Mendoza v. Martinez CA2/3 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 3/3/23 Mendoza v. Martinez CA2/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on
    opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule
    8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for
    purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    STEPHANIE MENDOZA,                                                  B314778
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                   (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC620761)
    v.
    JOEY C. MARTINEZ et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County, Terry Green, Judge. Affirmed.
    Law Offices of Michael N. Berke and Michael N. Berke;
    RCM Legal and Roy C. Manukyan for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Diem Law and Robin L. Diem; Johnson Oakleaf and Wade
    C. Johnson for Defendants and Respondents.
    ‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗
    Stephanie Mendoza appeals from an order denying her
    motion to amend a judgment to include alleged alter egos.
    Mendoza obtained a judgment against RBD Real Estate
    Development, LLC (RBD, LLC), and later sought to amend the
    judgment to add Renovations Builders & Developers, Inc. (RBD,
    Inc.) and Joey Martinez, the principal of both RBD, LLC and
    RBD, Inc., as alter ego debtors.
    Mendoza primarily contends that the trial court misapplied
    the controlling legal principles in denying her motion to amend
    the judgment to include Martinez as an alter ego debtor. She
    also contends that the trial court failed to consider evidence of
    the unity of interest between RBD, LLC and RBD, Inc. For the
    reasons described below, we find no reversible error and thus
    affirm the trial court’s order.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    I.    The lawsuit and stipulated judgment
    On May 27, 2016, Mendoza filed a complaint against
    Martinez and RBD, LLC. The complaint alleged several causes of
    action, including breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and
    fraud. The complaint alleged that Martinez, on behalf of himself
    and RBD, LLC, solicited funds from Mendoza to help develop
    parcels of real property. According to the complaint, Martinez
    borrowed money from Mendoza to avoid defaulting on payments
    owed to contractors and suppliers, and made promises to her,
    later broken, to induce her financial assistance.
    For example, the complaint alleged that Mendoza loaned
    Martinez money in reliance on his promise to make her a partner
    in the development projects, to include her name on the title to
    the properties being developed, and to execute promissory notes
    2
    and deeds of trust in her favor to secure repayment of the loans.
    The complaint further alleged that Martinez did not follow
    through on any of those promises.
    On December 7, 2016, Mendoza, Martinez, and RBD, LLC
    filed a stipulated judgment in favor of Mendoza and against RBD,
    LLC in the amount of $285,923.96. The stipulated judgment also
    provided that Martinez “shall be dismissed as to all causes of
    action with prejudice.”
    Although Mendoza was able to collect $29,095.79 pursuant
    to a writ of attachment on RBD, LLC’s bank account, she was
    unable to collect the remainder of the judgment. Then, in June
    2017, RBD, LLC filed a certificate of dissolution signed by
    Martinez with the California Secretary of State. As described
    below, Mendoza attempted to collect the remainder of the
    judgment by enforcing a writ of attachment against a property
    formerly owned by RBD, LLC, but that effort was unsuccessful.
    II.   Motion to amend the judgment and opposition
    A.    Mendoza’s motion to amend the judgment
    In September 2019, Mendoza conducted a judgment debtor
    exam of Martinez. Martinez testified that RBD, LLC was created
    at the request of investors who helped finance his development of
    properties on Goldenrod Avenue and Isabella Terrace in Corona
    Del Mar. RBD, Inc. was Martinez’s general contracting company
    which, at least according to Martinez’s deposition testimony, “had
    nothing to do with the development of either property.”
    Martinez testified that after RBD, LLC dissolved in June
    2017, RBD, Inc. repaid investors who had loaned money in
    connection with the Goldenrod and Isabella properties. When
    asked why Mendoza had not been repaid for her payment to
    3
    RBD, LLC, Martinez responded, “Because she hasn’t contacted
    me.”
    Martinez was also questioned about certain payments
    involving him, RBD, LLC, and RBD, Inc. For example, Martinez
    acknowledged that RBD, LLC had written checks to RBD, Inc.
    totaling more than $60,000, but he was unable to explain their
    purpose. RBD, LLC also paid for Martinez’s son’s college tuition,
    but Martinez could not explain why, other than noting that his
    children worked for him. When presented with several checks to
    a law firm from RBD, LLC, which included Martinez’s son’s name
    on the memo line, Martinez was unable to identify their purpose.
    RBD, LLC also paid Martinez’s son to prepare architectural plans
    even though his son was unlicensed to do so. Another check
    appeared to show that RBD, LLC paid for RBD, Inc.’s contractor’s
    license fee.
    Martinez also produced RBD, LLC’s bank records, which
    showed that its account was often overdrawn or had a low
    operating balance.
    Based on this information, Mendoza filed a motion to
    amend the judgment against RBD, LLC to add Martinez and
    RBD, Inc. as alter ego debtors. She included her declaration and
    the declaration of her then-counsel, Dana Leigh Cisneros.
    Mendoza’s declaration explained that although Martinez
    had assured her in text messages in March 2016 that he would
    “make good on [his] side” and would “not forget what [Mendoza]
    did for [him],” he had not repaid any of what he owed her. She
    also explained that, as noted, she was able to collect only
    $29,095.79 from the bank account of RBD, LLC pursuant to a
    writ of attachment issued at the start of her lawsuit.
    4
    Cisneros’s declaration explained that a writ of attachment
    had issued on the same day that Mendoza filed her lawsuit in
    May 2016, which thereafter attached to the Goldenrod property.1
    But after the writ was issued, Martinez and RBD, LLC
    transferred the Goldenrod property to a third party who brought
    an action to remove Mendoza’s lien. That action concluded with a
    settlement agreement requiring Mendoza to release her lien on
    the Goldenrod property.
    Cisneros’s declaration also included the transcript and
    exhibits from Martinez’s judgment debtor exam.
    Mendoza’s motion argued that amendment of the judgment
    was warranted because Martinez owned and controlled both
    RBD, LLC and RDB, Inc.; held himself out as liable for RBD,
    LLC’s debts and caused RBD, Inc. to pay creditors of RBD, LLC
    after it had been dissolved; commingled assets of the two
    companies; treated the assets of RBD, LLC as his own; and had
    undercapitalized RBD, LLC.
    B.    Martinez’s and RBD, Inc.’s opposition
    Martinez and RBD, Inc. opposed the motion and included a
    declaration from Martinez and their counsel, Wade Johnson.
    Martinez’s declaration explained that he was the president
    and sole shareholder of RBD, Inc., which was a licensed general
    building contractor. As he explained at his deposition, Martinez
    1     Although not addressed in Cisneros’s declaration, as
    discussed herein it appears the Isabella property was foreclosed
    upon prior to Mendoza recording her pre-judgment writ of
    attachment.
    5
    formed RBD, LLC at the request of lenders2 for the purpose of
    taking title to the Goldenrod and Isabella properties. Martinez
    was also a guarantor on the notes for the purchase money for
    both properties.
    According to Martinez, Mendoza and her business partner
    agreed to purchase the Isabella property for $150,000 plus the
    balance on the loans for the property, and to take possession of
    the property and pay the mortgage as rent until the sale was
    closed. Despite their agreement, Mendoza and her partner were
    unable to obtain financing for the purchase and stopped paying
    rent on the property in January 2016.
    Martinez sold the Goldenrod property in July 2016, before
    he had knowledge of Mendoza’s lawsuit. The Isabella property
    was sold at auction in November 2016. Because Martinez was
    personally obligated for the deficiency, he had been making
    payments on the deficiency since that time.
    When Martinez agreed to the stipulated judgment, he
    understood that Mendoza “would be looking solely to the
    Goldenrod Property for compensation.” Because there was no
    longer any purpose for RBD, LLC, and it had no assets, he
    thereafter caused it to be dissolved.
    Johnson’s declaration explained that he was counsel for
    Martinez and RBD, Inc. According to Johnson, after he was
    engaged to represent Martinez he had settlement discussions
    with Mendoza’s counsel. During those discussions, Johnson and
    Mendoza’s counsel learned the Isabella property had been
    foreclosed upon prior to the recording of Mendoza’s writ of
    2     Martinez explained that he had mistakenly referred to the
    lenders as “investors” during his debtor exam.
    6
    attachment and that the Goldenrod property had been sold
    subject to Mendoza’s attachment lien.
    According to Johnson, the parties agreed to the stipulated
    judgment with the understanding that Martinez would be
    dismissed with prejudice, that Mendoza would have the money
    she collected from RBD, LLC’s bank account, and that she would
    try to collect the balance of the judgment from her lien on the
    Goldenrod property. But after judgment was entered, the new
    owners of the Goldenrod property successfully sued to have
    Mendoza’s lien equitably subordinated to their title.
    Martinez and RBD, Inc. opposed Mendoza’s motion to
    include them as judgment debtors on several grounds. Among
    other things, they contended that Martinez had been induced not
    to defend the lawsuit by Mendoza’s promise to dismiss him and
    collect the judgment against RBD, LLC; that RBD, Inc. should
    not be included as a judgment debtor because it had no duty to
    intervene and defend the allegations in the lawsuit; that it would
    be inequitable to allow Mendoza to include Martinez as a
    judgment debtor after she had dismissed him with prejudice; and
    that Mendoza failed to show that Martinez had improperly
    commingled assets or undercapitalized RBD, LLC.
    III.   Evidentiary hearing
    After the parties filed supplemental briefs, the court held a
    two-day evidentiary hearing on Mendoza’s motion to amend the
    judgment.
    A.   February 24, 2021 hearing
    At the start of the hearing, the court and counsel discussed
    the factual background of the case, including the events leading
    7
    to Mendoza’s inability to enforce her lien on the Goldenrod
    property.
    During their discussion, the court observed, “Now, I see it,
    because when I was reading this, I thought that we’re talking
    more of a fraudulent transfer or something more slight [sic.] of
    hand, but apparently not.” A short time later, the court asked
    the parties, “So what do you see is the issue?” Counsel for
    Mendoza replied, “The question is, was the judgment capable of
    being enforced at the time it was made? And our position, it’s
    not. There was no value in anything. Even the writ of
    attachment had no value, so—because there was no equity.”
    The court responded, “But isn’t that why we hire lawyers?
    . . . . [¶] But, you know, ordinarily, if there was—why would you
    enter into a judgment if there’s a stipulated judgment with both
    parties agreeing to this, if there was no way it could be fulfilled?
    You know, that—you sort of take a risk. [¶] I mean, that tells
    me that maybe her case wasn’t as strong as, you know, I might
    think. And maybe this was the best deal that counsel at the time
    could get, and then you roll the dice and see if you can get
    anything out of it.”
    Later during the same discussion, counsel for Martinez
    emphasized that when the parties were negotiating the
    stipulated judgment, Mendoza’s counsel was in communication
    with the title company that insured the title on the Goldenrod
    property. According to Martinez’s counsel, his “file [was] full of e-
    mail correspondence” between Mendoza’s counsel and the title
    company “discussing the merits of their claim against [the title
    company], that took place prior to the judgment, the stipulated
    judgment. There is nothing that wasn’t disclosed.”
    8
    Mendoza then called Martinez as a witness. Martinez
    explained that he was the principal in both RBD, Inc. and RBD,
    LLC, and that he formed RBD, LLC to take title to the Goldenrod
    and Isabella properties. Mendoza and her partner later agreed to
    purchase the Isabella property by refinancing an existing loan on
    the property, to pay Martinez $150,000 as a sale profit, and to
    pay the mortgage on the property until they could obtain
    financing. But the transaction fell apart after Mendoza was
    unable to acquire financing. By then, Mendoza had paid
    Martinez a total of $250,000, approximately $130,000 of which
    was rent. Martinez characterized the remaining $120,000 as
    “hard money.”
    Martinez also described several other loans he obtained
    related to the Isabella and Goldenrod properties, and his efforts
    with Mendoza to secure financing for those properties. But in
    November 2016 one of his lenders foreclosed on the Isabella
    property and acquired title.
    At the end of the first day of the hearing, the court noted
    that its prior impression of the case was that “Ms. Mendoza went
    and gave money to Mr. Martinez to invest in property.” However,
    the court observed that Mendoza was “an active participant, and
    this just didn’t work out. And, you know, now, . . . the settlement
    [makes] a little more sense. But if everybody knew it was going
    on, and there were evaluations of the strength and weakness of
    the cases, and it just didn’t work out, it’s hard for me to find a
    way to say that, as a matter of law, that Mr. Martinez should be
    added to the judgment.”
    The court further stated that “one of the main reasons for
    piercing a business veil and having individual liability is that
    injustice will result, if that isn’t—if that isn’t done. [¶] And it’s
    9
    hard here to say that there’s an injustice, if everybody knew, or
    their agents knew, maybe Ms. Mendoza didn’t appreciate the
    legalities or maybe her lawyer didn’t tell her or maybe her lawyer
    didn’t know. But unless you point to something that is nefarious
    here, it could be very hard to say that injustice will result if I
    don’t add Mr. Martinez to the judgment.”
    The next day, Martinez’s counsel filed a declaration
    attaching correspondence between him, Mendoza’s counsel, and
    the title company. The correspondence between Mendoza’s
    counsel and the title company, occurring prior to the entry of the
    stipulated judgment, indicates the title company disputed
    Mendoza’s ability to enforce her lien against the Goldenrod
    property.
    B.    April 20, 2021 hearing
    At the second day of the hearing, the court stated that it
    was “trying to understand where the fraud is.” It likewise
    emphasized that it “was wondering what did Mr. Martinez do or
    say that was a misrepresentation or fraudulent? . . . Let’s face it.
    It is odd to apply alter ego to a settlement.”
    Later, the court said to Mendoza’s counsel, “I’m trying to
    understand what Mr. Martinez did that was dishonest. What did
    he do that fooled the lawyer and fooled your client?” The court
    stressed that “if [Martinez] had looted the company the day
    before the judgment and then the company was a shell and he
    misrepresented the assets of the company, then I agree with you.
    I absolutely agree with you, but I’m saying this is the kind of
    thing which I look for in an alter ego. [¶] You know, where is the
    lying and cheating?”
    The court also stated that “what makes this thing so odd, it
    appears to be a fully negotiated settlement. I mean, fully
    10
    negotiated with emails going back and forth between multiple
    lawyers involved. [¶] Unless you can show me that Mr. Martinez
    engages in sleight of hand, I see no reason to disrupt this
    settlement. It’s a bargained-for deal.”
    Martinez then continued his testimony. Among other
    things, he explained the purpose of the payments from RBD, LLC
    to RBD, Inc., which he was asked about during his debtor exam.
    He testified that the payments were for construction services
    provided by RBD, Inc. to RBD, LLC. He also acknowledged that
    RBD, LLC’s tax returns reflected an income of $76,443 in 2016,
    and a loss of $3,451 in 2017.
    That testimony then prompted the court to observe the
    absence of evidence that Martinez misled Mendoza about the
    finances of RBD, LLC. The court stated, “So did [counsel for
    Mendoza] ask [counsel for Martinez] for the books? I mean, if I
    were her counsel and we were negotiating and I had my client in
    negotiation—especially cutting loose the principal and instead
    having some businesses as the part of the cash cow, I would want
    to see what the balance was up to and as close to December of
    2015 as humanly possible. [¶] Then, suddenly, if in January
    2017, it all vanished, then I might have a fraudulent conveyance
    or a fraud. But, I mean, there’s simply no evidence here that I
    have seen that [counsel for Mendoza] asked that question or that
    [counsel for Martinez] misled [her].”
    After some additional discussion, Martinez testified that he
    dissolved RBD, LLC because he “wasn’t using it anymore.”
    Although he intended to continue developing properties,
    Martinez believed that RBD, LLC’s reputation had been
    tarnished in connection with the foreclosure of the Isabella
    property.
    11
    At the conclusion of Martinez’s testimony, counsel for
    Martinez pointed out that Martinez was a guarantor on the
    purchase money loans for the Isabella property, which explains
    why RBD, Inc. had been repaying the loans after RBD, LLC
    dissolved.
    Mendoza testified next. She explained that she and her
    business partner invited Martinez to be a partner in their real
    estate development firm because Martinez had construction
    experience. Mendoza thereafter wrote checks and paid cash to
    Martinez to cover outstanding mortgage payments and
    construction costs related to the Isabella and Goldenrod
    properties. She understood that in exchange for her payments,
    once the Isabella and Goldenrod properties sold she would share
    in the profit and recoup her investments.
    The court then observed that “Ms. Mendoza is a
    sophisticated businessperson. She brought a partner into her
    firm, it sounds to me like, without doing any due diligence at all,
    and the firm is now paying these expenses for a fellow partner on
    firm property. [¶] Am I wrong on that?” Mendoza’s counsel
    replied, “No.”
    Mendoza also described further efforts by her and Martinez
    to develop the Isabella property and other properties. But by
    April 2016, Mendoza said the communications between her and
    Martinez “broke down.” She attempted to meet with Martinez to
    discuss repayment of her investments, but she never heard back
    from him.
    Mendoza then described the circumstances surrounding the
    settlement of her lawsuit against Martinez and RBD, LLC. At
    that time, she was aware only of RBD, LLC, not RBD, Inc. Her
    counsel advised her that Martinez and RBD, LLC would release
    12
    the funds attached in RBD, LLC’s bank account, and that she
    could “go after his development company, RBD, LLC. And I had
    no idea that that was not a company that was going to continue
    doing what it did in Corona Del Mar.” Regarding the Goldenrod
    property, she was advised “that since title blatantly missed my
    lien, that that would be one avenue that we could pursue, but it
    was not the only avenue. It was never advised that it was the
    only avenue.” She also testified that she was unaware that the
    Isabella property “had gone under and went into default.” Last,
    she explained that following the entry of the stipulated judgment
    against RBD, LLC, she was sued by the title company regarding
    her lien on the Goldenrod property. The litigation with the title
    company lasted two years.
    C.    Court’s ruling
    The court issued an oral ruling at the conclusion of the
    second day of hearing. Because the court’s subsequent minute
    order does not contain the court’s reasoning, and because
    Mendoza’s appeal focuses on the court’s statements during the
    evidentiary hearing, we include the court’s pertinent statements
    at the conclusion of the hearing:
    “It sounds to me, as I said, that [Martinez and Mendoza]
    had made an atrocious series of business deals that sank them.
    And I don’t see any documentation, partnership agreement, or
    any sort of agreement, which would make Mr. Martinez liable for
    this. I mean, you bring in partners, and sometimes they work
    out, and sometimes they end up being a nightmare. . . .
    “But, you know, be that as it may, Mr. Martinez, for
    whatever reason, decided to settle. And then the question was
    what were the expectations of the parties as to why there was
    13
    going to be a settlement and why these specific terms, how it was
    going to be paid. . . .
    “I mean, the deal that the prior counsel had is very clear
    when you read the emails with [Martinez’s counsel]. It’s very
    clear what the deal was. The expectations were that Ms.
    Mendoza apparently had no illusions as to how deep Mr.
    Martinez’s pockets were and that the terms of the settlement
    reflect the strengths of the case.
    “I mean, as I said, I don’t understand the liability Mr.
    Martinez had to that firm. The liability would be to the firm. I
    don’t understand what that liability would be, which explains
    partly why they held out for having him dismissed with
    prejudice. . . . .
    “And then they go after the property in Corona Del Mar,
    Goldenrod. And certainly prior counsel had a theory whereby—
    and she was pretty sure of herself, and she may be right. You
    think she was right all along. She may have been right, but the
    judge didn’t buy it, and that happens. It happens when you get
    involved in lawsuits, and there were, you know, title companies
    and whatever.
    “And everything was known up front. Everything was
    known up front. I read through the emails, and I think the day
    before the settlement, they had an email from the title company
    that told—. . . . [¶] [Mendoza’s counsel]—you know, telling her
    to pound sand; they’re referring it to outside counsel for
    litigation. And knowing that, the plaintiff went ahead with the
    deal. That’s the deal. And, frankly, it’s sort of reflected in the
    merits of the underlying case.
    “It would not be fair, as I understand it, to add Mr.
    Martinez back into the case after there was a negotiated
    14
    settlement whereby he was dismissed with prejudice, and where I
    feel that negotiated settlement reflected the merits of the
    underlying case.
    “So I’ve never heard of an alter ego case where you bring
    someone in who has been dismissed with prejudice, especially
    here where it reflects ongoing extensive negotiations.”
    Later, counsel for Mendoza asked to address the
    relationship between RBD, Inc. and RBD, LLC. The court
    responded, “Yeah, but I don’t see—that’s only important if there
    was some fraud here. If he emptied these corporations with the
    intent to deprive Ms. Mendoza of the ability to satisfy the
    judgment, and you know, I don’t see that. There were six months
    whereby Ms. Mendoza could have gotten to the entity and tried to
    satisfy it, but she didn’t.”
    Following further discussion, the court stated: “But, you
    know, what makes this case so unusual is that the lead
    defendant, the person who has the ability to go out and make
    money, was dismissed with prejudice. That’s what makes it so
    odd and, frankly, makes it so difficult to bring him back into the
    case when the parties reached a negotiated settlement to the
    contrary. [¶] You know, I don’t know what more I can say.”
    Last, the court stated, “I’ve seen these alter ego cases, and
    we see them actually more than you might realize after verdicts.
    And the ones that I have are the ones where there’s been, you
    know, some degree of lying, cheating, stealing, and equity
    demands that we disregard this entity so the victim can be made
    whole.
    “But, again, what makes this—I hate to say it over and
    over again because I’ve never seen it. This a case where the
    15
    person you want to bring back into the case has been, after
    extensive negotiation, dismissed with prejudice.
    “I’ve just never seen that. So I mean, it’s an interesting
    case, no question about that. But I don’t see it. Frankly, I don’t
    think it’s a close case. I just don’t think it’s a close case. He was
    dismissed with prejudice, and now I see why. [¶] . . . [¶]
    “Okay. Look guys, that’s my decision.”
    The court’s minute order dated the same day states, in
    relevant part: “The Court will not add Joey Martinez into this
    action.”
    IV.   Motion for reconsideration
    Mendoza filed a motion for reconsideration pursuant to
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1008, or in the alternative, to
    obtain a ruling on her motion to amend. She noted that the
    court’s April 20, 2021 minute order addressed her request to add
    Martinez as a judgment debtor, but not RBD, Inc.
    On June 24, 2021, the court held a hearing on Mendoza’s
    motion, but the transcript of the hearing is not part of the record.
    That same day, the court issued a minute order denying the
    motion for reconsideration and stating that the “Order on
    Plaintiff’s [m]otion to amend judgment to add alter egos Joey
    Martinez and [RBD, Inc.] to judgment is signed, filed and
    incorporated herein.” It also signed and filed the order denying
    Mendoza’s motion to add Martinez and RBD, Inc. as judgment
    debtors. On June 28, 2021, the court clerk served a copy of the
    June 24, 2021 minute order on the parties.
    Mendoza filed a notice of appeal on August 13, 2021.
    16
    DISCUSSION
    Mendoza raises several challenges to the trial court’s
    decision denying her motion to amend the judgment. First, she
    contends the court erred by weighing the merits of her claims
    against Martinez and her subsequent dismissal of Martinez with
    prejudice. Second, she contends the court erred by requiring her
    to show evidence of fraud or wrongful intent by Martinez or RBD,
    LLC. Last, she contends the court erred by failing to consider the
    evidence of unity of interest between RBD, LLC and RBD, Inc.
    Martinez and RBD, Inc. (hereinafter respondents) contend
    that Mendoza’s appeal is untimely, that the trial court’s order is
    supported by substantial evidence, and that the court did not
    commit legal error. They also contend Mendoza forfeited and
    waived her appeal.
    I.    Timeliness of appeal
    Because the timeliness of Mendoza’s appeal is a
    jurisdictional issue, we address that issue first. (See Drum v.
    Superior Court (2006) 
    139 Cal.App.4th 845
    , 849.)
    Mendoza’s notice of appeal states that she appeals from an
    order entered on June 24, 2021. As noted earlier, the court
    issued two orders on that date: a minute order denying
    Mendoza’s motion for reconsideration and denying her motion to
    amend the judgment, and a separate signed order denying her
    motion to amend the judgment. According to respondents,
    Mendoza’s notice of appeal concerns only the denial of her motion
    for reconsideration, because the court’s April 20, 2021 minute
    order had already denied Mendoza’s motion to amend the
    17
    judgment.3 Respondents further contend that Mendoza’s notice
    of appeal is untimely under California Rules of Court, rule
    8.108(e), which concerns the time to appeal where a party “serves
    and files a valid motion to reconsider” an appealable order under
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1008, subdivision (a). (Cal. Rules
    of Court, rule 8.108(e).)
    We conclude that Mendoza’s appeal is timely. If we
    construe Mendoza’s notice of appeal as an appeal from the June
    24, 2021 order denying her motion to amend the judgment—the
    most logical conclusion given the sequence of events in the trial
    court—her notice of appeal was timely.4 That is because the
    shortest possible deadline for Mendoza to have appealed that
    order was 60 days from June 24, 2021, and she filed her notice of
    appeal on August 13, 2021. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.104(a)(1).)
    3      Mendoza counters that the April 20, 2021 minute order
    denied her request to add Martinez as a judgment debtor, but left
    unresolved her request to add RBD, Inc. as a judgment debtor.
    She thus contends that her subsequent motion, although styled
    in part as a motion for reconsideration, was in effect a motion to
    obtain a final ruling. She further argues that the resulting June
    24, 2021 order should be treated as the court’s initial order on her
    motion to amend the judgment, not an order denying her motion
    for reconsideration. We need not address this argument because,
    as discussed herein, we find the appeal timely even with respect
    to the April 20, 2021 order.
    4     The parties do not dispute that an order denying a motion
    to amend a judgment to include alter ego judgment debtors is an
    appealable order. (See Misik v. D’Arco (2011) 
    197 Cal.App.4th 1065
    , 1071 [order denying motion to amend judgment to add alter
    ego judgment debtor is appealable].)
    18
    But even if we assume, as respondents contend, that the
    court had already denied Mendoza’s motion to amend the
    judgment on April 20, 2021, and that the court’s June 24, 2021
    order only concerned her motion for reconsideration, we would
    still conclude that her appeal is timely. We take several steps to
    reach that conclusion.
    The order denying Mendoza’s motion for reconsideration
    was not a separately appealable order. (See Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 1008, subd. (g) [“An order denying a motion for reconsideration
    made pursuant to subdivision (a) is not separately appealable.”];
    Chango Coffee, Inc. v. Applied Underwriters, Inc. (2017) 
    11 Cal.App.5th 1247
    , 1254 [“we conclude an order denying a
    renewed motion under [Code of Civil Procedure] section 1008,
    subdivision (b) is nonappealable”].) Nonetheless, we must
    liberally construe a notice of appeal in favor of its sufficiency if
    doing so would not prejudice a respondent. (See Walker v. Los
    Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 15
    , 20 [construing notice of appeal from nonappealable
    post-judgment order as encompassing underlying appealable
    judgment].)
    We find that respondents would not suffer prejudice if we
    construed Mendoza’s notice of appeal as encompassing the court’s
    April 20, 2021 minute order denying Mendoza’s motion to amend
    the judgment. Indeed, the court’s June 24, 2021 minute order
    clearly addressed Mendoza’s motion to amend the judgment,
    stating that the “[o]rder on Plaintiff’s [m]otion to amend
    judgment to add alter egos Joey Martinez and [RBD, Inc.] to
    judgment is signed, filed, and incorporated herein . . . .” Also, the
    parties have focused their briefs on the merits of the court’s
    ruling denying Mendoza’s motion to amend the judgment.
    19
    Furthermore, Mendoza’s notice of appeal is timely with
    respect to the April 20, 2021 minute order. The record fails to
    indicate that either the court clerk or a party served a “Notice of
    Entry” of judgment or a filed-endorsed copy of the April 20, 2021
    minute order, which would have triggered a 60-day deadline to
    file a notice of appeal. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.104(a)(1)(A)–(B).) Mendoza therefore had 180 days to appeal
    the court’s April 20, 2021 order, i.e., until October 18, 2021.5 (See
    Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(1)(C).) Hence, her August 13,
    2021 notice of appeal was timely.6
    II.   Applicable law and standard of review
    “The trial court is authorized to amend a judgment to add
    judgment debtors. [Citation.] The judgment may be amended to
    add additional judgment debtors on the ground that a person or
    entity is the alter ego of the original judgment debtor. [Citation]
    5     180 days from April 20, 2021, was October 17, 2021. That
    was a Sunday, so Mendoza had until the following day to appeal.
    (See Code Civ. Proc., §§ 10, 12.)
    6     Respondents’ reliance on California Rules of Court, rule
    8.108(e) is misplaced. That rule extends the time to appeal if
    “any party serves and files a valid motion to reconsider an
    appealable order” under Code of Civil Procedure section 1008,
    subdivision (a). (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.108(e).) But
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.108 “operates only to extend the
    time to appeal otherwise prescribed in rule 8.104(a); it does not
    shorten the time to appeal.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.108(a).)
    Because we have concluded that Mendoza’s appeal is timely
    under California Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a), we need not reach
    respondents’ argument regarding the timeliness of Mendoza’s
    appeal under California Rules of Court, rule 8.108(e).
    20
    It is an equitable procedure based on the theory that the court is
    not amending the judgment to add a new defendant but is merely
    inserting the correct name of the real defendant. [Citation.] The
    decision to grant an amendment lies in the sound discretion of
    the trial court. [Citation.] Great liberality is allowed in granting
    such amendments.” (Relentless Air Racing, LLC v. Airborne
    Turbine Ltd. Partnership (2013) 
    222 Cal.App.4th 811
    , 815
    (Relentless).)
    To prevail in a motion to add judgment debtors, the moving
    party must show that “(1) the parties to be added as judgment
    debtors had control of the underlying litigation and were
    virtually represented in that proceeding; (2) there is such a unity
    of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the
    entity and the owners no longer exist; and (3) an inequitable
    result will follow if the acts are treated as those of the entity
    alone.” (Relentless, supra, 222 Cal.App.4th at pp. 815–816.)
    “Factors for the court to consider include identical equitable
    ownership, comingling of funds, use of the same offices, disregard
    of formalities, and use of one entity as a mere shell for the affairs
    of another.” (Butler America, LLC v. Aviation Assurance Co.,
    LLC (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 136
    , 146 (Butler).) “An important
    factor in determining alter ego liability is that a corporate entity
    is so undercapitalized that it is likely to have no sufficient assets
    to meet its debts.” (Ibid.) “When considering the application of
    the alter ego doctrine to a particular situation, it must be
    remembered that it is an equitable doctrine and, though courts
    have justified its application through consideration of many
    factors, their basic motivation is to assure a just and equitable
    result.” (Alexander v. Abbey of the Chimes (1980) 
    104 Cal.App.3d 39
    , 48.)
    21
    “The decision to grant an amendment to add additional
    judgment debtors is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.” (Butler,
    supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at p. 146.) Even that deferential standard
    of review, however, requires that we examine whether the court
    applied the correct legal principles in exercising its discretion.
    (See Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California
    (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 747
    , 773 [“ ‘Action that transgresses the
    confines of the applicable principles of law is outside the scope of
    discretion and we call such action an “abuse” of discretion.’ ”].)
    Respondents contend that we should review the trial
    court’s denial of Mendoza’s motion to amend the judgment for
    substantial evidence. (See, e.g., Misik v. D’Arco, supra, 197
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1072 [noting that existence of alter ego is
    “ ‘ordinarily a question of fact’ ” and that “ ‘conclusion of the trier
    of fact will not be disturbed if it is supported by substantial
    evidence’ ”]; Alexander v. Abbey of the Chimes, supra, 104
    Cal.App.3d at p. 47 [because determination of alter ego status “is
    primarily one for the trial court and is not a question of law, the
    conclusion of the trier of fact will not be disturbed if it is
    supported by substantial evidence”].) However, Mendoza does
    not contend the trial court’s order lacks adequate factual support.
    Rather, she contends the court misapplied the controlling legal
    principles for determining whether to amend a judgment to
    include an alter ego debtor. Thus, once we are satisfied that the
    court applied the correct legal principles, we examine its ultimate
    determination for an abuse of discretion. (See Relentless, supra,
    222 Cal.App.4th at p. 815.)
    Finally, Mendoza’s appeal is governed by familiar
    principles of appellate review. “ ‘A judgment or order of the lower
    court is presumed correct. All intendments and presumptions are
    22
    indulged to support it on matters as to which the record is silent,
    and error must be affirmatively shown.’ ” (Denham v. Superior
    Court (1970) 
    2 Cal.3d 557
    , 564, italics omitted.) “We presume the
    trial court followed applicable law.” (Cahill v. San Diego Gas &
    Electric Co. (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 939
    , 956.)
    III.   The trial court did not misapply the alter ego
    doctrine
    Mendoza argues that the trial court misapplied the
    controlling legal principles for determining whether to include
    Martinez as an alter ego judgment debtor. According to
    Mendoza, the court erred by weighing the merits of her claims
    against Martinez and by relying on her dismissal of Martinez
    with prejudice. She further contends the court erred by requiring
    her to show evidence of fraud or wrongful intent by Martinez or
    RBD, LLC. As discussed below, we reject her arguments.
    Regarding her first contention, Mendoza focuses our
    attention on statements by the trial court during the evidentiary
    hearing suggesting that it believed Mendoza’s underlying claims
    against Martinez lacked merit. Mendoza emphasizes that the
    trial court did not have all the relevant evidence before it to
    evaluate the merits of her claims against Martinez, and that it
    should not have looked beyond the terms of the stipulated
    judgment to determine if it reflected a “ ‘fair’ resolution of the
    case.” As Mendoza puts it, “when a case ends via a stipulated
    judgment, the case is over. There is no more inquiry into the
    underlying facts.”
    Before analyzing her argument, we observe that Mendoza’s
    heavy reliance on the trial court’s statements during the
    evidentiary hearing is at odds with the settled principle that “oral
    remarks or comments made by a trial court may not be used to
    23
    attack a subsequently entered order or judgment.” (Transport
    Ins. Co. v. TIG Ins. Co. (2012) 
    202 Cal.App.4th 984
    , 1009; see also
    Farwell v. Sunset Mesa Property Owners Assn., Inc. (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 1545
    , 1552 [“Opinions voiced by the trial court are to
    be distinguished from the trial court’s decision; the opinions
    voiced by the trial court do not furnish any basis for an attack on
    an otherwise correct decision.”].) Thus, it is the trial court’s final
    order, not its statements at the evidentiary hearing, that is the
    subject of our review. Nevertheless, in the interests of justice we
    consider Mendoza’s arguments.
    We agree with Mendoza that Martinez’s lack of personal
    liability on the underlying claims would not have been a
    sufficient ground to deny Mendoza’s motion to amend the
    judgment to include him as an alter ego debtor. (See, e.g., Favila
    v. Pasquarella (2021) 
    65 Cal.App.5th 934
    , 943–944 [rejecting
    argument that it was “unfair” to add defendant as alter ego
    judgment debtor after she obtained summary judgment in her
    favor]; Danko v. O’Reilly (2014) 
    232 Cal.App.4th 732
    , 749–752
    [amending judgment to include alter ego debtor “was unrelated to
    the liability determinations made at trial,” and thus not barred
    by directed verdict in favor of defendant]; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
    v. Weinberg (2014) 
    227 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 6–8 [trial court’s
    sustaining of demurrer in favor of defendant did not bar it from
    later adding defendant as alter ego judgment debtor].)
    But based on our review of the transcript from the
    evidentiary hearing, we are not persuaded that this was a basis
    for the trial court’s ruling. Rather, we view the court’s ruling as
    based primarily on its conclusion that because Mendoza
    voluntarily agreed to dismiss Martinez from the lawsuit with
    prejudice and to obtain a judgment against only RBD, LLC,
    24
    denying her the ability to enforce the judgment against Martinez
    would not lead to an inequitable result. We are not convinced
    that the trial court’s ruling was outside the bounds of its wide
    discretion here. (See Zoran Corp. v. Chen (2010) 
    185 Cal.App.4th 799
    , 811 [alter ego doctrine “ ‘is essentially an equitable one and
    for that reason is particularly within the province of the trial
    court’ ”]; Alexander v. Abbey of the Chimes, supra, 104 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 46 [“the conditions under which the corporate entity may be
    disregarded vary according to the circumstances in each case and
    the matter is particularly within the province of the trial court”].)
    That is especially so given the evidence that Mendoza was
    represented by counsel during the lawsuit, including during
    negotiations over the stipulated judgment; the absence of
    evidence that Mendoza was prevented from evaluating the
    finances and assets of Martinez or RBD, LLC prior to agreeing to
    the stipulated judgment; the evidence that Mendoza and
    Martinez both understood that she would enforce the stipulated
    judgment against the Goldenrod property, not Martinez; and the
    evidence that Mendoza understood, prior to dismissing Martinez
    with prejudice, that the title company disputed her ability to
    enforce the judgment against the Goldenrod property—in other
    words, she clearly understood the risks associated with that
    strategy.
    The cases cited by Mendoza regarding the effect of a
    stipulated judgment do not warrant a different conclusion. If
    anything, they suggest that Mendoza should be held to the terms
    of the stipulated judgment, which provided for Martinez’s
    dismissal with prejudice. (See California State Auto. Assn. Inter-
    Ins. Bureau v. Superior Court (1990) 
    50 Cal.3d 658
    , 663
    [“stipulated judgments bear the earmarks both of judgments
    25
    entered after litigation and contracts derived through mutual
    agreement”]; A. J. Industries, Inc. v. Ver Halen (1977) 
    75 Cal.App.3d 751
    , 759 [“A settlement contract has the attributes of
    a judgment in that it serves to bar reopening of the issues
    settled.”].) Mendoza herself appears to recognize as much,
    stating that the “policy in California is to uphold settlement
    agreements and stipulated judgments, not to systematically
    question their validity during judgment enforcement.” Upholding
    the stipulated judgment is precisely what the trial court did here:
    It disallowed Mendoza’s attempt to add Martinez as a judgment
    debtor contrary to her earlier agreement to dismiss him from the
    action with prejudice.
    Mendoza also discusses Butler in support of her argument,
    noting that Butler did not rely on whether the settlement
    agreement at issue in that case was “ ‘fully bargained’ ” by the
    parties. We find Butler distinguishable. In Butler, the parties
    settled a lawsuit by agreeing that the defendant would pay the
    plaintiff the greater of a fixed sum or a percentage of defendant’s
    “ ‘revenue and income interest’ ” in a contract relating to the
    management and leasing of jet engines. (Butler, supra, 55
    Cal.App.5th at p. 140.) But the defendant did not disclose during
    negotiations over the settlement that a separate corporate entity,
    not the defendant, was a party to the contract; that there was no
    written agreement regarding the income the defendant would
    receive under the contract; and that for a year after the contract
    was made it generated no income for the defendant. (Id. at p.
    141.) After the defendant ceased making payments pursuant to
    the settlement agreement, the trial court entered a stipulated
    judgment in favor of the plaintiff as required by the terms of the
    settlement agreement. (Id. at p. 140.) The trial court thereafter
    26
    granted the plaintiff’s motion to amend the judgment to add alter
    ego debtors. (Id. at p. 139.)
    That neither the trial court nor the Court of Appeal in
    Butler relied on the bargained-for nature of the underlying
    settlement agreement makes sense in the context of that case. In
    affirming the amendment of the judgment to include alter ego
    debtors, the Court of Appeal agreed with the trial court’s ruling
    that the defendant’s fraudulent concealment relating to the jet
    engine contract rendered the settlement agreement’s release
    unenforceable. (Butler, supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at pp. 143–145.)
    As the Court of Appeal emphasized, the defendant “knew the
    facts, but failed to disclose them. The entire transaction reeks of
    fraud on [defendant’s] part.” (Id. at p. 144.)
    By contrast, nothing in the record here suggests any
    similar concealment regarding the parties’ negotiation of the
    stipulated judgment. To the contrary, the evidence before the
    trial court demonstrated that Mendoza clearly understood the
    risks associated with dismissing Martinez with prejudice and
    instead seeking to enforce the judgment against RBD, LLC, and
    in particular, the Goldenrod property.
    For a similar reason, we disagree with Mendoza that the
    trial court required her to show fraud or wrongful intent to
    prevail in her motion to amend the judgment. In support of her
    argument, Mendoza focuses our attention on remarks by the trial
    court during the evidentiary hearing noting the absence of
    evidence of fraud, concealment, or other bad faith conduct by
    Martinez or RBD, LLC aimed at avoiding satisfaction of the
    judgment or misleading Mendoza about their finances or assets.
    It is correct, as Mendoza points out, that the “inequitable
    result” prong of the alter ego test does not require the party
    27
    seeking to amend a judgment to demonstrate fraud or bad faith.
    (See Triyar Hospitality Management, LLC v. WSI (II)–WHP, LLC
    (2020) 
    57 Cal.App.5th 636
    , 642–643 (Triyar) [rejecting argument
    that “there must be some conduct amounting to bad faith that
    makes it inequitable to hide behind the corporate form”];
    Relentless, supra, 222 Cal.App.4th at p. 816 [“The trial court
    erred in requiring Relentless to prove that the Fultons acted with
    wrongful intent.”].)
    But again, based on our review of the transcript from the
    evidentiary hearing we are not persuaded that the trial court
    required Mendoza to show fraud or wrongful intent to prevail in
    her motion to amend the judgment. Rather, we understand the
    trial court’s statements as reflecting its view that because
    Mendoza was not misled during her negotiations over the
    stipulated judgment, and understood the risks associated with
    her strategy of enforcing the judgment against RBD, LLC, and
    particularly the Goldenrod property, there was nothing
    inequitable about her later inability to enforce the judgment
    against RBD, LLC. (See Sonora Diamond Corp. v. Superior
    Court (2000) 
    83 Cal.App.4th 523
    , 539 [“[d]ifficulty in enforcing a
    judgment or collecting a debt does not satisfy” the inequitable
    result prong of alter ego test].) Mendoza’s reliance on Triyar and
    Relentless is thus misplaced. Neither case involved the unique
    circumstances presented here, namely, a plaintiff’s attempt to
    amend a judgment to add a party as an alter ego debtor after
    having negotiated a stipulated judgment dismissing that very
    same party with prejudice.7
    7    After oral argument, Mendoza notified us of the decision in
    JPV 1 L.P. v. Dan Koetting (Feb. 7, 2023, A163491) __
    28
    In sum, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying Mendoza’s motion to amend the judgment to include
    Martinez as an alter ego debtor.
    IV.   Reversal is not warranted due to the trial court’s
    purported failure to consider unity of interest
    Mendoza contends the trial court erred by failing to
    consider the evidence of unity of interest between RBD, LLC and
    RBD, Inc. She also argues that such evidence showed that RBD,
    Inc. “was nothing more than a mere continuation of RBD, LLC.”
    We need not reach these arguments. As noted above, a
    party seeking to amend a judgment to add an alter ego debtor
    must establish three elements, and unity of interest is only one of
    those elements. (See Triyar, supra, 57 Cal.App.5th at p. 641;
    Relentless, supra, 222 Cal.App.4th at pp. 815–816.) Hence, even
    if the trial court erred regarding its determination of the unity of
    interest between RBD, LLC and RBD, Inc., Mendoza would still
    need to demonstrate that the trial court erred in its
    determination of the other alter ego elements as applied to RBD,
    Inc. (See Denham, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 564 [“order of the lower
    court is presumed correct” and “error must be affirmatively
    shown”]; Butler, supra, 55 Cal.App.5th at p. 146 [“In addition to
    showing a unity of ownership, the moving party must show an
    inequitable result will follow if the acts are treated as those of the
    entity alone.”].)
    Cal.App.5th __ [
    2023 WL 1791966
    ]. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.254.) We are not persuaded that it applies here. Like Triyar
    and Relentless, it did not involve a plaintiff’s attempt to add a
    party as an alter ego judgment debtor after having voluntarily
    dismissed that same party with prejudice.
    29
    Mendoza’s briefs address only the unity of interest prong of
    the alter ego test regarding RBD, Inc. Because Mendoza has
    failed to identify any error regarding the other prongs, she cannot
    demonstrate reversible error regarding the trial court’s decision
    to deny amendment of the judgment to include RBD, Inc. as an
    alter ego debtor.8 (See Soule v. General Motors Corp. (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 548
    , 574 [error “does not warrant reversal unless there is
    a reasonable probability that in the absence of the error, a result
    more favorable to the appealing party would have been
    reached”].)
    V.    Sanctions are not warranted
    Respondents contend that Mendoza forfeited her appeal by
    filing an opening brief that does not describe the evidence
    supporting the trial court’s order; by filing appendices that
    included the reporter’s transcripts from the evidentiary hearing
    but did not include her notice of appeal; and by failing to include
    in the record on appeal the transcript from the hearing on her
    motion for reconsideration. Respondents further argue that
    Mendoza waived her appeal by agreeing in the stipulated
    judgment that “[e]ach party hereby expressly waives any and all
    appellate rights.” Because we have concluded that Mendoza’s
    8      Mendoza’s briefs also fail to identify any error regarding
    the trial court’s determination of the first and second prongs of
    the alter ego test regarding Martinez. Although we have already
    rejected Mendoza’s arguments regarding the trial court’s denial
    of her motion to amend the judgment to include Martinez as an
    alter ego debtor, we note that this is an additional ground to
    affirm the trial court’s order.
    30
    arguments do not warrant reversal, we need not reach these
    contentions.
    Citing these same arguments, and the claim that
    Mendoza’s appeal was untimely, respondents’ brief also requests
    sanctions against Mendoza. We deny the request because
    respondents failed to file a separate sanctions motion.9 (See Cal.
    Rules of Court, rule 8.276(b)(1); Cowan v. Krayzman (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 907
    , 919 [“Sanctions cannot be sought in the
    respondent’s brief.”].)
    9     Although we deny respondents’ sanctions request, we
    remind Mendoza that a notice of appeal is a required component
    of an appellant’s appendix. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.124(b)(1)(A) [requiring appellant’s appendix to include “[a]ll
    items required by rule 8.122(b)(1)”]; Cal. Rules of Court, rule
    8.122(b)(1)(A) [requiring clerk’s transcript to include notice of
    appeal].)
    31
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s order denying Mendoza’s motion to amend
    the judgment is affirmed. The request of Martinez and RBD, Inc.
    for sanctions is denied. Martinez and RBD, Inc. shall recover
    their costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL
    REPORTS
    EDMON, P. J.
    We concur:
    LAVIN, J.
    EGERTON, J.
    32