McPherson v. Southard CA4/3 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 8/14/23 McPherson v. Southard CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    BONITA M. MCPHERSON,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                         G060577
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 30-2018-00964601)
    DONALD L. SOUTHARD et al.,                                            OPINION
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Fred W.
    Slaughter, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Motion to augment record
    granted.
    Martorell Law, Eduardo Martorell and JoAnn Victor for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Ulwelling Law, James K. Ulwelling and Lauren E. Saint for Defendants
    and Respondents.
    *           *         *
    This is a shareholder derivative action for breach of fiduciary duty,
    corporate waste, and related claims. Among other allegations, the derivative plaintiff
    alleges three of the corporation’s officers, directors, and controlling shareholders usurped
    a corporate opportunity by personally purchasing the real property where the
    corporation’s facilities are located, without offering the corporation an opportunity to
    exercise a previously negotiated option to purchase that property for itself.
    Following a two-week bench trial conducted just prior to the start of the
    COVID-19 pandemic, the trial judge issued a minute order finding in favor of the
    derivative plaintiff. Two of the defendants requested a statement of decision, but the trial
    judge retired before addressing the request.
    Several months later, after consulting with the first judge, a second judge
    determined the intended minute order by the trial judge was meant to serve as the
    statement of decision, and entered a judgment prepared by plaintiff. Among other things,
    the judgment amended the complaint to conform to proof by adding as defendants a
    family trust and a limited liability company formed by two of the named defendants. The
    judgment required the newly added defendants to either sell the property or turn it over to
    the corporation. The judgment also vacated a deed of trust defense counsel had placed on
    the property to secure the payment of their attorney fees.
    The two newly named defendants filed a motion for new trial, asserting the
    1
    judgment was against the law and involved an error in law. (See Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 657(6) & (7).) A third judge heard and granted that motion, finding the judgment
    implicated the rights of third parties who were not parties at the trial in violation of due
    1
    All further statutory references are to this code.
    2
    process principles, and the court’s statement of decision did not adequately provide the
    legal and factual bases for its decision or sufficiently address all the principal
    controverted issues at trial.
    We reverse the new trial order. Although we agree the judgment violates
    the due process rights of the new defendants, we conclude the appropriate means of
    addressing this error is to delete the offending provisions from the judgment, rather than
    to require the original parties who are involved in this appeal (none of whom were
    aggrieved by the due process violation) to retry the case from the beginning. We further
    conclude that the statement of decision, though brief, sufficiently explains the court’s
    decision and addresses the principal controverted issues at trial. We therefore reverse the
    order granting a new trial and remand this matter to the trial court with directions to
    modify the judgment.
    FACTS
    Western Tap Manufacturing Company, Inc. (Western Tap) manufactures
    special tapping for the aerospace industry. In 1979, plaintiff Bonita M. McPherson
    2
    (Bonita ) and her husband purchased all 800 shares of Western Tap’s stock. Over the
    next few years, they transferred 200 shares to defendant Donald L. Southard (Don), a
    long-time employee of Western Tap, to incentivize him to stay with the company. They
    also transferred 80 shares to their son, defendant Robert McPherson.
    In 1997, Bonita’s husband, who at the time was chairman of the board of
    Western Tap, passed away, and their son Robert became chief executive officer and
    president. Bonita, who was ill at the time, decided to gift 260 shares of her stock to
    Robert and to sell her remaining 260 shares to Western Tap.
    2
    Because several of the parties share the same surnames, we refer to them by
    their first names to avoid confusion. We mean no disrespect.
    3
    In 1998, Western Tap apparently agreed to purchase those 260 shares by
    paying Bonita $1,000 per week, either for the rest of her life or for 15 years. Although
    the record contains no promissory note or signed written agreement confirming Western
    Tap’s purchase of those shares from Bonita, Western Tap’s tax returns since 1998 reflect
    that Western Tap held 260 shares as treasury stock (i.e., stock Western Tap repurchased
    from a shareholder).
    From 1999 to 2001, Western Tap paid Bonita roughly $1,000 per week, or
    about $52,000 annually. From 2002 onward, however, Bonita received no more than
    $28,447 annually. Her son Robert told her at some point that Western Tap could no
    longer afford to pay her $52,000 per year.
    In 2004, Western Tap entered into a lease for a property located at 6440-
    6450 Dale Street in Buena Park (the Dale Street property). The lease, which Robert
    signed on Western Tap’s behalf, included an option to purchase the property for
    $900,000 when the lease term ended in December 2015.
    In 2012, Robert was imprisoned for a felony conviction unrelated to
    Western Tap’s business; he resigned as chief executive officer and president of Western
    Tap. Don became its president and chief executive officer. At some point, Don’s wife,
    defendant Lynn Southard (Lynn), also joined the board of directors.
    In February 2013, the board of directors held a special meeting to discuss,
    among other topics, what to do with the business in light of Robert’s imprisonment, who
    owned Western Tap stock, and in what percent. According to the minutes from that
    meeting, the board’s “understanding” was that since Western Tap had not paid Bonita
    $348,000 for the shares she sold to Western Tap in 1998, those 260 shares “revert back to
    Bonita.” The minutes also noted Western Tap would hire an attorney for “advice on how
    to straighten out this situation.” However, no attorney was ever hired.
    4
    After the 2013 board meeting, Bonita voted as a Western Tap shareholder
    3
    without objection. However, Western Tap continued to make periodic payments to
    Bonita throughout 2013, 2014, and 2015, and Western Tap’s tax returns continued to
    categorize the 260 shares as treasury stock.
    In August 2015, with the end of the lease for the Dale Street property
    drawing near, Robert wrote a letter from prison ‘“grant[ing] to [Don] my option to
    purchase the [Dale Street property]”’ and ‘“grant[ing] all proxy and authority to purchase
    said property for Western Tap.”’ Two months later, Robert executed assignment escrow
    instructions purporting to assign the right to purchase the Dale Street property to Don and
    Lynn’s family trust—the Don and Lynn Southard Trust dated April 19, 2007 (the
    Southard Trust).
    The Southard Trust obtained financing to purchase the Dale Street property.
    During that process, the property was appraised at $1,890,000—more than twice the
    value of Western Tap’s $900,000 purchase option; Don did not inform Bonita or anyone
    4
    else from the McPherson family about the appraisal.
    The Southard Trust purchased the Dale Street property for $900,000;
    escrow closed in December 2015. That same month, the Southard Trust executed a
    21-year lease with Western Tap for the Dale Street property without consulting Bonita or
    the Western Tap board. Don and Lynn signed the lease on behalf of both the lessor (the
    Southard Trust) and the lessee (Western Tap).
    Shortly thereafter, Don and Lynn formed Donald and Lynn Southard, LLC
    (the Southard LLC), acting upon an attorney’s advice to “protect [the property] in a[n]
    3
    The other shareholders reportedly did not want to “make waves.”
    4
    Don told Bonita he was going to exercise the option to purchase the
    building; she did not object or call a board meeting to discuss the purchase.
    5
    LLC.” The Southard Trust quitclaimed the Dale Street property to the Southard LLC in
    2016. The Southard LLC charged and collected rent from Western Tap.
    In May 2016, Don and Lynn informed Bonita via e-mail that they were
    5
    “going to have to sell Western Tap.” Two months later, Bonita filed a complaint in
    federal court against Western Tap, Don, and Lynn, alleging they had breached the 1998
    contract to purchase her shares. That case was eventually remanded to Orange County
    Superior Court.
    In January 2018, Bonita initiated the present action by filing a verified
    shareholder derivative complaint against Don, Lynn, and Robert, asserting claims on
    Western Tap’s behalf for breach of fiduciary duty by corporate officers and controlling
    shareholders, unfair business practices, unjust enrichment, abuse of control, corporate
    waste, and for an accounting. Two months later, Don and Lynn resigned as employees
    and board members of Western Tap, believing Western Tap had become a “hostile
    workplace.”
    In 2019, Bonita filed a motion for leave to file a first amended complaint
    adding the Southard LLC and the Southard Trust as defendants and adding claims for
    quiet title and set aside. The trial court denied her motion without prejudice, in part
    because Bonita had been “dilatory” in bringing the motion. Bonita did not renew her
    6
    motion.
    5
    Don and Lynn both testified that this was a poor choice of words and they
    did not intend to shut down the company.
    6
    A few months later, Bonita brought another motion for leave to file a first
    amended complaint which would have consolidated her federal court claims with the
    present action. That motion did not seek to add the Southard LLC or the Southard Trust
    as defendants. The trial court denied that motion as well, finding Bonita had failed to
    demonstrate diligence in moving for leave to amend.
    6
    Around that same time, Ulwelling Law, APC (Ulwelling Law), counsel for
    Don and Lynn in this litigation, placed a lien on the Dale Street property by way of a
    deed of trust and assignment of rent. This was done to secure Don and Lynn’s payment
    of their attorney fees.
    Trial began in February 2020 before the Honorable Sheila Fell. During the
    two-week bench trial, three of the main issues were (1) whether Bonita was a shareholder
    who had standing to sue derivatively on Western Tap’s behalf; (2) whether Don, Lynn,
    and Robert misappropriated company funds to cover their personal expenses; and
    (3) whether Don and Lynn usurped a corporate opportunity by purchasing the Dale Street
    property. At no point during trial did Bonita move to amend her complaint to conform to
    7
    proof by adding the Southard Trust, the Southard LLC, or Ulwelling Law as parties.
    Judge Fell took the matter under submission, and in July 2020, she issued a
    two-page minute order in favor of Bonita on behalf of Western Tap. Judge Fell found
    Bonita did have standing to bring the lawsuit; Western Tap funds were used to cover the
    personal expenses of Don, Lynn, and Rob; and Don and Lynn usurped a corporate
    opportunity by exercising the option to purchase the Dale Street property. She therefore
    ordered Don, Lynn, and Robert to reimburse Western Tap for all unauthorized
    distributions and payments of personal expenses.
    As for the Dale Street property, Judge Fell found that Western Tap “shall
    have the right to ownership of the Dale Street property subject to repayment of expenses
    actually incurred by Don and Lynn Southard pursuant to the acquisition of the property.
    Alternatively, the property may be sold with the net proceeds being distributed first: to
    Don and Lynn Southard to reimburse them for the provable Dale Street acquisition costs,
    7
    At the end of trial, Bonita’s counsel commented in passing, “[I]f Your
    Honor thinks anything is missing from our complaint, there is the opportunity to amend
    the complaint. That’s Code of Civil Procedure 469, ‘to conform to proof.’ [¶] . . . No
    one is going to be prejudiced.”
    7
    and next: to unpaid obligations of the corporation (such as the weekly $1,000 obligation
    to Bonita McPherson, and other unpaid obligations). Any remaining balance from said
    sale in addition to the funds received from Defendants’ reimbursement amount is to be
    distributed to shareholders pro rata to the shares owned.”
    Don and Lynn filed a 15-page request for a statement of decision under
    section 632, identifying 34 controverted issues, which they then splintered into more than
    160 subissues. In response, Bonita asserted the court’s July 2020 ruling adequately
    addressed all the principal controverted issues at trial. On page 26 of her response,
    Bonita also asked the court to amend the pleadings to conform to proof by adding the
    Southard LLC and the Southard Trust as defendants.
    Judge Fell retired before responding to Don and Lynn’s request for a
    statement of decision. After her retirement, the Honorable Frederick P. Horn (Ret.)
    presided over several posttrial hearings, including the hearing on Don and Lynn’s request
    for a statement of decision. In January 2021, Judge Horn issued a minute order on their
    request, noting he had consulted at length with Judge Fell, reviewed all minute orders
    from the trial, considered Don and Lynn’s request and Bonita’s response, and concluded
    the July 2020 minute order was in fact the statement of decision for the matter.
    Bonita submitted a proposed judgment, which Judge Horn entered in
    March 2021. Among other things, the judgment amended the operative complaint to
    conform to proof by adding the Southard Trust and the Southard LLC as defendants. The
    judgment then required Don, Lynn, the Southard Trust, and the Southard LLC (which the
    judgment collectively referred to as “the ‘Defendants Southards’”) to either turn over the
    Dale Street property to Western Tap, subject to the repayment of the expenses Don and
    Lynn incurred in acquiring the property, or submit a joint plan to sell the Dale Street
    property with net proceeds covering Don and Lynn’s expenses in acquiring the property
    and Bonita’s attorney fees and costs; any remaining funds were to be distributed to the
    shareholders on a pro rata basis. The judgment also voided and nullified the Southard
    8
    LLC’s 2016 quitclaim deed and Ulwelling Law’s 2019 deed of trust on the Dale Street
    property.
    Don and Lynn moved for a new trial under section 657 based on
    irregularity in the proceedings (§ 657(1)), excessive damages (§ 657(5)), the decision
    being against the law (§ 657(6)), and error in law (§ 657(7)). Among other arguments,
    they asserted the judgment differed substantially from Judge Fell’s decision, and granted
    relief not contemplated in Judge Fell’s July 2020 decision because it added new parties—
    the Southard LLC and the Southard Trust—as defendants. Bonita opposed the motion,
    asserting the judgment’s inclusion of the Southard LLC and the Southard Trust and its
    voiding of defense counsel’s deed of trust on the Dale Street property were consistent
    with Judge Fell’s ruling.
    The new trial motion was heard by a third judge, the Honorable Fred W.
    Slaughter. After taking the matter under submission, Judge Slaughter granted the motion:
    “Based on a review of the record, the court concludes [Don and Lynn] show an error in
    law, as the judgment implicates the rights of third parties that were not parties at the trial.
    The only named defendants in this case through the end of trial were the Southards. The
    record demonstrates that it is undisputed that the Dale Street Property was purchased in
    2015 by trustees of [the Southard Trust], and later transferred by quitclaim deed to [the
    Southard LLC]. The court also notes there are three deeds of trust recorded on the
    Property, including one recorded in 2019 by defense counsel Ulwelling Law, APC, to
    secure the Southards’ obligation to pay legal fees. [Citation.] [¶] This court’s March 30,
    2021, Judgment . . . voids the Quitclaim Deed between the [Southard] Trust and the
    [Southard] LLC as well as the October 23, 2019, Deed of Trust recorded by Ulwelling
    Law. [Citation.] The judgment also orders the parties to either: (a) turn over the Dale
    Street Property to Western Tap, subject to repayment of expenses the Southard
    Defendants incurred in acquiring the property, or (b) submit a joint plan to sell the
    Property.”
    9
    Judge Slaughter continued: “Both the California and U.S. Constitutions
    provide that no state shall deprive any person of property without due process of law.
    (U.S. Const., 14th Amdt.; Cal. Const., Art. 1, §§7, 15.) Here, the record demonstrates
    that the court adjudicated the property rights of the [Southard] Trust, the [Southard] LLC,
    and the Ulwelling Law without providing each party notice and an opportunity for
    hearing. While the judgment purports to amend the operative complaint to add the
    [Southard] Trust and the [Southard] LLC, the court notes the record includes no evidence
    of a motion by Plaintiff to amend to conform to proof, or any ruling thereon by Judge
    Fell. [¶] Even if the court assumed Plaintiff made a motion at trial to add these
    defendants, the court concludes the addition of these defendants constitutes an error in
    law. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] [The Southard] LLC and the [Southard] Trust were added to the case
    at judgment, with no opportunity to protect their property rights. The court observes that
    Ulwelling Law was never added as a defendant, despite its purported interest in the Dale
    Street Property.”
    In granting Don and Lynn’s new trial motion, Judge Slaughter also found
    the statement of decision did not adequately explain the legal and factual bases for the
    court’s decision, or sufficiently address several controverted issues identified in Don and
    Lynn’s request for statement of decision, “including: (1) the date of breach of Western
    Tap’s breach, the date [Bonita’s] shares of stock reverted to her, and whether Western
    Tap’s obligation to make weekly payments continued after that reversion; (2) the statute
    of limitations on [Bonita’s] claims based on the Southards’ and Robert McPherson’s
    unauthorized use of corporate funds for personal expenses; (3) the factual bases of the
    court’s finding that the option to purchase the Dale Street Property was a corporate
    opportunity; and (4) whether [Bonita] had actual knowledge of the option and/or
    transaction prior to the December 2015 transaction.” The court also “reiterate[d] that
    Judge Fell is retired, and is no longer available to issue a statement of decision on this
    case.” Accordingly, Judge Slaughter ordered a new trial and set a status conference.
    10
    Bonita filed a motion for leave to file a first amended complaint to add the
    Southard LLC, the Southard Trust, and Ulwelling Law. Judge Slaughter denied the
    motion, explaining in a seven-page minute order that Bonita had not adequately
    explained or justified her delay in seeking to add those third parties, despite having
    known about their involvement years earlier.
    Bonita filed a notice of appeal from Judge Slaughter’s order granting a new
    trial. Don and Lynn in turn filed a protective cross-appeal from the judgment. (See
    companion case, McPherson v. Southard et al. (Aug. 14, 2023, G060614 [nonpub. opn.].)
    DISCUSSION
    A trial court’s authority to grant a new trial is established and
    circumscribed by statute. (Oakland Raiders v. National Football League (2007)
    
    41 Cal.4th 624
    , 633.) Specifically, section 657 allows a court to vacate a decision and
    order a new trial “on the application of the party aggrieved” if that party’s “substantial
    rights” are materially affected by one or more of seven enumerated causes, including:
    “6. . . . the verdict or other decision is against law” or “7. [e]rror in law, occurring at the
    trial and excepted to by the party making the application.” (§ 657.) “When a new trial is
    granted, on all or part of the issues, the court shall specify the ground or grounds upon
    which it is granted and the court’s reason or reasons for granting the new trial upon each
    ground stated.” (Ibid.) “On appeal from an order granting a new trial the order shall be
    affirmed if it should have been granted upon any ground stated in the motion, whether or
    not specified in the order or specification of reasons.” (Ibid.)
    The parties disagree on the applicable standard of review. As Bonita
    argues, orders granting a new trial are generally examined for abuse of discretion.
    (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 826
    , 859 (Aguilar); see Lane v.
    Hughes Aircraft Co. (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 405
    , 412 [“an order granting a new trial under
    section 657 ‘must be sustained on appeal unless the opposing party demonstrates that no
    11
    reasonable finder of fact could have found for the movant on [the trial court’s] theory’”];
    see also Johnson & Johnson Talcum Powder Cases (2019) 
    37 Cal.App.5th 292
    , 336-337
    [order granting new trial ‘“will not be disturbed unless a manifest and unmistakable
    abuse of discretion clearly appears”’].) As Don and Lynn note, however, where the trial
    court’s order granting a new trial is predicated on its determination that there was an error
    in law, we review its ruling de novo. (Aguilar, pp. 859-860.) We need not resolve which
    standard of review applies here, because under either standard, the order granting new
    trial must be reversed.
    The trial court correctly determined the judgment affected the real property
    rights of several nonparties—the Southard Trust, the Southard LLC, and Ulwelling
    Law—and therefore violated those parties’ right to due process. California has long
    recognized that “‘a judgment may not be entered either for or against one who is not a
    party to an action or proceeding. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘Rendering a judgment for or
    against a nonparty to a lawsuit may constitute denial of due process under the United
    States and California Constitutions. [Citations.] Due process is denied because the
    nonjoined party has not been given notice of the proceedings or an opportunity to be
    heard. [Citation.] Notice and a chance to be heard are essential components to the trial
    court’s jurisdiction and for due process.’” (Tokio Marine & Fire Ins. Corp. v. Western
    Pacific Roofing Corp. (1999) 
    75 Cal.App.4th 110
    , 121 (Tokio Marine); see Ansley v.
    Superior Court (1986) 
    185 Cal.App.3d 477
    , 483 [absence of due process notice is a
    8
    jurisdictional defect that renders the judgment void].)
    8
    “‘Without jurisdiction over the parties, an in personam judgment is
    invalid.’” (Tokio Marine, supra, 75 Cal.App.4th at p. 121.) A court obtains personal
    jurisdiction over a party if the party is served with the summons or if the party consents
    to jurisdiction by making a general appearance, seeking affirmative relief, or opposing a
    motion on the merits. (§ 410.50, subd. (a); Dial 800 v. Fesbinder (2004) 
    118 Cal.App.4th 32
    , 52 [general appearance operates as consent to personal jurisdiction and dispenses
    with service requirement]; Canaan Taiwanese Christian Church v. All World Mission
    Ministries (2012) 
    211 Cal.App.4th 1115
    , 1126 [“nonparty that is not named in the
    12
    “‘The federal and state Constitutions generally require that individuals be
    accorded procedural due process before being deprived of a protected property interest.
    [Citations.] This requirement ensures fair play, protects an individual’s use and
    possession of property from arbitrary encroachment and minimizes unfair or mistaken
    deprivations of property. [Citation.] Whenever property is taken, due process requires
    some form of notice and a hearing . . . .’” (In re FairWageLaw (2009) 
    176 Cal.App.4th 279
    , 286; cf. Roth v. Jelley (2020) 
    45 Cal.App.5th 655
    , 672 [party with contingent future
    remainder interest in a trust had a due process right to notice and hearing before probate
    court could issue decree adversely affecting his property interests]; In re Marriage of
    Ramirez (2011) 
    198 Cal.App.4th 336
    , 345 [just as lienholders are indispensable parties to
    foreclosure actions, family law attorney with real property lien on community real
    property is an indispensable party in any proceeding affecting his or her rights to
    property].)
    In this case, the entities that were added to the judgment or whose property
    interests in the Dale Street property were adversely affected by the judgment—the
    Southard Trust, the Southard LLC, and Ulwelling Law—were not named as parties in the
    complaint, were not served with a summons, and were not joined in the proceedings.
    They did not consent to jurisdiction by making a general appearance, by seeking
    affirmative relief, or by opposing a motion. They were not afforded an opportunity to
    pleadings makes a general appearance and submits to the court’s personal jurisdiction by
    seeking affirmative relief or opposing a motion on the merits”]; see also Rockefeller
    Technology Investments (Asia) VII v. Changzhou SinoType Technology Co., Ltd. (2020)
    
    9 Cal.5th 125
    , 139 [service of process protects a defendant’s due process right to defend
    against an action by providing constitutionally adequate notice of the court proceeding].)
    13
    conduct discovery, assemble evidence, or defend their property rights at trial. And
    9
    Bonita never brought a motion during trial to add them as defendants.
    The judgment nonetheless purportedly added the Southard Trust and the
    Southard LLC as defendants, voided the Southard Trust’s quitclaim deed on the Dale
    Street property to the Southard LLC, forced the Southard LLC to turn over the property
    to Western Tap, and voided Ulwelling Law’s deed of trust in the property. “This was a
    rather straightforward denial of due process.” (Tokio Marine, supra, 75 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 121 [reversing order adding nonparty insurer as judgment debtor].)
    Bonita insists there was no due process violation because Don and Lynn,
    who are the trustees of the Southard Trust and the principals of the Southard LLC, and
    their defense counsel, James K. Ulwelling, were all present at trial and had “every
    incentive” to protect the property interests of the Southard Trust, the Southard LLC, and
    Ulwelling Law. While that could be true, we cannot know for certain. As best we can
    tell, the record is silent as to who the Southard Trust’s beneficiaries are, whether the
    Southard LLC has other members besides Don and Lynn, or whether any of these
    nonparties had insurance policies which would have provided a defense to any claims
    against them. Without such information, we cannot determine whether the interests of
    the Southard Trust, the Southard LLC, or Ulwelling Law were adequately represented
    during discovery or at trial. (Cf. St. Sava Mission Corp. v. Serbian Eastern Orthodox
    Diocese (1990) 
    223 Cal.App.3d 1354
    , 1376 [applying Illinois law and noting that “[i]f a
    nonparty is to be bound by a judgment, upon the theory the nonparty’s concurrently held
    interests were represented by a party, at a minimum it must be shown that the interest of
    the nonparty received adequate representation by the party”].)
    9
    Although Bonita mentioned in passing a possible amendment to conform to
    proof on page 26 of her response to Don and Lynn’s request for a statement of decision,
    that was after the case was submitted.
    14
    Bonita asks us to disregard these procedural failings because the judgment
    amended the complaint to conform to proof to add those nonparties as defendants. We
    are not persuaded. Although generally speaking, California courts liberally allow
    amendments to conform to proof (General Credit Corp. v. Pichel (1975) 
    44 Cal.App.3d 844
    , 849), allowing such an amendment during or after trial is an abuse of discretion if it
    prejudices the opposing party. (See, e.g., McMillin v. Eare (2021) 
    70 Cal.App.5th 893
    ,
    913-914 [trial court’s sua sponte posttrial amendment to add cause of action was abuse of
    discretion because it “contravened basic tenets of law and motion practice” and violated
    party’s due process right to notice]; Duchrow v. Forrest (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 1359
    ,
    1380 [granting midtrial motion to amend complaint to conform to proof was abuse of
    discretion because motion was made unreasonably late and without excuse for delay];
    Garcia v. Roberts (2009) 
    173 Cal.App.4th 900
    , 912-913 [granting midtrial motion to
    amend complaint to conform to proof was prejudicial to opposing party where theory had
    not been pursued in discovery].)
    Moreover, an amendment to conform to proof to add a nonparty as a
    defendant is rarely appropriate because the nonparty would almost certainly be
    prejudiced by such an amendment. Indeed, “California courts have denied leave to
    amend where the proposed amendment to the complaint is during or after trial, and the
    amendment would require the defendant to have litigated or acted differently to assert his
    rights before and at trial.” (Mac v. Minassian (2022) 
    76 Cal.App.5th 510
    , 519 (Mac).)
    The parties do not point to any case where a defendant was pled into a case posttrial
    without prejudice, and we could find none. (See id. at p. 520 [reaching same
    10
    conclusion].)
    10
    As the Mac court noted, “Possibly analogous circumstances are cases
    concerning motions to amend judgments to add a defendant who is the alter ego of
    another defendant against whom the plaintiff obtained a judgment, which are filed
    pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 187. [Citation.] Yet, the ‘ability under
    section 187 to amend a judgment to add a defendant, thereby imposing liability on the
    15
    For all these reasons, Judge Slaughter was correct in determining
    Judge Horn should not have added the Southard Trust and the Southard LLC as
    defendants after trial, and that Judge Horn should not have included provisions in the
    judgment voiding the Southard Trust’s quitclaim deed on the Dale Street property,
    forcing the Southard LLC to turn over the property to Western Tap, or voiding Ulwelling
    11
    Law’s deed of trust in the property.
    That is not to say, however, that the entire judgment must be vacated, or
    that the matter should be retried from scratch. The due process violations discussed
    above affected only three entities—none of which moved for new trial, and none of
    which is a party to this appeal. The parties who moved for a new trial, Don and Lynn,
    were not individually aggrieved by the due process violations. Accordingly, they lacked
    the ability to raise that due process violation as a basis for their motion for new trial.
    new defendant without trial, requires both (1) that the new party be the alter ego of the
    old party and (2) that the new party had controlled the litigation, thereby having had the
    opportunity to litigate, in order to satisfy due process concerns.’” (Mac, supra,
    76 Cal.App.5th at p. 520.) Here, as best we can tell, Bonita did not bring a motion under
    section 187 or make any alter ego argument to the trial court, nor does she argue on
    appeal that the unnamed parties were Don and Lynn’s alter egos. Indeed, doing so would
    have been seemingly inconsistent with Bonita’s theory of the case, because “amending a
    judgment to add an alter ego does not add a new defendant but instead inserts the correct
    name of the real defendant.” (Misik v. D’Arco (2011) 
    197 Cal.App.4th 1065
    , 1072.)
    11
    Bonita also contends Judge Slaughter lacked the power to correct or change
    Judge Fell’s July 2020 minute order or Judge Horn’s March 2021 judgment, asserting
    that “the power of one judge to vacate an order made by another judge is limited.” (In re
    Alberto (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 421
    , 427.) While that may be true, the rule is
    inapplicable here. Although a new trial motion generally must “be heard and determined
    by the judge who presided at the trial,” if the judge who presided at trial is unable to hear
    the motion, the motion instead “shall be heard and determined by any other judge of the
    same court.” (§ 661; see also Sandco American, Inc. v. Notrica (1990) 
    216 Cal.App.3d 1495
    , 1508–1509 [trial judge may grant new trial based on irregularity in orders of
    another judge].) That is what occurred here. Judge Slaughter therefore did not act in
    excess of his powers in hearing the new trial motion.
    16
    (See § 657 [new trial may be granted “on the application of the party aggrieved” if the
    error “materially affect[s] the substantial rights of such party”].)
    The proper remedy is to delete paragraph 1 (granting Bonita’s request to
    add the Southard Trust and the Southard LLC as defendants), the second sentence and
    subdivisions (a) and (b) of paragraph 13 (requiring “Defendants Southard” to turn over or
    sell the Dale Street property), paragraph 14 (requiring the appointment of a receiver to
    address the disposition of the Dale Street property), and paragraph 15 (voiding and
    nullifying the Southard LLC’s quitclaim deed and Ulwelling Law’s deed of trust) from
    the judgment in their entirety. (See § 43 [Court of Appeal may modify any judgment or
    order appealed from and direct proper judgment or order to be entered]; In re J.R. (2022)
    
    82 Cal.App.5th 569
    , 582 [noting that Courts of Appeal are given “‘broad powers’” in the
    12
    disposition of appeals].)
    But our analysis of the new trial order does not end there. Judge Slaughter
    also granted Don and Lynn’s new trial motion because he found the statement of decision
    did not adequately provide the legal and factual bases for the court’s decision or
    sufficiently address several principal controverted issues as identified in Don and Lynn’s
    request for statement of decision.
    We disagree. A statement of decision need only “explain[ ] the factual and
    legal basis for its decision as to each of the principal controverted issues at trial . . . .”
    (§ 632.) Judge Fell’s July 2020 minute order (which Judge Horn later determined was in
    fact the statement of decision after consulting at length with Judge Fell), though brief,
    complied with that minimum requirement: it addressed (1) whether Bonita was in fact a
    shareholder and had standing to sue derivatively on Western Tap’s behalf, (2) whether
    12
    We recognize these deletions eliminate any relief to Bonita for Don and
    Lynn’s usurpation of the corporate opportunity (see the first sentence of paragraph 13).
    However, we decline to determine what relief, if any, might be appropriate for that. That
    job is best left to the trial court in the first instance.
    17
    Don, Lynn, and Robert misappropriated company funds to cover their personal expenses,
    and (3) whether Don and Lynn usurped a corporate opportunity by purchasing the Dale
    Street property.
    Don and Lynn’s request for a statement of decision identified
    34 controverted issues and more than 160 subissues they asked the trial court to address.
    However, their specification of the “principal controverted issues” at trial is not
    controlling. “[A] trial court is not required to respond point by point to issues posed in a
    request for a statement of decision.” (Ermoian v. Desert Hospital (2007)
    
    152 Cal.App.4th 475
    , 500.) The court was therefore under no obligation to issue a
    second statement of decision responding to the over 160 subissues identified by Don and
    Lynn. (See 
    ibid.
     [trial court was not required to respond point by point to every issue
    raised by plaintiff]; In re Marriage of Balcof (2006) 
    141 Cal.App.4th 1509
    , 1530 [trial
    court was not required to provide a statement of decision addressing wife’s 37 questions
    or their subparts]; Golden Eagle Ins. Co. v. Foremost Ins. Co. (1993) 
    20 Cal.App.4th 1372
    , 1380 [trial court was not required to respond point by point to 36 issues posed by
    plaintiff].)
    DISPOSITION
    The order granting new trial is reversed. On remand, the trial court is
    directed to enter an amended judgment in favor of Bonita and against Don, Lynn, and
    Robert that deletes paragraph 1, the second sentence and subdivisions (a) and (b) of
    paragraph 13, and paragraphs 14 and 15 in their entirety, and that defines the term
    “Defendants Southards” to refer only to Don and Lynn, not to the Southard Trust or the
    Southard LLC. In light of these deletions, the court may also, in its discretion, award any
    relief it deems appropriate for Don and Lynn’s usurpation of the corporate opportunity
    (see the first sentence of paragraph 13) or for any other claim, and it may request
    18
    supplemental briefing from the parties before doing so. In the interests of justice, each
    side shall bear his or her own costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(5).)
    GOETHALS, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    BEDSWORTH, J.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G060577

Filed Date: 8/14/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/14/2023