Bock v. Cal. Capital Loans ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 5/20/13 (Unmodified opn. attached)
    Reposted 5/21/13 to attach opinion
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Nevada)
    ----
    GREGORY W. BOCK, as Trustee, etc.,                                      C069863
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                       (Super. Ct. No. 76151)
    v.                                                     MODIFICATION OF
    OPINION
    CALIFORNIA CAPITAL LOANS, INC. et al.,
    (NO CHANGE IN
    Defendants and Respondents.                        JUDGMENT)
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Nevada County, Sean P.
    Dowling, Judge. Affirmed.
    John J. Hartford; Wilson & Wilson and Donald A. Wilson for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Jay-Allen Eisen Law Corporation, Jay-Allen Eisen, Aaron S. McKinney; The Law
    Offices of Kirk S. Rimmer and Kirk S. Rimmer for Defendant and Respondent.
    TH E COURT:
    The opinion of this court filed May 14, 2013, in the above entitled case is
    modified as follows:
    The second sentence of the second paragraph on 8 page beginning “According to
    Bock” is deleted and the following sentence is inserted in its place:
    1
    According to Bock, the interest that the lender, California Capital, was to have
    earned on the loan cannot be considered compensation to Speckert for purposes of
    section 1916.1, even though Speckert was the sole shareholder of the corporation, and
    since Speckert did not take a commission on the transaction, Speckert did not act for
    compensation or in expectation of compensation in arranging the loan.
    This modification does not affect the judgment.
    ROBIE                        , Acting P. J.
    MURRAY                         , J.
    DUARTE                         , J.
    2
    Filed 5/14/13 Unmodified version
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Nevada)
    ----
    GREGORY W. BOCK, as Trustee, etc.,                                   C069863
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                      (Super. Ct. No. 76151)
    v.
    CALIFORNIA CAPITAL LOANS, INC. et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Nevada County, Sean P.
    Dowling, Judge. Affirmed.
    John J. Hartford; Wilson & Wilson and Donald A. Wilson for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Jay-Allen Eisen Law Corporation, Jay-Allen Eisen, Aaron S. McKinney; The Law
    Offices of Kirk S. Rimmer and Kirk S. Rimmer for Defendant and Respondent.
    In California, a loan secured by a lien on real property is exempt from the
    constitutional prohibition on usury if the loan is made or arranged by a licensed real
    estate broker. (Cal. Const., art. XV, § 1; Civ. Code, 1 § 1916.1.) Section 1916.1 explains
    1       All further section references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise noted.
    1
    that “a loan . . . is arranged by a person licensed as a real estate broker when the
    broker . . . acts for compensation or in expectation of compensation for soliciting,
    negotiating, or arranging the loan for another.”
    In this case, we conclude that even when the lender on such a loan is a corporation
    that is wholly owned by the arranging broker, the broker can still be found to have
    arranged the loan “for another” for purposes of section 1916.1. We also conclude that in
    such a situation, the broker may be found to have arranged the loan “in expectation of
    compensation” even if the only compensation the broker will receive is the profit his
    wholly owned corporation reaps from the interest on the loan. Based on these
    conclusions, we affirm the judgment here.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    When plaintiff Gregory W. Bock, trustee of the Bock Family Trust, needed a loan,
    a third party put him in contact with defendant Leo Speckert, a licensed real estate broker
    and the sole shareholder of defendant California Capital Loans, Inc. (California Capital).
    Speckert told Bock what the terms of the loan would be and made out disclosure
    statements regarding the loan. California Capital loaned Bock $1.2 million secured by a
    deed of trust on certain real property the trust owned. Speckert did not take a
    commission on the transaction.
    The promissory note for the loan provided for an interest rate of 15 percent, with
    monthly interest-only payments to commence in April 2009 and to continue until March
    2012, when the entire loan principal was to be repaid. When Bock defaulted on the loan
    payments, California Capital foreclosed and purchased the trust‟s property at a trustee‟s
    sale under the deed of trust in April 2010. In May 2010, Bock filed suit against
    California Capital and Speckert, claiming (among other things) that the interest rate on
    the loan exceeded the maximum allowed by the California Constitution and therefore the
    trustee‟s sale was void. Ultimately, a brief court trial was held in August 2011 on Bock‟s
    claim of usury. The trial court found the note was exempt from the constitutional usury
    2
    prohibition under section 1916.1, which applies to “any loan . . . made or arranged by any
    person licensed as a real estate broker by the State of California, and secured, directly or
    collaterally, in whole or in part by liens on real property.” Accordingly, the trial court
    entered judgment in favor of defendants.2 Following the denial of his motion for a new
    trial, Bock timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Bock contends section 1916.1 did not apply here because the loan was
    made by California Capital, not Speckert, and Speckert cannot be deemed to have
    arranged the loan within the meaning of the statute because: (1) he did not act in
    expectation of receiving a commission on the transaction; and (2) he did not arrange the
    loan “for another” because the lender was his wholly owned corporation. Finding no
    merit in these arguments, we affirm.
    Section 1 of article XV of the California Constitution imposes certain limitations
    on the amount of interest that can be charged on a loan. That provision also contains an
    exemption for “any loans made or arranged by any person licensed as a real estate broker
    by the State of California and secured in whole or in part by liens on real property.” As
    relevant here, section 1916.1 implements that exemption by specifying that “a loan . . . is
    arranged by a person licensed as a real estate broker when the broker . . . acts for
    compensation or in expectation of compensation for soliciting, negotiating, or arranging
    the loan for another.”
    Under the part of section 1916.1 at issue here, then, a licensed real estate broker
    can be deemed to have arranged a loan only if the broker “act[ed] for compensation or in
    2      Defendants have requested that we take judicial notice of the complaint and
    judgment in an unlawful detainer proceeding that California Capital commenced against
    Bock following the judgment in this case. As those documents are irrelevant to our
    resolution of this appeal, we deny that request.
    3
    expectation of compensation” and the broker “solicit[ed], negotiat[ed], or arrang[ed] the
    loan for another.” (See Green v. Future Two (1986) 
    179 Cal.App.3d 738
    , 742–743 [“a
    loan is arranged by a person licensed as a real estate broker only if two things occur. One
    is that the broker acts for another or others, not for himself. The other is that he receives
    or expects to receive compensation”].)
    I
    Arranging A Loan “For Another”
    Taking Bock‟s second argument first, the question is whether a real estate broker
    can be deemed to have arranged a loan “for another” when the lender is a corporation that
    is wholly owned by the broker. Like the trial court, we conclude the answer to that
    question is “yes.”
    First, Bock himself qualifies as “another” person separate and apart from Speckert
    for whom Speckert can be deemed to have arranged the loan. The evidence was that
    when Bock needed a loan, a third party put Bock in contact with Speckert, and Speckert
    told Bock what the terms of the loan would be and made out disclosure statements
    regarding the loan. As we explain, the statutory provisions governing those disclosure
    statements support the conclusion that Speckert arranged the loan for Bock within the
    meaning of section 1916.1.
    “Business and Professions Code section 10240 requires a real estate broker to
    provide [a mortgage loan disclosure statement] to a borrower on a secured loan
    negotiated by the broker.” (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners
    III (2007) 
    153 Cal.App.4th 1373
    , 1377.) By its terms, Business and Professions Code
    section 10240 applies to “[e]very real estate broker. . . acting within the meaning of
    subdivision (d) of Section 10131.” In turn, subdivision (d) of Business and Professions
    Code section 10131 provides that “[a] real estate broker within the meaning of this part is
    a person who, for a compensation or in expectation of a compensation, regardless of the
    form or time of payment” “[s]olicits borrowers or lenders for or negotiates loans or
    4
    collects payments or performs services for borrowers or lenders or note owners in
    connection with loans secured directly or collaterally by liens on real property or on a
    business opportunity.” (See Stickel v. Harris (1987) 
    196 Cal.App.3d 575
    , 583 [“Given
    unmistakable parallels of language, it is both logical and appropriate for section 1916.1 to
    be construed in light of Business and Professions Code section 10131”].)
    Business and Professions Code section 10131 makes clear that a real estate broker
    can perform services for both lenders and borrowers in connection with loans secured by
    liens on real property. Bock points to no authority suggesting that a broker can only be
    deemed to have performed such services for either the lender or the borrower and not for
    both sides in the transaction. Thus, on the facts here, even if Speckert can be deemed to
    have arranged the loan for his wholly owned corporation, California Capital, he can also
    be deemed to have arranged the loan for Bock, who certainly qualifies as “another.”
    Second, even if we were to look only at the relationship between Speckert and
    California Capital in addressing this issue, we would still conclude that Speckert arranged
    the loan “for another” within the meaning of section 1916.1. “It is fundamental that a
    corporation is a legal entity that is distinct from its shareholders.” (Grosset v. Wenaas
    (2008) 
    42 Cal.4th 1100
    , 1108.) Thus, California Capital qualifies as “another” for
    purposes of the loan Speckert arranged, even though Speckert was the sole shareholder of
    the corporation.
    Bock argues that under the case law, “a broker [can] „arrange‟ a loan for a
    business he [i]s a part of only if there [is] some other person who also benefit[s] from the
    transaction.” In Bock‟s view, because only Speckert -- as the sole shareholder of
    California Capital -- would have benefited from the loan his corporation made, Speckert
    cannot be deemed to have arranged the loan “for another.”
    The case law does not support Bock‟s argument. In Stoneridge, this court
    concluded that “an officer and employee of the managing company of a limited liability
    company, which was the manager of another limited liability company, which was the
    5
    general partner of the lender” “negotiated and arranged the . . . loan as a third party
    intermediary, or as the statute reads, „for another‟ ” because he “was not negotiating
    solely on his own behalf.” (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners
    III, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1379, 1381.) The same is true here. Even if Speckert
    was, indirectly, the only individual who would benefit from the loan because he was the
    sole shareholder of the lending corporation, he still was -- like the individual in
    Stoneridge -- “not negotiating solely on his own behalf” because he and his corporation
    are distinct legal entities, and therefore he was necessarily acting “for another” in
    negotiating the loan for his corporation.3
    None of the four other cases Bock cites -- all of which this court discussed in
    Stoneridge -- is any more helpful to him. As this court explained in Stoneridge, the court
    in Winnett v. Roberts (1986) 
    179 Cal.App.3d 909
     “determined a loan was not exempt
    from the usury prohibition where the only broker involved in the transaction was the
    borrower.” (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, supra, 153
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1380.) Obviously, that holding has no application here because
    Speckert was neither the borrower nor the lender in the transaction at issue. As we have
    noted, Speckert and California Capital are legally distinct from each other and therefore
    Speckert cannot be treated as the lender simply because he was the sole shareholder in
    the corporation that loaned the money to Bock.
    As for Green v. Future Two, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at page 738, which
    “concerned a loan made to a partnership, the general partner of which was a licensed
    3       We note that Bock made no attempt here to use the alter ego doctrine to pierce the
    corporate veil and thereby establish that for purposes of this transaction Speckert and
    California Capital should be treated as one and the same. (See Mesler v. Bragg
    Management Co. (1985) 
    39 Cal.3d 290
    , 300 [describing circumstances in which the
    courts “will disregard the corporate entity and will hold the individual shareholders liable
    for the actions of the corporation”].)
    6
    broker,” the Stoneridge court concluded that on this particular point Green was “not
    persuasive authority” because “[t]he Green court reached its conclusion ipse dixit,
    without analyzing the broker‟s efforts on behalf of the partnership.” (Stoneridge
    Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th at p. 1380.)
    Thus, we find no guidance in Green.
    In Stickel v. Harris, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at page 575, “the First Appellate
    District determined the exemption for loans negotiated by licensed real estate brokers
    applied to a loan made to a partnership and a joint venture even though a licensed broker
    who solicited and negotiated the loan was one of the partners” because “[t]he broker „was
    not acting exclusively as a borrower; he was simultaneously acting as an agent soliciting
    the loan on behalf of others, conduct for which a license was required . . . .‟ ”
    (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v. MW Housing Partners III, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 1381, quoting Stickel, at p. 587.) Here, because Speckert and California Capital are
    distinct legal entities, Speckert was not acting as the lender in the transaction at all; he
    was, at best, acting as an agent for his corporation and thus was acting “for another.”
    Finally, in Park Terrace Limited v. Teasdale (2002) 
    100 Cal.App.4th 802
    , “the
    Fourth Appellate District determined a licensed broker who was a general partner in five
    limited partnerships arranged loans to the partnerships, and thus the loans were exempt
    from the usury limitation” because the broker “ „negotiated the loans for each
    partnership‟s benefit, not merely for his own.‟ ” (Stoneridge Parkway Partners, LLC v.
    MW Housing Partners III, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th at p. 1381, quoting Park Terrace, at
    p. 807.) A similar conclusion applies here: Speckert negotiated the loan for the benefit
    of his corporation -- a separate legal entity -- not merely for his own benefit.
    Based on the foregoing analysis, we reject Bock‟s argument that Speckert could
    not be deemed to have acted “for another” in arranging the loan from California Capital
    to Bock.
    7
    II
    Arranging A Loan “In Expectation Of Compensation”
    Bock‟s other argument on appeal is that Speckert cannot be deemed to have
    arranged the loan within the meaning of section 1916.1 because he did not act in
    expectation of receiving a commission on the transaction. We find no merit is this
    argument either.
    As we have noted, under the part of section 1916.1 at issue here a broker must
    have “act[ed] for compensation or in expectation of compensation” for the exception
    from the constitutional usury provision to apply. According to Bock, the interest that the
    lender, California Capital, was to have earned on the loan but cannot be considered
    compensation to Bock for purposes of the section 1916.1, even though Bock was the sole
    shareholder of the corporation, and since Speckert did not take a commission on the
    transaction, Speckert did not act for compensation or in expectation of compensation in
    arranging the loan.
    Bock‟s argument is inconsistent with decisional law under the statute that we find
    persuasive. In Stickel, the licensed real estate broker whose actions were at issue
    (Butticci) was a member of a joint venture and of a partnership that were the borrowers
    on the loans in question. (Stickel v. Harris, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp. 579-580.)
    There, the appellate court noted that “[p]recisely what constitutes „compensation‟ for
    purposes of section 1916.1 is a question of first impression.” (Stickel, at p. 584.) The
    court then continued as follows: “Within the context of other statutes, compensation is a
    concept which has received an extremely broad definition sufficient to encompass the
    receipt of just about any form of monetary or tangible benefit that is not self-bestowed.
    [Citations.] „[T]he nature of compensation . . . is as variable as the particular facts
    involved.‟ [Citation.] The term „interest‟ has been treated with a similar expansiveness.
    [Citations.]
    8
    “Whether a payment, advantage, benefit, or other form of consideration amounts
    to compensation has traditionally been regarded as an issue to be decided by the trier of
    fact. [Citations.] In usury cases the trier of fact is vested with the power to resolve many
    issues attending and including the ultimate question of whether a particular transaction is
    usurious. [Citations.] By parity of reasoning, it follows that the issue of whether Butticci
    „arranged‟ a nonusurious loan within the meaning of section 1916.1 was likewise
    committed to the trier of fact unless, as a matter of law, a given transaction failed to meet
    the two-prong test cited previously. The only task confronting us is to decide if the trial
    court‟s determination that the loan was exempt can claim the support of substantial
    evidence considered by the trial court in its capacity as the trier of fact. [Citations.]
    “[I]t is undisputed that [Butticci] was not soliciting the loan for himself, but as the
    intermediary for the partnership and the joint venture. Butticci did not forfeit this status
    solely because he became a member of these entities. Butticci testified that he expected
    to be compensated when the profits generated by sale of the condominiums were paid to
    the partners at the conclusion of the project. By obtaining the financial wherewithal
    which would enable the partnership and the joint venture to operate, he was providing a
    vital service from which all involved would benefit. Those benefits would accrue to all
    of the partners and joint venturers, who would each obtain a pro rata share of the ultimate
    profits. The fact that Butticci‟s reward would be deferred until a later time is of no
    moment. Anticipated profits qualify as compensation. [Citations.] Accordingly,
    substantial evidence supports the trial court‟s finding that Butticci solicited the loan with
    an expectation of compensation. This finding in turn supports the court‟s determination
    that the loan was exempted by section 1916.1 from the interest limitations of the usury
    law.” (Stickel v. Harris, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at pp. 584-585; see also Park Terrace
    Limited v. Teasdale, supra, 100 Cal.App.4th at pp. 806-808 [following Stickel on this
    point].)
    9
    Applying the reasoning of Stickel here, there was substantial evidence on which
    the trial court could have found that Speckert “act[ed] . . . in expectation of
    compensation” in arranging the loan from California Capital to Bock because, as the sole
    shareholder of California Capital, Speckert could have expected to reap the benefits of
    the interest his corporation was supposed to earn on the loan: 15 percent per year for
    three years on a loan principal of $1.2 million -- i.e., $540,000. There is no logical
    reason to require Speckert to have earned, or expected to earn, compensation solely in the
    form of a commission from his corporation for section 1916.1 to apply here. Whether he
    took his compensation for the deal by drawing a dividend from the corporation or by
    receiving a commission from the corporation makes no difference under Stickel. The
    profit his corporation expected to reap from the interest payments on the loan was
    sufficient to satisfy the “compensation” requirement of the statute just as the profits
    Butticci‟s joint venture and partnership expected to reap from the sale of the
    condominiums they were going to build on the property they purchased with the loan
    proceeds was sufficient to satisfy that requirement in Stickel.
    This conclusion is bolstered by the provision in subdivision (d) of Business and
    Professions Code section 10131, discussed above, that refers to a broker acting “for a
    compensation or in expectation of a compensation, regardless of the form or time of
    payment.” (Italics added.) We have noted already that “it is both logical and appropriate
    for section 1916.1 to be construed in light of Business and Professions Code section
    10131.” (Stickel v. Harris, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at p. 583.) The italicized language of
    Business and Professions Code section 10131, subdivision (d) emphasizes that we are not
    to draw fine distinctions between various forms of compensation -- i.e., a commission
    versus a corporate dividend -- in determining whether a licensed real estate broker has
    acted in his or her licensed capacity. Accordingly, under the reasoning of Stickel, there
    was substantial evidence to support the trial court‟s implied finding here that Speckert
    10
    acted in expectation of compensation in brokering the loan from California Capital to
    Bock.
    Ignoring Stickel on this point, Bock relies on two cases to support his contention
    that the expectation that California Capital would earn interest on the loan did not satisfy
    the “compensation” requirement of section 1916.1. He first cites In re Lara (9th Cir.
    1984) 
    731 F.2d 1455
    . In Lara, a licensed real estate broker (Zager) and his friend (Pion)
    loaned money to the Laras secured by a deed of trust on their home. (Id. at pp. 1457-
    1458.) The Ninth Circuit concluded that “the portion of the loan funded by Zager [wa]s
    exempt [from the constitutional usury prohibition under section 1916.1] because it was
    „made‟ by a licensed real estate broker.” (Lara, at p. 1462.) As for the portion of the
    loan funded by Pion, the question for the court was whether that portion of the loan was
    “arranged” by a licensed real estate broker. (Ibid.) The court concluded that it was not
    “[b]ecause Zager did not receive a commission for soliciting Pion‟s participation in the
    loan.” (Id. at p. 1463.) “Zager and Pion argue[d] that [the court] define[d] the term
    „compensation‟ too narrowly. Zager claim[ed] that he was „compensated‟ for soliciting a
    lender inasmuch as he would not have undertaken the loan, and would have received no
    interest from the Laras, absent Pion‟s participation.” (Ibid.) The Ninth Circuit disagreed,
    concluding as follows: “The fact that Zager would profit if Pion agreed to undertake the
    loan . . . does not imply that Zager was acting for compensation. Under California law, a
    broker is not acting in his licensed capacity unless he receives compensation for acting on
    behalf of someone else. [Citation.] A broker who realizes a profit from participating in a
    real estate transaction on his own behalf does not act for „compensation.‟ [Citations.] It
    follows that Zager did not receive compensation for bringing Pion into the transaction,
    and we hold, therefore, that Pion‟s portion of the loan was not „arranged‟ by a licensed
    real estate broker.” (Ibid.)
    We do not find Lara persuasive on this point for two reasons. First, it was noted
    in In re Hein (Bankr. S.D.Cal. 1986) 
    60 B.R. 769
    , 775 that “Business and Professions
    11
    Code [section] 10131 was amended in 1984, after In re Lara, to add the emphasized
    portion of the introductory paragraph, as follows: [¶] “ „A real estate broker within the
    meaning of this part is a person who, for a compensation or in the expectation of a
    compensation, regardless of a form or time of payment, does or negotiates to do one or
    more of the following acts or acts for another or others . . . .‟ ” Thus, in reaching its
    conclusion, the Lara court did not have the benefit of the statutory language that we have
    found persuasive here (see above).
    Second, Lara is distinguishable on its facts, inasmuch as the Ninth Circuit treated
    the part of the loan Zager made on his own behalf separately from the part of the loan
    Pion made. The Ninth Circuit essentially concluded that the interest Zager expected to
    receive on the part of the loan he made could not be considered, at the same time, to be
    compensation that he expected to receive for “arranging” the part of the loan Pion made.
    No such issue arises here. Here, there was only one loan -- made by California Capital to
    Bock -- and the only compensation Speckert expected to receive for brokering that single
    loan was the profit he would reap from the interest his corporation earned on the loan. As
    we have explained, that profit gave the trial court a substantial evidentiary basis for
    finding that Speckert acted with the expectation of compensation in arranging the loan.
    The second case on which Bock relies is Creative Ventures, LLC v. Jim Ward &
    Associates (2011) 
    195 Cal.App.4th 1430
    , which he contends “is squarely on fours with
    the present case.” As the court explained in that case, “[p]laintiffs Creative Ventures,
    LLC (Creative), and Arden 2002, LLC (Arden), borrowed nearly $3 million from
    defendant Jim Ward & Associates (JWA), a California Corporation, to finance two real
    property development projects. The loans were evidenced by four promissory notes
    12
    secured by deeds of trust on the real property. Each of the notes called for interest
    payments in excess of the maximum permitted by the California Constitution. (Cal.
    Const., art. XV, § 1.) The interest charges would have been lawful if the loans had been
    „made or arranged‟ by a licensed real estate broker (Civ. Code, § 1916.1), as JWA held
    itself out to be. As it happened, JWA was not so licensed.” (Creative Ventures, at
    p. 1435.) The trial court found JWA liable for usury, and the appellate court found the
    evidence sufficient to support that ruling. (Id. at pp. 1435-1436.)
    On appeal, JWA argued the loans were “exempt from the usury law because, as a
    corporation, it could only act through its directors, officers, or other agents and the loans
    were actually arranged by [Jim] Ward, who was licensed.” (Creative Ventures, LLC v.
    Jim Ward & Associates, supra, 
    195 Cal.App.4th 1442
    -1443.) The appellate court
    explained that “although the parties argue over the evidence of Ward‟s role in the
    negotiations, the arguments miss the point. The question is not what Ward did but
    whether he was acting on behalf of the corporation or in his individual interest when he
    did it. As to that factual question, the trial court implicitly found that, to the extent Ward
    was involved, he was acting on behalf of JWA. There is ample evidence to support the
    finding.” (Id. at p. 1443.) In particular, the court noted that (1) “the promissory notes . . .
    specifie[d] that the loans were being arranged by a licensed broker and identifie[d] the
    broker as JWA”; (2) the managing member of the borrowers (Schink) “thought JWA was
    the broker arranging the loans because that is what Lee [the attorney who helped Ward
    form JWA] told him and that is what he read in the loan documents”; (3) “[t]hat Lee and
    Ward believed the transaction was conducted on behalf of the corporation is evidenced
    by their mutual belief that the corporation was licensed; licensing the corporation was a
    concern only if the loans were to be arranged on behalf of the corporation”; (4) “Lee‟s
    13
    understanding that the individuals were acting on behalf of the corporation is further
    evidenced by his describing lending practices not in terms of what Ward did, but in terms
    of what the company did.” (Id. at pp. 1436, 1443-1444.) The appellate court concluded
    that “[t]his is substantial evidence to support the trial court‟s conclusion that the parties‟
    true intent was that JWA arranged the loans; Ward, Lee, and Locker acted on behalf of
    JWA. Since JWA was not licensed, the loans are not exempt from the usury laws. The
    trial court did not err in declaring the interest terms null and void and finding JWA liable
    for usury.” (Id. at p. 1444.)
    The reason Creative Ventures is of no assistance to Bock here is that in this case
    the trial court impliedly found that Speckert arranged the loan at issue by acting in his
    individual capacity as a licensed real estate broker, and the question on appeal is simply
    whether there was substantial evidence to support that finding. We have concluded
    already that there was. The fact that different evidence in Creative Ventures -- namely,
    the evidence that the licensed individual was acting on behalf of the corporation rather
    than in his individual capacity -- led to the appellate court affirming a different trial court
    finding in that case, namely, that the loan was arranged by the unlicensed corporation
    rather than the licensed individual -- simply has no logical bearing on the outcome of
    Bock‟s appeal here.
    For the foregoing reasons, substantial evidence supports the trial court‟s finding
    that section 1916.1 applied here, and there was no trial court error on this point. 4
    4      Because we uphold the judgment on this basis, we do not address defendant‟s
    alternate argument that the appeal is barred by res judicata.
    14
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Defendants shall recover their costs on appeal. (Cal.
    Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)
    ROBIE                  , Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    MURRAY                           , J.
    DUARTE                          , J.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C069863N

Filed Date: 5/21/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014