MTC Financial Inc. v. Cal. Dept. of Tax and Fee Admin. ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 10/31/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    MTC FINANCIAL INC.,
    Plaintiff,                                        G056234
    v.                                            (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00954145)
    CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF TAX                          OPINION
    AND FEE ADMINISTRATION,
    Defendant and Respondent;
    RAJINDAR MEHTA,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert J.
    Moss, Judge. Affirmed.
    Winters Law Firm and Dennis Winters for Defendant and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Diane S. Shaw, Assistant Attorney
    General, Lisa W. Chao and Charles Tsai, Deputy Attorneys General for Defendant and
    Respondent.
    *          *          *
    Proceeds remaining after a home foreclosure sale were deposited with a
    trial court due to competing claims to the proceeds. A primary dispute between the
    claimants was whether a first in time trust deed sufficiently described the foreclosed
    property. Among other things, the court found the description was insufficient and the
    trust deed therefore void. It entered judgment in favor of a next in time state tax lien.
    Finding no error in the result of the judgment, we affirm.
    I
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In 2017, a foreclosure sale for the home (the property) of Kamini and
    Anand Chopra (collectively, the Chopras) was conducted by MTC Financial Inc. (the
    trustee). Following an initial distribution of the sale proceeds, the trustee determined
    there was a conflict between outstanding claims to the remaining proceeds (the surplus
    fund). The trustee deposited the fund with the trial court so it could determine the
    claimants’ respective priorities pursuant to Civil Code section 2924j, subdivisions (c) and
    1
    (d). Among the claimants was appellant Rajindar Mehta, the grantee of a 2004 deed of
    trust signed by the Chopras (the trust deed). Mehta claimed his trust deed was senior in
    priority because it was created first in time relative to the outstanding claims to the fund.
    Respondent, the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (the Tax
    2
    Department), disputed Metha’s claim and contended that its 2008 tax lien against
    Kamini Chopra had senior priority as next in time because, among other things, the trust
    1
    All further undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code.
    2
    None of the other claimants at the trial court level is a party to this appeal.
    2
    deed was void and unenforceable based upon its insufficient legal description of the
    3
    property.
    A. The Ambiguous Trust Deed
    The trust deed’s legal description of the property contains multiple points
    of inaccuracy or ambiguity: (1) the lot number of “68” is incorrect (it should be “88”);
    (2) the book page number of “810-11” is incorrect (it should be “1-11”); (3) the city of
    the property is not identified; and (4) regarding the county where the property is located,
    the description only reads “said county,” although a preceding information field does
    state the correct “Orange County.”
    At the same time, the trust deed references an assessor’s parcel number,
    which matches the number identified for the property according to attachments to the
    4
    trustee’s petition which was filed with the deposit of the surplus fund. The attachments
    include two copies of a purported assessor’s map denoting information that could
    correspond to the trust deed’s legal description of the property. For example, the map
    purports to depict a “Tract No. 9268,” which is the tract described in the trust deed.
    Ambiguously, however, both numbers “68” and “88” (respectively, the incorrect lot
    number listed in the trust deed and the true lot number that should have been listed)
    appear at different locations on the map. Neither Mehta nor the Tax Department
    discussed this map in their briefs, either at the trial court level or on this appeal.
    3
    The Tax Department also argued, as it does on appeal, that the trust deed was not
    supported by consideration. We do not discuss the issue in this opinion.
    4
    An assessor’s parcel number, also referred to as an “‘APN’ . . . is a numerical identifier
    associated with a particular piece of property for property tax assessment purposes.”
    (Cafferkey v. City and County of San Francisco (2015) 
    236 Cal. App. 4th 858
    , 861, fn. 2.)
    3
    B. The Trial Court’s Judgment in Favor of the Tax Department
    After conducting two hearings, the trial court found in favor of the Tax
    5
    Department. Among other things, the court determined the Tax Department’s tax lien
    claim to have priority over Mehta’s claim because the trust deed contained a fatally
    defective legal description of the property and Mehta had failed to produce evidence of
    6
    actually lending money to the Chopras, as the trust deed purported. The order also
    stated: “As for the assessor’s parcel number appearing on the face of the [trust deed],
    there is no evidence that such number is the correct assessor’s parcel number assigned by
    the Orange County Assessor to the subject real property, especially given the other
    erroneous information appearing in the deed of trust.” A judgment for the Tax
    Department was entered and this timely appeal by Mehta followed.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review and Relevant Law
    Mehta argues the trial court erred in finding the trust deed void. Mehta
    does not discuss what standard of review should be applied to his appeal whereas the Tax
    Department contends a substantial evidence standard is appropriate. With respect to the
    5
    No reporter’s transcript was included in the record.
    6
    The procedural history of the trial court proceedings is complicated by the fact that the
    Chopras themselves initially disputed the validity of Mehta’s trust deed. Specifically, the
    Chopras initially claimed the trust deed had not been delivered as a matter of law, had
    been made without full consideration, and insufficiently described the property.
    According to a minute order, the trial court continued the initial hearing to determine
    senior priority to the surplus fund and ordered Mehta to submit documentary evidence of
    money loaned to the Chopras in exchange for the trust deed. In its final ruling, the court
    noted Mehta’s failure to comply with its order. Based upon our disposition of this appeal
    infra, Mehta’s failure to produce the evidence ordered is immaterial to this appeal and
    therefore not discussed in this opinion.
    4
    trial court’s judgment being based upon an interpretation of the trust deed without the aid
    of extrinsic evidence, we review the trial court’s determination de novo for an error of
    law. (See City of Manhattan Beach v. Superior Court (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 232
    , 238
    [finding that unless the interpretation of a written instrument turns upon the credibility of
    extrinsic evidence, de novo review is proper]; see also Pou Chen Corp. v. MTS Products
    (2010) 
    183 Cal. App. 4th 188
    , 192 [finding that de novo review applied to the
    determination of the relative priorities between contractual liens and an equitable offset
    based upon an assigned judgment].) For any finding of fact by the court, “‘[w]e apply a
    substantial evidence standard of review . . . [where] findings of fact are liberally
    construed to support the judgment and we consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prevailing party, drawing all reasonable inferences in support of the
    findings.’” (Integrated Lender Services, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (2018) 22
    Cal.App.5th 867, 875.) Mehta, as the appellant, has the burden of demonstrating the trial
    court erred. (Allen v. Liberman (2014) 
    227 Cal. App. 4th 46
    , 53.)
    Well-established principles for determining the relative priorities of
    property interests are implicated. This state observes a “first in time, first in right”
    system of lien priorities where, generally, competing enforceable interests have priority
    among themselves “according to the time of their creation.” (§ 2897.) As to determining
    the enforceability of such interests, a trust deed must sufficiently describe the property
    securing it to be enforceable. (Saterstrom v. Glick Bros. Sash, Door & Mill Co. (1931)
    
    118 Cal. App. 379
    .) “To be sufficient the description must be such that the land can be
    identified or located on the ground by use of the same.” (Edwards v. Santa Paula (1956)
    
    138 Cal. App. 2d 375
    , 380.) “[A] description that is equally applicable to two different
    parcels is fatally defective.” (Id. at p. 382.)
    5
    B. The Tax Department’s Standing
    Mehta contends the Tax Department lacked standing to challenge the trust
    deed. We are not persuaded. “‘“To have standing, a party must be beneficially interested
    in the controversy; that is, he or she [or it] must have ‘some special interest to be served
    or some particular right to be preserved or protected over and above the interest held in
    common with the public at large.’ [Citation.] The party must be able to demonstrate that
    he or she has some such beneficial interest that is concrete and actual, and not conjectural
    or hypothetical.”’” (City of Palm Springs v. Luna Crest Inc. (2016) 
    245 Cal. App. 4th 879
    ,
    883; see Mendoza v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2016) 6 Cal.App.5th 802, 810
    [wrongful foreclosure borrower must demonstrate standing by alleging a “‘beneficial
    interest’” that was “‘“concrete and actual, and not conjectural or hypothetical”’”].)
    Mehta does not challenge this general principle but argues the Tax Department lacked
    standing in this case because it was not a party to the transaction that created the trust
    deed at issue. Specifically, Mehta cites to Rosenthal v. Great Western Fin. Securities
    Corp. (1996) 
    14 Cal. 4th 394
    (Rosenthal) and Yvanova v. New Century Mortgage Corp.
    (2016) 
    62 Cal. 4th 919
    (Yvanova), to argue his trust deed was immune from challenge by
    the Tax Department because it was ratified as a transaction that was merely voidable,
    since “fraud in the execution or other illegality” had not been shown to render it void.
    The argument fails because, while Rosenthal does stand for a proposition
    that a fraud in the “‘execution’” or “‘inception’” of a contract will render it void
    
    (Rosenthal, supra
    , 14 Cal.4th at p. 415), it does not follow that fraud is the only ground
    upon which a document can be found void. Indeed, the contrary is demonstrated by well-
    established authorities—some cited to by the Tax Department in its respondent’s brief
    and the trial court in its ruling in this case—where defects in property descriptions
    rendered deeds void without any connection to fraud-related claims. (E.g., Edwards v.
    Santa 
    Paula, supra
    , 138 Cal.App.2d at pp. 380-381; Saterstrom v. Glick Bros. Sash,
    Door & Mill 
    Co., supra
    , 118 Cal.App. at p. 381.) In other words, Mehta’s citation to
    6
    Rosenthal does not demonstrate his proffered argument that the trust deed was merely
    voidable due to a lack of “fraud in the execution or other illegality.”
    As a result, Mehta’s attempt to rely upon Yvanova—to argue that he and the
    Chopras subsequently ratified the trust deed—fails for not demonstrating its logically
    necessary premise of a voidable (as opposed to void) trust deed. Moreover, while it is
    true the analysis in Yvanova involved the concept of a voidable transaction being capable
    of ratification by one or more of its involved parties 
    (Yvanova, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p.
    930), we note the Yvanova court expressly limited its scope of review to “action[s]
    seeking remedies for wrongful foreclosure.” (Id. at p. 934.) We further note Yvanova
    stands for a narrow holding that “a wrongful foreclosure plaintiff” can have standing to
    challenge a foreclosing entity’s assigned interest where such assignment was void and not
    merely voidable. (Id. at p. 935.) In sum, Mehta has not demonstrated the trust deed was
    immune from a challenge by the Tax Department based upon Rosenthal and Yvanova.
    We are also not persuaded by Mehta’s contention that the Tax Department
    lacked standing to challenge the trust deed because it was not a bona fide purchaser or
    encumbrancer. Mehta cites to the general proposition that “[r]ecordation is not essential
    to the validity of a real mortgage, but only affects its priority as against subsequent bona
    fide purchasers or encumbrancers.” (4 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (11th ed. 2017)
    7
    Secured Transactions in Real Property, §52, p. 844.)       Mehta asserts this general rule
    should be applied to his “allegedly defectively recorded” trust deed, but he does not
    provide any authority or reason as to why. In other words, Mehta’s contention fails
    because he does not demonstrate why his proffered rule regarding recordation status of a
    7
    Mehta cites also to Overton v. Schmitt (1936) 
    7 Cal. 2d 163
    ; Wells Fargo Bank v. PAL
    Investments, Inc. (1979) 
    96 Cal. App. 3d 431
    ; and 5 Miller and Star, California Real
    Estate (3d ed. 2000) section 11:114.
    7
    8
    trust deed controls the issue of the Tax Department’s standing in this case. The
    enforceability of Mehta’s trust deed was not and is not disputed based upon whether it
    was recorded.
    Mehta has failed to demonstrate the Tax Department lacked standing to
    challenge his trust deed. The Tax Department’s asserted tax lien—which is only
    challenged with respect to its priority relative to Mehta’s trust deed—demonstrated a
    “‘“concrete and actual”’” interest “‘“to be preserved and protected over and above the
    interest held in common with the public at large.”’” (City of Palm Springs v. Luna Crest
    
    Inc., supra
    , 245 Cal.App.4th at p. 883.)
    C. Mehta’s Independent Burden of Proof
    Next, Mehta contends he should have prevailed at the trial court level
    because the Tax Department failed to meet its burden of proof. We disagree. Given that
    the statutory framework for a hearing conducted under section 2924j, subdivisions (c)
    and (d), does not specify who bears burdens of proof (§§ 2924j, 2924k), we hold that
    each claimant in such a dispute has their own burden to prove each fact essential to their
    claim. (Evid. Code, § 500.) Both Mehta and the Tax Department had independent
    burdens to prove their claims of senior priority to the fund. (See State Farm Mutual
    Automobile Ins. Co. v. Huff (2013) 
    216 Cal. App. 4th 1463
    [court discusses the history of
    courts applying a burden of proof pursuant to Evidence Code section 500 in interpleader
    actions].) Since the validity of the Tax Department’s tax lien is not disputed in this
    8
    In the same vein, Mehta also cites to section 1214 in his opening brief, to contend that a
    “subsequent lienholder only gets priority over [an] unrecorded trust deed if the
    subsequent lienholder obtained the lien ‘in good faith and for a valuable consideration.’”
    (Underlining omitted.) Section 1214 determines the priority of competing interests in a
    property based upon their recordation status. Again, Mehta does not demonstrate that the
    trust deed’s recordation status controls the issues raised by his appeal, including the Tax
    Department’s standing to challenge Mehta’s trust deed.
    8
    appeal, this case is resolved by determining whether Mehta met his burden to show that
    his trust deed was an enforceable interest in the property.
    D. The Parcel Number, by Itself, Does not Resolve the Trust Deed’s Ambiguity
    Mehta contends his trust deed sufficiently described the property because of
    the parcel number, address, and trustor names contained in it. We disagree. First, by
    noting that the trustor names (the Chopras) and address contained in the trust deed do not
    provide grounds for a sufficient property description in this case. The names have no
    logical relationship to whether the property is sufficiently described and the subject
    address is only listed as the address of the trustors (not the property). Accordingly, the
    only potentially valid basis for finding the property description to be sufficient, of the
    three offered by Mehta, is the parcel number contained in the trust deed.
    While we find no reason to disagree that a parcel number could
    theoretically satisfy the law’s requirement for sufficient legal description of a property,
    we also find a parcel number, by itself, does not necessarily demonstrate the actual,
    physical location of a property. Generally, such a number corresponds to an assessor’s
    map (see Cafferkey v. City & County of San 
    Francisco, supra
    , 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 861,
    fn.2), which is a type of map that does not have to necessarily correspond with the actual
    physical location of a property. (Id. at p. 869 [Parcel numbers assigned pursuant to
    Revenue & Tax Code section 327 “need not correspond with actual subdivisions, lots,
    tracts or other legal divisions or boundaries of land”].)
    Additionally, in this case, the trust deed’s legal description of the property
    refers to a “recorded” map in its legal description. This reveals another potential issue
    with respect to locating the property by its parcel number because a “recorded” map
    9
    9
    could mean a certified parcel map filed in the Orange County Clerk Recorder’s Office.
    (See Gov. Code, § 66499.55.) Given that a parcel map and assessor’s map need not
    necessarily correspond to each other (Cafferkey v. City and County of San 
    Francisco, supra
    , 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 872), even if the trust deed’s parcel number correctly
    corresponds to a property depicted in a tax assessor’s map (a fact which has not been
    demonstrated by Mehta), this would not necessarily establish what property the trust deed
    is describing in a certified parcel map. In sum, the parcel number in this case, by itself,
    does not necessarily describe the property’s actual, physical location so that it can be
    “identified or located on the ground.” (Edwards v. City of Santa 
    Paula, supra
    , 138
    Cal.App.2d at p. 380.)
    E. No Extrinsic Evidence was Offered to Resolve the Ambiguous Trust Deed
    Mehta offers no demonstration of how the parcel number could have been
    used to locate the property. He instead argues—as he did to the trial court—that “no
    parol evidence is needed to confirm [the trust deed] is a lien on this property.” Mehta’s
    argument is incorrect. The inaccuracies of the trust deed’s legal description of the
    property created an ambiguity, which implicated a need for clarification by extrinsic
    evidence. Indeed, in the relevant cases cited to by the parties, courts based their
    determinations regarding sufficient description of a property upon examinations of
    extrinsic evidence. (See Rogers v. McCartney (1906) 
    3 Cal. App. 34
    , 35 [court examined
    recorded map to rule out possibility that the incorrectly listed book and page number in
    the inaccurate deed did not correspond to an actual lot and block number combination for
    another property]; see also Edwards v. City of Santa 
    Paula, supra
    , 138 Cal.App.2d at pp.
    9
    A parcel map is used to sell, lease, or finance property. (See Sixells, LLC v. Cannery
    Business Park (2008) 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 648
    , 652 [the Subdivision Map Act “‘generally
    prohibits the sale, lease, or financing of any parcel of a subdivision until the recordation
    of an approved map in full compliance with the law’”].)
    10
    382-383 [court found description in tax deed insufficient because its reference to “‘Map
    No. 20’” was unclear and extrinsic evidence did not clarify the description’s references];
    Finn v. Goldstein (1927) 
    201 Cal. 605
    , 608 [court examined extrinsic evidence describing
    property by metes and bounds and found the description corresponded to a differently
    worded description in the memorandum at issue].)
    In contrast, no such extrinsic evidence was offered to the court in this
    matter. This left the trust deed’s ambiguity unresolved with no demonstration that the
    property could be identified or located by the legal description of the trust deed. As a
    result, Mehta failed to carry his independent burden at the trial court level to prove that
    the trust deed’s legal description of the property was sufficient to be enforceable. On
    appeal, with respect to the trial court’s factual finding that there was no evidence
    demonstrating the sufficiency of the parcel number, Mehta’s has failed to meet his burden
    under substantial evidence review to demonstrate that the “‘evidence was (1)
    “uncontradicted and unimpeached” and (2) “of such a character and weight as to leave no
    room for a judicial determination that it was insufficient to support a finding.”’”
    (Eriksson v. Nunnink (2015) 
    233 Cal. App. 4th 708
    , 733.) In sum, Mehta has not met his
    burden to demonstrate reversible error.
    F. Mehta’s Arguments Regarding Notice of the Trust Deed
    Finally, we are unpersuaded that Mehta’s assertions regarding notice of the
    trust deed should control the disposition of this appeal. Mehta asserts the indexing of the
    county recorder filing system provided effective notice of the trust deed to the Tax
    10
    Department.        However, Mehta does not say how this point, even if shown, would
    impact the dispositive issue of whether the trust deed sufficiently described the property.
    10
    Also, for the first time in his reply brief, Mehta cites to section 1207 as further support
    of his argument that notice of the trust deed existed. We do not consider this argument.
    (Reichardt v. Hoffman (1997) 
    52 Cal. App. 4th 754
    , 764.)
    11
    This absence of meaningful discussion exists within a context of case law supporting a
    conclusion that if the trust deed was void, then notice of it achieved nothing for the
    purposes of determining the senior interest to the surplus fund. (See Vassault v. Austin
    (1869) 
    36 Cal. 691
    , 700 [“We know of no principle justifying us in holding that the
    record of a deed, void as to any person, was notice to such person of anything, except,
    perhaps, of the existence of the void instrument”]; see also 
    Yvanova, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 929 [“‘“A void thing is as no thing”’”].) In other words, Mehta has not persuaded us
    that any notice his trust deed may have imparted would outweigh the conclusion that the
    trust deed was void and unenforceable. (See Benach v. County of Los Angeles (2007)
    
    149 Cal. App. 4th 836
    , 852 [“An appellant must provide an argument and legal authority
    to support his contentions”].)
    In sum, Mehta failed to carry his independent burden at the trial court level
    to show the trust deed’s legal description of the property was sufficient to make it
    enforceable. (Evid. Code, § 500.) On appeal, Mehta has not carried his burden to
    demonstrate the trial court committed reversible error. (Allen v. 
    Liberman, supra
    , 227
    Cal.App.4th at p. 53.) Mehta is incorrect that no extrinsic evidence was needed to clarify
    the patent ambiguity of his trust deed’s legal description of the property. Accordingly,
    we have not been persuaded to disagree with the result of the trial court’s judgment
    finding the trust deed unenforceable and the Tax Department’s claim senior in priority as
    next in time of creation. (§ 2897.)
    12
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondent is entitled to its costs on appeal.
    MOORE, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    GOETHALS, J.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G056234

Filed Date: 10/31/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/31/2019