    approving his former conservator’s final account due to
    misrepresentations of material fact in the account. The probate
    court denied the motion after finding that the conservatee failed
    to show he was unaware of the defects in the account at the time
    it was approved, or failed to act with reasonable diligence to set
    aside the order in light of information that he should have
    known. On appeal, the conservatee contends the order denying
    the motion to vacate is appealable, because it is based on the
    probate court’s equitable power to set aside an order obtained
    through extrinsic fraud. The conservatee further contends that
    the order approving the account was not preclusive under
    Probate Code section 2103,1 because it was based on
    misrepresentations of material fact, and as a result, the trial
    court abused its discretion by refusing to set aside the order.
    We agree that the order denying the motion to vacate for
    extrinsic fraud is appealable in this case. Misrepresentations of
    material fact in a conservator’s account are treated as extrinsic
    fraud. We hold that a conservatee has no duty to investigate
    representations of fact in the conservator’s account, unless the
    conservatee becomes aware of facts from which a reasonably
    prudent person would suspect wrongdoing. Therefore, to set
    aside an order approving the conservator’s account on the ground
    of extrinsic fraud, a conservatee is not required to establish that
    the misrepresentations of material fact in the account could not
    have been discovered prior to entry of the order approving the
    1All further statutory references are to the Probate Code
    unless otherwise specified.
    2
    account. The probate court’s ruling relied on legal authority that
    we find unpersuasive because it placed a higher burden to
    investigate on the conservatee. The matter must be reversed and
    remanded for the probate court to exercise its discretion based on
    an accurate understanding of the applicable law.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Conservatorship of the Estate
    In January 2007, petitioner and appellant Nigel Hudson
    was severely injured in a car accident. An attorney was
    appointed guardian ad litem for Hudson. A personal injury
    lawsuit filed on Hudson’s behalf resulted in a settlement of
    $13,863,000. In October 2011, the court in the personal injury
    case established a qualified settlement fund to receive the
    settlement proceeds.
    The guardian ad litem filed a petition for a voluntary
    conservatorship of the estate on Hudson’s behalf, resulting in the
    appointment of Hudson’s friend, respondent Lucas Foster, as the
    general conservator of Hudson’s estate on April 6, 2012.2 Foster
    is a film producer; he owns Warp Films, Warp Media
    Development, Inc., Warp LLC, and various single purpose
    entities. Hudson retained testamentary capacity and the ability
    2 On February 13, 2012, Hudson filed a petition for
    dissolution of his marriage to Cynthia Kendall. A final judgment
    was entered in the dissolution proceedings on April 3, 2013.
    Kendall, who was unrepresented, waived spousal support and
    any interest in the proceeds of the civil action. She received
    payment of $10,000 pursuant to the dissolution decree.
    3
    to make medical decisions, so he did not require a conservator of
    the person. Hudson and Foster agreed that Foster would
    advance the funds necessary to pay for goods and services for
    Hudson’s benefit, and Foster would be reimbursed after the
    settlement proceeds were received. Hudson was able to view the
    records of the conservatorship bank account that were online.
    In January 2013, the court in the personal injury case
    issued an order approving the disposition of the settlement
    proceeds. $5,090,974.25 was paid directly to the guardian ad
    litem for attorney fees, and $799,563.96 was paid directly to
    certain medical providers. In addition, the civil court order
    directed Foster to pay a total of $1,945,412.43 to creditors listed
    in attachments to the order. The attachments listed hundreds of
    creditors, including Miracle Mile and LA Litigation Copy Service.
    The attachments showed Miracle Mile’s total bill was $11,250
    and the negotiated balance was $10,125. The attachments listed
    the total amount owing to LA Litigation as $39,913.25.
    Order Approving Final Account
    On December 28, 2013, Foster filed a first and final account
    in the probate case and a petition for approval of the account,
    allowance of attorney fees and costs, an order terminating
    conservatorship of the estate, and discharge of the conservator.
    Foster stated that he received property as conservator totaling
    $9,489,265.16, and disbursed $4,314,887.38. The disbursement
    schedule attached to the final account listed more than one
    thousand disbursements made to various entities during the
    accounting period from March 2, 2012, through October 31, 2013.
    4
    The property on hand at the close of the final account was
    $5,168,725.63, including cash of $2,730,932.03.
    In the petition, Foster carefully explained that 17 checks
    were paid to him directly or to his film production company which
    were reimbursements for funds that he advanced to Hudson prior
    to receipt of the settlement funds. Each amount that Foster
    described in the petition as a reimbursement corresponded to an
    entry on the disbursement schedule. The disbursement schedule
    listed the payee for these transactions as Foster, Warp Film, Inc.,
    or Warp Development, Inc., with a notation that the payment
    was a reimbursement for a specific expense. In addition to the 17
    entries that Foster expressly brought to the court’s attention in
    the petition, there were a few additional entries in the
    disbursement schedule listing amounts paid directly to Foster or
    one of his companies and stating the payments were in
    reimbursement for a specific expenditure made on Hudson’s
    behalf. Foster waived payment of any conservator’s commissions.
    Foster also explained in the petition that the civil court
    order had directed him to pay specific creditors of the lawsuit. In
    some circumstances, a creditor accepted a reduced payment.
    Foster obtained receipts for all of the direct payments made to
    creditors. Debts totaling approximately $300,000 remained
    outstanding, however, because Foster was either unable to
    contact the creditor or the creditor had been unwilling to execute
    a receipt. Foster added, “[The remaining debts] will be fully set
    forth in a noticed supplement hereto. [¶] Conservator submits
    that these remaining debts simply be transferred to the
    Conservatee, who will be taking over the process privately.”
    Among hundreds of individual disbursements listed in the
    account was a payment on July 9, 2013, to “Miracle Mile Surgical
    5
    Center – per Court Order” in the amount of $10,000, paid with
    check number 2294. In addition, Foster made a payment on
    April 2, 2013, to “LA Litigation Copy Service – litigation
    expenses” in the amount of $31,089.25 with check number 2258.
    Foster made a payment on November 28, 2012, to “Dr. Sam
    Markzar, DDS – dental” in the amount of $9,839.10 with check
    number 2227.
    Foster did not disclose in the petition that 28 checks shown
    as paid to third parties, including the checks to Miracle Mile, LA
    Litigation, and Markzar, were in fact paid to Foster or one of his
    companies. Miracle Mile and Markzar had not received any
    payment toward Hudson’s debt. In other words, the checks listed
    as paid to Miracle Mile and Markzar were not paid to them, and
    the amounts received by Foster through these checks were not
    reimbursement for funds advanced to these creditors. LA
    Litigation received a payment from Foster toward Hudson’s debt,
    but the amount was far less than was listed in the final account.
    The check numbers and payment amounts listed in the final
    account matched the information shown in the bank statements
    for the conservatorship, but the bank statements did not contain
    the names of the payees on the checks. Only the face of the
    checks revealed the payee information. The total amount of the
    28 checks disbursed to Foster’s own accounts, rather than to the
    payees listed in the final account, was $558,169.47.
    Hudson and the guardian ad litem each signed a consent to
    the final account. On March 28, 2014, the probate court entered
    an order approving the final account.
    6
    Events after Approval of the Final Account
    A week after the final account was approved, on April 4,
    2014, a representative from Miracle Mile emailed an associate of
    Foster asking about the status of payment for the services that
    Miracle Mile provided to Hudson on two dates. Miracle Mile sent
    a second email on April 7, 2014, explaining that the company
    agreed in June 2011, to accept an offer of $10,125. The associate
    forwarded the messages to Foster with a note saying the amount
    needed to be paid and asking Foster to send a release to Miracle
    Mile. Foster forwarded the messages to Hudson with a note that
    said, “Let’s discuss.”
    In a declaration filed later, Hudson described meeting with
    Foster at a coffee shop to discuss the messages from Miracle Mile.
    Calm and reassuring, Foster confirmed that Miracle Mile’s bill
    was part of the outstanding $300,000 in medical expenses that
    Foster had been unable to negotiate and remained unpaid.
    Foster said he would have Miracle Mile sign a release and then
    the bill would be paid. Hudson never saw a release from Miracle
    Mile, and Foster never provided a supplement to the final
    account listing the bills that remained unpaid under the court
    order.
    On October 18, 2014, more than 18 months after the
    payment date stated in the final account and six months after
    approval of the final account, LA Litigation signed a document
    which was provided to Foster, acknowledging receipt of $23,500
    in release of all claims against Hudson.
    Foster told Hudson that he could settle Hudson’s
    outstanding bill with UCLA for $60,000, so Hudson provided
    $60,000 to pay the bill. Hudson later learned that Foster
    7
    negotiated a final payment of $54,500 in full satisfaction of
    UCLA’s lien, but did not return the overpayment of $5,500 to
    Hudson.
    On April 26, 2017, Hudson filed an unrelated civil action
    against Foster based on loans that Hudson made to Foster after
    the conservatorship ended. According to the complaint, the total
    amount borrowed was $400,000. Foster refused to sign a
    promissory note secured by a deed of trust. Hudson filed the civil
    action to compel Foster to repay the money borrowed after the
    conservatorship terminated, and to recover the difference
    between the amount that he gave Foster for payment of the
    UCLA bill and the amount received by UCLA.
    In April 2018, Miracle Mile filed a motion in the personal
    injury case to enforce the settlement agreement. The motion was
    brought against Foster in his former role as conservator. Miracle
    Mile alleged that it had sent two letters to Foster without
    response. Miracle Mile had not received payment of its bill for
    $11,250 or any other sum required under the court ordered
    settlement.
    Motion to Vacate Order Approving Final Account
    On August 30, 2018, Hudson filed a motion in the probate
    court to vacate the order approving the conservator’s final
    account on the grounds of fraud and misrepresentation of
    material fact. Hudson stated that he was not aware of any fraud
    until Miracle Mile filed its motion seeking to enforce the
    settlement. After Miracle Mile insisted that it had not received
    any payment under the court order, Hudson ordered copies of his
    bank documents, including check images. Hudson saw that
    8
    check number 2294, which Foster’s final account listed as paid to
    Miracle Mile, was in fact made payable to Warp Media
    Development, Inc. Hudson compared the check images that he
    received to the final account and discovered the 28 checks listed
    in the final account as paid to third parties that were actually
    made payable to Foster or one of his companies. In addition,
    Hudson discovered Foster had written four checks totaling more
    than $60,000 to himself or his company after the final account
    had been approved, which were not listed in the account. Hudson
    argued these discrepancies were misrepresentations of material
    fact that provided grounds to vacate the order approving the final
    account. Under section 2103, the conservator is not released
    from claims of the conservatee if the order is obtained by fraud or
    misrepresentation in the petition, account, or order as to any
    material fact.
    In support of the motion, Hudson submitted his attorney’s
    declaration describing discovery of the misrepresentations in the
    final account, the pleading filed by Miracle Mile in the civil
    action, the disbursement schedule from Foster’s final account,
    and copies of bank statements and check images showing that
    the payees in the check images were not the parties listed in the
    final account.
    Opposition to Motion to Vacate
    On October 11, 2018, Foster filed an opposition to the
    motion to vacate the order approving the final account. He
    explained that the parties had agreed Foster would advance
    funds for Hudson’s benefit and be reimbursed for these sums
    upon payment of the settlement proceeds from the personal
    9
    injury case. At all times, Hudson had online access to the
    conservatorship bank account and was aware of all financial
    transactions undertaken by Foster.
    Foster’s counsel arranged for Nan Buchanan to prepare the
    conservator’s account. All of the documents relating to the
    conservatorship income and expenses, receipts and
    disbursements, were provided to Buchanan. Buchanan prepared
    the schedules for the final conservatorship account. The
    schedules reflected direct payments to medical providers, as well
    as payments for goods or services that were advanced by Foster
    and reimbursed to him. The report disclosed and explained the
    advances made for Hudson’s benefit. Hudson discussed the final
    account with his guardian ad litem, and each consented to the
    account in writing. The account was also reviewed by the probate
    court investigator.
    When the conservatorship terminated in 2014, Hudson was
    aware of the dispute over payment of Miracle Mile’s bill. After
    preparation of the final account, copies of every document related
    to the account, including cancelled checks, invoices, bills,
    statements, and other memorandum, were delivered in multiple
    storage boxes to Hudson, who had ample time to review the
    documents and object to the account or set aside the order
    approving the account within the statutory time period.
    Foster argued that no fraud had been shown. He admitted
    it was arguable that the account represented direct payment was
    made to a medical provider when the check was, in fact, a
    reimbursement to Foster. He explained, “The fact that the
    schedule of disbursements prepared by Nan Buchanan reflected
    the underlying payees who provided services rather than
    reflecting that Warp paid the provider and was reimbursed is
    10
    perhaps unclear, but is certainly not a fraud.” Hudson had not
    alleged, and could not show, that the expenditures reflected in
    the account were not advanced for his benefit. Although the
    representations “might have been better presented in a separate
    schedule reflecting both the underlying provider and the
    reimbursement to Foster, they are not fraudulent, nor are they
    untrue. There is no evidence suggesting the account is
    substantively inaccurate.” He noted that no medical provider
    disputed payment other than Miracle Mile, and there was no
    damage to Hudson because all his bills had been paid.
    In addition, Foster argued the motion was untimely.
    Foster relied on the legal authority of Knox v. Dean (2012) 
    205 Cal.App.4th 417
     (Knox), to argue that a party seeking to set aside
    a judgment based on misrepresentations of fact must show the
    facts could not reasonably have been discovered prior to the entry
    of judgment. He also noted that Hudson had not submitted his
    own declaration in support of the motion. Hudson was aware of
    every transaction reflected in the account and Hudson had not
    shown that he could not reasonably have discovered the allegedly
    false information prior to entry of judgment.
    Foster submitted his own declaration in support of the
    opposition. He had advanced hundreds of thousands of dollars to
    purchase goods and services for Hudson’s benefit, which were
    reimbursed with payments from the conservatorship bank
    account. He discussed each of the payments and reimbursements
    with Hudson as they occurred. Hudson had no objections and
    was grateful that Foster could facilitate the purchases. Hudson
    was at all times aware of, and agreed to the advances and the
    reimbursements. Foster did not request or receive any
    compensation for the time and effort he expended as Hudson’s
    11
    conservator. All of the funds that were reimbursed directly to
    Foster or any entity for which he is the principal were
    reimbursements for money advanced for Hudson’s use and
    benefit. Buchanan was provided all the banking records,
    invoices, and other documents related to the conservatorship
    account, and Buchanan prepared the various accounting
    schedules attached to the final account.
    When Foster received Miracle Mile’s email seeking
    payment after the court approved the final account and
    terminated the conservatorship, he forwarded the messages to
    Hudson with an offer to discuss the bill. He was not sure why
    Miracle Mile had not been paid long ago, or why Miracle Mile
    waited so long to take legal action, but Hudson had been aware of
    the issue for more than four years, and it was not new
    information.
    Reply and Initial Hearing
    Hudson filed a reply on October 17, 2018. He noted that
    Foster’s opposition admitted the payees on the checks were not
    the payees identified in the account. Hudson, the guardian ad
    litem, and the court staff had relied on the conservator’s
    statements in the account. There was nothing in the account to
    put Hudson on notice of any irregularities. They had the right to
    rely on the statements of the court-appointed conservator.
    In support of the reply, Hudson filed his own declaration.
    He declared that he had no idea, and no reason to believe, the
    checks listed in the disbursement schedule were not made
    payable to the parties represented in the account and instead
    were paid to Foster or his companies. Hudson was not aware of
    12
    all of the financial transactions undertaken by Foster. He was
    shocked and disappointed that the person in whom he had placed
    his trust and confidence took money from his account in this
    manner. Hudson disputed Foster’s statement that all the
    expenditures made by Foster or his companies were made for
    Hudson’s benefit. Foster did not give him copies of every
    document related to the account. When Hudson asked for copies
    of his records, Foster said all of Hudson’s records were swept
    away and destroyed in mud slides that affected Foster’s house in
    Montecito, California. Before Miracle Mile filed its motion to
    enforce payment, Hudson had no reason to believe Foster had not
    paid Miracle Mile the amount approved by the court and no
    reason to compare the payees on the checks to verify that they
    matched the payees identified by Foster in his account.
    A hearing was held on the motion to vacate the account on
    October 25, 2018. Foster argued that even if he had taken money
    as alleged in the motion, his email forwarding Miracle Mile’s
    request for payment in 2014 put Hudson on notice and the
    statute of limitations began to run. In response, Hudson argued
    his own access to financial information did not absolve Foster
    from providing correct information or require Hudson to verify
    that the payees listed in the account were paid. The court
    concluded that it did not have sufficient evidence to support a
    fraud claim and gave Hudson an opportunity to file additional
    points and authorities.
    Supplemental Pleadings
    On February 14, 2019, Hudson filed additional points and
    authorities. He argued that under section 2103, the order
    13
    settling the final account of the conservator did not provide
    protection from claims when the order was obtained by fraud or
    misrepresentation in the petition or the account as to any
    material fact. The conservator had a duty to accurately disclose
    all disbursements, but had instead misrepresented the payee
    information. The amounts in question were not reimbursements;
    Foster had clearly identified reimbursements elsewhere in the
    account.
    Hudson argued that the statute of limitations did not begin
    to run until Hudson discovered facts putting him on notice of the
    fraud, specifically, when Miracle Mile filed the motion to enforce
    the settlement on April 19, 2018. Hudson’s receipt of the
    message forwarded from Miracle Mile did not put Hudson on
    notice that the accounting was fraudulent, because Foster also
    notified the court that medical liens totaling $300,000 remained
    unsatisfied and would be Hudson’s responsibility to negotiate
    after the conservator was released.
    Hudson and the court staff who investigated the accounting
    did not have access to physical copies of the checks. By
    accurately listing check numbers and payment amounts, but
    changing the identity of the payee, Foster demonstrated an
    intent to conceal information and deceive Hudson and the court.
    Hudson was harmed because the funds were not used to pay the
    named payee for the services stated and the money is no longer in
    Hudson’s account or available for his benefit. The
    misrepresentations were sufficient to support vacating the order
    approving the account.
    Hudson submitted his declaration stating that Foster never
    informed Hudson which unpaid liens were assigned to him to
    negotiate after the conservatorship was terminated. Hudson
    14
    learned Miracle Mile’s bill was not paid as stated in the final
    account when Miracle Mile filed its motion to enforce payment
    and Hudson investigated the payment history. After Miracle
    Mile denied receiving payment and the check image confirmed
    that payment was not made as stated in the account, Hudson
    paid Miracle Mile.
    Foster filed additional points and authorities, but did not
    cite any additional legal authority. He argued Hudson knew or
    should have known of the facts claimed to constitute fraud when
    Foster forwarded the email about Miracle Mile’s unpaid bill.
    Hudson had ample opportunity to examine the account but had
    offered no explanation for failing to discover the facts earlier.
    On March 19, 2019, Hudson filed a supplemental reply.
    He argued that the parties who reviewed the final account were
    not required to confirm that checks had been accurately listed.
    As a fiduciary, the conservator was required to be truthful and
    not misrepresent material facts. Hudson identified
    representations of fact in the account about payments to
    Markzar, LA Litigation, and an entity named Sunset Studios
    Media Solutions, which Hudson claimed were false. He
    submitted the final account and copies of the check images. In
    the final account, Foster represented that he paid $9,839.10 to
    Markzar with check number 2227. The check image showed
    check number 2227 was paid to Warp Film, Inc. Hudson also
    submitted a declaration from Markzar as a custodian of records
    stating the total cost of Hudson’s dental care was $8,790, and no
    check or payment of any type was received on Hudson’s account
    from Foster or any of his business entities. Hudson personally
    paid for all dental care.
    15
    In the final account, Foster represented LA Litigation was
    paid $31,089.25 with check number 2258. In fact, the check
    image showed check number 2258 was made payable to Warp
    Media Development, Inc. Hudson submitted a declaration from
    Marcelo Marciano as a custodian of records for LA Litigation.
    Marciano confirmed check number 2258 in the amount of
    $31,089.25 was not received on Hudson’s account at LA
    Litigation. Hudson submitted a similar declaration from a
    custodian of records for Sunset Studios Media Solutions.
    The probate court held another hearing on March 27, 2019.
    The court concluded that Hudson had not yet provided sufficient
    information concerning his personal knowledge of the account to
    determine whether he acted with diligence in seeking to vacate
    the order. The court continued the motion and directed Hudson
    to file a personal declaration within ten days of the continued
    hearing date discussing in detail the circumstances surrounding
    the discovery of the disputed issues with the account. Hudson
    was to address his relevant prior communications with Foster,
    and his understanding of any advances Foster made for Hudson’s
    benefit during the administration of the conservatorship. Foster
    was permitted to file a reply.
    Hudson filed a supplemental declaration. When he
    received the email from Foster to discuss payment to Miracle
    Mile, Hudson believed there were outstanding bills that had not
    been settled, as stated in the final account. The information that
    he still owed money to Miracle Mile did not put Hudson on notice
    that the payments listed in the final account were false. Hudson
    described the meeting with Foster at Starbucks. Foster did not
    say Miracle Mile’s bill had been paid already. Instead, Foster
    confirmed Miracle Mile’s request was part of the unpaid medical
    16
    expenses which he had not been able to negotiate. Foster said
    before Miracle Mile was paid, he was going to get a release
    agreement signed, and thereafter, Miracle Mile would be paid.
    Hudson never had any reason to distrust Foster, who was his
    friend and advisor, and he had no reason to independently
    confirm what Foster said. The matter did not come up again
    until Miracle Mile filed its motion against Foster. Foster did not
    give Hudson any reason in any of their discussions to think that
    the checks listed in the final account were false or contained
    misrepresentations. Hudson would not have been able to
    discover the fraud without seeing the copies of cancelled checks.
    Hudson asked Foster to purchase items and services for
    him, and he was aware that Foster intended to reimburse himself
    for the amounts that he spent on behalf of Hudson. The checks
    represented in the final account as paid to creditors, but which
    were actually paid to Foster, were not reimbursements, as shown
    by the declarations from Markzar, LA Litigation, and Sunset
    Studios Media Solutions. Hudson was also not aware of several
    checks Foster wrote after the final account was filed with the
    court and which were not approved by the court. Hudson
    described the allegations of his civil action against Foster as we
    Hudson also filed a declaration by his attorney Martin
    Horwitz. Horwitz explained that the motion filed by Miracle Mile
    against Foster in the personal injury case sought payment of
    $20,099.89, which included the total principal of the bill, plus fees
    and interest. Hudson asked Horwitz whether he needed to take
    any action in response to the motion. The final account had
    listed a payment of $10,000 to Miracle Mile, but Horwitz could
    not tell from any of the documents whether this was a partial
    payment or payment in full. Horwitz served a subpoena for
    17
    production of the bank records, which included the check images.
    Had Miracle Mile not filed a motion to enforce its lien, the false
    information in the final account would not have been discovered.
    Horwitz also learned that Foster continued to sign checks on the
    conservatorship account to himself and his companies in
    February and March 2014, after the final account had been filed
    with the court and approved by the guardian ad litem and
    Hudson. Horwitz also described the civil lawsuit based on acts
    that took place after the conservatorship terminated.
    In May 2019, Foster filed a reply to the supplemental
    declarations of Hudson and Horwitz, but did not cite any
    additional legal authority. Foster argued the discrepancies
    between the final account and the checks were not evidence of
    fraud. Hudson had intimate involvement in all aspects of his
    financial affairs. The parties had an understanding that Foster
    would be reimbursed when Hudson received his personal injury
    settlement, which is what occurred. The account was not
    challenged during the statutory period to appeal, even though
    Hudson had sufficient knowledge to do so. Hudson knew Miracle
    Mile’s bill was unpaid, because Miracle Mile’s bill was the subject
    of the email forwarded to Hudson in 2014, and Foster had offered
    to discuss the matter.
    Foster argued Marciano’s declaration was carefully drafted
    to suggest that LA Litigation had not been paid at all. In fact, LA
    Litigation was paid $23,500, and Marciano signed a release dated
    October 18, 2014, admitting the full amount of any claim due to
    LA Litigation was paid. Check number 2258, which was listed in
    the final account as paid to LA Litigation on April 2, 2013, was
    paid to Warp Media Development for multiple reimbursements to
    medical providers or purchases on behalf of Hudson that had
    18
    been lumped together, including the amount paid to LA
    Litigation.
    Foster emphasized that the issue before the probate court
    was whether extrinsic fraud existed to justify setting aside a final
    order. Hudson had sufficient information from which he knew, or
    should have known, about any potential error or discrepancy in
    the account. If Hudson had any reason to suspect an error,
    misstatement or deception, he should have acted to challenge the
    accounting years earlier and should not be rewarded for
    slumbering on his rights.
    In support of the reply, Foster submitted the release that
    Marciano signed on behalf of LA Litigation on October 18, 2014.
    Foster submitted his own declaration as well. He attached
    communications about conservatorship finances between Hudson
    and Foster. Foster described funds advanced for specific
    expenses, which were often coordinated through an employee of
    Warp Films. Hudson had the ability to view cancelled checks,
    disbursements, and bank statements at any time. Foster did not
    believe he made any representation that was false, and he did not
    believe Hudson relied on a representation by Foster to his
    detriment. Hudson suffered no damage; no medical providers
    came forward other than Miracle Mile. There has been no
    showing of any fraud sufficient to set aside the court order
    obtained within the framework of normal court procedures years
    ago and which should be determinative.
    Final Hearing on Motion to Vacate
    The probate court held a final hearing on the motion to
    vacate the account on June 5, 2019. Hudson acknowledged that
    19
    he received items paid for by Foster and he had understood that
    Foster would be reimbursed for those items, but he argued that
    reimbursements were a separate issue. Hudson was not
    challenging the checks listed in the account as paid to Foster in
    reimbursement for funds that he had advanced. In addition to
    the reimbursements that Foster disclosed, Foster had written
    checks to himself that he told the court were written to third
    parties. Hudson later found out that Foster did not make the
    payments to third parties that the account said had been made.
    These checks were not reimbursements. Hudson was not
    required to conduct a private accounting of the checks that his
    fiduciary testified to making in the final account. Moreover,
    Foster wrote additional checks to himself after the final account
    was approved.
    When Miracle Mile filed the motion against Foster alleging
    more than $20,000 dollars was owed on Hudson’s account,
    Hudson asked his attorney if he needed to take any action.
    Horwitz saw the payment of $10,000 to Miracle Mile listed in the
    disbursement schedule, but did not know if that was a full or
    partial payment. Only after viewing the checks could they
    determine the check listed in the final account was not made
    payable to the creditor. Even learning that the check was paid to
    Foster’s company did not provide notice of fraud until Miracle
    Mile explained that no payment had been received at all. Hudson
    was seeking to vacate the order approving the account in order to
    file objections to the final account and determine whether the
    fiduciary had acted properly.
    Foster’s attorney argued that Hudson had notice and an
    opportunity to investigate whether Miracle Mile’s bill was paid in
    2014. It was unfair to litigate at this point when everyone’s
    20
    recollection had faded, Foster no longer had documents, and the
    attorney who had represented Foster was no longer practicing.
    Although Hudson told Foster during their meeting at Starbucks
    to get a release from Miracle Mile, Foster had never provided
    Hudson with a release or a canceled check showing payment to
    Miracle Mile. Hudson did nothing and sat on his rights for too
    long. Foster was disadvantaged because he had access to counsel
    before the conservatorship was terminated, but could no longer
    hire an attorney to represent him in his role as conservator and
    would have to pay out of his own funds to defend himself. The
    probate court took the matter under submission.
    Probate Court Ruling
    On June 18, 2019, the probate court issued a minute order
    denying the motion to vacate the order approving the final
    account. The order stated, “The Court finds that Nigel Hudson
    has not provided sufficient information regarding his personal
    knowledge of the circumstances of the accounting. Former
    Conservator, Lucas Foster, with support, contends Nigel
    [Hudson] knew about a certain reimbursement procedure he was
    undertaking. Nigel Hudson, though specifically given [an]
    opportunity to describe what he did or did not know about any
    reimbursements, only addresses the subject in general terms.
    Movant Nigel Hudson has not shown he was unaware of the
    defects in the accounting at the time, or, at the very least, has not
    shown he acted with reasonable diligence in seeking to vacate the
    21
    order based on the information that he should have known.”
    Hudson filed a timely notice of appeal from the order.3
    DISCUSSION
    Appealability
    Hudson contends that the order denying the motion to
    vacate the approval of the final account is appealable, because it
    was based on the court’s inherent equitable power to set aside an
    order obtained through extrinsic fraud. We agree.
    The only appealable orders in probate proceedings are
    those listed in the Probate Code. (§§1300–1304; Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 904.1, subd. (a)(10); Kalenian v. Insen (2014) 
    225 Cal.App.4th 569
    , 575–576 (Kalenian); Estate of Stoddart (2004) 
    115 Cal.App.4th 1118
    , 1125–1126.) An order settling an account of a
    fiduciary is an appealable order. (§1300, subd. (b).) An order
    denying a motion to vacate an order on equitable grounds is
    generally not appealable. (Kalenian, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p.
    577; Estate of Baker (1915) 
    170 Cal. 578
    , 581–582 (Baker).)
    Otherwise, an unsuccessful party would have two appeals from
    the same judgment: one appeal provided by law within a limited
    time period and another at an indefinite time in the future at the
    convenience of the litigant after the denial of a motion to vacate
    the judgment. (Baker, supra, 170 Cal. at p. 582.)
    3Hudson’s corrected motion to take additional evidence on
    appeal, which was filed with this court on March 22, 2021, is
    denied. The evidence was not before the trial court and is not
    necessary to resolve the issues on appeal.
    22
    Under limited circumstances, however, a probate court
    order denying a motion to vacate on equitable grounds is
    appealable. (Kalenian, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p. 577.) If the
    judgment or decree was final and appealable, then an order
    refusing to vacate the judgment or decree is appealable “when,
    for reasons involving no fault of the appealing party, he has never
    been given an opportunity to appeal directly from the judgment
    or decree.” (Baker, supra, 170 Cal. at p. 582.)
    In this case, the order approving the final account was an
    appealable order, so there is no concern of indirectly allowing an
    appeal from a nonappealable order. The motion seeking to vacate
    the order was based on equitable fraud in the form of
    misrepresentations of fact by a fiduciary which deprived the
    conservatee of a full and fair opportunity to object to the final
    account prior to entry of the order approving the account. Under
    the circumstances of this case, the order denying the motion to
    set aside the order approving the final account is an appealable
    order.
    Standard of Review
    We review an order denying equitable relief for an abuse of
    discretion. (County of San Diego v. Gorham (2010) 
    186 Cal.App.4th 1215
    , 1230.) “In doing so, we determine whether the
    trial court’s factual findings are supported by substantial
    evidence [citation] and independently review its statutory
    interpretations and legal conclusions [citations].” (Ibid.)
    “‘In assessing whether any substantial evidence exists, we
    view the record in the light most favorable to respondents, giving
    them the benefit of every reasonable inference and resolving all
    23
    conflicts in their favor.’ [Citation.]” (Kramer v. Traditional
    Escrow, Inc. (2020) 
    56 Cal.App.5th 13
    , 28.) “‘A finding . . . based
    upon a reasonable inference . . . will not be set aside by an
    appellate court unless it appears that the inference was wholly
    irreconcilable with the evidence. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘[W]hen
    the evidence gives rise to conflicting reasonable inferences, one of
    which supports the finding of the trial court, the trial court’s
    finding is conclusive on appeal. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Phillips
    v. Campbell (2016) 
    2 Cal.App.5th 844
    , 851.)
    “Normally, we must presume the trial court was aware of
    and understood the scope of its authority and discretion under
    the applicable law. [Citations.]” (Barriga v. 99 Cents Only Stores
    LLC (2020) 
    51 Cal.App.5th 299
    , 333–334 (Barriga).) “If the
    record demonstrates the trial court was unaware of its discretion
    or that it misunderstood the scope of its discretion under the
    applicable law, the presumption has been rebutted, and the order
    must be reversed. [Citation.] ‘“[A]ll exercises of legal discretion
    must be grounded in reasoned judgment and guided by legal
    principles and policies appropriate to the particular matter at
    issue.” [Citations.] Therefore, a discretionary decision may be
    reversed if improper criteria were applied or incorrect legal
    assumptions were made. [Citation.] Alternatively stated, if a
    trial court’s decision is influenced by an erroneous understanding
    of applicable law or reflects an unawareness of the full scope of
    its discretion, it cannot be said the court has properly exercised
    its discretion under the law. [Citations.] Therefore, a
    discretionary order based on the application of improper criteria
    or incorrect legal assumptions is not an exercise of informed
    discretion and is subject to reversal even though there may be
    substantial evidence to support that order. [Citations.] If the
    24
    record affirmatively shows the trial court misunderstood the
    proper scope of its discretion, remand to the trial court is
    required to permit that court to exercise informed discretion with
    awareness of the full scope of its discretion and applicable law.’
    (F.T. v. L.J. (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 15–16.)” (Barriga, supra,
    51 Cal.App.5th at p. 334.)
    Fiduciary Duty to Account Generally
    It is undisputed that as conservator, Foster had a fiduciary
    duty to Hudson that required Foster to account for transactions.
    “There is a fiduciary relationship between the conservator and
    conservatee. (§ 2101.)” (Conservatorship of Presha (2018) 
    26 Cal.App.5th 487
    , 498; Conservatorship of Lefkowitz (1996) 
    50 Cal.App.4th 1310
    , 1313.) The conservator must account to the
    court for the property of the conservatee with information about
    receipts, disbursements, transactions, and the remaining assets.
    (Johnson v. Kotyck (1999) 
    76 Cal.App.4th 83
    , 89.) The
    conservator must also prevent misappropriation of the
    conservatee’s assets. (Ibid.) A fiduciary has a duty to provide
    full disclosure of all material facts that affect the beneficiary’s
    interest. (Ball v. Posey (1986) 
    176 Cal.App.3d 1209
    , 1214.) “Even
    the lack of full disclosure will amount to fraud, because the
    fiduciary’s obligation is affirmative.” (Ibid.)
    Even without the conservatorship, the parties may have a
    confidential relationship. “It is well settled that ‘[a] confidential
    relationship exists when one party gains the confidence of the
    other and purports to act or advise with the other’s interests in
    mind; it may exist although there is no fiduciary relationship; it
    is particularly likely to exist when there is a family relationship
    25
    or one of friendship.’ [Citations.]” (Estate of Sanders (1985) 
    40 Cal.3d 607
    , 615 (Sanders).)
    “Fiduciary” and “confidential” have been used
    interchangeably to describe a relationship in which one party has
    a duty to act in the highest good faith for the benefit of the other
    party. (Richelle L. v. Roman Catholic Archbishop (2003) 
    106 Cal.App.4th 257
    , 270.) When a person places confidence in
    another person, the person who voluntarily accepted the
    confidence cannot take any advantage from acts undertaken for
    the other party without the knowledge or consent of that party.
    (Ibid.) “Technically, a fiduciary relationship is a recognized legal
    relationship such as guardian and ward, trustee and beneficiary,
    principal and agent, or attorney and client [citation], whereas a
    ‘confidential relationship’ may be founded on a moral, social,
    domestic, or merely personal relationship as well as on a legal
    relationship. [Citations.] The essence of a fiduciary or
    confidential relationship is that the parties do not deal on equal
    terms, because the person in whom trust and confidence is
    reposed and who accepts that trust and confidence is in a
    superior position to exert unique influence over the dependent
    party.” (Barbara A. v. John G. (1983) 
    145 Cal.App.3d 369
    , 382–
    383.)
    Equitable Power of the Probate Court to Vacate Order
    The doctrine of res judicata applies in probate proceedings
    to bar a party from relitigating a claim that has been finally
    determined in a prior proceeding.4 (Lazzarone v. Bank of
    4Courts have often used “res judicata” to refer to both
    claim preclusion and issue preclusion. (DKN Holdings LLC v.
    26
    America (1986) 
    181 Cal.App.3d 581
    , 591 (Lazzarone).) However,
    the probate court has inherent equitable authority to set aside an
    order or decree when extrinsic factors have deprived a party of a
    fair adversary hearing. (Sanders, supra, 
    40 Cal.3d 607
    , 614;
    Estate of Charters (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 227
    , 234–235; Jorgensen v.
    Jorgensen (1948) 
    32 Cal.2d 13
    , 18 (Jorgensen).) Courts require a
    showing of extrinsic fraud or mistake in order to balance the
    public policy in favor of the finality of judgments with the policy
    in favor of providing litigants a fair opportunity to present a case.
    (Sanders, supra, 40 Cal.3d at p. 614.)
    The requirements for equitable relief have been articulated
    by some courts as a three-part test. (In re Marriage of
    Stevenot (1984) 
    154 Cal.App.3d 1051
    , 1069 (Stevenot) [extrinsic
    fraud]; Rappleyea v. Campbell (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 975
    , 982 [extrinsic
    mistake].) In order to set aside a final order based on extrinsic
    fraud, “the moving party must demonstrate that he or she has a
    meritorious case, that [they have] a satisfactory excuse for not
    presenting a defense to the original action and that [they]
    exercised diligence in seeking to set aside the default once the
    Faerber (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 813
    , 823–824.) “Claim preclusion, the
    ‘“‘primary aspect’”’ of res judicata, acts to bar claims that were, or
    should have been, advanced in a previous suit involving the same
    parties. [Citation.] Issue preclusion, the ‘“‘secondary aspect’”’
    historically called collateral estoppel, describes the bar on
    relitigating issues that were argued and decided in the first suit.
    [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 824.) “To avoid future confusion, we will
    follow the example of other courts and use the terms
    ‘claim preclusion’ to describe the primary aspect of
    the res judicata doctrine and ‘issue preclusion’ to encompass the
    notion of collateral estoppel. [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    27
    fraud had been discovered.” (Stevenot, supra, 154 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 1071.)
    A. Extrinsic Fraud
    In this case, Hudson’s claim that the conservator’s account
    contained misrepresentations of material fact which amounted to
    extrinsic fraud is both the basis of his case as well as his excuse
    for failing to object within the original proceeding. The elements
    of fraud are misrepresentation, knowledge of falsity, intent to
    induce reliance on the misrepresentation, justifiable reliance on
    the misrepresentation, and resulting damages. (Lazar v.
    Superior Court (1996) 
    12 Cal.4th 631
    , 638.) The terms extrinsic
    fraud and extrinsic mistake have been interpreted broadly,
    encompassing “almost any set of extrinsic circumstances which
    deprive a party of a fair adversary hearing.” (In re Marriage of
    Park (1980) 
    27 Cal.3d 337
    , 342.)
    Fraud is extrinsic when a party is prevented from fully
    participating in the proceeding or deprived of the opportunity to
    present a claim to the court by the fraudulent conduct of another
    party, as opposed to the moving party’s own negligence.
    (Stevenot, supra, 154 Cal.App.3d at p.1068; City and County of
    San Francisco v. Cartagena (1995) 
    35 Cal.App.4th 1061
    , 1067
    (Cartagena).) “The clearest examples of extrinsic fraud are cases
    in which the aggrieved party is kept in ignorance of the
    proceeding or is in some other way induced not to appear.
    [Citation.]” (Sanders, supra, 40 Cal.3d at pp. 614–615.) Other
    examples include “concealment of the existence of a community
    property asset, failure to give notice of the action to the other
    party, and convincing the other party not to obtain counsel
    28
    because the matter will not proceed (and then it does proceed).
    ([Stevenot, supra, 154 Cal.App.3d at p. 1069].)” (Cartagena,
    supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at p. 1067.)
    Fraud is generally considered intrinsic when a party had
    notice of the action and an opportunity to present a case, but
    unreasonably neglected to protect themselves from fraud or
    mistake involving the merits of the proceeding. (Stevenot, supra,
    154 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1069–1070.) “The public policy underlying
    the principle of res judicata that there must be an end to
    litigation requires that the issues involved in a case be set at rest
    by a final judgment, even though a party has persuaded the court
    or the jury by false allegations supported by perjured testimony.
    This policy must be considered together with the policy that a
    party shall not be deprived of a fair adversary proceeding in
    which fully to present his case. Thus, equitable relief will be
    denied where it is sought to relitigate an issue involved in the
    former proceeding on the ground that allegations or proof of
    either party was fraudulent or based on mistake, but such relief
    may be granted if the party seeking it was precluded by fraud or
    the mistake of the other party from participating in the
    proceeding or from fully presenting his case. (Gale v. Witt, 
    31 Cal.2d 362
    , 365; Howard v. Howard, 
    27 Cal.2d 319
    , 321;
    Westphal v. Westphal, 
    20 Cal.2d 393
    , 397; Larrabee v. Tracy, 
    21 Cal.2d 645
    ; Olivera v. Grace, 
    19 Cal.2d 570
    , 575; Carr v. Bank of
    America, 
    11 Cal.2d 366
    , 371–373; Purinton v. Dyson, 
    8 Cal.2d 322
    , 325–326; Ringwalt v. Bank of America, 
    3 Cal.2d 680
    , 684–
    685; Caldwell v. Taylor, 
    218 Cal. 471
    , 476–479; Tracy v.
    Muir, 
    151 Cal. 363
    , 371; see, Restatement, Judgments, p. 588; 3
    Freeman, Judgments (5th ed.), §§ 1233–1235; 3 Pomeroy, Equity
    29
    Jurisprudence (5th ed.), p. 610.)” (Jorgensen, supra, 
    32 Cal.2d 13
    at pp. 18–19.)
    “The terms ‘intrinsic’ and ‘extrinsic’ fraud or mistake are
    generally accepted as appropriate to describe the two different
    categories of cases to which these policies of the law apply.
    [Citation.] They do not constitute, however, a simple and
    infallible formula to determine whether in a given case the facts
    surrounding the fraud or mistake warrant equitable relief from a
    judgment. [Citations.] It is necessary to examine the facts in the
    light of the policy that a party who failed to assemble all his
    evidence at the trial should not be privileged to relitigate a case,
    as well as the policy permitting a party to seek relief from a
    judgment entered in a proceeding in which he was deprived of a
    fair opportunity fully to present his case.” (Jorgensen, supra, 
    32 Cal.2d 13
     at p. 19.)
    A critical wrinkle in the extrinsic fraud rule is applied to
    fiduciaries. A party may obtain relief from a judgment when the
    other party concealed facts in violation of a duty arising from a
    trust or confidential relationship, even though the facts
    concerned issues in the prior proceeding. (Jorgensen, supra, 
    32 Cal.2d 13
     at p. 20.) “‘The failure to perform the duty to speak or
    make disclosures which rests upon one because of a trust or
    confidential relation is obviously a fraud, for which equity may
    relieve from a judgment thereby obtained, even though the
    breach of duty occurs during a judicial proceeding and involves
    false testimony, and this is true whether such fraud be regarded
    as extrinsic or as an exception to extrinsic fraud rule.’
    [Citations.] In this state equitable relief has been granted from
    final judgments settling the accounts of guardians,
    administrators, or executors who withheld information that
    30
    would have enabled the beneficiaries to attack the
    accounts. (Lataillade v. Orena, 
    91 Cal. 565
    , 576; Silva v. Santos,
    
    138 Cal. 536
    , 541; Aldrich v. Barton, 
    138 Cal. 220
    , 223; Simonton
    v. Los Angeles Trust & Sav. Bank, 
    192 Cal. 651
    , 655, 657; Morgan
    v. Asher, 
    49 Cal.App. 172
    , 182; see Griffith v. Godey, 
    113 U.S. 89
    ,
    93.)” (Jorgensen, at pp. 20–21.)
    “[W]here one is justified in relying, and does in fact rely,
    upon false representations, his right of action is not destroyed
    merely because opportunities for examination or means of
    knowledge were open to him where no legal duty devolved upon
    him to employ such means of knowledge. [Citations.]” (Stevens v.
    Marco (1956) 
    147 Cal.App.2d 357
    , 378–379.) For example, in
    Conservatorship of Coffey (1986) 
    186 Cal.App.3d 1431
    , 1443
    (Coffey), the court concluded a life insurance beneficiary was not
    required to oversee the activities of the conservator, scrutinize
    accountings and detect omissions, warn the conservator or take
    other action, to receive a benefit that the conservator had a
    statutory duty to conserve. (Id. at p.1443.) “Sound policy
    considerations require that we reject the imposition of such
    a duty, for otherwise we would encourage the conservator who
    had acted with less than ordinary care and diligence to hide his
    failings by nondisclosure, hoping to eliminate or lessen his
    liability by the beneficiary’s failure to detect the omission.”
    (Ibid.)
    “The courts are particularly likely to grant relief from a
    judgment where there has been a violation of a special or
    fiduciary relationship. The commentators have observed that
    breach of a fiduciary duty may warrant setting aside the
    judgment even though the same conduct in a nonfiduciary
    relationship would not be considered extrinsic fraud. (See
    31
    Freeman, Judgments, supra, § 1235, pp. 2575–2576; Moore,
    Moore’s Federal Practice (2d ed. 1948) [¶] 60.37.[1], p. 614;
    Comment, Seeking More Equitable Relief From Fraudulent
    Judgments: Abolishing the Extrinsic-Intrinsic Distinction (1981)
    12 Pacific L.J. 1013, citing above at p. 1021, fns. 65–66.)”
    (Sanders, supra, 40 Cal.3d at p. 615, fn. omitted.) “‘“Where there
    exists a relationship of trust and confidence it is the duty of one
    in whom the confidence is reposed to make full disclosure of all
    material facts within his knowledge relating to the transaction in
    question and any concealment of material facts is a fraud.”’
    [Citations.] ‘“Where there is [such] a duty to disclose, the
    disclosure must be full and complete, and any material
    concealment or misrepresentation will amount to fraud sufficient
    to entitle the party injured thereby to an action.”’ [Citations.]”
    (Id. at p. 616.)
    Some legal authorities characterize a fiduciary’s failure to
    disclose material facts as a second form of extrinsic fraud
    (Lazzarone, supra, 181 Cal.App.3d at pp. 596–597), while others
    describe it as an exception to the requirement of extrinsic fraud
    (Jorgensen, supra, 
    32 Cal.2d 13
     at p. 19). It may also be
    explained by the balance of public policy considerations: when a
    judgment is obtained through a fiduciary’s violation of the duty of
    disclosure to the moving party, the policy to provide a fair
    adversary proceeding outweighs the policy in favor of finality,
    and the moving party’s reasonable reliance on the disclosures of a
    fiduciary is considered a satisfactory excuse for not presenting a
    defense in a prior proceeding.
    32
    B. Section 2103
    The preclusive effect of probate court orders governing
    guardians and conservators is established by statute. Section
    2103 provides for finality, but incorporates the exception for
    extrinsic fraud as it is applied to fiduciaries: “(a) When a
    judgment or order made pursuant to this division becomes final,
    it releases the guardian or conservator and the sureties from all
    claims of the ward or conservatee and of any persons affected
    thereby based upon any act or omission directly authorized,
    approved, or confirmed in the judgment or order. For the
    purposes of this section, ‘order’ includes an order settling an
    account of the guardian or conservator, whether an intermediate
    or final account. [¶] (b) This section does not apply where the
    judgment or order is obtained by fraud or conspiracy or by
    misrepresentation contained in the petition or account or in the
    judgment or order as to any material fact. For the purposes of
    this subdivision, misrepresentation includes, but is not limited to,
    the omission of a material fact.” (Prob. Code, § 2103.)
    C. Duty of Diligence to Discover Misrepresentations
    of Material Fact
    Generally, a party has a duty to take advantage of
    discovery procedures to fully investigate the facts prior to entry of
    judgment. (Stevenot, supra, 154 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1069–1070.)
    To set aside a judgment based on “false facts” when the fraud was
    part of the proceeding itself, a party must show “such facts could
    not reasonably have been discovered prior to entry of judgment.”
    (Cartagena, supra, 
    35 Cal.App.4th 1061
    , 1068.)
    33
    A conservator’s presentation of an accounting to the court
    for approval, however, is not an adversarial proceeding between
    parties. The conservator is required to account and disclose
    material information to the conservatee. There is a distinction
    made “between cases where a plaintiff is under a duty to inquire
    and those in which he has no such duty until he has notice of
    facts sufficient to arouse the suspicions of a reasonable man.”
    (Bennett v. Hibernia Bank (1956) 
    47 Cal.2d 540
    , 563 (Bennett).)
    A plaintiff who has no duty to inquire because of a fiduciary
    relationship does not need to show that he or she could not have
    discovered the facts earlier with a diligent inquiry. (Ibid.)
    Once a party actually becomes aware of facts which would
    make a reasonably prudent person suspicious of wrongdoing by a
    fiduciary, the party is put on inquiry notice and has a duty to
    investigate. (Bennett, supra, 47 Cal.2d at p. 563; Alfaro v.
    Community Housing Improvement System & Planning Assn., Inc.
    (2009) 1356, 1394.) At that point, “[a] person with ‘actual notice
    of circumstances sufficient to put a prudent man on inquiry’ is
    deemed to have constructive notice of all facts that a reasonable
    inquiry would disclose. [Citations.]” (E-Fab, Inc. v. Accountants,
    Inc. Services (2007) 
    153 Cal.App.4th 1308
    , 1319.) It is
    significant, however, that when a fiduciary relationship exists
    between the parties, facts which would ordinarily require
    investigation may not excite suspicion and less diligence is
    required. (Bennett, supra, at pp. 559–560.) Therefore, a
    conservator may show that representations of fact in the account
    were so obviously false that the conservatee was not justified in
    relying on them. If the conservatee was not actually aware of
    facts prior to entry of judgment from which a reasonable person
    would have suspected wrongdoing, however, the conservatee
    34
    satisfies the duty of diligence by showing the action to set aside
    the judgment was filed within the limitations period, as
    measured from the party’s actual discovery of formerly unknown
    information. (Id. at p. 563.)5
    D. Knox
    As he did in the trial court, Foster relies heavily on the
    legal authority of Knox, supra, 205 Cal.App.4th at page 428, for
    the proposition that a party seeking to set aside a judgment for
    5 Several authorities hold that an equitable action to set
    aside a judgment obtained through extrinsic fraud or mistake is
    governed by the three-year statute of limitations in Code of Civil
    Procedure section 338, subdivision (d), including its discovery
    rule. (Lightner Mining Co. v. Lane (1911) 
    161 Cal. 689
    , 702;
    Lataillade v. Orena, supra, 91 Cal. at pp. 577–578; Turner v.
    Milstein (1951) 
    103 Cal.App.2d 651
    , 659; Scott v. Dilks (1941) 
    47 Cal.App.2d 207
    , 209–210; Zastrow v. Zastrow (1976) 
    61 Cal.App.3d 710
    , 714–715 [the weight of California case law
    applies statutory limitation periods in equitable actions to vacate
    a judgment].) Although some courts have stated that an
    equitable action to set aside a judgment based on extrinsic fraud
    or mistake is not subject to statutory time limits (Department of
    Industrial Relations v. Davis Moreno Construction, Inc. (2011)
    
    193 Cal.App.4th 560
    , 570–571; Munoz v. Lopez (1969) 
    275 Cal.App.2d 178
    , 181), even under this view, courts employ the
    statute of limitations by analogy to measure laches or
    unreasonable delay in an action to set aside a judgment. (Vai v.
    Bank of America (1961) 
    56 Cal.2d 329
    , 343; Protopappas v.
    Protopappas (1963) 
    213 Cal.App.2d 659
    , 665; Barritt v. Barritt
    (1933) 
    132 Cal.App. 538
    , 544.) An equitable action to set aside a
    judgment is also subject to a defense of laches. (Stevenot, supra,
    154 Cal.App.3d at p. 1071.)
    35
    extrinsic fraud based on misrepresentations of fact must show
    the party could not reasonably have discovered the
    misrepresentations prior to entry of judgment. To the extent that
    Knox may be interpreted to mean that a conservatee with no
    actual notice of facts that suggest wrongdoing has a duty to
    conduct an investigation to verify the facts in a conservator’s
    account prior to entry of judgment, we respectfully disagree.
    In Knox, a successor conservator brought an action against
    former conservator Lawrence A. Dean II for several causes of
    action, including elder financial abuse. (Knox, supra, 205
    Cal.App.4th at p.422.) Dean asserted in a summary judgment
    motion that the probate court orders approving his accountings
    were conclusive of the matters contained in them. (Ibid.) The
    Knox court considered whether the successor’s claims were
    precluded by section 2103, rather than as here whether to
    exercise the court’s equitable power to set aside the orders
    approving the accounts, but the same principles of extrinsic fraud
    have been applied in both contexts.
    Dean stated in his first accounting that he hired “Girlie
    Kirbac” as an in-home caregiver for the conservatee and paid her
    approximately $4,200 for her services. (Knox, supra, 205
    Cal.App.4th at p. 428.) In opposition to summary judgment, the
    successor conservator provided a declaration from Kirbac stating
    that she had never met Dean and had not provided any services
    for the conservatee. (Ibid.)
    The Knox court expressed concern about the accuracy of
    Dean’s representations in the first accounting, but the court
    concluded that the successor conservator “failed to explain why
    the first accounting did not provide her sufficient information to
    investigate a fraud claim at the time. In order to establish the
    36
    second type of extrinsic fraud, ‘“it is insufficient for a party to
    come into court and simply assert that the judgment was
    premised on false facts. The party must show that such facts
    could not reasonably have been discovered prior to the entry of
    judgment.” [(Cartagena, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1067–
    1068)]’ (In re Margarita D. (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 1288
    , 1295.)
    Thus, the fraud, if any, was intrinsic rather than extrinsic (see
    Lazzarone, supra, 181 Cal.App.3d at pp. 588–589) and does not
    provide an exception under Probate Code section 2103,
    subdivision (b) to the preclusive effect of the order approving the
    first accounting.” (Knox, supra, 205 Cal.App.4th at p. 428.)
    We conclude Knox misinterpreted the requirements for
    establishing extrinsic fraud by a fiduciary that are incorporated
    in section 2103. Section 2103 clearly states that an order does
    not operate to release a guardian or conservator when the order
    is obtained by misrepresentation of material fact in the petition
    or account. Within the context of a nonfiduciary relationship,
    misrepresentations of material fact presented in a judicial
    proceeding are considered intrinsic fraud, but misrepresentations
    of material fact by a fiduciary constitute extrinsic fraud. Where a
    conservator has misrepresented a material fact in an account
    approved by the probate court, a party bringing a subsequent
    action on behalf of the conservatee does not need to show that the
    misrepresentation could not have been discovered prior to entry
    of the order approving the account. (See Bennett, supra, 47
    Cal.2d at p. 563.)
    The Knox court relied on In re Margarita D., supra, 72
    Cal.App.4th at page 1295, for the proposition that a party must
    show “false facts” could not reasonably have been discovered
    prior to the entry of judgment. (Knox, supra, 205 Cal.App.4th at
    37
    p. 428.) In re Margarita D., however, concerned a motion to set
    aside a paternity judgment in a nonfiduciary context. (In re
    Margarita D., supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at p. 1293.) In re Margarita
    D. had in turn relied on Cartagena which also concerned a
    paternity judgment and did not involve any statement of fact by a
    fiduciary. (Id. at p. 1295; Cartagena, supra, 35 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 1066–1068.)
    The Knox court’s interpretation of section 2103 incorrectly
    imposes on fiduciary relationships the discovery obligation that
    applies in non-fiduciary relationships, thereby substantially
    limiting the protection of section 2103, subdivision (b). We
    disagree with Knox to the extent it suggests that a conservatee
    who is not aware of facts suggesting wrongdoing must show the
    misrepresentations of material fact in a fiduciary’s account could
    not reasonably have been discovered prior to the entry of
    judgment.
    Application
    In denying Hudson’s motion to vacate, the probate court
    found that Hudson failed to sufficiently describe his knowledge of
    reimbursements, and as a result, he had not shown that he was
    unaware of the defects in the final account at the time of its
    approval.
    The probate court’s ruling reflects the incorrect legal
    standard provided in Knox. The court improperly placed the
    burden on Hudson to show that he could not have discovered the
    misrepresentations of material fact in the final account prior to
    entry of the order. To the extent the court found Hudson was
    aware of the defects in the final account at the time it was made,
    38
    the finding is not supported by substantial evidence. The probate
    court focused on Hudson’s knowledge of reimbursements, but the
    entries at issue did not concern reimbursements. The final
    account included representations that 28 specific checks were
    paid directly to Hudson’s creditors, when in fact those checks
    were paid to Foster. In response to Hudson’s motion to set aside
    the final account, Foster’s explanation was that these checks
    were reimbursements that were poorly presented in the account
    as direct payments to creditors, but Hudson showed that at least
    two of the checks could not even be characterized as mislabeled
    reimbursements because the creditors did not receive any
    payment from Foster.
    To the extent the probate court further found that Hudson
    did not act with reasonable diligence to set aside the account
    based on information that he should have known, the court’s
    ruling did not apply the law governing the diligence of a
    conservatee asserting extrinsic fraud against his fiduciary.
    Rather, the court’s rational again reflects the incorrect statement
    of the law made in Knox. The court placed a burden on Hudson
    to scrutinize Foster’s account and faulted Hudson for delay in
    seeking relief based on what he “should have known.” We have
    clarified that Hudson was entitled to rely on the disclosures made
    by Foster as his conservator and confidant, including after
    approval of the final account. Hudson’s mere access to
    information did not trigger an obligation to comb through the
    records to verify the truth of Foster’s representations. A correct
    inquiry into whether Hudson acted diligently would require the
    court first to determine when Hudson actually discovered
    formerly unknown information sufficient to put a reasonable
    person on notice of fraud. We therefore remand the matter to
    39
    provide the probate court an opportunity to determine whether
    Hudson has met the requirements for relief, and if so, whether to
    exercise its discretion to set aside the final account based on a
    correct statement of the existing law with respect to fiduciaries.
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying the motion to vacate the order approving
    the conservator’s final account is reversed and the matter is
    remanded for the probate court to exercise its discretion.
    Appellant Nigel Hudson is awarded his costs on appeal.
    MOOR, J.
    We concur:
    BAKER, Acting P.J.
    KIM, J.
    40
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B300017

Filed Date: 9/7/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/7/2021