Eleanor Licensing LLC v. Classic Recreations LLC ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 3/21/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    ELEANOR LICENSING LLC             B275429 and B279238
    et al.,
    (Los Angeles County
    Plaintiffs and             Super. Ct. No. EC062924)
    Respondents,
    v.
    CLASSIC RECREATIONS LLC
    et al.,
    Defendants and
    Appellants.
    APPEALS from judgment of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County. William D. Stewart, Judge. Reversed in
    part and affirmed in part.
    Haight Brown & Bonesteel, Bruce Cleeland, William O.
    Martin, Jr., Vangi M. Johnson and Kristian Moriarty for
    Defendants and Appellants Classic Recreations, LLC, T&D Motor
    Company, Jason Engel and Tony Engel.
    Morris Polich & Purdy , David L. Brandon, Neda Cate;
    Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Timothy T. Coates and
    Jonathan H. Eisenman for Plaintiffs and Respondents Eleanor
    Licensing, LLC and Denice Shakarian Halicki.
    ___________________
    Following a four-day bench trial, the court entered
    judgment in favor of Eleanor Licensing LLC and Denice
    Shakarian Halicki and against Classic Recreations, LLC, T&D
    Motor Company, Jason Engel and Tony Engel (collectively
    Classic), ordering that Eleanor Licensing retain possession of a
    vehicle identified as “Eleanor No. 1,” which had been
    manufactured by Classic pursuant to a licensing agreement
    between the parties; quieting title to the vehicle in Eleanor
    Licensing; directing Classic to perform according to the terms of
    the licensing agreement and transfer legal title to Eleanor No. 1
    to Eleanor Licensing; and awarding damages of $6,657.75 and
    attorney fees of $176,050. On appeal Classic contends the
    licensing agreement was unenforceable due to lack of
    consideration at the time of execution, the governing statutes of
    limitation barred Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s claims, and the
    findings that Jason Engel and Tony Engel are the alter egos of
    Classic Recreations and T&D Motor are not supported by
    substantial evidence. We reverse the judgment to the extent it is
    based on Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s causes of action for
    breach of contract, as well as the court’s alter ego findings, and
    otherwise affirm the judgment and postjudgment order.
    2
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1. The Gone in 60 Seconds Films and the November 1, 2007
    License Agreement
    The 1974 motion picture Gone in 60 Seconds was written,
    directed and produced by H.B. “Toby” Halicki, who also starred in
    1
    the film. The movie featured a yellow 1971 Fastback Ford
    Mustang, code named “Eleanor.” H.B. Halicki died in 1989 while
    filming Gone in 60 Seconds 2. His widow, Denice Shakarian
    Halicki, acquired intellectual property rights relating to “Gone in
    60 Seconds” and “Eleanor” from H.B. Halicki’s estate.
    A 2000 remake of Gone in 60 Seconds, released by
    Hollywood Pictures, a division of Walt Disney Company,
    pursuant to rights granted by Denice Shakarian Halicki in May
    1995, starred Nicolas Cage and Angelina Jolie. Jerry
    Bruckheimer produced the remake; Halicki was an executive
    producer. The 2000 motion picture featured a customized 1967
    Fastback Ford Mustang, which was also named “Eleanor.” The
    vehicle was sometimes (erroneously) referred to in the film as a
    1967 Shelby GT-500. In July 2007 Hollywood Pictures/Disney
    executed a quitclaim to confirm that Halicki retained the
    merchandising rights to “Gone in 60 Seconds” and “Eleanor.”
    Halicki formed Eleanor Licensing in 2007 and on
    October 31, 2007 granted the company a nonexclusive license to
    her intellectual property rights, merchandising rights,
    trademarks and copyrightable material relating to “Gone in
    60 Seconds” and “Eleanor.” As of November 1, 2007 Eleanor
    1
    Our factual summary is based on the findings set forth in
    the trial court’s statement of decision, which, except where noted,
    are undisputed on appeal.
    3
    Licensing entered a license agreement with T&D Motor and
    Classic Recreations granting T&D Motor and Classic Recreations
    the right to use intellectual property rights, trademarks and
    copyrightable material relating to “Gone in 60 Seconds” and
    “Eleanor” to manufacture and sell 300 restored 1971, 1972 and
    1973 Fastback Ford Mustangs fitted and detailed to replicate in
    appearance the 1974 Eleanor and 1,000 restored 1967 and 1968
    Fastback Ford Mustangs fitted and detailed to replicate in
    appearance the 2000 Eleanor.
    Pursuant to the license agreement T&D Motor and Classic
    Recreations agreed to pay Eleanor Licensing a one-time fee of
    $300,000, plus a royalty for each vehicle sold in accordance with a
    schedule set forth in the agreement (but no less than 15 percent
    2
    of each vehicle’s sale price). Paragraph 9.3 of the license
    agreement further provided, “Licensee agrees at Licensee’s
    expense to give Licensor Number ‘1’ unit, Number ‘48’ unit and
    Number ‘60’ unit of the original ‘Gone in 60 Seconds’ Eleanor
    vehicle and Number ‘1’ unit, Number ‘47’ unit and Number ’60’
    unit of the Remake 2000 Eleanor vehicle. [¶] (a) Licensor agrees
    that the aforesaid samples of the Licensed Merchandise may be
    used by Licensee in the promotions and car events with
    Licensor’s approval and will be fully insured during such use and
    during the transportation to and from such event.”
    Paragraph 14.1, “Licensor’s Warranty,” part of the section
    of the agreement entitled Warranties, Representations and
    Indemnification, provided, “Licensor represents and warrants
    that it has the right to enter into this Agreement: Should any
    2
    Classic eventually sold replicas for approximately
    $2.7 million and paid Eleanor Licensing $340,000 in royalties.
    4
    third party assert a claim, demand, or cause of action against
    Licensee contesting Licensor’s ownership of Licensed Properties
    in relation to this Agreement, Licensor shall undertake and
    conduct the defense of any such claim, demand or cause of
    action.”
    Paragraph 16.4(b) provided, in part, “Licensee is
    responsible for any and all legal fees, collections costs, and/or
    court costs incurred by Licensor in securing a remedy for any
    breach of this Agreement by Licensee . . . .” Paragraph 23.5
    required all disputes to be resolved by “binding, mandatory
    arbitration subject and pursuant to the rules and procedures of
    the American Arbitration Association.”
    2. Delivery of the Sample Car
    The Number 1 unit of the 2000 Eleanor replica described in
    the licensing agreement (Eleanor No. 1 or the sample car) was
    constructed in Yukon, Oklahoma, Classic’s place of business, and
    3
    moved from there to Halicki’s residence in February 2008.
    Apparently neither license plates nor title documents were
    delivered with the vehicle. On September 16, 2009 Michael
    Leone, a consultant working with Halicki, emailed Jason Engel to
    “remind you to please find and send Denice’s Eleanor title with
    3
    At times in the trial court Classic maintained this vehicle
    was a prototype, not one of the sample cars described in
    paragraph 9.3 of the license agreement. The trial court found
    Jason Engel had “deliberately testified untruthfully” on this point
    and, as a result, “determine[d] that his testimony on other facts is
    not credible.” On appeal Classic does not reiterate its claim the
    vehicle delivered to Halicki in February 2008 was not a sample
    car to which she was entitled under the terms of the license
    agreement.
    5
    her license plate.” When the license plate, but not the title
    document, was sent, Leone again emailed Jason Engel, noting
    “Denice’s title to Eleanor . . . wasn’t in the fedex [sic] with
    Eleanor’s License plate (tag). What happened? Please check into
    this.” Jason Engel responded, “Mike it should have been. I’ll find
    it and send it out.”
    3. The Shelby Litigation
    In April 2004 the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office issued a certificate of registration to the Carroll Hall
    Shelby Trust (Shelby) for the trademark “Eleanor” for use with
    automobiles and structural parts of automobiles. Shelby
    thereafter licensed Unique Motorcars, Inc. to use the trademarks
    “Shelby GT-500” and “Eleanor” in connection with the
    manufacture and sale of vehicles and merchandise relating to any
    1960’s Shelby automobiles. Unique then began manufacturing
    and selling vehicles that resembled the 2000 remake version of
    Eleanor, which, as discussed, had been referred to in the movie as
    a 1967 Shelby GT-500. In May 2004 Halicki sued Unique and
    Shelby for copyright infringement, common law trademark
    infringement, unfair competition and other related torts. Halicki
    also sought cancellation of Shelby’s registration of the “Eleanor”
    mark.
    The Engels were aware of the Shelby litigation when they
    were negotiating the November 1, 2007 license agreement.
    Paragraph 11.5 of the agreement stated, “Shelby Matter.
    Licensor has advised Licensee that Licensor and related parties
    are currently involved in litigation with Carroll Shelby, Unique
    Performance, Steve Sanderson and related entities (collectively
    ‘Shelby’) with respect to the alleged infringement by Shelby of
    6
    certain intellectual property rights relating to the Eleanor vehicle
    from the ‘Gone in 60 Seconds’ films.”
    In December 2008, after Classic had delivered
    Eleanor No. 1 to Halicki, Shelby filed its own federal court
    trademark infringement action against Classic Recreations,
    Halicki and others. All disputes involving Shelby and the
    identification of the 2000 Eleanor as a 1967 Shelby GT-500 were
    eventually settled in 2009. As part of the settlement, Shelby
    abandoned any claim to the intellectual property rights to
    “Eleanor” and on December 18, 2009 assigned to Halicki its
    entire interest and goodwill in the “Eleanor” registered mark.
    4. Termination of the License Agreement and Classic’s
    Demand Letter
    On October 16, 2009, shortly after the email exchange
    between Jason Engel and Leone regarding the title document to
    Eleanor No. 1, Classic terminated the license agreement. A
    month later, in a letter from counsel dated November 20, 2009,
    Classic asserted claims against Eleanor Licensing under the
    license agreement, stating, “As a result of the settlement of the
    lawsuit brought by Carroll Shelby, et al. against Denice
    Shakarian Halicki, et al., and other facts, it is clear that Eleanor
    Licensing LLC did not have the rights it claimed to have had
    relative to the automobiles that were manufactured by Classic
    under the terms of the Agreement . . . .” The letter continued
    that Classic had suffered damages as a consequence of Eleanor
    Licensing’s wrongful actions, including “the licensing fees and
    royalties paid by T&D and Classic to Eleanor Licensing LLC
    under the terms of the Agreement [and] the ‘Number 1 Unit
    Remake 2000 Eleanor vehicle’ given to Eleanor Licensing LLC
    under the terms of the Agreement . . . .” The letter offered to
    7
    settle the claims for $640,000 and “return of the ‘Eleanor’
    automobile.” The penultimate paragraph of the letter declared,
    “[B]ecause the ‘Eleanor’ automobile which was manufactured by
    Classic and which is in your possession remains titled in Classic’s
    name, you will not be able to obtain insurance on it. The vehicle
    is not being insured by Classic and demand is hereby made upon
    you not to drive the vehicle.”
    Counsel for Halicki responded to the November 20, 2009
    letter, describing the claims asserted as “frivolous and without
    any foundation whatsoever” and threatening an action for
    malicious prosecution against lawyer and clients if Classic
    initiated a lawsuit.
    5. Disputed Ownership and Possession of the Sample Car
    Classic did not sue Eleanor Licensing for allegedly
    misrepresenting its rights to “Gone in 60 Seconds” and “Eleanor”
    in the November 1, 2007 license agreement. However, in
    May 2014 Jason Engel petitioned for a writ of replevin in
    Oklahoma state court seeking recovery of the sample car, naming
    as defendant Fusion Motor Sports, Inc., which Eleanor Licensing
    had licensed to build Eleanor replicas and which was displaying
    the sample car in its Southern California showroom. A copy of a
    State of Oklahoma certificate of title, naming Classic
    Recreations LLC as owner of the vehicle, was attached as
    4
    Exhibit A to the verified petition. The Oklahoma state court
    4
    While Classic’s appeals were pending in this court, Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki moved to dismiss the appeals pursuant to
    the disentitlement doctrine, contending the photocopy of the
    certificate of title presented to the Oklahoma state court and
    thereafter used by Classic during trial of this action had been
    reproduced in a manner that failed to include the word “Denice”
    8
    issued a prejudgment order of restraint based on the verified
    petition on May 23, 2014 and an order of delivery on
    June 26, 2014.
    After filing the Oklahoma replevin action, Jason Engel
    contacted the Los Angeles Police Department and reported that
    he owned the sample car, which he had loaned out years earlier
    for promotional use. He claimed the car had then disappeared. A
    detective with the LAPD automobile task force received a copy of
    the Oklahoma title document but also learned there was a
    dispute as to the vehicle’s ownership. The sample car was seized
    from the Fusion showroom, impounded and then ultimately
    released pursuant to stipulation to Eleanor Licensing and
    Halicki, who paid storage fees of $6,657.75.
    6. Halicki and Eleanor Licensing’s Lawsuit
    On August 15, 2014 Eleanor Licensing and Halicki filed
    this lawsuit to recover possession of, and legal title to,
    Eleanor No. 1. Their complaint alleged eight causes of action:
    breach of contract, breach of contract implied by conduct, breach
    of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, declaratory
    relief, return of personal property, quiet title, injunctive relief
    and specific performance.
    The gravamen of the first three, contract-based causes of
    action is that Classic breached the agreement between the
    parties (either the license agreement or an implied-in-fact
    handwritten in pencil on the top margin of the document.
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki have also moved for this court to
    take evidence on appeal, presenting the declaration of a forensic
    examiner who opined the pencil notation “Denice” had been on
    the original title document since late 2008. Both motions are
    denied.
    9
    contract) by attempting to gain possession of the sample car. The
    eighth cause of action for specific performance, also based on the
    license agreement, alleges that Halicki is entitled, pursuant to
    paragraph 13.2 of the agreement, to a court order requiring
    Classic to transfer title to Eleanor No. 1 to her and to execute all
    5
    documents necessary to accomplish that task. The declaratory
    relief cause of action alleges an actual controversy concerning the
    parties’ respective rights to Eleanor No. 1: Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki claim they own Eleanor No. 1 free and clear of any
    express or implied interest of Classic; Classic claims it has an
    interest in Eleanor No. 1 as a result of holding title to the vehicle.
    The fifth cause of action for return of personal property
    incorporates by reference the allegations in all the prior
    paragraphs in the complaint, seeks return of the sample car and
    alleges Classic has damaged Eleanor Licensing and Halicki by
    having Eleanor No. 1 taken from their possession, custody and
    control. The quiet title cause of action seeks to quiet title to
    Eleanor No. 1 solely in the name of Halicki as of the date Classic
    6
    gave the vehicle to Halicki in February 2008. The seventh cause
    of action requests injunctive relief restraining Classic from
    interfering with Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s merchandising
    rights to “Eleanor,” including their rights to the use and quiet
    enjoyment of Eleanor No. 1.
    5
    The court permitted Eleanor Licensing and Halicki to
    amend the complaint to conform to proof to allege title should be
    transferred to both plaintiffs, not just Halicki.
    6
    The amendment to conform to proof also modified the quiet
    title cause of action to include Eleanor Licensing, as well as
    Halicki.
    10
    The complaint alleged in its description of the parties that
    Jason Engel was the co-owner of Classic Recreation and T&D
    Motor and the alter ego of both companies and similarly that
    Tony Engel, Jason’s father, was co-owner and alter ego of both
    Classic Recreation and T&D Motor.
    7. The Trial Court’s Decision in Favor of Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki and Postjudgment Award of Fees
    The case was tried before the court over four days in
    February 2015. The court issued a 10-page tentative decision in
    September 2015, ruling in favor of Eleanor Licensing and Halicki
    on all causes of action, including a finding that Classic had
    breached the license agreement by failing to transfer title to the
    sample car to Eleanor Licensing. Following Classic’s request for
    a statement of decision, the court entered a 32-page statement of
    decision in February 2016 (adopting Eleanor Licensing and
    Halicki’s proposed statement of decision after overruling Classic’s
    objections).
    In its statement of decision the court rejected Classic’s
    argument, predicated on Shelby’s claim to certain “Eleanor”
    trademark rights, that Eleanor Licensing did not have the legal
    authority to license all the rights identified in the November 1,
    2007 license agreement. Then, finding that Classic stood in a
    fiduciary relationship with Eleanor Licensing and Halicki with
    respect to delivery of title to the sample car, the court ruled the
    delayed discovery rule articulated by this court in April
    Enterprises, Inc. v. KTTV (1983) 
    147 Cal. App. 3d 805
    applied and
    Classic’s breach of the license agreement had occurred in secret,
    so that the limitations period for Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s
    claims did not begin to run until the sample car was seized and
    impounded by the LAPD at the urging of Classic. The court also
    11
    found that Jason Engel and Tony Engel were the alter egos of
    Classic Recreations and T&D Motor.
    In its Judgment, entered April 5, 2016, the court ordered
    that Eleanor Licensing retain possession of Eleanor No. 1,
    quieted title to the vehicle to Eleanor Licensing, and ordered
    Classic Recreations, T&D Motor, Jason Engel and Tony Engel to
    specifically perform their duties according to the terms of the
    license agreement and transfer full title to the sample car to
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki. Additionally, the court issued a
    permanent injunction requiring Classic Recreations, T&D Motor,
    Jason Engel and Tony Engel to transfer title to the sample car to
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki and precluding them from
    transferring title to anyone other than Eleanor Licensing and
    from seeking possession of, or harming, the sample car. Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki were awarded damages of $6,657.75, plus
    prejudgment interest of $887.70, jointly and severally from all
    defendants. Finally, the court quieted title to the sample car in
    Eleanor Licensing.
    Following entry of judgment Eleanor Licensing and Halicki
    moved for an award of attorney fees and costs pursuant to
    paragraph 16.4 of the license agreement and Civil Code
    section 1717. The court granted the motion in part, awarding
    Eleanor Licensing attorney fees of $176,050 in a postjudgment
    order dated August 23, 2016, rather than the $308,969.50 that
    had been requested.
    Classic filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment
    (case no. B275429) and a separate timely appeal from the
    postjudgment attorney fee order (case no. B279238).
    12
    CONTENTIONS
    Classic contends that, because Classic Recreations was
    named as owner of the sample car in the certificate of legal title
    issued by the State of Oklahoma, it was presumed to be the
    owner of full beneficial title pursuant to Evidence Code
    7
    section 662 and that Eleanor Licensing and Halicki failed at
    trial to meet their burden of overcoming the presumption.
    Specifically, Classic asserts Eleanor Licensing did not convey the
    trademark rights to “Eleanor” in the November 1, 2007 license
    agreement, resulting in a failure of consideration for that
    agreement and invalidating any rights Eleanor Licensing and
    Halicki assert under its terms. Classic also contends the statute
    of limitations barred the various claims asserted by Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki in their complaint and the findings that
    Jason Engel and Tony Engel are the alter egos of Classic
    Recreations and T&D Motor are not supported by substantial
    8
    evidence.
    7
    Evidence Code section 662 provides, “The owner of the legal
    title to property is presumed to be the owner of the full beneficial
    title. The presumption may be rebutted only by clear and
    convincing proof.”
    8
    Although Classic separately appealed the postjudgment
    order awarding attorney fees, in its briefs in this court it argues
    only that, if we reverse the judgment in favor of Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki in its entirety, the award of attorney fees
    and costs to them as prevailing parties should also be reversed
    and, alternatively, if we reverse the court’s alter ego findings but
    otherwise affirm the judgment, we should also reverse the award
    of attorney fees and costs against Jason Engel and Tony Engel in
    their individual capacities. Any other challenge to the ruling has
    been forfeited. (See, e.g., Tiernan v. Trustees of Cal. State
    13
    DISCUSSION
    1. The November 1, 2007 License Agreement Is Supported
    by Adequate Consideration
    Emphasizing the 2004 federal registration of Shelby’s
    “Eleanor” trademark for “automobiles, engines for automobiles,
    and structural parts for automobiles” and the statutory
    9
    presumption of its validity (15 U.S.C. § 1115(a)), Classic argues
    Eleanor Licensing failed at trial to demonstrate its ownership of
    a prior use common law trademark to “Eleanor” for those items
    and, therefore, did not establish it owned the rights it
    purportedly licensed to Classic in November 1, 2007. Classic also
    asserts Shelby’s December 2009 assignment to Halicki of its
    federally registered trademark as part of the settlement of the
    Shelby litigation confirmed that Eleanor Licensing could not
    convey a license to use the trademark in November 2007.
    Classic’s argument is doubly flawed. First, Halicki testified
    concerning her late husband’s commercial exploitation of the
    University & Colleges (1982) 
    33 Cal. 3d 211
    , 216, fn. 4; Paulus v.
    Bob Lynch Ford, Inc. (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 659
    , 685.)
    9
    Title 15 United States Code section 1115(a) provides that
    federal registration of a trademark “shall be admissible in
    evidence and shall be prima facie evidence of the validity of the
    registered mark and of the registration of the mark, of the
    registrant’s ownership of the mark, and of the registrant’s
    exclusive right to use the registered mark in commerce on or in
    connection with the goods or services specified in the registration
    subject to any conditions or limitations stated therein, but shall
    not preclude another person from proving any legal or equitable
    defense or defect, including those set forth in subsection (b),
    which might have been asserted if such mark had not been
    registered.”
    14
    “Eleanor” and “Gone in 60 Seconds” marks following the release
    of the first film, as well as the marketing activities surrounding
    and subsequent to the release of the 2000 remake. The trial
    court found this evidence established Eleanor Licensing and
    Halicki’s ownership of rights in the “Eleanor” trademark (that is,
    a common law trademark) sufficient to authorize the license for
    use of the mark by Classic. That finding is amply supported by
    substantial evidence. (See Feresi v. The Livery, LLC (2014)
    
    232 Cal. App. 4th 419
    , 424 [testimony of a single witness is
    sufficient to constitute substantial evidence]; Citizens Business
    Bank v. Gevorgian (2013) 
    218 Cal. App. 4th 602
    , 613 [same].)
    Second, evidence at trial, as well as the license agreement
    itself, demonstrated that Classic was fully aware of Shelby’s 2004
    federal trademark registration of “Eleanor” and the litigation
    initiated by Halicki concerning its validity. In fact, trial
    testimony disclosed that Leone, on behalf of Eleanor Licensing,
    had advised the Engels to investigate ownership of the
    intellectual property covered by the license agreement before
    completing the transaction, which they did. In addition, Eleanor
    Licensing warranted that it had the right to enter into the license
    agreement and agreed to defend Classic in any third-party
    infringement action brought against it for its use of the
    intellectual property being licensed. Thus, even if ownership of
    the “Eleanor” trademark was legitimately disputed by Shelby,
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki provided sufficient consideration
    to Classic by giving Classic what it bargained for, licensing the
    rights they had (which included their undisputed copyright
    interests in “Eleanor” and “Gone in 60 Seconds,” as well as their
    trademark rights) and agreeing to protect Classic from
    infringement claims. (See San Diego City Firefighters, Local 145
    15
    v. Board of Administration Etc. (2012) 
    206 Cal. App. 4th 594
    , 619
    [“‘[a] written instrument is presumptive evidence of a
    consideration’ (Civ. Code, § 1614), and in any event all the law
    requires for sufficient consideration is the proverbial
    ‘peppercorn’”].) There was no failure of consideration.
    2. The Contract-based Claims, to the Extent Otherwise
    Valid, Are Barred by the Statute of Limitations; the
    Causes of Action for Return of Personal Property and
    Quiet Title Were Timely Filed
    a. The contract claims
    Classic terminated the November 1, 2007 license
    agreement on October 16, 2009. At that point the sample car was
    in Halicki’s possession; legal title to the vehicle, however,
    remained in the name of Classic Recreations. That Classic had
    not transferred legal title to Halicki or Eleanor Licensing—and
    did not intend to do so—was emphasized a month later in the
    demand letter sent by Classic’s counsel to Eleanor Licensing. In
    their complaint filed August 15, 2014, approximately four years
    eight months after Classic’s demand letter, Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki sought specific performance of certain provisions of
    the license agreement, including that Classic transfer legal title
    to Eleanor No. 1 to Halicki, and alleged that Classic had
    breached the license agreement “by attempting to assume
    possession, custody, or control of Eleanor No. 1” in May and
    June 2014.
    Contract claims relating to Classic’s refusal to transfer
    legal title to the sample car to Halicki were barred by the four-
    year statute of limitations governing actions for breach of a
    written contract (Code Civ. Proc., § 337), as Classic argued in the
    trial court. Contrary to the court’s finding, Jason Engel did not
    “harbor[] a secret intent in 2009 not to turn over title”; the
    16
    demand letter of November 20, 2009 made plain that Classic
    Recreations held legal title to the sample car in its name and did
    not intend to transfer title to Eleanor Licensing or Halicki.
    Indeed, far from somehow suggesting it would comply with the
    provisions of the license agreement and transfer title to Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki, Classic demanded they return possession
    of the sample car to it as part of the consideration for settling the
    claims it asserted against Eleanor Licensing. Moreover, Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki were well aware that Classic held the legal
    title and refused to transfer it throughout the period from
    termination of the license agreement in October 2009 to the time
    of Jason Engels’s attempts to regain possession of the sample car
    from the Focus showroom in June 2014. The record is totally
    devoid of evidence that would permit use of the delayed discovery
    rule articulated in April Enterprises, Inc. v. 
    KTTV, supra
    ,
    
    147 Cal. App. 3d 805
    to the breach of contract claim relating to the
    10
    failure to transfer title.
    10
    In April Enterprises, Inc. v. 
    KTTV, supra
    , 
    147 Cal. App. 3d 805
    , this court applied the delayed discovery rule to a cause of
    action for breach of contract when the plaintiff did not discover
    the destruction of its property (the erasure of videotapes) until
    long after its occurrence. As we explained, the injury was
    “difficult for the plaintiff to detect”; the defendant was in “a far
    superior position to comprehend the act and the injury”; and the
    defendant “had reason to believe the plaintiff remained ignorant
    he had been wronged.” (Id. at p. 831; see Gryczman v. 4550 Pico
    Partners, Ltd (2003) 
    107 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 5 [delayed discovery rule
    applicable to breach of contract action because defendant “not
    only breached the contract ‘within the privacy of its own offices’
    but the act which constituted the breach—failure to give notice of
    the option offer—was the very act which prevented plaintiff from
    discovering the breach”]; see also Cleveland v. Internet Specialties
    17
    Although the refusal to transfer title was made known to
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki in late 2009, Classic’s efforts in
    May and June 2014 to regain possession of the sample car
    through the Oklahoma writ of replevin and notice to LAPD that
    the car had been taken from it without authorization occurred
    only a few months before the August 2014 filing of the instant
    lawsuit. The statute of limitations should not be an issue in
    challenging the lawfulness of that conduct, regardless of the
    theory of liability. But the suggestion that those actions
    somehow constituted a breach of the long-since-terminated
    license agreement lacks any merit, as Eleanor Licensing and
    Halicki now seem to acknowledge by arguing in their
    respondents’ brief that, “[f]or all the palaver about the license
    agreement,” their lawsuit was not about the parties’ contract, but
    was “a classic conversion claim.”
    b. The claims for return of personal property and to
    quiet title
    As Classic emphasizes in its reply brief, Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki did not plead or attempt to prove a cause of action for
    conversion. However, they did plead, and the trial court ruled
    they had proved, a cause of action for recovery of specific personal
    property, a code-based cause of action (see Code Civ. Proc., § 627),
    often incorrectly referred to as a “claim and delivery action.” (See
    generally 5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Pleading, § 692,
    West, Inc. (2009) 
    171 Cal. App. 4th 24
    , 33 [breach of contract and
    fraud claims arising from false representations that new business
    venture had failed when it was actually operating at a profit
    under a different name].) There was nothing secret or hidden
    about Classic’s refusal to transfer legal title to Eleanor No. 1 to
    Halicki.
    18
    at p. 110 [an action for the specific recovery of personal property,
    with damages in a proper case for its detention, “insofar as it
    needs a label or designation, might be termed ‘specific recovery of
    personal property.’ [Citations.] [¶] At an early date, however,
    California courts borrowed the statutory title of the provisional
    remedy of ‘claim and delivery,’ which gives immediate possession
    pending trial, and the action is often called a ‘claim and delivery
    action.’”].)
    Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision (c)(1),
    creates a three-year limitations period for “actions for the specific
    recovery of personal property.” (See Coy v. County of Los Angeles
    (1991) 
    235 Cal. App. 3d 1077
    , 1087 [“[c]auses of action for claim
    and delivery or conversion of personal property are governed by
    the three-year statute of limitations as set forth in section 388,
    subdivision (c)”].) In most cases, the act of wrongfully taking the
    property triggers the statute of limitations. (AmerUS Life Ins.
    Co. v. Bank of America, N.A. (2006) 
    143 Cal. App. 4th 631
    , 639; see
    Strasberg v. Odyssey Group, Inc. (1996) 
    51 Cal. App. 4th 906
    , 915-
    916 [recognizing general rule but applying delayed discovery
    doctrine].) Because Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s fifth cause of
    action for return of personal property was based on Classic’s
    interference with their possession and control of the sample car
    in May and June 2014—only a few months before they initiated
    their lawsuit—this claim was timely filed. Those portions of the
    judgment restoring possession of Eleanor No. 1 to Eleanor
    Licensing and Halicki and awarding damages (storage costs
    incurred as a result of Classic’s wrongful actions in causing the
    vehicle to be impounded by the police) are properly affirmed.
    Similarly, Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s sixth cause of
    action to quiet title was timely filed. To be sure, Eleanor
    19
    Licensing and Halicki were aware no later than November 2009
    that Classic did not intend to voluntarily transfer legal title to
    the sample car and, as a consequence, had reason to know there
    might be a dispute concerning ownership of the vehicle at some
    11
    future point. However, the general rule in quiet title actions
    (usually articulated in cases involving real property, not personal
    property) is that the statute of limitations “‘“does not run against
    one in possession of land.”’” (Salazar v. Thomas (2015)
    
    236 Cal. App. 4th 467
    , 477; accord, Muktarian v. Barmby (1965)
    
    63 Cal. 2d 558
    , 560 (Muktarian); Crestmar Owners Assn. v.
    12
    Stapakis (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 1223
    , 1228.) Even if a party in
    possession knows of a potential adverse claim, “there is no reason
    to put him to the expense and inconvenience of litigation until
    such a claim is pressed against him.” (Muktarian, at pp. 560-
    561.) “Thus, mere notice of an adverse claim is not enough to
    11
    Notably, Classic’s November 2009 demand letter did not
    assert ownership or a right to immediate possession of the
    sample car. Rather, it offered to accept return of the car, together
    with a cash payment, to settle its claims relating to the license
    agreement and insisted only that Eleanor Licensing not drive the
    car because it was uninsured.
    12
    There is no statute of limitations specific to quiet title
    actions. 
    (Muktarian, supra
    , 63 Cal.2d at p. 560; Salazar v.
    
    Thomas, supra
    , 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 476.) Instead, courts refer
    to the underlying theory of relief (for example, adverse
    possession, breach of contract or fraud) to determine which
    limitations period applies. (Muktarian, at p. 560.) However,
    because Eleanor Licensing and Halicki initiated their quiet title
    action within three months of Classic’s activities interfering with
    their possession of the sample car, we need not determine which
    limitations period would otherwise apply.
    20
    commence the owner’s statute of limitations.” (Salazar, at
    p. 478.)
    Here, following Classic’s demand letter of November 20,
    2009 and Eleanor Licensing’s rejection of Classic’s claims as
    “frivolous,” Classic took no action to assert any claim or right to
    possession of Eleanor No. 1 until May and June 2014. It was
    those events in 2014 that triggered the limitations period for the
    quiet title action.
    Neither Walters v. Boosinger (2016) 2 Cal.App.5th 421 nor
    Ankoanda v. Walker-Smith (1996) 
    44 Cal. App. 4th 610
    , the cases
    relied upon by Classic, supports a conclusion Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki’s quiet title action was not timely filed. The plaintiff
    in Walters had argued a quiet title claim based on the theory a
    deed was void ab initio “is not subject to any statute of limitation
    and ‘can be brought at any time.’” (Walters, at p. 433.) The court
    of appeal rejected that contention. (Ibid.) Noting the plaintiff
    had not raised any contention as to which statute of limitation
    applied to his claim or maintained that his quiet title action had
    been timely filed under any governing limitations period, the
    court expressly declined to consider that issue. (Id. at p. 433,
    fn. 16.) The court did not, as Classic asserts, hold that actual
    knowledge of a potential dispute concerning ownership triggered
    the limitations period for a quiet title action.
    Ankoanda v. 
    Walker-Smith, supra
    , 
    44 Cal. App. 4th 610
    involved an action to quiet title in which the property owner
    alleged she had conveyed a joint tenancy interest in the property
    to her tenant based on fraud or mistake, believing the tenant
    would reconvey the interest when it was no longer needed to
    qualify for a government program providing subsidies to daycare
    centers. (Id. at pp. 613-614.) The tenant in a letter from her
    21
    attorney, however, had claimed a genuine ownership interest
    pursuant to the deed creating the joint tenancy more than three
    years before the owner filed her quiet title action. The court of
    appeal held the action was barred by the three-year limitations
    period of Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision (d),
    rejecting the owner’s contention the limitations period was tolled
    because, as landlord, she was at all times deemed to have seisen
    and possession of the leased property through her tenant.
    (Ankoanda, at pp. 615-616.) The court held the Supreme Court’s
    ruling in 
    Muktarian, supra
    , 63 Cal.2d at page 560 that no statute
    of limitations runs against a plaintiff seeking to quite title while
    he or she is in possession of the property required “exclusive and
    undisputed possession,” and did not apply to the alleged joint
    ownership situation presented by the case before it. (Ankoanda,
    at pp. 616, 618.) The court added, “as joint tenants, both Walker-
    Smith [the tenant] and Ankoanda [the landlord] had an equal
    right to possession of the entire property, but did not have right
    to the exclusive possession of the property as against each other.
    [Citation.] Thus, case law stating the general proposition that a
    landlord remains seised and possessed of leased property through
    her tenant as against third parties and/or the tenant is clearly
    distinguishable from a case like the present one where the
    occupying tenant claims a joint ownership interest pursuant to a
    recorded deed and the question is whether the deed should be
    invalidated.” (Id. at p. 618.)
    Thus, although the court of appeal in Ankoanda held the
    letter from the tenant’s lawyer asserting an ownership interest in
    the property started the running of the governing three-year
    limitations period, as Classic argues, that conclusion was
    expressly premised on the disputing parties’ joint possession of
    22
    the property. (Ankoanda v. 
    Walker-Smith, supra
    , 44 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 618.) The court did not—indeed, could not—overturn the
    Supreme Court’s holding in Muktarian that, as to the party who
    is in exclusive possession of the property at issue, knowledge of a
    potential adverse claim is not enough to trigger the limitations
    period for a quiet title action. (See Crestmar Owners Assn. v.
    
    Stapakis, supra
    , 157 Cal.App.4th at p. 1229 [unusual facts
    present in Ankoanda distinguished it from the very different
    circumstances in Muktarian].) Here, like the situation in
    13
    Muktarian and unlike Ankoanda, even though Classic retained
    legal title to Eleanor No. 1, Eleanor Licensing had possession and
    control of the car before it was impounded by the LAPD. The
    time to file a quiet title action began to run only with that event:
    “[T]itle does not equal possession.” (Crestmar, at p. 1230.)
    3. The Alter Ego Finding Is Not Supported by
    Substantial Evidence
    “‘Ordinarily, a corporation is regarded as a legal entity,
    separate and distinct from its stockholders, officers and directors,
    with separate and distinct liabilities and obligations. [Citations.]’
    [Citation.] ‘[T]he corporate form will be disregarded only in
    narrowly defined circumstances and only when the ends of justice
    13
    In Muktarian a father had executed a grant deed conveying
    certain real property to his son (apparently to keep his second
    wife from acquiring it), but continued to live on the property.
    
    (Muktarian, supra
    , 63 Cal.2d at pp. 559-560.) It was in this
    context—where the father retained possession but knew his son
    had legal title—that the Supreme Court held the limitation
    period for the father’s quiet title action did not start to run until
    the son acted in some way to challenge his father’s rights in the
    property. (Id. at pp. 560-561.)
    23
    so require.’ [Citation.] Before a corporation’s obligations can be
    recognized as those of a particular person, the requisite unity of
    interest and inequitable result must be shown. [Citation.] These
    factors comprise the elements that must be present for liability as
    an alter ego.” (Leek v. Cooper (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 399
    , 411;
    see Sonora Diamond Corp. v. Superior Court (2000)
    
    83 Cal. App. 4th 523
    , 539 [alter ego doctrine does not apply
    without evidence showing that “some conduct amounting to bad
    faith makes it inequitable for the corporate owner to hide behind
    the corporate form”]; Associated Vendors, Inc. v. Oakland Meat
    Co. (1962) 
    210 Cal. App. 2d 825
    , 838.)
    The trial court based its alter ego findings on the following
    evidence:
    • Jason Engel told Halicki that “Classic Recreation[s]
    and T&D Motors are one and the same. It’s me and
    my Dad Tony that do all the decision making, so you
    [Halicki] and or Mr. Leone will only be dealing with
    us, no one else.”
    • Jason Engel “testified under oath in a petition filed in
    the Oklahoma court that Classic Recreations LLC is
    14
    his DBA”—that is, his fictitious business name.
    14
    The reference to Classic Recreations LLC as Jason Engel’s
    dba appears only in the caption of the replevin petition, prepared
    by Engel’s attorney. Although Engel verified that the allegations
    in the petition were “true and correct based on my knowledge and
    belief,” it was something of an overstatement for the court to find
    that Engel had testified under oath in an Oklahoma court
    proceeding that Classic Recreations was simply a dba, as set
    forth on page 13 of the statement of decision, let alone that he
    had “assert[ed] under oath in a court of law that he is an alter
    24
    • Tony Engel provided Eleanor Licensing with his
    personal guarantee to honor any agreement entered
    by the parties.
    The court concluded this evidence was sufficient to
    demonstrate such a unity of interest and ownership between
    Jason Engel and Tony Engel, on the one hand, and Classic
    Recreations and T&D Motor, on the other hand, that the
    corporate and individual personalities merged. In addition, the
    court found it would be inequitable for Jason Engel to assert
    under oath in an Oklahoma court proceeding that Classic
    Recreations was simply a dba and to make statements to that
    effect on which he intended Eleanor Licensing and Halicki to rely
    and then not to treat him as an alter ego of Classic Recreations.
    Although it appears from the record that Classic
    Recreations and T&D Motor are closely held family businesses,
    the evidence submitted is insufficient to support the alter ego
    findings. That Tony Engel and Jason Engel, as co-owners of the
    two businesses, were authorized to make all decisions related to
    the license agreement and the manufacture and sale of the
    Eleanor replicas in no way indicates any commingling of personal
    and corporate assets, use of corporate assets for personal
    purposes, gross undercapitalization of the corporate entities,
    disregard of corporate formalities or any other of the many
    circumstances that might support the conclusion that no
    separation actually existed between these two individuals and
    the two corporate entities. (See, e.g., Misik v. D’Arco (2011)
    
    197 Cal. App. 4th 1065
    , 1073 [listing a series of factors identified
    ego of Classic Recreation[s] LLC,” as the court reformulated this
    point on pages 26-27 of its statement of decision.
    25
    in prior court decisions to support a unity-of-interest finding];
    Leek v. 
    Cooper, supra
    , 194 Cal.App.4th at pp. 417-418 [same].)
    Moreover, Tony Engel’s offer of a personal guarantee to Halicki in
    connection with the corporations’ contractual obligations, if
    meaningful at all in this context, suggests that he and his
    resources were viewed as distinct from those of the corporations.
    Finally, while the identification of Classic Recreations as
    Jason Engel’s fictitious business name in the Oklahoma state
    court replevin proceedings certainly implies that Engel did not
    consider Classic Recreations a distinct legal entity for purposes of
    asserting ownership of Eleanor No. 1, this evidence does not
    support an alter ego finding as to Tony Engel or with respect to
    either individual and T&D Motor. In addition, as discussed, the
    second prong of an alter ego determination requires a finding
    there would be an inequitable result if the acts in question were
    treated as those of the corporation alone: “‘Under the alter ego
    doctrine, then, when the corporate form is used to perpetrate a
    fraud, circumvent a statute, or accomplish some other wrongful or
    inequitable purpose, the courts will ignore the corporate entity
    and deem the corporation’s acts to be those of the persons or
    organizations actually controlling the corporation, in most
    instances the equitable owners.’” (Turman v. Superior Court
    (2017) 17 Cal.App.5th 969, 981; accord, Sonora Diamond Corp. v.
    Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 83 Cal.App.4th at pp. 538-539.) Although
    the trial court may have correctly applied the doctrine of judicial
    estoppel to preclude Jason Engel from denying the existence of a
    unity of interest between him and Classic Recreations, his
    assertion that Classic Recreations functioned as his fictitious
    business name did not establish that he used the corporate form
    26
    for any fraudulent or deceptive purpose, as required to impose
    alter ego liability.
    4. Jason Engel Was Properly Named as a Defendant in the
    Causes of Action To Quiet Title and for Return of
    Personal Property; Tony Engel Was a Proper Defendant
    in the Quiet Title Cause of Action
    A quiet title action may name as a defendant any party
    who might assert a claim to title in the property. (See Code Civ.
    Proc., §§ 762.010 [“[t]he plaintiff shall name as defendants in the
    action the persons having adverse claims to the title of the
    plaintiff against which a determination is sought”], 762.060,
    subd. (b) [“[i]n an action under this section, the plaintiff shall
    name as defendants the persons having adverse claims that are
    of record or known to the plaintiff or reasonably apparent from
    an inspection of the property”]; see also Harbour Vista, LLC v.
    HSBC Mortgage Services Inc. (2011) 
    201 Cal. App. 4th 1496
    , 1506
    [explaining one purpose of 1980 revision of statutory scheme for
    quiet title actions was to permit the action to proceed against
    “any or all adverse claimants,” making final quiet title judgment
    “good against all the world as of the time of the judgment”]; see
    generally Caira v. Offner (2005) 
    126 Cal. App. 4th 12
    , 25, fn. 7
    [“action to quiet title may be used to establish ownership of
    personal property as well as real property”].) Eleanor Licensing
    and Halicki argue, and Classic does not dispute, that, because
    neither Jason Engel nor Tony Engel disclaimed any interest to
    Eleanor No. 1, they were each properly named as defendants in
    the quiet title cause of action. As a consequence,
    notwithstanding our reversal of the alter ego findings as to the
    Engels, they are properly included in those portions of the
    judgment in which the court ordered Eleanor Licensing to retain
    possession of the sample car, quieted title to the sample car to
    27
    Eleanor Licensing and issued an injunction requiring transfer of
    title to the vehicle to Eleanor Licensing, precluding Classic from
    transferring title to anyone else and restraining Classic from
    seeking possession of, or harming, the sample car (paragraphs 1,
    2, 4, 5, 6 and 8).
    Because Jason Engel asserted personal ownership of the
    sample car in the Oklahoma replevin action, he was also properly
    named as a defendant in Eleanor Licensing and Halicki’s cause of
    action for return of personal property. As such, Jason Engel was
    properly held jointly and severally liable with the two corporate
    entities for damages equal to the storage fees imposed when the
    sample car was seized from Fusion and impounded by the LAPD.
    (See Code Civ. Proc., § 667 [“[i]n an action to recover the
    possession of personal property, judgment for the plaintiff may be
    for the possession or the value thereof, in case delivery cannot be
    had, and damages for the detention”]; Crosswhite v. American
    Ins. Co. (1964) 
    61 Cal. 2d 300
    , 302 [party improperly withholding
    personal property is “liable not only for the property or its value,
    but also for damages for the detention from the time of the
    demand”]; see also Spencer Kennelly, Ltd. v. Bk. of Amer. (1942)
    
    19 Cal. 2d 586
    , 589 [“in a claim and delivery action where plaintiff
    prevails and the personal property involved has diminished in
    value, deprecation is a proper element of damages”].)
    5. The Engels Are Not Liable for Attorney Fees
    The Engels are neither parties to the November 1, 2007
    license agreement nor the alter egos of Classic Recreations and
    T&D Motor, the two corporations that entered into the agreement
    with Eleanor Licensing. Because the award of attorney fees to
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki as prevailing parties was based on
    the fee provision in the license agreement and Civil Code
    28
    section 1717, the finding that Jason Engel and Tony Engel are
    jointly and severally liable for that award is reversed. (See
    Wilson’s Heating & Air Conditioning v. Wells Fargo Bank (1988)
    
    202 Cal. App. 3d 1326
    , 1332 [although contracts between general
    contractor and subcontractors had attorney fee provisions and
    notwithstanding stipulated judgment against general contractor
    and construction lender, plaintiff subcontractors were not
    entitled to recover attorney fees from construction lender that
    was not a signatory to the subcontracts, was not the alter ego of
    the general contractor and had not assumed general contractor’s
    obligations when it foreclosed on the property]; see generally
    Reynolds Metals Co. v. Alperson (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 124
    , 127.)
    DISPOSITION
    Paragraph 3 of the judgment entered April 5, 2016,
    ordering Classic Recreations, T&D Motor, Jason Engel and Tony
    Engel to perform certain terms of the November 1, 2007 license
    agreement, that portion of paragraph 7 of the judgment that
    finds Tony Engel jointly and severally liable for damages and
    prejudgment interest and those portions of paragraph 7 of the
    judgment and the postjudgment order that find Jason Engel and
    Tony Engel jointly and severally liable for the award of attorney
    fees are stricken. In all other respects the judgment and
    postjudgment order awarding attorney fees are affirmed.
    Eleanor Licensing and Halicki are to recover their costs on
    appeal.
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    We concur:
    ZELON, J.                    SEGAL, J.
    29