Plaintiff and respondent Los Angeles Federal Credit Union (the Credit Union) prevailed in an action for conversion against defendants and appellants Edgar Madatyan and Elvis Madatyan
On August 1, 2008, the Credit Union financed the purchase of a 2000 Bentley by Areg Khachikian in the amount of $136,126. The loan agreement provided that the car was collateral for the loan and required Khachikian to maintain insurance for the car. The insurance provision of the loan agreement stated, in part, "You promise to maintain property insurance in an amount necessary to protect Our security interest in the collateral, with a policy as specified by Us, in the amount and for the period required by Us, and with Us named as loss payee for Our protection. Such insurance shall protect against loss by fire, theft, and collision...."
Paul Pitts, the Credit Union's collection manager, testified that Khachikian fulfilled his responsibility to maintain insurance on the car through a policy
In October 2008, Khachikian took his car to GAD to be repaired. Elvis owned, and Edgar managed, GAD. An Allstate adjuster went to the body shop and appraised the damage to Khachikian's car at $39,697.35. Allstate sent Khachikian a check for that amount, naming Khachikian and GAD as payees, but not the Credit Union.
Khachikian took the insurance check to GAD and asked Edgar to endorse it. Edgar went with Khachikian to Bank of America to obtain a signature guarantee of Edgar's endorsement. Edgar endorsed the check on behalf of GAD. Khachikian left the bank without cashing the check. Edgar did not know Khachikian before Khachikian brought his car to GAD. Edgar did not know that the Credit Union had a lien on Khachikian's car before he endorsed the check.
In a declaration of which the trial court took judicial notice, Elvis stated that Khachikian's request that GAD endorse the check was not unusual. In Elvis's experience, "Sometimes customers decide to go somewhere else, do the work themselves, or simply hold the money until we complete the work so they know it was done right. Since I am confident of the quality of our work, and since we have a lien on the vehicle for any work performed (which means we do not release the vehicle until we are paid) I have not, in the past, refused to endorse the checks, nor, until now, experienced any problems due to endorsing a check."
Pitts testified that insurance companies make checks payable to an insured and an auto shop to ensure that the car is repaired. In Pitts's experience, such checks were cashed "[o]nly at the completion of the repair work to the vehicle[,] then the check is signed off by the Credit Union and paid to the body shop for the services completed." Pitts explained that in the usual case, insurance checks were made out to the Credit Union and the body shop, and not the "customer" and the body shop, because the Credit Union had an interest in the car. As a payee on the check, the Credit Union would endorse the check after the work was completed. That was the only way to ensure that the repairs were made.
Khachikian had not authorized GAD to work on the car, and GAD had not worked on the car. The insurance check was cashed. GAD did not receive any money from the check, from Allstate, or from Khachikian.
The trial court ruled that defendants converted the insurance check or its proceeds. In support of its ruling, the trial court found that Khachikian's loan agreement with the Credit Union required Khachikian to insure the car and name the Credit Union as an insured. Khachikian insured the car, but violated the loan agreement by not naming the Credit Union as an insured. The purpose of the insurance was to repair the car in the event it was damaged. The trial court found that by assisting Khachikian in negotiating the insurance check, defendants "interfered with the [Credit Union's] right" and therefore defendants were liable for conversion.
Defendants contend that the evidence does not support the trial court's ruling that they converted the Credit Union's property because they did not receive and were never in control of the proceeds of the insurance check, a check cannot be converted solely by the act of endorsing it, the Credit Union had no interest in the check as the check was made payable to GAD and Khachikian, and defendants did not know of the Credit Union's existence. Substantial evidence supports the ruling.
Substantial evidence also supports the trial court's finding that defendants wrongfully interfered with the Credit Union's interest in the insurance proceeds. An equitable lien is a property interest that can be converted. (McCafferty v. Gilbank (1967) 249 Cal.App.2d 569, 574-576 [57 Cal.Rptr. 695] (McCafferty).) In McCafferty, the former wife settled a judgment against her former husband for child support pursuant to an agreement that established an equitable lien on one-half of any recovery the husband received from a pending action arising from an automobile accident. (Id. at pp. 571-575.) The former husband's attorney in the automobile action, knowing of the plaintiff's equitable lien, endorsed two bank drafts that were made payable jointly to the attorney and the former husband in settlement of the automobile action, the settlement proceeds were distributed, and no payment was made to the former wife for her interest in the settlement proceeds. (Id. at p. 574.) The Court of Appeal held that the attorney converted the former wife's equitable lien in the settlement proceeds by endorsing the bank drafts. (Id. at p. 576.) Here, defendants converted the Credit Union's equitable lien in the insurance proceeds when Edgar endorsed the Allstate check. (Ibid.)
The judgment is affirmed. The Credit Union is awarded its costs on appeal.
Turner, P. J., and Armstrong, J., concurred.