Schrage v. Schrage ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 9/2/21; Certified for Publication 9/22/21 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    LEONARD SCHRAGE,                                      B298119
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                     (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC579623)
    v.
    MICHAEL SCHRAGE et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL from orders and a judgment of the Superior Court
    of Los Angeles County, Yvette M. Palazuelos and Daniel J.
    Buckley, Judges. Affirmed as modified in part and reversed in
    part.
    Randall S. Waier for Defendants and Appellants.
    Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, Benjamin G. Shatz, Kishan H.
    Barot; Markun Zusman Freniere Compton and Steven M.
    Goldberg for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    Michael and Joseph Schrage appeal from the judgment and
    several orders entered in an action filed by their brother, Leonard
    Schrage, for involuntary dissolution of the family business and
    breach of fiduciary duty. After Michael and Joseph invoked their
    statutory right under the Corporations Code to buy Leonard’s
    interests in the business pursuant to a court-ordered appraisal,
    the parties stipulated to add five limited liability companies to
    the eight limited liability companies, five corporations, and one
    limited partnership that were already subject to the appraisal
    and buyout proceeding. The trial court confirmed a valuation of
    Leonard’s interests determined by appraisers and a court-
    appointed referee. The court also issued an alternative decree
    ordering that Michael and Joseph had to pay the appraised
    amount by a certain date and that, if they did not, the entities
    would be wound up and dissolved. Michael and Joseph appealed
    from that order, but voluntarily dismissed the appeal. They did
    not pay the buyout amount, and the court proceeded to wind up
    and dissolve the family business, including the five additional
    limited liability companies.
    Meanwhile, Leonard proceeded on his cause of action for
    breach of fiduciary duty against Michael and Joseph. Following a
    court trial, the court found in favor of Leonard on that cause of
    action, awarded Leonard compensatory and punitive damages,
    and entered judgment in favor of Leonard and against Michael
    and Joseph. The court also denied various postjudgment
    motions.
    Michael and Joseph argue the alternative decree to wind
    up and dissolve the family business and the “follow-up judgments
    2
    and orders” are void as a matter of law because the trial court
    lacked jurisdiction to dissolve the five limited liability companies
    the parties stipulated to include in the appraisal and buyout
    proceeding. We reject this argument because the trial court had
    fundamental jurisdiction and Michael and Joseph are estopped
    from collaterally attacking the alternative decree. Michael and
    Joseph also argue Leonard lacked standing to assert his cause of
    action for breach of fiduciary duty. We agree with this argument
    because Leonard’s cause of action was derivative, not individual.
    Therefore, we affirm the order of dissolution (with a
    modification), reverse the award of damages for breach of
    fiduciary duty, and dismiss the appeals from nonappealable
    orders.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Leonard Sues His Brothers To Dissolve the Family
    Business and for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    We pick up with the story in this (the parties’ third) appeal
    where we left off following Michael and Joseph’s appeal from an
    order awarding Leonard fees and expenses he incurred in a court-
    ordered appraisal under Corporations Code section 1800.1 (See
    Schrage v. Schrage (Aug. 19, 2020, B288478) [nonpub. opn.]
    (Schrage I); see also Schrage v. Schrage (May 14, 2021, B307539)
    [nonpub. opn.] (Schrage II).) But first we repeat some of the basic
    facts of the case summarized in Schrage I.
    1       Undesignated statutory references are to the Corporations
    Code.
    3
    Leonard, Michael, and Joseph each owned a one-third
    interest in the Sage Automotive Group, a family-owned car
    dealership business founded by their father. In April 2015
    Leonard filed this action against Michael, Joseph, and
    14 corporate entities in the Sage Automotive Group to dissolve
    and wind up those entities. Leonard alleged Michael and Joseph
    engaged in a pattern of self-dealing and mismanaged the
    business by, among other things, misappropriating company
    assets to fund a separately owned car dealership and to pay for
    lavish personal expenses, making business decisions without
    Leonard’s consent, and denying Leonard access to corporate
    books and records. Leonard sought to dissolve five corporations
    under section 1800, eight limited liability companies under
    section 17707.03, and one limited partnership under section
    15908.02. Leonard also sought compensatory and punitive
    damages against Michael and Joseph for breach of fiduciary duty.
    (Schrage I, supra, B288478.)
    In June 2016 Michael and Joseph filed a motion under
    sections 2000, 15908.02, and 17707.03 (collectively, the buyout
    statutes) to stay the dissolution causes of action and determine
    the value of Leonard’s interest in the entity defendants. On
    August 23, 2016 the trial court stayed Leonard’s three dissolution
    causes of action (one for each legal form of business entity) to
    allow Michael and Joseph to proceed on their election to purchase
    Leonard’s interests in the business. The court did not stay
    Leonard’s breach of fiduciary duty cause of action or Michael and
    Joseph’s causes of action in their cross-complaint for breach of
    fiduciary duty, conversion, and recording confidential
    communications in violation of Penal Code sections 630 and 632.
    (Schrage I, supra, B288478.) The trial court also denied Michael
    4
    and Joseph’s motion for judgment on the pleadings on Leonard’s
    cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty, ruling Leonard had
    alleged an individual cause of action against his brothers, not a
    derivative cause of action on behalf of the entities in the Sage
    Automotive Group.
    On September 19, 2016 the parties entered into a
    stipulation, approved by the court, to appoint retired judge
    Louis M. Meisinger as the referee to oversee and adjudicate all
    aspects of the appraisal process, including selecting the
    appraisers, determining the buyout price, and setting a deadline
    for Michael and Joseph to pay the buyout price. The order stated
    that “Judge Meisinger’s determinations in this regard will be
    final, and all parties expressly waive any right to contest,
    challenge, or object to such rulings . . . .”
    The parties entered into another stipulated order on
    January 5, 2017 to govern the appraisal and buyout proceeding.
    That order provided, among other things, the appraisal and
    buyout process would include the 14 entity defendants named in
    the first amended complaint, plus five additional limited liability
    companies (collectively, the buyout entities). The five limited
    liability companies that were not named defendants in any of the
    three causes of action for involuntary dissolution, but that were
    subject to the appraisal and buyout process by stipulation, were
    UCNP 3, UCNP 4, UCNP 5, UCNP 6, and UCNP 8 (collectively,
    the UCNP entities). To allow the appraisers to value each entity,
    the order required the parties to give the appraisers a variety of
    information, including organizational agreements, historical and
    projected financial data, and real estate holdings. The
    stipulation provided that, after the appraisers submitted their
    written reports to the parties and Judge Meisinger, the parties
    5
    would meet and confer to try to reach agreement on the valuation
    assigned to each entity and the overall value of Leonard’s one-
    third interest in the buyout entities, “which shall constitute the
    buy-out price to be paid by Michael and Joseph to Leonard.” If
    the parties were unable to agree on a buyout price, Judge
    Meisinger would set the price following a hearing.
    On July 25, 2017, following a contested appraisal process,
    Judge Meisinger submitted a recommendation and proposed
    order confirming the value of Leonard’s interests in the buyout
    entities was $40,237,000 and stating that, if Michael and Joseph
    did not pay Leonard that amount by September 11, 2017, the
    buyout entities (including the UCNP entities) would be wound up
    and dissolved. Judge Meisinger’s recommendation also stated
    that, under the September 19, 2016 stipulation and order, his
    findings were “‘final’ and ‘all parties expressly waive any right to
    contest, challenge, or object to such rulings before’” the court. On
    July 28, 2017 the trial court approved the referee’s
    recommendation and entered it as the court’s order and
    alternative decree.
    Michael and Joseph did not pay Leonard by September 11,
    2017, but they did file a notice of appeal from the July 28, 2017
    order and alternative decree. Michael and Joseph subsequently
    filed requests to dismiss that appeal, and on May 31, 2018 this
    court granted those requests and dismissed the appeal.2
    Meanwhile, on September 27, 2017 the trial court appointed a
    2     We take judicial notice of the May 31, 2018 order of
    dismissal in Schrage v. Schrage (B285049) under Evidence Code
    sections 452, subdivision (d), and 459. The notice of appeal in
    this case purports to appeal again from the July 28, 2017 order.
    We dismiss the second appeal from that order as untimely.
    6
    receiver to wind up and dissolve the buyout entities. In Schrage I
    we modified and affirmed an order granting Leonard’s motion for
    attorneys’ fees and other expenses incurred in the appraisal
    process and in obtaining certain injunctive relief during that
    process. (Schrage I, supra, B288478.)
    B.     The Trial Court Enters a Net Judgment of
    Approximately $31 Million in Favor of Leonard and
    Against Michael and Joseph
    A bifurcated court trial began in April 2018 on Leonard’s
    cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty and on Michael and
    Joseph’s cross-complaint. Following almost two months of
    testimony, the court on October 12, 2018 issued a tentative
    decision finding Michael and Joseph breached their fiduciary
    duties to Leonard, awarding Leonard compensatory damages
    offset by an amount for Leonard’s unclean hands, finding Michael
    and Joseph acted with malice, oppression, and fraud, and ruling
    against Michael and Joseph on their cross-complaint. The court
    began the punitive damages phase of the trial on November 26,
    2018.
    On March 12, 2019 the court entered judgment in favor of
    Leonard and against Michael and Joseph in the amount of
    approximately $31 million. The judgment consisted of
    $962,903.13 on the first, second, and third causes of action for
    involuntary dissolution,3 $24,418,473 in compensatory damages
    3    Michael and Joseph appealed from this portion of the
    judgment in Schrage I, and we modified the amount to strike
    $561,393.63 in injunction-related attorneys’ fees, leaving an
    7
    on Leonard’s cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty offset by
    $3,506,412 for Leonard’s unclean hands, and punitive damages of
    $5 million against Michael and $5 million against Joseph.
    Michael and Joseph filed motions to vacate and amend the
    judgment and for a new trial. Michael and Joseph argued the
    trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and personal
    jurisdiction over the UCNP entities for the July 28, 2017
    alternative decree and the September 27, 2017 order appointing a
    receiver to wind up and dissolve the buyout entities, which made
    those orders void as a matter of law; the “one judgment rule” and
    claim preclusion (which they referred to as res judicata) barred
    Leonard’s cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty because the
    appraisal and buyout process should have included the value of
    that cause of action; the trial court erred in awarding
    compensatory and punitive damages on Leonard’s cause of action
    for breach of fiduciary duty; and Michael and Joseph’s affirmative
    defense of unclean hands precluded any recovery by Leonard on
    his cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty.
    The trial judge was unavailable to hear Michael’s and
    Joseph’s postjudgment motions, and another judge heard them.
    Following a hearing, the court denied the motions, and Michael
    and Joseph timely appealed from the judgment and the
    postjudgment orders.4
    award of $401,509.50 for referee fees and appraisal-related
    attorneys’ fees. (Schrage I, supra, B288478.)
    4      Joseph Schrage died after the trial court entered judgment
    in this action, and the executor of his estate filed the notice of
    appeal.
    8
    DISCUSSION
    Michael and Joseph argue the alternative decree and
    subsequent orders and judgment are void as a matter of law
    because the trial court lacked jurisdiction to order the appraisal
    and dissolution of the UCNP entities; Leonard lacked standing to
    assert his cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty because his
    claims were derivative, not individual; the trial court exceeded its
    jurisdiction by failing in the appraisal and buyout process to
    assess the economic impact of the cause of action for breach of
    fiduciary duty; the election of remedies doctrine, the “one
    judgment rule,” and claim preclusion barred Leonard’s cause of
    action for breach of fiduciary duty; the trial court erred in
    awarding compensatory and punitive damages for Leonard’s
    cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty; and Michael and
    Joseph’s affirmative defense of unclean hands precluded any
    recovery by Leonard for his cause of action for breach of fiduciary
    duty. We conclude the standing argument has merit, the
    jurisdictional argument does not, and we do not reach the other
    issues.
    A.     The Buyout Statutes
    As we explained in Schrage I, the “statutory buyout
    provisions of the Corporations Code provide a defendant in an
    involuntary dissolution action with a mechanism for avoiding
    dissolution by purchasing the plaintiff’s shares or other interests.
    [Citations.] Section 2000, subdivision (a), which applies to
    corporations, states that, ‘[i]n any suit for involuntary
    dissolution, . . . the corporation or, if it does not elect to purchase,
    the holders of 50 percent or more of the voting power of the
    9
    corporation (the “purchasing parties”) may avoid the dissolution
    of the corporation and the appointment of any receiver by
    purchasing for cash the shares owned by the plaintiffs or by the
    shareholders so initiating the proceeding (the “moving parties”)
    at their fair value.’ If the parties are unable to agree on the fair
    value of the shares, and the purchasing parties post a bond with
    sufficient security to pay the moving parties’ estimated
    reasonable expenses, ‘the court upon application of the
    purchasing parties . . . shall stay the winding up and dissolution
    proceeding and shall proceed to ascertain and fix the fair value of
    the shares owned by the moving parties.’” (Schrage I, supra,
    B288478.)
    “Section 2000, subdivision (c), prescribes the procedure for
    determining the fair value of the shares and the relief available
    to the moving parties if the shares are not purchased. That
    provision states in relevant part: ‘The court shall appoint three
    disinterested appraisers to appraise the fair value of the shares
    owned by the moving parties, and shall make an order referring
    the matter to the appraisers so appointed for the purpose of
    ascertaining the value. . . . The award of the appraisers or of a
    majority of them, when confirmed by the court, shall be final and
    conclusive upon all parties. The court shall enter a decree, which
    shall provide in the alternative for winding up and dissolution of
    the corporation unless payment is made for the shares within the
    time specified by the decree.’ Sections 17707.03 and 15908.02
    contain substantively identical buyout provisions for limited
    liability companies and limited partnerships, respectively.”
    (Schrage I, supra, B288478.)
    “The statutory buyout procedure is ‘a special proceeding’
    that, ‘once initiated, “supplants” a cause of action for involuntary
    10
    dissolution.’ [Citations.] ‘In such a proceeding, [the] purchasing
    parties aspire to buy out the moving party, with minimal
    expenditure of time and money that would otherwise be spent in
    litigation, in order to preserve the corporation. If they . . . cannot
    pay the purchase price, or decide not to do so, then both sides
    must walk away, receiving pro rata the proceeds resulting from
    dissolution of the corporation. On the other hand, if the
    purchasing parties tender the amount determined by the court,
    the moving party cannot reject the share price as being too low.’
    [Citation.] The buyout procedure ‘does not determine whether
    the corporation should be dissolved, but instead, provides the
    plaintiff and defendant with a statutory remedy without [a] trial’
    on the merits.” (Schrage I, supra, B288478; see Ontiveros v.
    Constable (2018) 
    27 Cal.App.5th 259
    , 277 [“A value of the
    corporation’s stock is determined and then the defendant has a
    period by which it is to pay the plaintiff for its stock. If the
    defendant does not do so, a judicial decree will dissolve the
    corporation.”].)
    B.    Michael and Joseph Cannot Collaterally Attack the
    Alternative Decree
    Michael and Joseph contend the alternative decree and
    “confirming judgments and orders” are void and unenforceable
    because the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to order
    the appraisal and buyout of the five UCNP entities.5 The
    5     Michael and Joseph do not argue the trial court lacked
    personal jurisdiction over the UCNP entities, even though the
    two brothers claim they made that argument in their motions for
    a new trial and for an order vacating the judgment, and even
    11
    alternative decree, however, was an appealable order. (See
    § 2000, subd. (c); Cotton v. Expo Power Systems, Inc. (2009)
    
    170 Cal.App.4th 1371
    , 1376; Dickson v. Rehmke (2008)
    
    164 Cal.App.4th 469
    , 476.) Michael and Joseph had an
    opportunity to challenge that order in their appeal from the
    alternative decree, but they dismissed the appeal, making that
    order final. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 913; Estate of Sapp (2019)
    
    36 Cal.App.5th 86
    , 100; Patchett v. Bergamot Station, Ltd. (2006)
    
    143 Cal.App.4th 1390
    , 1396; Schrage I, supra, B288478.)
    Nevertheless, Michael and Joseph can challenge it in this appeal
    if it is a void order, because a party may collaterally attack a void
    judgment or order at any time. (Falahati v. Kondo (2005)
    
    127 Cal.App.4th 823
    , 830, fn. 9; accord, Deutsche Bank National
    Trust Co. v. Pyle (2017) 
    13 Cal.App.5th 513
    , 526-527; see Code
    Civ. Proc., § 473, subd. (d) [“[t]he court . . . may, on motion of
    either party after notice to the other party, set aside any void
    judgment or order”].)
    A judgment or order that is not void but “merely” voidable,
    however, is generally not subject to collateral attack. (See People
    v. American Contractors Indemnity Co. (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 653
    , 661
    (American Contractors); Adoption of Myah M. (2011)
    
    201 Cal.App.4th 1518
    , 1531.) “When a court has fundamental
    jurisdiction, but acts in excess of its jurisdiction, its act or
    judgment is merely voidable. [Citations.] That is, its act or
    judgment is valid until it is set aside, and a party may be
    precluded from setting it aside by ‘principles of estoppel, disfavor
    of collateral attack or res judicata.’ [Citation.] Errors which are
    merely in excess of jurisdiction should be challenged directly, for
    though their opening brief on appeal cites law that a judgment is
    void if the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction.
    12
    example by motion to vacate the judgment, or on appeal, and are
    generally not subject to collateral attack once the judgment is
    final unless ‘unusual circumstances were present which
    prevented an earlier and more appropriate attack.’” (American
    Contractors, at p. 661; see Adoption of Myah M., at p. 1531 [“A
    claim that does not concern the trial court’s fundamental subject
    matter jurisdiction is waived if not timely asserted.”].) We review
    de novo the trial court’s ruling that neither the alternative decree
    nor the judgment is void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    (See Mack v. All Counties Trustee Services, Inc. (2018)
    
    26 Cal.App.5th 935
    , 940; Talley v. Valuation Counselors Group,
    Inc. (2010) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 132
    , 146.)
    1.    Michael and Joseph Cannot Collaterally Attack
    the Alternative Decree as a Void Order Because
    the Trial Court Had Fundamental Jurisdiction
    To Adjudicate the Buyout Proceeding
    a.     Applicable Law
    “A judgment or order is void when there is an absence of
    fundamental jurisdiction. However, an act in excess of
    jurisdiction simply renders an order of judgment voidable. ‘Lack
    of jurisdiction in its most fundamental or strict sense means an
    entire absence of . . . authority over the subject matter or the
    parties. . . .’ [Citation.] In contrast, a court acts in excess of
    jurisdiction in the broader sense ‘where, though the court has
    jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties in the
    fundamental sense, it has no “jurisdiction” (or power) to act
    except in a particular manner, or to give certain kinds of relief, or
    to act without the occurrence of certain procedural prerequisites.’
    13
    [Citation.] ‘Action “in excess of jurisdiction” by a court that has
    jurisdiction in the “fundamental sense” . . . is not void, but only
    voidable.’” (Adoption of Myah M., supra, 201 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1531; see In re Marriage of Goddard (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 49
    , 56
    [“A court can lack fundamental authority over the subject matter,
    question presented, or party, making its judgment void, or it can
    merely act in excess of its jurisdiction or defined power, rendering
    the judgment voidable.”]; see also American Contractors, 
    supra, 33
     Cal.4th at pp. 660-661; People v. North River Ins. Co. (2020)
    
    58 Cal.App.5th 300
    , 311-313; Torjesen v. Mansdorf (2016)
    
    1 Cal.App.5th 111
    , 117 (Torjesen).)
    “Subject matter jurisdiction . . . is the power of the court
    over a cause of action or to act in a particular way.” (Greener v.
    Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 1028
    , 1035; see
    People v. Superior Court (Mitchell) (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 451
    ,
    458.) “[L]ack of subject matter jurisdiction means the entire
    absence of power to hear or determine a case; i.e., an absence of
    authority over the subject matter.” (Guardianship of Ariana K.
    (2004) 
    120 Cal.App.4th 690
    , 701; see Abelleira v. District Court of
    Appeal (1941) 
    17 Cal.2d 280
    , 288 (Abelleira) [“A court has no
    jurisdiction to hear or determine a case where the type of
    proceeding or the amount in controversy is beyond the
    jurisdiction defined for that particular court by statute or
    constitutional provision.”]; 2 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2020 supp.)
    Jurisdiction, § 44 [“A court without authority to try actions of the
    type or class to which the action belongs is ‘not competent,’ i.e., it
    has no jurisdiction of the subject matter.”].)
    “Subject matter jurisdiction is conferred by constitutional
    or statutory law.” (Guardianship of Ariana K., supra,
    120 Cal.App.4th at p. 701.) In general, article VI, section 10 of
    14
    the California Constitution confers broad authority on the
    superior courts. (Donaldson v. National Marine, Inc. (2005)
    
    35 Cal.4th 503
    , 512; see Cal. Const., art. VI, § 10 [except as
    otherwise provided, “[s]uperior courts have original jurisdiction
    in all other causes”]; see also Code Civ. Proc., § 410.10 [a “court of
    this state may exercise jurisdiction on any basis not inconsistent
    with the Constitution of this state or of the United States”].)
    “A court does not necessarily act without subject matter
    jurisdiction merely by issuing a judgment going beyond the
    sphere of action prescribed by law. ‘Speaking generally, any acts
    which exceed the defined power of a court in any instance,
    whether that power be defined by constitutional provision,
    express statutory declaration, or rules developed by the courts
    and followed under the doctrine of stare decisis, are in excess of
    jurisdiction.’” (Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency v.
    McGrath (2005) 
    128 Cal.App.4th 1093
    , 1101; see American
    Contractors, 
    supra, 33
     Cal.4th at p. 661 [“‘“[W]hen a statute
    authorizes [a] prescribed procedure, and the court acts contrary
    to the authority thus conferred, it has exceeded its
    jurisdiction.”’”].)
    b.     The Buyout Statutes Conferred Subject
    Matter Jurisdiction for the Buyout
    Proceeding
    Michael and Joseph do not argue the trial court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction over Leonard’s causes of action for
    involuntary dissolution. Nor do they contend the court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the appraisal and buyout
    proceeding for the 14 entity defendants Leonard named in those
    causes of action or to dissolve them. They argue only that the
    15
    “addition of the UCNP entities in the buyout proceedings, when
    they were not the subjects of a pending judicial dissolution cause
    of action, rendered the alternative decree, and ensuing judgments
    and orders,” void.6
    To determine whether an error is jurisdictional in a
    fundamental sense, courts “look first to the language of the
    statute.” (American Contractors, 
    supra, 33
     Cal.4th at p. 661; see
    In re Marriage of Goddard, 
    supra, 33
     Cal.4th at p. 54; People v.
    North River Ins. Co., 
    supra, 58
     Cal.App.5th at p. 313.) For
    6      We do not address Michael and Joseph’s argument the trial
    court lacked subject matter and personal jurisdiction to order
    “post judgment, Sage Vermont, nunc pro tunc, as a ‘dissolved
    entity’ under the control of the receiver to be wound up.” There is
    no indication in the record Michael and Joseph appealed from
    that order, which was issued on August 16, 2019, after Michael
    and Joseph filed their notices of appeal in this action, and which
    is not included in the record of this appeal. Even assuming the
    August 16, 2019 order was appealable, we do not have
    jurisdiction to review it in this appeal. (See In re Baycol
    Cases I & II (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 751
    , 761, fn. 8 [“if an order is
    appealable, [an] appeal must be taken or the right to appellate
    review is forfeited”];Williams v. Impax Laboratories, Inc. (2019)
    
    41 Cal.App.5th 1060
    , 1071 [same].) In addition, the vast majority
    of Michael and Joseph’s argument appears in a footnote. (See
    Sabi v. Sterling (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 916
    , 947 [“Footnotes are
    not the appropriate vehicle for stating contentions on appeal.”];
    Evans v. Centerstone Development Co. (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 151
    , 160 [raising an issue in a two-page footnote “is a violation of
    court rules that require arguments to be contained in discrete
    sections with headings summarizing the point”]; see also Holden
    v. City of San Diego (2019) 
    43 Cal.App.5th 404
    , 419-420 [an
    “appellant cannot bury a substantive legal argument in a footnote
    and hope to avoid waiver of that argument”].)
    16
    example, in American Contractors the Supreme Court considered
    whether the trial court lacked fundamental jurisdiction when it
    declared a bond forfeited without complying with two
    “jurisdictional prerequisites” in Penal Code sections 1305 and
    1306. (See generally People v. Safety National Casualty Corp.
    (2016) 
    62 Cal.4th 703
    , 710 [describing the jurisdictional
    prerequisites of Penal Code sections 1305 and 1306].) The
    Supreme Court observed that neither statute declared the surety
    released or the bond exonerated if the court failed to comply with
    those prerequisites under the circumstances in that case.
    (American Contractors, at p. 661.) “Based on what sections 1305
    and 1306 said and did not say, the Supreme Court [in American
    Contractors] concluded the failure ‘to follow the procedural
    requirements to enter judgment properly did not affect the court’s
    statutory control and jurisdiction over the bond.’ [Citation.]
    Accordingly, the court held the trial ‘court’s failure to comply
    with section 1306 . . . “does not effect a fundamental loss of
    jurisdiction, i.e., ‘an entire absence of power to hear or determine
    the case, an absence of authority over the subject matter of the
    parties.’”’” (North River Ins. Co., at p. 314, quoting American
    Contractors, at pp. 662-663.)
    The buyout statutes established the court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction to conduct and adjudicate the buyout proceeding and
    to dissolve the entities subject to that proceeding. As discussed,
    the relevant language of section 2000 states: “In any suit for
    involuntary dissolution, . . . the holders of 50 percent or more of
    the voting power of the corporation (the ‘purchasing parties’) may
    avoid the dissolution of the corporation and the appointment of
    any receiver by purchasing for cash the shares owned by the
    plaintiffs . . . (the ‘moving parties’) at their fair value. [¶] . . . [¶]
    17
    . . . [T]he court upon application of the purchasing parties, . . . in
    the pending action . . . , shall stay the winding up and dissolution
    proceeding and shall proceed to ascertain and fix the fair value of
    the shares owned by the moving parties. [¶] . . . The court shall
    enter a decree, which shall provide in the alternative for winding
    up and dissolution of the corporation unless payment is made for
    the shares within the time specified by the decree. If the
    purchasing parties do not make payment for the shares within
    the time specified, judgment shall be entered against them and
    the surety or sureties on the bond for the amount of the expenses
    (including attorneys’ fees) of the moving parties.” (§ 2000,
    subds. (a)-(c), italics added; see §§ 15908.02, 17707.03.) Thus, if
    the purchasing parties follow through on buying out the minority
    shareholder (or member or partner), the buyout proceeding
    successfully avoids litigation and the dissolution of the
    corporation. But if the purchasing parties are unable or
    unwilling to buy out the minority shareholder, the entity subject
    to the proceeding is wound up and dissolved.
    In compliance with the buyout statutes, the trial court on
    August 23, 2016 granted Michael and Joseph’s motion to stay
    Leonard’s involuntary dissolution causes of action, thereby
    establishing subject matter jurisdiction for the buyout
    proceeding. The court still had subject matter jurisdiction over
    the proceeding on January 5, 2017, when Michael, Joseph, and
    Leonard stipulated to include the UCNP entities in the
    proceeding. And the court had subject matter jurisdiction on
    July 28, 2017, when it issued the alternative decree providing
    that the entity defendants and the UCNP entities would be
    wound up and dissolved if Michael and Joseph did not pay
    Leonard by September 11, 2017.
    18
    The buyout statutes do not address circumstances where,
    as here, the owners of an entity all agree to submit that entity
    (or, here, several entities) to an existing buyout proceeding over
    which the trial court undoubtedly had authority. But considering
    the statutes’ silence on this issue, the broad authority conferred
    on superior courts (including the power to dissolve companies
    organized under the laws of California), and cases holding that
    neither the addition of nonparties to an action nor the violation of
    certain statutory requirements (even where “jurisdictional”)
    divests a court of its subject matter jurisdiction, we conclude the
    addition of the UCNP entities to the existing buyout proceeding
    did not undermine the court’s “inherent authority to deal with
    the case or matter before it.” (Law Offices of Ian Herzog v. Law
    Offices of Joseph M. Fredrics (1998) 
    61 Cal.App.4th 672
    , 680; see
    American Contractors, 
    supra, 33
     Cal.4th at p. 661; Abelleira,
    supra, 17 Cal.2d at p. 288; Conservatorship of O’Connor (1996)
    
    48 Cal.App.4th 1076
    , 1087-1088.)
    For example, in Serrano v. Stefan Merli Plastering Co., Inc.
    (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 1014
     the court held the trial court
    adjudicating a personal injury action had subject matter
    jurisdiction to adjudicate a fee dispute between the plaintiff and a
    nonparty court reporting company. Even though the dispute
    “was not within the scope of the pleadings and pertained to a
    third party” (id. at p. 1028), the matter involved a right created
    by California discovery statutes and the court’s authority to
    control the conduct of its ministerial officers, and the dispute was
    “typical of those commonly adjudicated in California courts” (id.
    at pp. 1029-1030). Similarly, in Lovett v. Carrasco (1998)
    
    63 Cal.App.4th 48
     the court held the trial court had subject
    matter jurisdiction to adjudicate third parties’ medical lien
    19
    claims in an underlying personal injury action. (Id. at p. 54.)
    The court in Lovett stated that “adjudication of claimants’
    medical lien claims is clearly within the general subject matter
    jurisdiction of the superior court.” (Ibid.) Thus, the
    “jurisdictional issue [was] whether the court acted in excess of its
    jurisdiction by adjudicating the liens in the [underlying] action,”
    not whether the court had fundamental jurisdiction. (Ibid.; see
    Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell v. Shine, Browne & Diamond
    (1995) 
    36 Cal.App.4th 1011
    , 1021-1023 [trial court in an
    underlying personal injury action had subject matter jurisdiction
    to issue an order denying a claim under an attorney’s lien, even
    though contractual liens generally are enforced in an
    independent action by the attorney against the client].)
    Nor did the fact the trial court arguably acted contrary to
    the authority conferred by the buyout statutes divest the court of
    subject matter jurisdiction. In Torjesen the plaintiff judgment
    creditor filed a petition under the Enforcement of Judgments Law
    (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 680.010 et seq.) to invalidate a third party
    claim on a deceased judgment debtor’s property. (Torjesen,
    supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 113.) The Enforcement of Judgments
    Law, however, provides that, “[a]fter the death of the judgment
    debtor, enforcement of a judgment against property in the
    judgment debtor’s estate is governed by the Probate Code, and
    not by this title.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 686.020.) The trial court
    nevertheless granted the judgment creditor’s petition under the
    wrong statute. (Torjesen, at p. 113.) The third party claimant
    did not appeal from that ruling, but two years later filed a motion
    to vacate the order, arguing the trial court did not have
    jurisdiction to proceed under the Enforcement of Judgments Law.
    (Ibid.) The court in Torjesen rejected that argument: “Without
    20
    question, the superior court has jurisdiction over disputes related
    to the enforcement of judgments and the validity of claims to
    property that has been levied upon. [Citations.] The statutory
    scheme does not deprive the superior court of jurisdiction over
    these matters. It simply limits the manner in which a judgment
    creditor may enforce a judgment against a deceased judgment
    debtor’s property.” (Id. at p. 118.) The court in Torjesen agreed
    that the superior court erred in allowing the judgment creditor to
    proceed under the Enforcement of Judgments Law, but the court
    held “that error was an act in excess of jurisdiction” rendering the
    order voidable, not void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    (Ibid.; see Barquis v. Merchants Collection Assn. (1972) 
    7 Cal.3d 94
    , 97-98, 99 [default judgments erroneously entered in favor of a
    collection agency that knowingly filed “statutorily inadequate
    complaints” in the wrong counties were not void for lack of
    “‘jurisdiction’ in the fundamental sense”]; Law Offices of Ian
    Herzog v. Law Offices of Joseph M. Fredrics, supra,
    61 Cal.App.4th at p. 680 [order compelling arbitration in the
    absence of an arbitration agreement, in violation of Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1281, was only an act in excess of jurisdiction];
    In re Marriage of Hinman (1992) 
    6 Cal.App.4th 711
    , 718 [“while
    the court’s award [granting joint custody to a nonbiological
    parent] may have been beyond its statutory authority, the court
    did not lack jurisdiction in the fundamental sense”].)
    Thus, even if the trial court erred by including the five
    UCNP entities in the appraisal and buyout proceeding, the trial
    court undoubtedly had subject matter jurisdiction over the
    proceeding. Michael and Joseph do not contest the court’s
    jurisdiction to hear and determine the case with regard to the
    14 entity defendants. Neither the voluntary addition of the five
    21
    UCNP entities to the buyout proceeding nor the trial court’s
    purported error in issuing the alternative decree over entities
    that were not parties to the involuntary dissolution causes of
    action disturbed or eliminated the court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction. At most, the alternative decree was an act in excess
    of the statutory authority conferred by the buyout statutes. (See
    Barquis v. Merchants Collection Assn., supra, 7 Cal.3d at p. 99;
    People v. North River Ins. Co., 
    supra, 58
     Cal.App.5th at p. 314.)
    The cases cited by Michael and Joseph do not hold
    otherwise. In general, those cases stand for the proposition that
    the court’s power to conduct a special proceeding under the
    buyout statutes depends on the existence of a cause of action for
    involuntary dissolution. (See Boschetti v. Pacific Bay
    Investments, Inc. (2019) 
    32 Cal.App.5th 1059
    , 1066 [“‘the right of
    buyout under section 15908.02 is dependent upon a cause of
    action for judicial dissolution’”]; Ontiveros v. Constable, supra,
    27 Cal.App.5th at p. 271 [“a party’s right under section 2000
    depends entirely on the existence of a cause of action for
    involuntary dissolution of a corporation”]; Kennedy v. Kennedy
    (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 1474
    , 1481 [“[u]pon dismissal of [a]
    dissolution cause of action, there is no dissolution to avoid and,
    thus, no right to buy out plaintiff’s interests” under section 2000];
    Panakosta, Partners, LP v. Hammer Lane Management, LLC
    (2011) 
    199 Cal.App.4th 612
    , 635 [“[w]ithout a pending judicial
    dissolution action, the trial court was without jurisdiction to
    allow the buyout petition to proceed”]; Dabney v. Dabney (2002)
    
    104 Cal.App.4th 379
    , 383 [“no court has inherent authority to
    decide a matter for which there is no legally recognized cause of
    action”]; Housing Group v. United Nat. Ins. Co. (2001)
    
    90 Cal.App.4th 1106
    , 1107-1108 [pending litigation is required
    22
    before parties may stipulate to the appointment of a judicial
    referee or temporary judge to secure a settlement enforceable by
    the court].) Unlike those cases, here there were causes of action
    for involuntary dissolution pending at the time Michael and
    Joseph moved to stay them and initiate the buyout proceeding
    and at the time Michael, Joseph, and Leonard agreed to add the
    five UCNP entities to the pending proceeding.
    Michael and Joseph also argue the trial court could not
    have subject matter jurisdiction unless Leonard added the UCNP
    entities as defendants to a pending cause of action. But third
    parties may appear and be bound by a judgment without being
    named in a complaint. (See People ex rel. Becerra v. Superior
    Court (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 486
    , 493; Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v.
    Sparks Construction, Inc. (2004) 
    114 Cal.App.4th 1135
    ,
    1145-1147; In re Marriage of Williams (1985) 
    163 Cal.App.3d 753
    ,
    759-760.) As stated, Michael and Joseph do not argue the trial
    court lacked personal jurisdiction over the five UCNP entities,
    and in any event the UCNP entities’ participation in the
    appraisal and buyout proceeding without objection (to this day)
    acknowledged the authority of the court in that proceeding. (See
    Rockefeller Technology Investments (Asia) VII v. Changzhou
    SinoType Technology Co., Ltd. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 125
    , 139 [“‘a party
    may voluntarily submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court, or
    may, by failing to seasonably object thereto, waive his right to
    question jurisdiction over him’”]; Becerra, at p. 493 [“a person can
    become a party to an action, even if not named in the complaint,
    by appearing and participating without any objection by the
    other parties”]; Thomson v. Anderson (2003) 
    113 Cal.App.4th 258
    ,
    266 [“‘because the personal jurisdiction requirement is a waivable
    right, there are a “variety of legal arrangements” by which a
    23
    litigant may give “express or implied consent to the personal
    jurisdiction of the court”’”].)7
    7      We also question whether Michael and Joseph have
    standing to assert this argument on behalf of the UCNP entities.
    (See City of Riverside v. Horspool (2014) 
    223 Cal.App.4th 670
    ,
    678 [a party may appeal “only that portion of the judgment
    adverse to the appealing party’s interest”]; In re Marriage of
    Hinman, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 719, fn. 3 [an “appellant may
    only complain of errors which injuriously affect her”]; Nichols v.
    Nichols (1933) 
    135 Cal.App. 488
    , 491 [an appellant cannot “urge
    errors which affect only his coparties who do not appeal, and such
    errors can be reviewed only at the instance of the parties affected
    thereby”]; see also Brenner v. Universal Health Services of
    Rancho Springs, Inc. (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 589
    , 605 [“As a
    general rule, a third party does not have standing to bring a
    claim asserting a violation of someone else’s rights.”].) After all,
    as we will discuss, Michael and Joseph argue Leonard lacked
    standing to assert his cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty
    for the very reason the alleged violations harmed only the entity
    defendants, not Leonard. Similarly, Michael and Joseph
    arguably lack standing to argue on behalf of the UCNP entities
    that the alternative decree and judgment cannot bind the UCNP
    entities. Although the buyout statutes give any shareholder
    aggrieved by an alternative decree standing to appeal the court’s
    decision (§ 2000, subd. (c); § 17707.03, subd. (c)(3); § 15908.02,
    subd. (d)), Michael and Joseph dismissed their appeal from the
    alternative decree. And they do not argue on appeal they were
    injured by the court’s exercise of jurisdiction over the UCNP
    entities.
    24
    2.     Michael and Joseph Cannot Collaterally Attack
    the Alternative Decree as a Voidable Order
    As discussed, a party generally may not collaterally attack
    errors in excess of jurisdiction once the judgment or order is final
    unless there are “unusual circumstances” that prevented the
    party from making an “earlier and more appropriate attack.”
    (American Contractors, supra, 33 Cal.4th at p. 661; see People v.
    North River Ins. Co., 
    supra, 58
     Cal.App.5th at p. 311; Torjesen,
    supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 118.) No unusual circumstances
    prevented Michael and Joseph from an earlier attack on the
    alternative decree.8 Indeed, Michael and Joseph could have
    appealed, and did appeal, from the alternative decree, but they
    dismissed their appeal. And the UCNP entities never objected to
    their inclusion in the buyout proceeding or appealed from the
    alternative decree or judgment. (See Travis v. Brand (2021)
    
    62 Cal.App.5th 240
    , 254 [nonparties have standing to appeal
    where “the judgment has a ‘res judicata effect’” or is otherwise
    binding on the nonparty], review granted June 23, 2021,
    8     The January 5, 2017 stipulated order gave Michael and
    Joseph the right to raise any dispute concerning the proceedings
    with Judge Meisinger. According to the alternative decree, after
    the appraisal and valuation process was complete Michael and
    Joseph asked Judge Meisinger for the first time to make discrete
    findings on the value of the constituent entities comprising the
    Sage Automotive Group (which included the UCNP entities).
    Judge Meisinger denied Michael and Joseph’s request “for the
    reasons stated in the transcript of that hearing.” Michael and
    Joseph do not challenge that aspect of Judge Meisinger’s decision
    or the alternative decree, nor did they include the transcript of
    the hearing before Judge Meisinger in the record on appeal.
    25
    S268480; Marsh v. Mountain Zephyr, Inc. (1996) 
    43 Cal.App.4th 289
    , 295 [same].)
    Moreover, a “party may be precluded from setting aside a
    voidable act or judgment made in excess of jurisdiction by
    ‘“principles of estoppel.”’ [Citation.] ‘When . . . the court has
    jurisdiction of the subject, a party who seeks or consents to action
    beyond the court’s power as defined by statute or decisional rule
    may be estopped to complain of the ensuing action in excess of
    jurisdiction. [Citations.] Whether he shall be estopped depends
    on the importance of the irregularity not only to the parties but to
    the functioning of the courts and in some instances on other
    considerations of public policy. A litigant who has stipulated to a
    procedure in excess of jurisdiction may be estopped to question it
    when “[t]o hold otherwise would permit the parties to trifle with
    the courts.”’” (Mt. Holyoke Homes, LP v. California Coastal Com.
    (2008) 
    167 Cal.App.4th 830
    , 842; see Garibotti v. Hinkle (2015)
    
    243 Cal.App.4th 470
    , 481 [“‘The doctrine of estoppel to contest
    jurisdiction . . . “provides that when a court has subject matter
    jurisdiction over an action, ‘a party who seeks or consents to
    action beyond the court’s power as defined by statute or
    decisional rule may be estopped to complain of the ensuing action
    in excess of jurisdiction.’”’”].)
    Michael and Joseph agreed to include the five UCNP
    entities in the buyout proceeding and did not question the
    validity of the court’s alternative decree for 18 months (when
    they first raised the issue on appeal from the award of attorneys’
    fees and costs in Schrage I).9 They are estopped from arguing the
    9     In Schrage I we rejected Michael and Joseph’s argument
    the alternative decree was void for lack of jurisdiction because
    26
    trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction by including the
    UCNP entities in the alternative decree. (See Kristine H. v.
    Lisa R. (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 156
    , 166 [“Given that the court had
    subject matter jurisdiction to determine the parentage of the
    unborn child, and that [the plaintiff] invoked that jurisdiction,
    stipulated to the issuance of a judgment, and enjoyed the benefits
    of that judgment for nearly two years, it would be unfair both to
    [the defendant] and the child to permit [the plaintiff] to challenge
    the validity of that judgment.”]; Torjesen, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 116 [a court order in excess of jurisdiction “was not subject to
    collateral attack two years after it was entered”]; Mt. Holyoke
    Homes, LP v. California Coastal Com., supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 842 [applicants could not set aside a voidable judgment where
    the applicants did not question jurisdiction until three and a half
    years after the latest date on which it contended the Coastal
    Commission lost jurisdiction].)
    Michael and Joseph attempt to salvage their collateral
    attack on the alternative decree by asserting they “forewarned
    the trial court of this jurisdictional impediment” and agreed only
    to include the UNCP entities in the appraisal, not for purposes of
    the winding up and dissolution that followed their failure to buy
    Leonard’s interest in the appraised entities. This assertion does
    not persuade. First, Michael and Joseph’s so-called forewarning
    appeared in their motion to stay the involuntary dissolution
    causes of action filed six months before their stipulation to
    include the UCNP entities in the appraisal and buyout
    they failed to appeal directly from the order, file a motion under
    Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (d), or file a
    collateral action challenging the order. (Schrage I, supra,
    B288478.)
    27
    proceeding, and it made no mention of the UCNP entities.
    Second, the plain language of the stipulated order undermines
    Michael and Joseph’s position. It is true the stipulated order lists
    the UCNP entities as “Entities to be Valued as Part of the
    Appraisal Engagement,” which in turn is defined as “the
    engagement and qualifications of the appraisers and the
    appraisal process.” But the stipulated order also provides Judge
    Meisinger was to issue an order stating the cumulative value of
    Leonard’s one-third interest in the Sage Automotive Group,
    “which shall constitute the buy-out price to be paid by Michael
    and Joseph to Leonard (the ‘Buy-Out Value’),” and the order
    defines the Sage Automotive Group to include the UCNP entities.
    Thus, Michael and Joseph agreed the amount they had to pay to
    prevent the winding up and dissolution of the Sage Automotive
    Group included the value of the UCNP entities. If Michael and
    Joseph intended only to submit the UCNP entities to the
    appraisal process, they would not have agreed to an aggregate
    buyout value that did not differentiate among individual entities,
    or at least among the entity defendants and the UCNP entities.10
    10    Michael and Joseph recognize their collateral attack on the
    consent decree is limited to jurisdictional arguments. (See
    Kabran v. Sharp Memorial Hospital (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 330
    , 339;
    Armstrong v. Armstrong (1976) 
    15 Cal.3d 942
    , 950-951.) In a nod
    to that limitation, Michael and Joseph argue the trial court
    “exceeded its jurisdiction” by failing to include in the buyout
    value “the economic impact of Leonard’s derivative allegations
    and prayer in his verified complaint.” This is not a jurisdictional
    argument; it is an argument the trial court made a substantive
    error in determining the value of the buyout entities. A
    “mistaken application of law” cannot be collaterally attacked.
    28
    Michael and Joseph are attempting to unwind the
    alternative decree on the basis the trial court erred in doing the
    very thing Michael and Joseph asked the court to do. To approve
    their belated request would invite the very trifling with the
    courts the doctrine of estoppel to contest jurisdiction seeks to
    prevent. (See Lovett v. Carrasco, supra, 63 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 54-55 [allowing a litigant to stipulate to a procedure in excess
    of jurisdiction and then challenge the procedure on appeal, would
    permit the parties “‘“‘to trifle with the courts’”’”]; Law Offices of
    Ian Herzog v. Law Offices of Joseph M. Fredrics, supra,
    61 Cal.App.4th at p. 680 [defendant’s stipulation the court could
    order the parties to arbitration estopped him from attacking
    arbitration award on that basis]; see also Kristine H. v. Lisa R.,
    supra, 37 Cal.4th at p. 166; Mt. Holyoke Homes, LP v. California
    Coastal Com., supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 842; In re Marriage of
    Jackson (2006) 
    136 Cal.App.4th 980
    , 989; Conservatorship of
    O’Connor, supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at p. 1092.)11
    (Armstrong, at pp. 950-951; see Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v.
    Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2010) 
    181 Cal.App.4th 752
    , 767
    [“Errors of substantive law are within the jurisdiction of a court
    and are not typically acts beyond the court’s fundamental
    authority to act.”].)
    11     Michael and Joseph listed in their notices of appeal a “Void
    Judgment” dated September 27, 2017, which was actually the
    trial court’s order appointing a receiver. That order was
    appealable, and Michael and Joseph did not file a timely notice of
    appeal. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a)(7); Wells Fargo
    Financial Leasing, Inc. v. D & M Cabinets (2009) 
    177 Cal.App.4th 59
    , 66.) Because Michael and Joseph do not argue the order was
    void, except as a consequence of the court’s lack of jurisdiction to
    29
    C.    Leonard Lacked Standing To Assert His Cause of
    Action for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    Michael and Joseph contend Leonard did not have standing
    to assert an individual cause of action against them for breach of
    fiduciary duty because Leonard sought and received an award of
    damages to the Sage Automotive Group and not to himself.
    Leonard contends that he suffered an individual injury and that,
    in any event, close corporations like those comprising the Sage
    Automotive Group are not subject to the derivative action rule.
    Michael and Joseph have the better argument: The allegations
    in Leonard’s complaint, the evidence at trial, and the court’s
    findings show Leonard’s causes of action were derivative.
    enter the alternative decree, we do not have jurisdiction to
    consider any appeal from the September 27, 2017 order and must
    dismiss the appeal from that order. (See City of Calexico v.
    Bergeson (2021) 
    64 Cal.App.5th 180
    , 189.) And even if we had
    jurisdiction, Michael and Joseph forfeited the argument by failing
    to support it in their briefs with any argument or citation to
    authority. (See Rios v. Singh (2021) 
    65 Cal.App.5th 871
    , 881;
    Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B) [briefs must support each
    point by argument and, if possible, by citation of authority].)
    And, even if we considered the argument on the merits, it would
    fail for the same reasons the argument concerning the alternative
    decree fails.
    Michael and Joseph also appeal from the trial court’s
    postjudgment order denying their motion to set aside the
    judgment under Code of Civil Procedure sections 663 and 663a on
    the same grounds. That order is appealable. (See Ryan v.
    Rosenfeld (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 124
    , 131-135.) We affirm it for the
    same reasons we affirm the judgment of dissolution.
    30
    1.    Applicable Law
    “[M]ajority shareholders, either singly or acting in concert
    to accomplish a joint purpose, have a fiduciary responsibility to
    the minority and to the corporation to use their ability to control
    the corporation in a fair, just, and equitable manner. Majority
    shareholders may not use their power to control corporate
    activities to benefit themselves alone or in a manner detrimental
    to the minority. Any use to which they put the corporation or
    their power to control the corporation must benefit all
    shareholders proportionately and must not conflict with the
    proper conduct of the corporation’s business.” (Jones v. H. F.
    Ahmanson & Co. (1969) 
    1 Cal.3d 93
    , 108 (Jones); accord, Sheley v.
    Harrop (2017) 
    9 Cal.App.5th 1147
    , 1171; see § 17704.09
    [describing the fiduciary duties of members and managers of a
    limited liability company]; Feresi v. The Livery, LLC (2014)
    
    232 Cal.App.4th 419
    , 425 [same]; Everest Investors 8 v. McNeil
    Partners (2003) 
    114 Cal.App.4th 411
    , 424-425 [describing the
    fiduciary obligations in a partnership].)
    A minority shareholder may bring a cause of action for
    breach of fiduciary duty against majority shareholders as an
    individual claim or as a derivative claim, depending on the
    circumstances. (See Daly v. Yessne (2005) 
    131 Cal.App.4th 52
    ,
    63; Jara v. Suprema Meats, Inc. (2004) 
    121 Cal.App.4th 1238
    ,
    1252-1253, 1257-1258 (Jara); see also Sutter v. General
    Petroleum Corp. (1946) 
    28 Cal.2d 525
    , 530 [“a stockholder may
    sue as an individual where he is directly and individually injured
    although the corporation may also have a cause of action for the
    same wrong”]; Goles v. Sawhney (2016) 
    5 Cal.App.5th 1014
    , 1018,
    fn. 3 [“A single cause of action by a shareholder can give rise to
    derivative claims, individual claims, or both.”]; Denevi v. LGCC,
    31
    LLC (2004) 
    121 Cal.App.4th 1211
    , 1222 [same].) But where a
    cause of action seeks to recover for harms to the corporation, the
    shareholders have no direct cause of action “[b]ecause a
    corporation exists as a separate legal entity” (Grosset v. Wenaas
    (2008) 
    42 Cal.4th 1100
    , 1108 (Grosset)) and “is the ultimate
    beneficiary of such a derivative suit” (Patrick v. Alacer Corp.
    (2008) 
    167 Cal.App.4th 995
    , 1003). (See Cotton v. Expo Power
    Systems, Inc., 
    supra, 170
     Cal.App.4th at p. 1380 [“A derivative
    claim is a property right that belongs to the corporation.”].)
    “The shareholders may, however, bring a derivative suit to
    enforce the corporation’s rights and redress its injuries when the
    board of directors fails or refuses to do so. When a derivative suit
    is brought to litigate the rights of the corporation, the corporation
    is an indispensable party and must be joined as a nominal
    defendant.” (Grosset, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 1108; accord, Jones,
    supra, 1 Cal.3d at pp. 106-107; see Patrick v. Alacer Corp., supra,
    167 Cal.App.4th at p. 1004 [“Though the corporation is
    essentially the plaintiff in a derivative action, ‘[w]hen a
    derivative suit is brought to litigate the rights of the corporation,
    the corporation . . . must be joined as a nominal defendant.’”].)
    “An action is deemed derivative ‘“if the gravamen of the
    complaint is injury to the corporation, or to the whole body of its
    stock and property without any severance or distribution among
    individual holders, or it seeks to recover assets for the
    corporation or to prevent the dissipation of its assets.”’
    [Citation.] When a derivative action is successful, the corporation
    is the only party that benefits from any recovery; the
    shareholders derive no benefit ‘“except the indirect benefit
    resulting from a realization upon the corporation’s assets.”’”
    (Grosset, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 1108, fn. omitted; see Bader v.
    32
    Anderson (2009) 
    179 Cal.App.4th 775
    , 793 [“a derivative suit is
    one in which the shareholder seeks ‘redress of the wrong to the
    corporation’”].)
    “‘The stockholder’s individual suit, on the other hand, is a
    suit to enforce a right against the corporation which the
    stockholder possesses as an individual.’” (Jones, supra, 1 Cal.3d
    at p. 107; see Bader v. Anderson, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 793; Denevi v. LGCC, LLC, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1222.)
    For example, “‘[i]f the injury is one to the plaintiff as a
    stockholder and to him individually, and not to the corporation,
    as where the action is based on a contract to which he is a party,
    or on a right belonging severally to him, or on a fraud affecting
    him directly, it is an individual action.’” (Sutter v. General
    Petroleum Corp., supra, 28 Cal.2d at p. 530.) “The individual
    wrong necessary to support a suit by a shareholder need not be
    unique to that plaintiff. The same injury may affect a substantial
    number of shareholders. If the injury is not incidental to an
    injury to the corporation, an individual cause of action exists.”
    (Jones, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 107; see Bader, at p. 793 [“A direct
    (as opposed to a derivative) action is maintainable ‘only if the
    damages [are] not incidental to an injury to the corporation.’”];
    see also Schuster v. Gardner (2005) 
    127 Cal.App.4th 305
    , 313;
    Denevi, at p. 1222; Nelson v. Anderson (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 111
    ,
    124 (Nelson).)
    The principles governing derivative actions in the context
    of corporations apply to limited liability companies and limited
    partnerships. (See Sprengel v. Zbylut (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 1028
    , 1040-1041 [limited liability company]; Everest Investors 8 v.
    McNeil Partners, supra, 114 Cal.App.4th at pp. 425-426 [limited
    partnership].) We review de novo the trial court’s ruling Leonard
    33
    had standing to maintain his cause of action for breach of
    fiduciary duty as an individual claim, rather than a derivative
    claim. (See A.J. Fistes Corp. v. GDL Best Contractors, Inc. (2019)
    
    38 Cal.App.5th 677
    , 687 [standing is a question of law to which
    we apply a de novo standard of review]; Citizens for Amending
    Proposition L v. City of Pomona (2018) 
    28 Cal.App.5th 1159
    , 1174
    [same].)
    2.      Leonard Sought and Recovered Damages for
    Injuries to the Sage Automotive Group
    Leonard alleged Michael and Joseph committed a wide
    variety of misdeeds, including “misappropriat[ing] at least
    $1.7 million of company funds” to open, advertise, and operate a
    Lotus dealership without Leonard’s consent or participation;
    mismanaging the Sage Automotive Group by engaging in
    “dishonest and manipulative accounting practices”; using Sage
    Automotive Group assets for personal gain; undermining
    Leonard’s authority with Sage Automotive Group employees;
    denying Leonard access to Sage Automotive Group’s books,
    records, and bank accounts; ceasing payment for directors and
    officers insurance coverage; and rebranding the Sage Automotive
    Group without Leonard’s consent. Leonard alleged these acts
    “significantly impeded Leonard’s ability to manage or participate
    in the affairs of the [Sage Automotive Group],” “caused damage to
    the [Sage Automotive Group,] and devalued his interest in turn.”
    At trial, Leonard’s expert witness on damages, Gordon
    Klein, calculated Leonard’s damages as one-third the difference
    between the 2015 court-approved valuation in the alternative
    decree and the value of the Sage Automotive Group at the time of
    trial, adjusted for market changes. Klein reviewed the
    34
    dealerships’ financial statements “to ascertain the diminution in
    value which ha[d] occurred” and concluded they collectively had
    declined in value over $65 million since April 2015. Klein
    attributed additional losses to a $3.6 million settlement with the
    Federal Trade Commission that arose from alleged misconduct by
    Michael and Joseph, “[e]xcess payments” to accountants and
    lawyers, and a reserve of $6 million for the anticipated
    settlement of a warranty fraud case brought by Nissan Motor
    Company against Michael and Joseph. Klein opined the total
    “loss in value” of the Sage Automotive Group was over
    $75 million, of which one-third, or approximately $25 million,
    was “[s]uffered by [Leonard]” because he owned one-third of the
    businesses. Klein estimated that, depending on the court’s
    findings, losses due to market forces not attributable to Michael
    and Joseph’s “alleged mismanagement” could reduce Leonard’s
    damages to about $18 million. For this reason, Klein determined
    Leonard’s damages were between $18,311,746 and $24,418,473.
    Klein also testified he did not include in his analysis any
    amounts for Leonard’s claims against Michael and Joseph for
    “‘personal misappropriations’” or “personal aggrandizement,”
    which Klein defined as “taking economic benefits or sums that
    are outside the ordinary course of business and/or were not
    expenses incurred for the economic benefit of the business or its
    partners.” Klein also said he did not analyze whether using Sage
    Automotive Group funds to seed the Lotus dealership caused
    specific losses to the Group. Klein said the scope of his
    assignment was to focus on, “at the core, the diminution in the
    value of the dealerships, plus . . . avoidable liabilities and
    payments that, but for alleged misconduct . . . , should not have
    happened and, therefore, result[ed] in damages.”
    35
    The trial court, in its statement of decision, found Michael
    and Joseph “pushed [Leonard] out” of the Sage Automotive
    Group, leaving him no “meaningful control over its operations”;
    engaged in self-dealing by diverting Sage Automotive Group
    funds to the separately held Lotus dealership; expended Sage
    Automotive Group assets without authorization; engaged in false
    advertising that led to the settlement with the Federal Trade
    Commission and a “dramatic drop in profit[s]”; and left the Sage
    Automotive Group in such “financial turmoil” that some of its
    assets had to be sold to a competitor. The trial court credited
    Klein’s damages analysis and awarded Leonard the upper end of
    Klein’s range (i.e., $24,418,472), “given the defense’s total failure
    to substantiate market causes for the precipitous and undisputed
    decline” in the Sage Automotive Group’s value, offset by losses
    attributable to Leonard’s unclean hands.
    The allegations in Leonard’s first amended complaint, the
    basis and calculation of Leonard’s damages at trial, and the
    court’s findings show that the gravamen of Leonard’s action was
    injury to the Sage Automotive Group and the “whole body of its
    stock and property” and that Leonard sought to, and ultimately
    did, recover damages for injuries to the entities. (Grosset, 
    supra, 42
     Cal.4th at p. 1108; see Avikian v. WTC Financial Corp. (2002)
    
    98 Cal.App.4th 1108
    , 1115 (Avikian) [plaintiffs’ “core claim” of
    mismanagement that caused the corporation’s demise
    “amount[ed] to a claim of injury to [the corporation] itself”];
    Nelson, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at p. 127 [“the action must be
    derivative” where the defendant’s actions caused the corporation
    to lose “earnings, profits, and opportunities, rendering all the
    shares valueless”].) Leonard did not allege, and the trial court
    did not award, damages for any injury that was not “incidental to
    36
    an injury to the corporation.” (Jones, supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 107;
    see ibid. [although the plaintiff alleged “the value of her stock
    [was] diminished by defendants’ actions,” she did not allege “the
    diminished value reflect[ed] an injury to the corporation and
    resultant depreciation in the value of the stock”]; Avikian, at
    p. 1116 [the plaintiffs’ “own damages, the loss in value of their
    investments in [the corporation], were merely incidental to the
    alleged harm inflicted upon [the corporation] and all its
    shareholders,” italics omitted].)
    Indeed, Leonard’s primary complaint was that his brothers’
    mismanagement (including by driving him out of the Sage
    Automotive Group) squandered the Sage Automotive Group’s
    assets and ultimately led to its demise. That is a derivative
    claim. “[W]here conduct, including mismanagement by corporate
    officers, causes damage to the corporation, it is the entity that
    must bring suit; the individual shareholder may not bring an
    action for indirect personal losses (i.e., decrease in stock value)
    sustained as a result of the overall harm to the entity.” (Bader v.
    Anderson, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at p. 788; see Heshejin v.
    Rostami (2020) 
    54 Cal.App.5th 984
    , 994, fn. 10 [“‘“a shareholder
    cannot bring a direct action for damages against management on
    the theory their alleged wrongdoing decreased the value of his or
    her stock (e.g., by reducing corporate assets and net worth)”’”;
    instead, the “‘“corporation itself must bring such an action, or a
    derivative suit may be brought on the corporation’s behalf”’”];
    Oakland Raiders v. National Football League (2005)
    
    131 Cal.App.4th 621
    , 651 [plaintiff’s breach of fiduciary duty
    claim for corporate mismanagement and diverting corporate
    assets was derivative]; PacLink Communications Internat., Inc. v.
    Superior Court (2001) 
    90 Cal.App.4th 958
    , 964 [minority
    37
    members’ fraudulent transfer claim was derivative where the
    “injury was essentially a diminution in the value of their
    membership interest in the [limited liability company] occasioned
    by the loss of the company’s assets”]; Nelson, supra,
    72 Cal.App.4th at pp. 125-126 [minority shareholder’s breach of
    fiduciary duty claim alleging the other shareholder of the
    corporation negligently managed the business was derivative];
    Marsh et al., Marsh’s Cal. Corp. Law (2021 supp.) Derivative
    Action, § 15.11[A][1] [“The clearest cases [of derivative actions]
    are those involving situations where the alleged wrongful actions
    of the defendants have reduced the corporate assets and net
    worth.”].)
    Leonard makes two arguments to show his cause of action
    for breach of fiduciary duty was an individual claim. First,
    Leonard lists 10 injuries that he says “hurt [him] alone.” None of
    the listed injuries, however, caused a discrete injury or damages
    to Leonard. Five of the listed injuries affected or reduced
    corporate assets or value without creating any nonincidental
    injuries to Leonard: (1) destruction of a document “related to
    personal spending using [Sage Automotive Group] funds”;
    (2) exclusion of Leonard from operational decisions;
    (3) falsification of corporate records and decisionmaking without
    Leonard’s input; (4) falsification of Leonard’s signature on an
    application to purchase a Hyundai dealership;12 and (5) the
    purchase of the Hyundai dealership without consulting
    12    Leonard presumably could allege an individual injury as a
    result of identity theft, but he did not, and the court did not
    award any damages for identity theft or similar injury.
    38
    Leonard.13 Two injuries listed by Leonard—(6) instruction to
    Sage Automotive Group’s counsel to file a cross-complaint against
    Leonard, requiring Leonard “to ‘pay for a lawsuit against
    himself,’” and (7) use of the cross-complaint “as a ‘pretextual
    threat to remove Leonard as a board member’”—were cited by the
    trial court as evidence of Michael and Joseph’s oppression in
    support of the award of punitive damages; they were not bases
    for the compensatory damages award.
    Another listed injury—(8) failure to honor the wish of the
    brothers’ father to make Leonard the majority owner of the Sage
    Automotive Group—is conduct ascribed to Sage Automotive
    Group’s (or their father’s) lawyer, not to Michael and Joseph; and
    another—(9) issuance of unequal distribution checks—is
    contradicted by the court’s statement of decision, which
    acknowledged that Leonard eventually received the missing
    distribution check, albeit six weeks after Michael and Joseph
    received theirs. That leaves (10), Leonard’s claim he suffered
    discrete injuries when Michael and Joseph reneged on their
    promise “‘to “indemnify” Leonard’” for losses related to the Lotus
    dealership separately held by Michael and Joseph. The promise
    apparently flowed from the two brothers’ recognition they used
    Sage Automotive Group funds to seed the new Lotus dealership.
    Even if Michael and Joseph’s failure to indemnify Leonard and
    13    In connection with the withholding of books and records,
    Leonard did not allege his inability to inspect company records
    precluded him from discharging his fiduciary duty or attempting
    to enforce his inspection rights under section 1601 or 1602. (See
    generally Wolf v. CDS Devco (2010) 
    185 Cal.App.4th 903
    , 916;
    Havlicek v. Coast-to-Coast Analytical Services, Inc. (1995)
    
    39 Cal.App.4th 1844
    , 1856.)
    39
    make him whole created an individual injury, the court awarded
    Leonard damages based on the overall diminution in value to the
    Sage Automotive Group, not the amount Michael and Joseph
    owed Leonard from funds used to start a separately owned
    venture.
    Second, Leonard argues we should follow the decision in
    Jara, which, according to Leonard, “support[ed] the notion that
    the policy reasons undergirding the rule requiring shareholder
    lawsuits to proceed derivatively do not apply to actions involving
    closely held businesses” like the Sage Automotive Group. In Jara
    the minority shareholder of a corporation alleged the two other
    shareholders breached their fiduciary obligations by paying
    themselves excessive executive compensation without the
    plaintiff’s approval and for the purpose of reducing the amount of
    profit to be shared with the plaintiff. (Jara, supra,
    121 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1248, 1258.) The plaintiff did not allege
    the two majority shareholders mismanaged the corporation; in
    fact, the corporation’s success enabled the majority shareholders
    to increase their executive compensation. (Id. at p. 1247.)
    The court in Jara held that, while “the alleged payment of
    excessive compensation did have the potential of damaging the
    business,” the plaintiff stated an individual cause of action
    against the majority shareholders because he alleged the
    payment of executive compensation “was a device to distribute a
    disproportionate share of the profits to the two officer
    shareholders during a period of business success.” (Jara, supra,
    121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1258.) The court read the Supreme Court’s
    decision in Jones to allow “a minority shareholder to bring a
    personal action alleging ‘a majority stockholders’ breach of a
    fiduciary duty to minority stockholders, which resulted in the
    40
    majority stockholders retaining a disproportionate share of the
    corporation’s ongoing value.’” (Jara, at pp. 1257-1258; see Jones,
    supra, 1 Cal.3d at p. 107; see also Crain v. Electronic Memories &
    Magnetics Corp. (1975) 
    50 Cal.App.3d 509
    , 521-522 [breach of
    fiduciary cause of action against a majority shareholder for self-
    dealing that enriched the majority shareholder and left minority
    shares “valueless and unsalable” was an individual claim].)
    We have some doubt whether Jara was correctly decided.
    At a minimum, however, it is distinguishable. The court in Jara
    characterized the plaintiff’s claim as “tantamount to a
    discriminatory payment of dividends” and cited cases allowing
    individual causes of action to recover the value of
    disproportionate payments to majority shareholders. (Jara,
    supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1256-1257, citing Smith v. Tele-
    Communication, Inc. (1982) 
    134 Cal.App.3d 338
    , 341-342
    [majority shareholders retained disproportionate value of tax
    savings]; Crain v. Electronic Memories & Magnetics Corp., supra,
    50 Cal.App.3d at p. 521 [majority shareholder “deprived plaintiffs
    of their ownership interests in an ongoing and potentially
    profitable business without any compensation whatsoever”]; Low
    v. Wheeler (1962) 
    207 Cal.App.2d 477
    , 479 [majority shareholders
    “refused to declare dividends” to minority shareholder]; De
    Martini v. Scavenger’s Protective Assn. (1935) 
    3 Cal.App.2d 691
    ,
    698 [majority shareholders deprived the minority shareholders of
    their “‘share of the profits of the business’”].)
    The Jara court distinguished the circumstances in these
    cases from those in cases “dealing with mismanagement,” such as
    Avikian, supra, 
    98 Cal.App.4th 1108
     and Nelson, supra,
    
    72 Cal.App.4th 111
    . (Jara, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1258.)
    In Avikian a group of minority shareholders alleged the majority
    41
    shareholders improperly bought and sold assets of the
    corporation and, with the corporation in financial distress, chose
    to pursue a “self-serving arrangement[ ] causing the demise of
    [the corporation],” rather than accepting an investor who was
    “willing to rescue” the corporation. (Avikian, at pp. 1115-1116.)
    The court in Avikian held that these alleged acts harmed the
    corporation rather than merely “affect[ing] the way in which the
    parties owned it” (id. at p. 1115) and that, because the plaintiffs’
    damages were “the loss in value of their investments in [the
    corporation],” their damages were “merely incidental to the
    alleged harm inflicted upon [the corporation] and all its
    shareholders” (id. at pp. 1115-1116). In Nelson a minority
    shareholder sued the majority shareholder for breach of fiduciary
    duty after the majority shareholder made “improper management
    decisions,” causing the minority shareholder “to lose her
    investment and prospective profits.” (Nelson, at p. 124.) The
    minority shareholder argued she could bring an individual cause
    of action because she “suffered injury to her reputation and
    emotional distress, and lost her out-of-pocket expenses, as well as
    other employment opportunities.” (Ibid.) The court in Nelson
    disagreed: “Because all of the acts alleged to have caused [the
    plaintiff’s] injury amount to alleged misfeasance or negligence in
    managing the corporation’s business, causing the business to be a
    total failure, any [fiduciary] obligations so violated were duties
    owed directly and immediately to the corporation.” (Id. at
    p. 125.) Moreover, “[t]he economic damages proven at trial were
    lost profits to the corporation as the result of rejected
    opportunities.” (Id. at p. 126.)
    This case is more like Avikian and Nelson than Jara.
    Unlike the plaintiff in Jara, Leonard did not allege Michael and
    42
    Joseph retained a disproportionate share of the Sage Automotive
    Group’s value; he alleged Michael and Joseph destroyed the value
    of the businesses for all of the shareholders (and members and
    partners). The court awarded Leonard damages based on the
    overall diminution in value of the Sage Automotive Group, not
    the difference in value between Leonard’s shares in the Group
    and those of Michael and Joseph. (Cf. Jara, supra,
    121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1258 [describing the plaintiff’s damages as
    his “fair share of the corporation’s profits”]; see also Jones, supra,
    1 Cal.3d at p. 107 [the diminution in value of the minority
    shareholders’ stock did not “reflect[ ] an injury to the
    corporation,” but instead resulted from the majority shareholders’
    self-serving scheme to increase the value of their shares]; Smith
    v. Tele-Communication, Inc., 
    supra, 134
     Cal.App.3d at p. 342
    [plaintiff was “deprived of a portion of his distributive share of
    [the corporation]”].) Similar to the plaintiffs’ allegations in
    Avikian and Nelson, Leonard alleged that his brothers’
    mismanagement diminished the value of the Sage Automotive
    Group overall and that the value of each of their interests, “in
    turn,” suffered accordingly. That Klein computed Leonard’s
    damages by dividing the Sage Automotive Group’s overall
    diminution of value by three confirms the gravamen of Leonard’s
    complaint was injury to the corporation as a whole, “‘“without
    any severance or distribution among individual holders,”’” and
    not to Leonard individually. (Grosset, supra, 42 Cal.4th at
    p. 1108; see Avikian, supra, 98 Cal.App.4th at p. 1116.)
    The court in Jara also relied on the absence of policy
    considerations favoring a derivative action in the context of that
    case, including preventing “‘a multiplicity of actions by each
    individual shareholder,’” protecting creditors “‘who have first call
    43
    on the corporate assets,’” and complying with procedural
    prerequisites for bringing a derivative action under section 800.14
    (Jara, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1258-1259.) Section 800, the
    court stated, “shield[s] the corporation from meritless lawsuits by
    requiring the plaintiffs to have contemporaneous stock ownership
    and by giving the defendants the right to move the court for an
    order requiring a bond” and “requires the plaintiffs to submit a
    demand to the board of directors before filing suit” to encourage
    the “‘intracorporate resolution of disputes’” and protect
    “‘managerial freedom.’” (Jara, at p. 1259; see § 800,
    subds. (b) & (c).) The court in Jara observed: “The objective of
    preventing a multiplicity of lawsuits and assuring equal
    treatment for all aggrieved shareholders does not arise at all
    when there is only one minority shareholder. The objective of
    encouraging intracorporate resolution of disputes and protecting
    managerial freedom is entirely meaningless where the
    defendants constitute the entire complement of the board of
    directors and all the corporate officers. And the policy of
    14    Section 800 states the procedural prerequisites to bringing
    a derivative action against a corporation. In general, section 800,
    subdivision (b), requires a shareholder to inform the directors
    about the action and to “make a reasonable effort to induce them
    to commence suit themselves or otherwise redress the wrong,
    unless such efforts would be ‘useless’ or ‘futile.’” (Friedman et al.,
    Cal. Practice Guide: Corporations (The Rutter Group 2021 supp.)
    ¶ 6:622; see § 800, subd. (b)(2).) Section 800, subdivision (c),
    gives the corporation and its directors the right to ask the court
    to require a bond under certain circumstances. Sections 17709.02
    and 15910.02 provide similar procedural requirements for
    derivative actions on behalf of limited liability companies and
    limited partnerships, respectively.
    44
    preserving corporate assets for the benefit of creditors has, at
    best, a very weak application where the corporation remains a
    viable business.” (Jara, at p. 1259.)
    The court in Nelson also considered whether the policies
    advanced by the derivative action rule applied in the context of
    close corporations and reached the opposite conclusion. The court
    stated: “A derivative action may appear to [the plaintiff] to be an
    empty formality when there are only two shareholders, and one
    of them is the alleged wrongdoer. However, the law demands
    certain prerequisites to bringing a derivative action which have
    not been alleged or proven in this case, such as alleging ‘in the
    complaint with particularity[, the] plaintiff’s efforts to secure
    from the board such action as plaintiff desires, or the reasons for
    not making such effort, and . . . further that plaintiff has either
    informed the corporation or the board in writing of the ultimate
    facts of each cause of action against each defendant or delivered
    to the corporation or the board a true copy of the complaint which
    plaintiff proposes to file.’” (Nelson, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 127.)
    We acknowledge the policies underlying the derivative
    action rule do not apply with equal force in actions involving
    closely held companies. Requiring Leonard to name the entities
    that comprise the Sage Automotive Group (and the UCNP
    entities) as nominal defendants in this action will not prevent a
    multiplicity of lawsuits or assure equal treatment for all
    aggrieved shareholders. And the objective of encouraging
    intracorporate resolution of disputes and protecting managerial
    freedom has less meaning where Michael, Joseph, and Leonard
    constitute the board of directors and corporate officers. (See
    Jara, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1259.) But the plain language
    45
    of sections 800, 15910.02, and 17709.02 does not exclude close
    corporations or small partnerships or companies from the
    procedural prerequisites before a shareholder, limited partner, or
    member may file a derivative action. (See Nelson, supra,
    72 Cal.App.4th at p. 127.) To allow Leonard to maintain his
    cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty as an individual
    action would essentially eliminate the derivative action rule in
    the context of close corporations and other closely held entities.
    California law does not support that result.
    3.     Leonard Did Not Allege a Derivative Cause of
    Action or Comply with the Statutory
    Prerequisites To Bring Such an Action
    Leonard did not allege a derivative cause of action on
    behalf of the Sage Automotive Group (or any of its constituent
    entities) or attempt to comply with the requirements of sections
    800, 15910.02, or 17709.02 to do so. Therefore, Leonard did not
    have standing to bring such an action, and the judgment on the
    cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty must be reversed.
    (See Bader v. Anderson, supra, 179 Cal.App.4th at p. 793; Nelson,
    supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at pp. 127-128.)
    46
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment on the causes of action for involuntary
    dissolution is modified, consistent with Schrage I, to correct the
    amount in favor of Leonard Schrage to $401,509.50 and, as
    modified, is affirmed. The order denying Michael and Joseph’s
    motion to set aside the judgment is affirmed. The appeals from
    the alternative decree and the order appointing the referee are
    dismissed. The judgment on the cause of action for breach of
    fiduciary duty is reversed. The parties are to bear their costs on
    appeal.
    SEGAL, J.
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    FEUER, J.
    47
    Filed 9/22/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    LEONARD SCHRAGE,                          B298119
    Plaintiff and Respondent,          (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC579623)
    v.
    ORDER CERTIFYING OPINION
    MICHAEL SCHRAGE et al.,                   FOR PUBLICATION [NO CHANGE IN
    APPELLATE JUDGMENT]
    Defendants and Appellants.
    THE COURT:
    The opinion in this case filed September 2, 2021 was not certified for
    publication. Because the opinion meets the standards for publication
    specified in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c), the respondent’s request
    for publication under California Rules of Court, rule 8.1120(a), is granted.
    IT IS HEREBY CERTIFIED that the opinion meets the standards for
    publication specified in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c); and
    ORDERED that the words “Not to be Published in the Official Reports”
    appearing on page 1 of said opinion be deleted and the opinion herein be
    published in the Official Reports.
    This order does not change the appellate judgment.
    PERLUSS, P. J.                   SEGAL, J.                   FEUER, J.