ARONSON, J.—
Rita Patel appeals the trial court's entry of a judgment of dismissal after granting terminating sanctions striking her complaint under Code of Civil Procedure section 128.7 (all further statutory references are to this code). The court concluded Patel filed the complaint for an improper purpose without evidentiary or legal support because her claims were barred by res judicata based on her previous adversary action in federal court opposing Victor Ali's bankruptcy petition.
Patel filed this action in March 2014 against Crown, Alonso, and a host of other named and Doe defendants whom she alleged, along with Alonso and Victor Ali, owned Crown and operated it to defraud her of hundreds of thousands of dollars after her husband died.
According to Patel's complaint, Alonso, Victor Ali, and the other defendants "all owned and operated Crown," but they utilized the corporate structure for fraudulent purposes. Patel therefore sought to pierce Crown's corporate veil based on allegations that defendants "deliberately undercapitalized their business and are the alter egos of one another, unfairly seeking to deceive and mislead plaintiff."
Patel alleged defendants, as Crown's owners and operators, hatched a "plan ... to strip [her] of all of her money and assets" for their own use.
More specifically, Patel alleged "[t]he saga" of defendants' fraud against her "began back in 2008." Her husband died in October 2008, leaving her with two young children to support. She had only the equivalent of a sixth-grade education, no experience in business, and did not read, write, or understand English well, which she claimed defendants exploited to obtain her funds. According to Patel's complaint, "By design, defendants always and only dealt with plaintiff when she was alone. Defendants did not want plaintiff to get any professional advice from an outsider or friend."
They plied her with gifts. According to her complaint, "About a week after her husband died, the[] defendants presented plaintiff and her two children with gifts. These were presented under false pretense, to gain plaintiff's trust." Patel's complaint alleged, "The gifts were designed to loosen up the plaintiff ... and to make her feel beholden to these defendants. Defendants knew that plaintiff was emotionally weak, vulnerable, alone, depressed, lonely and sad," and that "they could take advantage of the plaintiff and her lack of education and experience."
According to Patel's complaint, Victor Ali, "a smooth salesman, ... acted as the lead spokesman for the other defendants." He was their "pitchman, acting on behalf of the other defendants." After learning Patel would receive $100,000 in life insurance proceeds, Victor Ali contacted her at defendants' behest and offered to help her with her paperwork and bills. He persuaded her to add him as a cosigner on her bank account. Next, according to Patel's complaint, "defendants, with Ali taking the lead, convinced plaintiff to withdraw [all] $200,000 from the retirement account that her husband had set up before he died," and to deposit those funds in her checking account.
Patel then met Victor Ali and another, unknown "agent of ... the other defendants" at Crown's office, where she signed "a stack of papers" based on their instruction that "it was necessary and beneficial to her and her children." She received no copies of the paperwork, but later learned it was for a loan of $417,000 taken against her home.
According to Patel's complaint, once her checking account and financial position ballooned, defendants began "to entice [her] to turn over money to the defendants," apparently in exchange for a position at Crown as a means to
Patel alleged defendants obtained a total of $691,824 from her with "no intention of putting [her] on the payroll." Instead, "[d]efendants intended to deceive plaintiff with this false promise and others." When Patel attempted to contact Victor Ali about her promised payroll position, "he talked her in circles [and] ignored the question." According to Patel's complaint, when she sought "something in writing from defendants," Victor Ali simply used the occasion to gain further advantage on defendants' behalf, "ha[ving] plaintiff sign an interest free loan for 11 years o[n] $150,000, involving defendants."
Soon, Patel began to receive late notices on the $417,000 mortgage encumbering her home. Patel called Victor Ali "and the others, trying to find out why the payment[s]," which they had promised to make, "had not been made." While defendants had been easy to reach before they obtained her funds, "calling her all the time, on a daily basis," Patel asserted in her complaint that "[a]fter defendants got [her] money, they avoided plaintiff and avoided all contact with her and would not return [her] phone calls." Patel finally reached Victor Ali in March 2009 to demand he reimburse her funds, but he "refused, stating he didn't have the money."
A year later in March 2010, it appears defendants or Victor Ali may have made at least token repayments because, as Patel acknowledged in her complaint, the principal amount they owed her declined from the original sum of $691,824 to $675,000. As Patel phrased it in her complaint, "defendants finally agreed to pay $7,500 per month, at 8% interest, on the princip[al] of $675,000, which defendants had taken from plaintiff." But Patel came to view the agreement as only another false promise or fraud in defendants' continuing pattern of falsehoods to defraud her. She alleged in her complaint that the March 2010 repayment agreement was merely "a further effort to carry out the conspiracy and to pacify [her].... The agreement was executed, but defendants had no intention of ever completing payments. Instead, defendants' conspiracy was to make payments for awhile, and then have Victor Ali declare bankruptcy." (Italics added.)
In any event, plaintiff alleged defendants' conspiracy to take her funds without fully repaying her reached its fulfillment in December 2013, after Victor Ali obtained a discharge in his personal bankruptcy proceeding. Patel alleged: "Before that date, defendants were paying the agreed amount of $7,500 per month to plaintiff. Once the conspiracy was completed, and the bankruptcy was granted to Victor Ali, defendants then stopped paying." As noted, Patel then filed her complaint in this action in March 2014 alleging claims against defendants — but not Victor Ali — for fraud, false promises, negligent misrepresentations, negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligence per se, accounting, and unfair business practices.
Defendants filed both a demurrer and a motion for sanctions under section 128.7. Defendants included as an exhibit a March 2010 agreement in which Crown and Victor Ali had agreed to repay Patel as she alleged in her complaint. Defendants pointed out that the agreement followed and served to settle a lawsuit Patel filed in 2009, in which she alleged Victor Ali, with Alonso's and the other defendants' knowledge and participation, fraudulently induced her to loan money to Crown, and then refused to return the money. Defendants did not claim a res judicata bar based on the settlement and dismissal of Patel's 2009 lawsuit rendered her new lawsuit worthy of sanction for lack of an evidentiary or legal basis.
Rather, defendants premised their sanctions motion on the bankruptcy court's dismissal under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 12(b)(6) (28 U.S.C.) of Patel's adversary action opposing Victor Ali's bankruptcy discharge. Defendants asserted that dismissal rendered Patel's lawsuit against them in this action wholly untenable and improper.
In its tentative ruling, the trial court overruled defendants' demurrer as to Patel's causes of action for fraud, false promises, negligent misrepresentations, accounting, and unfair business practices, and sustained the demurrer with leave to amend on her causes of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress and per se negligence. The court also denied defendants' motion for sanctions and to strike Patel's complaint, observing that it overruled the demurrer on which defendants' based their sanctions motion.
The court did not specify Patel's or her attorney's alleged omissions, but granted defendants' request for judicial notice of several documents, including Patel's adversary complaint pleadings opposing Victor Ali's bankruptcy petition, the bankruptcy court's orders dismissing those complaints for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted in federal bankruptcy court, and the bankruptcy court's order granting Victor Ali's bankruptcy discharge.
Patel contends the trial court erroneously granted defendants' sanctions motion under section 128.7 based on res judicata and collateral estoppel. Section 128.7, subdivision (b), provides, "By presenting to the court, whether by signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating, a pleading, petition, written notice of motion, or other similar paper, an attorney or unrepresented party is certifying that to the best of the person's knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, all of the following conditions are met: [¶] (1) It is not being presented primarily for an improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation. [¶] (2) The claims, defenses, and other legal contentions therein are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law. [¶] (3) The allegations and other factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, are likely to
"Under the requirement of privity, only parties to the former judgment or their privies may take advantage of or be bound by it. [Citation.] A party in this connection is one who is `directly interested in the subject matter, and had a right to make a defense, or to control the proceeding, and to appeal from the judgment.' [Citations.] A privy is one who, after rendition
Defendants' res judicata claim on which they premised their sanctions motion failed at the outset because they were neither parties to Patel's adversary action in the bankruptcy proceeding, nor Victor Ali's privies. It is undisputed they were not parties to the action because it arose from Victor Ali's personal bankruptcy petition, not a petition by Crown, Alonso, or any of the other defendants in this case. Nor were they privies because although Patel asserted in her adversary action in the bankruptcy proceeding that Victor Ali committed fraud in obtaining and retaining her funds, to the extent Crown or Alonso or the other defendants may have been implicated to a greater or lesser degree, they had no direct interest in the subject matter, nor any right to make a defense, control the proceeding, or appeal from the judgment. (Bernhard, supra, 19 Cal.2d at p. 811.) They could not intervene in the proceeding, nor assert and control a defense nor appeal as a party or privy because the outcome of the proceeding — Victor Ali's bankruptcy discharge — determined his legal rights and obligations, not theirs.
Defendants claim they are privies because any liability they face in this case is merely derivative as Victor Ali's alleged coconspirators or aiders and abettors, relying on Richard B. LeVine, Inc. v. Higashi (2005) 131 Cal.App.4th 566 [32 Cal.Rptr.3d 244] (Levine). In affirming summary judgment, the Levine court discussed the solely "derivative liability" of an alleged conspirator whom the evidence showed committed no "direct acts" nor "`actually committ[ed] a tort themselves.'" (Id. at p. 579.) Here, in contrast, Patel's complaint in this action alleged, "Defendants, and each of them, conspired, approved, ratified, and carried out each step of their conspiracy." (Italics added.) The complaint alleged defendants engaged directly in the fraud, by "tak[ing] from plaintiff" a net sum of $675,000, which they "hid and transferred ... to and among each other," and which, in another stage of the fraud, they "finally agreed to [re]pay" the sum through Crown as their alter ego, but without intending to complete the repayment.
In addition to claim preclusion, "[r]es judicata also includes a broader principle ... commonly referred to as `collateral estoppel' or `issue preclusion.' Under this principle an issue necessarily decided in prior litigation may be conclusively determined as against the parties or their privies in a subsequent lawsuit on a different cause of action." (Roos, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at p. 879.)
Like res judicata, collateral estoppel requires that the person or entity asserting it was a party to the previous action or in privity with the party, among other requirements. "`Collateral estoppel applies when (1) the party against whom the plea is raised was a party or was in privity with a party to the prior adjudication, (2) there was a final judgment on the merits in the prior action and (3) the issue necessarily decided in the prior adjudication is identical to the one that is sought to be relitigated.'" (Roos, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at p. 879.)
A privity defense does not apply here. Of course "`the party to be estopped and the unsuccessful party in the prior litigation'" were close here
The trial court concluded Victor Ali's relationship with them "is sufficiently close ... such that he represented the same legal rights, and therefore Defendants are in privity with Victor Ali in the prior bankruptcy proceeding." (Italics added.) But as discussed, Victor Ali represented only himself and his own interests in the bankruptcy litigation, not defendants. His interests were at stake; they had no rights in the action to turn over to him, such as to defend or control the action on their behalf, nor to appeal. The point is illustrated by considering codefendants in a civil conspiracy action. Each advances his or her own interests, and therefore does not necessarily represent the others, particularly where each is an alleged direct tortfeasor. Similarly, as discussed, business partners are not in privity for purposes of subsequent preclusion, especially as here where the plaintiff alleged they were independently liable. (DKN Holdings, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 825.)
In Vella, for example, a party had raised in the prior proceeding affirmative defenses of waiver, equitable estoppel, and tender, and sought judgment on those grounds based on a claim of res judicata. But as the Supreme Court explained, "The record offered in support of the plea of res judicata is virtually barren.... The sparse record presented to us fails to show either the precise nature of the factual issues litigated, or the depth of the court's inquiry. We decline to assume, given the summary character of this type of action, that the mere pleading of a defense without objection by the adverse party necessarily demonstrates adequate opportunity to litigate the defense." (Vella, supra, 20 Cal.3d at p. 258.)
Moreover, defendants' preemption argument fails on the merits. Defendants argue Patel's claims in this action are preempted because they "are entirely predicated on the claimed wrongful filing of a bankruptcy petition and necessarily relate to the management of the bankruptcy process." In other words, defendants cast Patel's case as claim of fraud on the bankruptcy court, and therefore "exclusive jurisdiction belongs to the bankruptcy court." Not so. Patel does not challenge Victor Ali's bankruptcy discharge, and has not sued him here. Instead, Patel in this action seeks redress for defendants' alleged frauds against her in obtaining and retaining her funds, not for any alleged fraud against the bankruptcy court.
The judgment and the trial court's order granting defendants' sanction motion are reversed. Appellants are entitled to their costs on appeal.
Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and Fybel, J., concurred.