Timmann v. Napoli CA2/3 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 4/23/14 Timmann v. Napoli 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SWARNAPALI TIMMANN,                                                   B246687
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                     (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC324461)
    v.
    JOHN F. NAPOLI et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment and orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles
    County, Anthony Mohr, Judge. Reversed in part, affirmed in part.
    Law Offices of David M. Dushane and David M. Dushane for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Law Offices of Eric Y. Nishizawa and Eric Y. Nishizawa for Defendants and
    Respondents.
    _____________________
    INTRODUCTION
    Plaintiff Swarnapali Timmann (Plaintiff) appeals from the judgment entered in
    favor of Defendants John Napoli (Napoli), Kelly Berkline (Berkline), JFN Project
    Consultants, Inc., a California corporation (JFN Consultants), and JFN Project
    Consultants, Ltd., a United Kingdom corporation (JFN Limited) (collectively,
    Defendants). Judgment was entered for Defendants after Plaintiff’s case was dismissed
    for failure to post a nonresident plaintiff bond pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
    section 1030. We reverse the judgment, but affirm the discovery orders discussed later in
    this opinion.
    Plaintiff is a citizen and resident of the United Kingdom. Pursuant to a forum
    selection clause in an investment agreement with JFN Consultants, Plaintiff sued
    Defendants in California state court, alleging, among other things, that Defendants
    breached the agreement by failing to make installment payments when due and failing to
    return Plaintiff’s principal after she cancelled the agreement.
    In this appeal, we are principally concerned with the trial court’s order requiring
    Plaintiff to post a nonresident bond. To support their bond motion, Defendants relied
    exclusively upon evidence showing they offered to pay Plaintiff all money due under the
    investment agreement, but Plaintiff rejected the offer. Defendants argued this evidence
    established a reasonable possibility of obtaining judgment, because their offer of
    payment, and Plaintiff’s rejection, purportedly extinguished the debt. The trial court
    agreed, and entered an order requiring Plaintiff to post a bond as security for the costs
    and attorney fees that might be awarded to Defendants. When Plaintiff failed to post the
    bond, the court dismissed the action and awarded Defendants over $250,000 for costs and
    attorney fees.
    As we shall explain, Defendants’ evidence was insufficient to establish a
    reasonable possibility of obtaining judgment as required to authorize a nonresident bond
    under Code of Civil Procedure section 1030. Though an offer to pay discharges the
    incidents of a debt, such as the accrual of interest (Civ. Code, § 1504), the debt is
    extinguished only if the amount owed “is immediately deposited in the name of the
    2
    creditor, with some bank or savings and loan association within this state, of good repute,
    and notice thereof is given to the creditor.” (Civ. Code, § 1500.) This is the law
    regardless of whether the creditor rejects the offer of payment. Because Defendants’
    evidence showed only that an offer of payment was made, the evidence was insufficient
    to authorize an order requiring Plaintiff to post a nonresident bond.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1.     The Investment Agreement
    On January 15, 2004, Plaintiff and JFN Consultants, by and through its chairman,
    Napoli, executed an “Inter-Party Private Agreement” (the Agreement), pursuant to which
    Plaintiff agreed to loan JFN Consultants £625,000 to fund a private transaction to create
    “certain medium and long term institutional quality notes issued by major international
    ‘AA’ and ‘AAA’ rated banks.” In consideration for funding the transaction, JFN
    Consultants agreed to pay Plaintiff 11 monthly payments of £41,667 and one final lump
    sum payment of £666,667, commencing 30 days after Plaintiff wired the principal
    amount to a British bank account held in the name of JFN Limited.
    The Agreement specifies the following remedy in the event of JFN Consultants’
    default: “IF TIMMANN HAS NOT RECEIVED PAYMENT WITHIN FIVE (5)
    BANKING DAYS, FROM THE END OF ANY THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD, THEN
    TIMMANN MAY AT ITS [sic] SOLE DISCRETION CANCEL THIS AGREEMENT
    AND HAVE THEIR [sic] FUNDS RETURNED.”
    2.     Plaintiff Files Suit
    Upon executing the Agreement in January 2004, Plaintiff wire transferred
    £625,000 to JFN Limited’s bank account in accordance with the Agreement’s terms. JFN
    Consultants paid Plaintiff four monthly installment payments in February, March, April
    and May of 2004, but failed to make the June payment when due. Based on assurances
    by Napoli that the June payment would be forthcoming, Plaintiff elected not to cancel the
    Agreement. In July 2004, JFN Consultants again failed to make the monthly installment
    payment.
    3
    On July 19, 2004, Plaintiff elected to cancel the Agreement. Pursuant to the
    Agreement’s terms, Plaintiff demanded the return of her £625,000 principal payment.
    Plaintiff also asserted she was owed two monthly installment payments, for June and
    July, totaling £83,334.
    In response to her notice of cancellation, Plaintiff alleges Napoli demanded that
    she execute a “Debt Discharge Agreement” and “Non-Disclosure Agreement” and
    provide her “tax code” before he would authorize any payments. Subsequently, Plaintiff
    received a letter from Napoli’s agent, Vince Rigano (Rigano), instructing Plaintiff to
    execute two copies of an enclosed Non-Disclosure Agreement. Rigano’s letter allegedly
    stated, “ ‘Upon receipt of the signed Non-disclosure Agreement my client advises that
    payment of 708,334 pounds (principal and interest of 83,334 pounds) will be made.’ ”
    Plaintiff alleges she signed the Non-Disclosure Agreement, but did not receive the Debt
    Discharge Agreement or the payments offered in satisfaction of the sums owed under the
    Agreement.
    In November 2004, Plaintiff filed this action against Defendants. While Plaintiff’s
    civil case was pending in California state court, a parallel criminal investigation related to
    Plaintiff’s transaction was commenced in the United Kingdom. In connection with those
    criminal proceeding, Plaintiff alleges Napoli, through his agents and associates, made
    death threats and false accusations of arson and assault against Plaintiff in the United
    Kingdom. The alleged death threats and criminal accusations led the British
    Metropolitan Police Service to place Plaintiff under police protection. Plaintiff alleges
    the conduct caused her to suffer severe and extreme emotional distress.
    Based on the foregoing factual allegations, Plaintiff’s operative fifth amended
    complaint asserts claims for breach of contract, fraud, negligent misrepresentation,
    breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, conversion, intentional infliction of emotional
    4
    distress, money had and received, unjust enrichment, alter ego liability and for a
    constructive trust.1
    3.      Discovery Order Compelling Plaintiff’s In-Person Deposition
    While the record is not entirely clear, it appears that at some point in late-2008,
    Plaintiff requested a protective order to have her deposition conducted by telephone or
    written questions to accommodate a purported mental illness that allegedly manifested as
    a result of Defendants’ threats.2 To support the request, Plaintiff presented reports from
    her general physician and a licensed consultant psychologist, both of whom diagnosed
    Plaintiff with anxiety/panic disorders and agoraphobia, and recommended against
    Plaintiff sitting for an in-person deposition.
    The trial court entered an order staying the action for the stated purpose of
    obtaining “expert opinion . . . to assist the Court in determining the appropriate manner
    and method by which Plaintiff should give her deposition in this case.” The order
    required Plaintiff to submit to an independent medical examination, pursuant to Evidence
    Code section 730, to be performed by a qualified psychiatrist or clinical psychologist,
    after which time the court would consider lifting the stay and making appropriate orders
    regarding Plaintiff’s deposition. In the alternative, the order provided, “Plaintiff may sit
    for her deposition in person in England” and, upon completion of her deposition, “the
    stay . . . shall be lifted.”
    The trial court appointed Dr. Christopher Thompson, a licensed medical doctor
    and psychiatrist in the United Kingdom, to conduct the independent medical examination.
    The examination took place on September 7, 2009. Dr. Thompson diagnosed Plaintiff
    with “severe panic disorder, and depression,” but found her symptoms did not meet the
    1
    Plaintiff failed to oppose Defendants’ demur to the emotional distress claim,
    which was sustained with leave to amend. Plaintiff passed on the opportunity to amend
    and does not challenge the ruling sustaining the demurrer in this appeal.
    2
    Although Plaintiff refers to the request in her opening brief, no motion for
    protective order or record of any such request is included in her appellant’s appendix or
    the reporter’s transcript Plaintiff designated for this appeal.
    5
    criteria for agoraphobia, PTSD, OCD, or delusional illness. He stated Plaintiff’s mental
    illness would not make her testimony “inherently unreliable,” but explained there was
    “sufficient cause to be concerned that if [Plaintiff] were required to make a deposition in
    person or by telephone she would be unable to state her case or respond to cross
    examination because of the speech problems that arise when she is stressed.” Thus, Dr.
    Thompson recommended that Plaintiff be allowed to “make a deposition in writing” as
    “an appropriate adjustment to her disability.”
    After receiving Dr. Thompson’s report, the trial court held a hearing to consider
    Plaintiff’s motion to lift the stay. Addressing Plaintiff’s deposition, the court stated it
    would be “unfair for [Defendants] to go to trial without having had the opportunity to talk
    to the Plaintiff.” The court added, “I know that there’s been some psychological
    examinations and all; but if [Plaintiff] wants to go forward with this case, I think she’s
    got some responsibilities that she’s going to have to own up to at some point.”
    At the same hearing, Defendants presented a witness statement made by Plaintiff
    in the British criminal proceeding. Plaintiff’s statement, dated March 6, 2008, gave a
    factual account of her dealings with Napoli and JFN Consultants, and declared, “I am
    willing to attend Court and give evidence.”
    After reviewing the statement, the trial court noted an apparent discrepancy
    between assertions Plaintiff made about her mental health in the California proceeding,
    and her statement that she was “willing to attend Court and give evidence” in the British
    case. Principally, the court recounted Plaintiff’s earlier claim that she began seeing a
    doctor in October 2007 about purported symptoms of agoraphobia. Contrasting those
    claims with Plaintiff’s March 2008 statement, the trial court observed, “that undercuts her
    claims” and “it looks to me as if she said one thing to a judge in the U.K. and another
    thing to a judge in California.”
    6
    The trial court concluded, “the court now doubts [Plaintiff’s] word and is not
    impressed with her credibility based on the statement she, herself, gave to the police in
    London.” Thus, the court rejected Plaintiff’s contention that mental illness precluded her
    from sitting for an in-person deposition, and ordered the stay lifted on the condition that
    “Plaintiff may engage in no discovery whatsoever against the Defendant[s] unless and
    until the Plaintiff has been deposed fully.”
    4.     Defendants’ Motion for a Nonresident Bond
    On August 9, 2012, Defendants filed a motion to compel Plaintiff to post a
    nonresident bond pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1030. To support the
    motion, Defendants relied exclusively upon a declaration by Napoli, stating that, in or
    around July 2004, he instructed JFN Consultant’s accountant “to offer to pay the sum of
    £708,334.00, as full performance of the terms of the [A]greement,” and that “[s]uch offer
    was made.” Napoli also stated that JFN Consultants “requested that Plaintiff sign a debt
    discharge agreement . . . to confirm full performance,” which Plaintiff refused to sign.
    Based on Napoli’s declaration, Defendants argued “[n]o breach of contract can
    exist and no failure to pay occurred[,] because [JFN Consultants] tendered performance
    of the Agreement,” thereby extinguishing Defendants’ contractual obligation. On this
    basis, Defendants argued they had established a reasonable possibility of obtaining
    judgment and, therefore, Plaintiff should be compelled to post a nonresident bond.
    Plaintiff opposed the motion on the ground that Defendants’ tender was
    insufficient because it failed to account for all monthly payments Plaintiff claimed she
    was entitled to under the Agreement. Plaintiff also argued Defendants were not entitled
    to prevailing party attorney fees under the terms of the Agreement.
    On September 13, 2012, the trial court ordered Plaintiff to file an undertaking
    within 30 days in the amount of $40,000 to secure an award of costs and attorney fees
    that might be awarded to Defendants.
    7
    5.     Dismissal for Failure to Post Nonresident Bond and Award of Attorney’s
    Fees to Defendant
    On December 5, 2012, the trial court held a hearing on Defendants’ motion to
    dismiss after Plaintiff failed to post the court ordered nonresident bond. Plaintiff argued
    Defendants had failed to establish a reasonable possibility of prevailing on the breach of
    contract cause of action because the purported tender described in Napoli’s declaration
    was not “full, complete and unconditional performance of the contract.” The trial court
    rejected the contention; observing, “It looks to me as if the defendants attempted tender,
    offered a tender, tried a tender before this case started.” The court concluded, “based on
    the record, there is a reasonable possibility they could prevail in this case.” The court
    dismissed Plaintiff’s action for failure to post the bond.
    At the same hearing, the trial court addressed Defendants’ right to attorney fees
    under the Agreement. Plaintiff argued the only provisions in the Agreement that
    mentioned attorney fees were indemnity provisions, which did not authorize prevailing
    party attorney fees. The court rejected the contention, and ruled Defendants were entitled
    to attorney fees under the Agreement.
    On March 21, 2013, the court entered judgment for Defendant, awarding
    Defendant $275,000 for attorney’s fees and $5,692.43 for costs.
    DISCUSSION
    1.     The Evidence Was Insufficient to Authorize an Order Compelling Plaintiff
    to Post a Nonresident Bond
    a.      Code of Civil Procedure section 1030 requires evidence establishing
    a reasonable possibility defendant will obtain judgment in the action
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1030 authorizes the court to order a plaintiff to
    file an undertaking as security for a defendant’s costs and attorney fees upon a showing
    that “the plaintiff resides out of the state or is a foreign corporation and that there is a
    reasonable possibility that the moving defendant will obtain judgment in the action or
    8
    special proceeding.”3 (Code Civ. Proc., § 1030, subd. (b).) The defendant’s motion must
    “be accompanied by an affidavit in support of the grounds for the motion.” (Ibid.) The
    statute thus requires the defendant to present evidence establishing a reasonable
    possibility of obtaining judgment in the action.
    Plaintiff contends Defendants’ evidence was insufficient to establish a reasonable
    possibility of obtaining judgment, particularly with respect to her breach of contract
    claim. In addressing a challenge to the sufficiency of evidence, “[t]his court’s task is
    simply to determine whether any substantial evidence supports the trial court’s
    determination.” (Baltayan v. Estate of Getemyan (2001) 
    90 Cal. App. 4th 1427
    , 1433.)
    We conclude substantial evidence was lacking in this case.
    As discussed, Defendants relied exclusively upon Napoli’s declaration to support
    their bond motion. Napoli’s declaration states an offer was made to pay Plaintiff “the
    sum of £708,334.00 as full performance of the terms of the [A]greement,” but Plaintiff
    rejected the offer by refusing to execute a debt discharge agreement. The declaration
    does not evidence that the funds were ever actually paid to Plaintiff to satisfy the
    contractual obligation. Nevertheless, in determining Defendants established a reasonable
    possibility of obtaining judgment, the trial court accepted Defendants’ contention that
    evidence of the mere offer to pay was sufficient under Civil Code4 section 1485 to
    3
    Because the “ ‘purpose of [Code of Civil Procedure section 1030] is to enable a
    California resident sued by an out-of-state resident “ ‘to secure costs in light of the
    difficulty of enforcing a judgment for costs against a person who is not within the court’s
    jurisdiction’ ” ’ ” (Alshafie v. Lallande (2009) 
    171 Cal. App. 4th 421
    , 428), the statute
    requires evidence establishing “a reasonable possibility that the moving defendant will
    obtain judgment in the action.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1030, subd. (b), italics added.) Thus,
    relief is available under Code of Civil Procedure section 1030 only if the defendant’s
    evidence establishes a reasonable possibility of prevailing on every claim plaintiff asserts
    in the action. (See, e.g., Michell v. Olick (1996) 
    49 Cal. App. 4th 1194
    , 1199 [a plaintiff
    who prevails on only one of several causes of action is entitled to judgment and an award
    of costs].)
    4
    Unless otherwise indicated, further statutory references are to the Civil Code.
    9
    extinguish the obligation to pay Plaintiff the money she was owed under the Agreement.
    This was error.
    b.     An offer of payment, without deposit of the amount owed, does not
    extinguish a debt obligation
    Section 1485 provides: “An obligation is extinguished by an offer of
    performance, made in conformity to the rules herein prescribed, and with intent to
    extinguish the obligation.” (Italics added.) The “rules herein prescribed” refers to the
    rules set forth in Chapter 2 of the Civil Code, entitled “OFFER OF PERFORMANCE,”
    consisting of sections 1485 through 1505. Thus, while section 1485 embodies the
    principle that one generally cannot be held liable for breach of an obligation that he or
    she stands willing and able to perform, it is the rules set forth in the latter sections of
    Chapter 2 that prescribe the requisites of the offer, including the actions that must be
    taken to extinguish the specific obligation.
    Because the obligation at issue is to pay money, section 1500 prescribes the
    governing rules for extinguishing the obligation. The statute provides: “An obligation
    for the payment of money is extinguished by a due offer of payment, if the amount is
    immediately deposited in the name of the creditor, with some bank or savings and loan
    association within this state, of good repute, and notice thereof is given to the creditor.”
    (§ 1500.) Under section 1500, the “[m]ere failure to accept a tender does not discharge
    the obligation to pay money. [Citation.] An offer to pay extinguishes the obligation only
    if the amount is deposited in the name of the creditor (Civ. Code, § 1500), and such
    deposit must be unconditional, and so made that the deposit becomes at once the property
    of the creditor.” (Verdier v. Verdier (1955) 
    133 Cal. App. 2d 325
    , 333, italics added; see
    also Walker v. Houston (1932) 
    215 Cal. 742
    , 746 (Walker).) Courts applying section
    1500 to circumstances where the plaintiff refused an otherwise valid tender of payment
    have uniformly reached the same conclusion. (See, e.g., Bohnstedt v. Ballagh (1958)
    
    161 Cal. App. 2d 109
    , 112 [trial court erred in failing to award judgment to plaintiff on
    ground defendant made sufficient tender, “for the tender, while sufficient to stop the
    running of interest (Civ. Code, § 1504) was not sufficient to extinguish respondent’s
    10
    obligation to appellant, there having been no deposit of the fund to her credit”]; Webb v.
    Jones (1927) 
    88 Cal. App. 20
    , 29-30 [plaintiff had a “just cause of action” for the
    nonpayment of rent where, despite plaintiff’s refusal of tender, defendant “did not
    attempt to extinguish the obligation by depositing the amount thereof to the credit of
    plaintiff and by giving the notice of the deposits as provided in section 1500 of the Civil
    Code. Therefore the debt was not extinguished by the tenders”].)
    Defendants concede their tender of payment did not comply with section 1500.
    Nonetheless, Defendants argue their obligation to pay Plaintiff was discharged under
    section 1512 because Plaintiff frustrated their attempt to tender performance by refusing
    the tender and providing a “fake” tax identification number.5 To support the contention,
    Defendants cite Bruntz v. Alfaro (1989) 
    212 Cal. App. 3d 411
    (Bruntz). Defendants’
    argument misconstrues the governing statutes and case law.
    Section 1512 provides: “If the performance of an obligation be prevented by the
    creditor, the debtor is entitled to all the benefits which he would have obtained if it had
    been performed by both parties.” As the case law applying the statute recognizes, section
    1512 simply declares the fundamental principle that an obligor under a contract cannot be
    denied the benefits of mutual performance where the obligee breaches the contract by
    preventing the obligor from performing. (See Buxbom v. Smith (1944) 
    23 Cal. 2d 535
    ,
    541.) Of course, as with any measure of contract damages, the costs the obligor would
    have incurred to perform must be taken into account in awarding “all the benefits which
    he would have obtained if [the contract] had been performed by both parties.” (§ 1512,
    5
    Defendants suggest a tax identification number was necessary to open a bank
    account in Plaintiff’s name. Whether this assertion is true is beyond the scope of our
    review because there was no evidence presented with Defendants’ bond motion to
    indicate Defendants attempted to open a bank account in Plaintiff’s name but were
    thwarted by the “false” tax identification number she provided. Although Napoli’s
    declaration states Defendants requested Plaintiff’s tax identification, it says nothing about
    the specific purpose for the request. As best we can discern from the declaration, the tax
    identification number appears to have been requested in connection with Defendants’
    efforts to have Plaintiff sign the debt discharge agreement to confirm satisfaction of the
    debt—not to open a bank account to deposit the subject funds in Plaintiff’s name.
    11
    italics added; see also § 3300.) Thus, in Ahlers v. Smiley (1912) 
    163 Cal. 200
    , our
    Supreme Court held that in view of section 1512 a seller under a supply contract was
    entitled to the lost profits—not revenues—it would have generated had the buyer not
    breached by purchasing from a different supplier. (Ahlers, at pp. 204-205; see also
    Navarro v. Jeffries (1960) 
    181 Cal. App. 2d 454
    , 460-461 [affirming damages award for
    depreciated value of equipment where contract promised plaintiff “the opportunity to
    dispose of the specially purchased equipment upon completion of performance”].) The
    cases applying section 1512 do not hold, as Defendants suggest, that a creditor’s rejection
    of the debtor’s tender permits the debtor to retain the benefits of the creditor’s
    performance—e.g., the lent funds—without accounting for the debtor’s own cost of
    performance. In the case of an obligation to pay money, the debtor’s cost of performance
    is the cost of repaying the debt.
    Thus, where the obligation at issue is to pay money, the cases eschew the
    application of section 1512 advanced by Defendants, while recognizing that a debt is
    extinguished only by depositing the amount owed in accordance with section 1500. For
    instance, in Rose v. Hecht (1949) 
    94 Cal. App. 2d 662
    , the court recognized that “[w]hile
    tenders of monthly rentals by personal checks without depositing in a bank the amount
    thereof to the lessor’s credit does not extinguish the obligation, such tenders are sufficient
    to stop the running of interest” pursuant to section 1512. (Rose, at pp. 656-666, italics
    added.) The reason is manifest in the statutes’ distinct mandates. Cessation of accruing
    interest is a benefit of performance to which the debtor is entitled upon tender of payment
    under section 1512. However, the ultimate obligation to pay the debt remains until the
    amount owed is actually paid to the creditor or deposited in the creditor’s name as
    prescribed by section 1500.
    12
    This distinction was explained by our Supreme Court in Walker as follows:
    “Tender is an offer of performance, not performance itself. When unjustifiably refused,
    one of its effects is to place the other party in default, and permit the party making the
    tender to exercise his remedies for breach of contract. [Citation.] Another effect is
    specified in section 1504 of the Civil Code: ‘An offer of payment or other performance,
    duly made, though the title to the thing offered be not transferred to the creditor, stops the
    running of interest on the obligation, and has the same effect upon all its incidents as a
    performance thereof.’ In such a case, the obligation still remains, but all of its incidents
    are gone. . . . The discharge of the incidents, however, does not affect the ultimate
    obligation, which, in the case of a debt, can only be discharged by either an actual
    payment to the creditor, or a deposit of the sum due in a bank in his name. . . . This is not
    tender, but actual performance. It discharges the obligation and not merely its
    incidents.” (Id. at pp. 745-746, italics added, citing § 1500.)
    
    Bruntz, supra
    , 
    212 Cal. App. 3d 411
    is in accord. After the plaintiff creditor in
    Bruntz commenced foreclosure proceedings pursuant to a note and deed of trust, the
    defendant debtors attempted to cure the alleged default and reinstate the loan in
    accordance with section 2924c, subdivision (a)(1), by tendering the sums demanded
    together with attorney fees as limited by section 2924c, subdivision (d).6 The plaintiff
    refused the tender, asserting the attorney fee limitations did not apply in judicial
    6
    Section 2924c was amended several times since Bruntz was decided, but the
    amendments did not affect the provisions at issue in the case. As the court explained in
    Bruntz, “Subdivision (a)(1) of Civil Code section 2924c provides for reinstatement after
    default. In order to obtain reinstatement, a debtor must pay the entire amount then due
    under the deed of trust or mortgage (other than any accelerated portion), including
    reasonable costs and expenses subject to Civil Code section 2924c, subdivision (c), and
    trustee’s or attorney’s fees subject to Civil Code section 2924c, subdivision (d). If such
    payments are made, then ‘all proceedings theretofore had or instituted shall be dismissed
    or discontinued and the obligation and deed of trust or mortgage shall be reinstated and
    shall be and remain in force and effect, the same as if no such acceleration occurred.’ ”
    (
    Bruntz, supra
    , 212 Cal.App.3d at pp. 419-420, quoting § 2924c, subd. (a)(1).)
    13
    foreclosure actions. The trial court disagreed and granted defendants’ summary judgment
    motion. The Court of Appeal affirmed.
    In affirming the judgment, the Bruntz court recognized, “When plaintiff brought
    the action for foreclosure, defendants were entitled, pursuant to Civil Code section 2924c,
    subdivision (a), to cure any alleged default and to reinstate the loan, and to obtain
    dismissal of the foreclosure action, by paying all amounts then due under the secured
    note with fees and costs as limited by subdivisions (c) and (d).” (
    Bruntz, supra
    ,
    212 Cal.App.3d at p. 423.) Because plaintiff wrongfully refused defendants’ efforts to
    tender, the court held “defendants were entitled to the incidents and benefits of
    performance, including dismissal of the foreclosure action” pursuant to section 2924c.
    (Bruntz, at p. 423, italics added.) However, as the Supreme Court explained in Walker,
    relief from the incidents of a debt and entitlement to the benefits of performance does not
    affect the ultimate obligation to pay money owed to a creditor. (See 
    Walker, supra
    ,
    215 Cal. at pp. 745-746.) In the case of a debt, that obligation “can only be discharged by
    either an actual payment to the creditor, or a deposit of the sum due in a bank in his
    name.” (Id. at p. 746, citing § 1500.) Bruntz does not hold otherwise. Although the
    plaintiff in Bruntz was entitled to dismissal of the foreclosure action—a benefit
    prescribed by section 2924c—the court did not hold, as Defendants suggest, that the debt
    was extinguished by the mere offer to pay.
    14
    Here, the trial court determined Defendants had a reasonable possibility of
    obtaining judgment based solely on evidence of Defendants’ offer to pay Plaintiff the
    amount she was owed under the Agreement.7 This tender, absent evidence showing
    Defendants deposited the amount owed in an account in Plaintiff’s name as prescribed by
    section 1500, was insufficient to establish a reasonable possibility of obtaining judgment.
    Accordingly, the trial court was not authorized to order Plaintiff to post a nonresident
    bond pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1030. Because the dismissal of
    Plaintiff’s action was predicated on Plaintiff’s failure to post the erroneously ordered
    bond, we reverse the judgment.
    2.     Prevailing Party Attorney Fees Are Not Authorized by the Agreement
    Though our reversal of the judgment effectively reverses the prevailing party
    attorney fee award, for the sake of efficiency we will address Plaintiff’s contention that
    attorney fees are not authorized by the Agreement.
    7
    Plaintiff challenges Defendants’ tender on the ground the amount offered did not
    include all monthly payments promised in the Agreement. The argument is inconsistent
    with the Agreement’s terms. In the event Defendants failed to make a monthly payment
    when due, the Agreement granted Plaintiff the right to “CANCEL THIS AGREEMENT
    AND HAVE THEIR [sic] FUNDS RETURNED.” In her complaint, Plaintiff alleges she
    elected to cancel the Agreement after Defendants failed to make two monthly payments
    totaling £83,334. Napoli’s declaration shows Defendants offered Plaintiff £708,334,
    consisting of Plaintiff’s £625,000 principal deposit plus the two monthly payments
    totaling £83,334 that were then due. The amount of Defendants’ tender was consistent
    with their obligation under the Agreement.
    Plaintiff also argues Defendants’ tender was deficient because payment was
    contingent on her first executing a debt discharge agreement and providing her tax
    identification number. There is some merit to this argument insofar as “[a]n offer of
    performance must be free from any conditions which the creditor is not bound, on his
    part, to perform.” (§ 1494.) However, it is not clear from the record whether Plaintiff
    objected to the tender on this basis when it was made. (See § 1501 [objections to the
    mode of an offer of performance, which the creditor has an opportunity to state at the
    time offer is made, are waived if not then stated by the creditor].) Accordingly, a factual
    dispute may exist as to the tender’s validity. We make these observations to provide
    guidance on remand, as the validity of the tender may impact the accrual of interest.
    (See § 1504.)
    15
    Because the trial court interpreted the purported attorney fee provision without
    resorting to extrinsic evidence, “we apply de novo review, exercising our independent
    judgment in interpreting the clause without giving any deference to the trial court’s
    ruling.” (Campbell v. Scripps Bank (2000) 
    78 Cal. App. 4th 1328
    , 1336.) “Under Civil
    Code section 1717, a reciprocal right to attorney fees in all parties to a contract arises
    where the contract accords a right to such fees to one party but not the other. [Citation.]
    However, the inclusion of attorney fees as an item of loss in a third party claim indemnity
    provision does not constitute a provision for the award of attorney fees in an action on
    contract as is required to trigger operation of Civil Code section 1717. [Citations.]
    Regardless whether [the] clause is characterized as an indemnification or an attorney fees
    provision, the usual rules of construing a contract govern our interpretation, as we strive
    to determine the actual intent of the parties.” (Id. at pp. 1336-1337.)
    The trial court held prevailing party attorney fees were authorized by section 1,
    subparagraph F of the Agreement. Section 1 is titled “NON-DISCLOSURE AND NON-
    USE OBLIGATIONS.” The section acknowledges the parties will exchange
    “Confidential Information” and prohibits the “Receiving Party” from disseminating the
    “Disclosing Party’s” Confidential Information to third parties or otherwise making use of
    the information, except as authorized by the Disclosing Party.
    Subparagraph F, under the heading “INDEMNIFICATION AND
    ACCOUNTING,” states: “The Receiving Party agrees to indemnify and hold harmless
    the Disclosing Party from and against all claims, losses, liabilities, damages, expenses,
    and costs (including, without limitation, reasonable attorneys’ fees, expert witness and
    court costs) which result from a breach or threatened breach of this Agreement. The
    Receiving Party agrees that if it breaches this Agreement, the Disclosing Party shall be
    entitled to an accounting, and payment of all forms of compensation or benefits that the
    Receiving Party directly or indirectly realizes as a result of such violation. Such remedy
    shall be in addition to any injunctive relief or other remedies to which the Disclosing
    Party may be entitled at law or in equity.”
    16
    Defendants contend the reference to “a breach or threatened breach of this
    Agreement” establishes that the clause applies to any claim made on the Agreement as a
    whole, not only the non-disclosure provisions. (Italics added.) We disagree. To begin,
    the clause grants an indemnity right to the Disclosing Party against the Receiving Party—
    parties whose status is defined entirely by the exchange of Confidential Information and
    whose rights and obligations are limited to those specified in the Agreement’s NON-
    DISCLOSURE AND NON-USE OBLIGATIONS section. Further, the second sentence
    of subparagraph F belies Defendants’ contention that the attorney fee provision in the
    first sentence applies to the entire Agreement. Like the first sentence, the second
    sentence refers to “breaches of this Agreement,” and provides that the Disclosing Party
    shall be entitled to all compensation or benefits the Receiving Party “directly or indirectly
    realizes as a result of such violation.” Notwithstanding the reference to “this
    Agreement,” the remedy provided by the second sentence logically relates exclusively to
    the non-disclosure section’s prohibition against the Receiving Party making unauthorized
    use of the Disclosing Party’s Confidential Information—no other breach of the
    Agreement would result in the Receiving Party directly or indirectly receiving
    compensation. The same is true of the non-disclosure section’s injunctive relief
    provision. That provision states: “[I]n the event of a breach of this Agreement, including
    without limitation, the actual or threatened disclosure or unauthorized use of the
    Disclosing Party’s Confidential Information, . . . the Disclosing Party shall be entitled to
    injunctive relief and/or a decree for specific performance . . . .” (Italics added.)
    Injunctive relief and specific performance are remedies that exclusively relate to the
    Agreement’s non-disclosure obligations.
    Accordingly, we conclude subparagraph F, read as a whole and in context, is an
    indemnification clause that authorizes a claim for reimbursement of attorney fees
    incurred in connection with enforcing the Agreement’s non-disclosure obligations.
    It does not authorize prevailing party attorney fees on the claims asserted in this action.
    17
    3.     The Order Compelling Plaintiff’s Deposition Was Not an Abuse of
    Discretion
    Plaintiff challenges the trial court’s orders requiring her to sit for an in-person
    deposition. Plaintiff contends there was no evidence to contradict the court appointed
    expert’s recommendation to allow Plaintiff’s deposition in writing and the trial court
    erred as a matter of law by refusing to order the accommodation. We disagree.
    “ ‘Management of discovery generally lies within the sound discretion of the trial
    court.’ ” (Maldonado v. Superior Court (2002) 
    94 Cal. App. 4th 1390
    , 1396.) “The
    appropriate test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial court exceeded the bounds of
    reason. When two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the facts, the
    reviewing court has no authority to substitute its decision for that of the trial court.”
    (Shamblin v. Brattain (1988) 
    44 Cal. 3d 474
    , 479.) “Even though contrary findings could
    have been made, an appellate court should defer to the factual determinations made by
    the trial court when the evidence is in conflict.” (Ibid.) Where the trial court’s
    determination of the facts supports its decision, there is no abuse of discretion. (Ibid.)
    Contrary to Plaintiff’s premise, the trial court made a factual finding from
    conflicting evidence concerning Plaintiff’s capacity to testify in-person. Principally,
    Plaintiff’s witness statement, made under oath in connection with the British criminal
    proceeding, evidenced Plaintiff’s capacity to “attend Court and give evidence” as recently
    as March 2008. Contrasted with Plaintiff’s statements in this action that she suffered
    from agoraphobia in October 2007, there was sufficient evidence for the court to find
    Plaintiff had been dishonest about her mental condition, and to reject the court appointed
    expert’s recommendation. On this record, we cannot say the trial court abused its
    discretion.
    18
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed and the order requiring Plaintiff to post a nonresident
    plaintiff bond is vacated. The discovery orders are affirmed. In the interest of justice,
    Plaintiff is awarded her costs on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    KITCHING, J.
    We concur:
    KLEIN, P. J.
    CROSKEY, J.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B246687

Filed Date: 4/23/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021