Dennis Wise and Joan Macfarlane (together the Wises) were represented by the law firm, defendant DLA Piper LLP (US),
In 1987, the Wises loaned $350,000 to Cheng, who signed two promissory notes. However, Cheng defaulted on the notes, and later filed for bankruptcy.
Cheng made no payments on the debt. Accordingly, DLA obtained a state court judgment against Cheng, entered on August 1, 1994, for $605,184.50. DLA Attorney Breslauer, who represented the Wises in obtaining the judgment, told them "we have got this judgment, it's good forever, until the cows come home." Breslauer also told the Wises "[w]e will keep our ears to the ground" and "we can come back and bring in Mr. Cheng for examinations from time to time, every six months, or surely once a year, if we want, just for harassment purposes even, if you want to." However, DLA did not inform the Wises the judgment would become invalid if not renewed within 10 years.
In 1994, DLA pursued collection efforts but determined Cheng was "dead broke," and a report from an asset search firm reported Cheng had no assets, had numerous other creditors, had been sued in numerous other proceedings, and had state and federal tax liens filed against him. Breslauer sent the asset search report to the Wises, and stated that if they were aware of any banking relationships not reflected in the report, they should contact Breslauer and DLA would "follow up." The Wises did not ask DLA to do anything further to collect the judgment, because there was nothing else to do unless something new came up.
Copeland left DLA in mid-1995 and took some of the Wises' matters with him to his new firm. However, the Wises instructed that the Cheng bankruptcy issues were to remain with Breslauer at DLA. When Breslauer left DLA at the end of 1995, the Cheng bankruptcy matters apparently remained with DLA, because DLA Attorney Rubin wrote to the Wises in April 1996 explaining the status of the Cheng bankruptcy and told them they would receive a final distribution check later in the year, and that the "remainder of your judgment will survive this bankruptcy and is enforceable against Cheng's post-bankruptcy assets." Rubin stated she would "continue to monitor this case" but told the Wises "it is likely you will not receive any further notices except the one to allow the creditor distribution."
In late 1996, DLA Attorney Zander sent a letter to the Wises enclosing a check from the bankruptcy trustee for $21,578.63, "representing the final
The Wises had no further contact with DLA until 2009. Although DLA closed the Cheng file administratively, DLA did not notify the Wises it had ceased representing them.
The Wises divorced in 1998. When dividing their marital assets, they contacted Copeland at his new firm to help accomplish the division and assignment of the Cheng judgment, with each receiving one-half. Copeland's new firm appeared as counsel of record for the Wises in the state court lawsuit in which the judgment against Cheng had been obtained and accomplished the division and assignment later in 1998. Copeland did not advise the Wises of the need to renew the judgment within 10 years.
In 2004, the judgment expired as a matter of law. At trial, DLA stipulated its representation of the Wises fell below the standard of care because it did not inform them of the need to renew the judgment or calendar the 10-year expiration date on the judgment. In 2009, the Wises discovered the judgment had been allowed to expire, and filed the present action against DLA within one year of that discovery.
At trial, Cheng testified he has not owned any bank accounts, real estate, or any other assets since his bankruptcy proceedings. He previously was licensed as a CPA, but relinquished that license in the 1990's in part because he could not afford to pay for the continuing education requirements. He had not filed a personal tax return in 17 years.
Cheng has a proven ability to convince investors to invest in corporate entities he has formed. Between 2003 and 2011, he raised at least $1.3 million from investors in OSCN and its subsidiaries, although Cheng estimated it was closer to $2 million. All of these investment monies, in return for which the investors received stock in the entities, were paid into the corporations and were spent on operating expenses for the entities. The operating expenses paid for by funds invested in OSCN included the rent on the La Jolla house where Cheng lived, and his multiple trips to China. None of the funds were given to Cheng personally. By the time of trial, OSCN had less than $100 in its bank account. Cheng's biggest investor, Mr. White, had invested approximately $900,000 over the years and, although he had put other investors in contact with Cheng, he cautioned them they had to be willing to take a 100 percent risk on any funds invested. By the time of trial, White had written off most of his investments because "[t]here was no viable evidence that it was worth anything at that point," and White had told an investigator that "nothing has happened since the beginning of the stock, so I consider it worthless." Cheng agreed the stock was "worthless" and "could be used to wallpaper bathrooms."
Cheng testified that, "if any of these businesses ... takes off and makes money," he would receive millions in back salary. However, none of the companies have any contracts or agreements, and Cheng described the companies as "dead" without an infusion of new investment funds. Since the stock market crash of 2008, Cheng has had difficulty raising money from investors. Cheng was specifically asked about solicitation materials he gave to a potential investor in 2009 seeking to persuade new investments in his
Joel Selik, a collection attorney, testified for the Wises that the Cheng judgment (1) could have been collected in the past and (2) might be collectable in the future. Selik premised his opinion on "past collectability" on several facts. First, Selik testified "it appears that Cheng had at least $2 million dollars, probably more since he gave a million to Ohio State," because Mr. White had invested approximately $900,000 so it was "absolutely uncontroverted that [Cheng] had money" that could have been reached by "piercing the corporate veil ... and all that money we'd be able to collect," and piercing would have been "very easy in this particular case."
Second, Selik testified that although he had seen neither the deed to nor lease for the La Jolla home in which Cheng lived, there was "a probability" (based on the length of time Cheng had lived there and the amount of rent paid) he had an "ownership interest" in the home on which a creditor could levy. Third, Selik relied on Cheng's statement that he donated $1 million to his alma mater as indicative that Cheng had substantial assets after the bankruptcy, although Selik conceded he did not independently verify either the accuracy of Cheng's claim, or whether donations were made after (rather than before) Cheng's bankruptcy. Cheng, a 1967 graduate of Ohio State University, testified he donated over $1 million to the university "[o]ver the years," and had also raised significant funds for Ohio State. However, there was no evidence these funds were donated after the Wises' judgment had lapsed. Indeed, although Cheng received a "Pacesetter" award from Ohio State's Fisher College of Business, that award was conferred in 1986, and Cheng testified he had left the board of an Ohio State alumni group after the bankruptcy.
Fourth, Selik relied on Cheng's testimony that he (Cheng) had made multiple trips to China after the bankruptcy as indicating he was "spending a lot of money." The only evidence for the funding of these trips was that Cheng used investor money for them, and Selik's testimony contained no mention of any factual basis for his belief that Cheng used personal resources for them. Indeed, Selik conceded he had not conducted an asset search on Cheng, but nevertheless stated (when asked how Cheng could have paid the judgment in response to pressure from his investors) that "[w]e have a few possible sources and a few out there in the [ether] that I suspect."
On appeal, the Wises claim (without citation to the record) Cheng "testified that if he had been aggressively pursued, he would have come up with [enough money to fully] satisfy the judgment." We disregard this "testimony" in our analysis for several reasons. First, the Wises' malpractice claim was not that DLA should have aggressively pursued collection efforts before the judgment expired in late 2004, and therefore Cheng's purported ability to raise funds to pay the judgment before that date has no relevance to whether the Wises showed the judgment would have been collectable had it not expired.
Second, Cheng's "what if surmises are doubly speculative, because it asks him to speculate both as to what he would have done, and to how others would have reacted to what he might have done (cf. Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California (2012) 55 Cal.4th 747, 780-781 [149 Cal.Rptr.3d 614, 288 P.3d 1237]) and "speculation is not evidence, less still substantial evidence." (People v. Berryman (1993) 6 Cal.4th 1048, 1081 [25 Cal.Rptr.2d 867, 864 P.2d 40], disapproved on other grounds in People v. Hill (1998) 17 Cal.4th 800, 823, fn. 1 [72 Cal.Rptr.2d 656, 952 P.2d 673].)
Finally, and most importantly, Cheng did not testify he would have come up with enough money to fully satisfy the judgment had he been pursued after 2004. Instead, the Wises apparently refer to a declaration (not included in the record on appeal) prepared by their counsel and signed by Cheng that stated "I am certain that if I had asked, I could have and would have obtained stock equity investments from [OSCN investors] to satisfy the entire judgment...." Cheng's actual testimony, however, was that by the time he signed the declaration he was not getting much money anymore from investors because of the recession. Moreover, when specifically asked about the statement that he would have obtained money from investors to pay the judgment, Cheng actually testified he "wouldn't ask my investors to take their money and ... satisfy the judgment" (italics added), nor would he have "gotten anywhere with [such a request]," nor would he have used investments made in the corporations to pay the Wises because "[t]hat's what Ponzi schemes do."
Selik's opinion on "future collectability" was based on a single overarching theme: because Cheng had been able to convince some "very important men"
Miles Grant, a collection attorney, testified for DLA that the judgment could not have been collected in the past or in the future. Grant conducted an extensive investigation of Cheng's assets, which Selik described as "excellent," and determined that Cheng has "been broke" and has "never had any assets" since 1991. Cheng owns no bank accounts in his name, drives a car — registered in the name of one of his companies — against which debt is owed, and lives in a rental unit (in which he had no ownership interest) not in good condition and furnished with "quite old" furniture.
Grant explained that a primary theme of Selik's opinion regarding collectability — a creditor may use "reverse alter ego" to reach corporate assets to satisfy debts incurred by a shareholder of the corporate entity — is an incorrect theory because the theory is no longer available to creditors. Grant also testified Selik's theory that the creditor could have subpoenaed Cheng's investors for third party debtor examinations and thereby pressured his investors to lend money to Cheng (or pressured Cheng to pay the judgment) faced numerous factual and legal obstacles: first, the identities of the investors would be unknown to the creditor unless Cheng cooperated with the creditor; second, many judges would not permit a creditor to subpoena third party investors because of the statutory limitations on such subpoenas; finally, it is purely speculative that investors would then have given or loaned Cheng an additional $1 million with which to pay the judgment.
"The element of collectibility requires a showing of the debtor's solvency. `["W]here a claim is alleged to have been lost by an attorney's negligence,... to recover more than nominal damages it must be shown that it was a valid subsisting debt, and that the debtor was solvent." [Citation.]' [Quoting Lolly v. Kuster (1918) 177 Cal. 783, 788 [171 P. 961], italics added by DiPalma; citations.] The loss of a collectible judgment `by definition means the lost opportunity to collect a money judgment from a solvent [defendant] and is certainly legally sufficient evidence of actual damage.' [Quoting Jackson v. Johnson (1992) 5 Cal.App.4th 1350, 1369 [7 Cal.Rptr.2d 482] (dis. opn. of Johnson, J.).]" (DiPalma, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 1509.)
The plaintiff in a malpractice action must establish that the underlying judgment lost as the result of the attorney's error could have been collected. (Garretson v. Harold I. Miller (2002) 99 Cal.App.4th 563, 571 [121 Cal.Rptr.2d 317].) As this court explained in Hecht, Solberg, Robinson, Goldberg & Bagley LLP v. Superior Court (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 579, 591 [40 Cal.Rptr.3d 446]:
When the plaintiff does not introduce evidence from which a trier of fact could conclude, to a reasonable degree of certainty, the judgment would have been collectable, a verdict in favor of the plaintiff must be reversed. (Filbin v. Fitzgerald (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 154, 166 [149 Cal.Rptr.3d 422]; accord, Garretson v. Harold I. Miller, supra, 99 Cal.App.4th at pp. 571-575 [affirming grant of JNOV (judgment notwithstanding the verdict) where no evidence of collectability introduced].)
On appeal, a jury's findings on collectability are reviewed for substantial evidence. (Garretson v. Harold I. Miller, supra, 99 Cal.App.4th at p. 569.) We review the evidence most favorably to the findings, resolving all conflicts and indulging all inferences in support of the judgment. (In re Marriage of Mix (1975) 14 Cal.3d 604, 614 [122 Cal.Rptr. 79, 536 P.2d 479].) Although it is true that the testimony of a single witness, including the testimony of an expert, may be sufficient to constitute substantial evidence (Leslie G. v. Perry & Associates (1996) 43 Cal.App.4th 472, 487 [50 Cal.Rptr.2d 785]), when an expert bases his or her conclusion on factors that are "speculative, remote or
A demonstration of collectability here — whether Cheng was able to pay some or all of the judgment — required the Wises to introduce admissible evidence (rather than speculation or assumptions) as to "`the actual circumstances to determine whether the judgment "would have been collectable[]"'" and "can include information about the basic solvency of the defendant in the underlying case, as shown by [his or her] assets, net worth or available proceeds from investments." (Hecht, Solberg, Robinson, Goldberg & Bagley LLP v. Superior Court, supra, 137 Cal.App.4th at p. 591.) It appears the only evidence concerning Cheng's personal net worth, income, or other assets came from the testimonies of Cheng, Grant, and Selik. Grant's asset search revealed Cheng owns no bank accounts in his own name, has "been broke since 1991," and has had no assets since 1991. Cheng's trial testimony, confirming this assessment, also verified he has not filed a personal income tax return in 17 years, and has funded his lifestyle over those years from Social Security, gifts from his parents, and money invested by third parties in his various corporate entities. The Wises' contrary showing contained no affirmative evidence Cheng has owned any assets in his own name since 1991. On appeal, the Wises argue the testimony of one witness can be substantial evidence and the jury could have "decided that Cheng was lying" when he denied having any assets or any current ability to pay the judgment. "True as that may be, disbelief of [his] testimony does not constitute affirmative evidence of the contrary proposition" (Viner v. Sweet (2004) 117 Cal.App.4th 1218, 1229 [12 Cal.Rptr.3d 533]), and hence the determination that Cheng was not credible simply means his testimony has "`no more effect than if it had not been given. It disappears from the case (Hicks v. Reis (1943) 21 Cal.2d 654, 660 [134 P.2d 788].)
The Wises rely principally on Selik's testimony that the judgment against Cheng was collectable in the past and would be collectable in the future, to assert there was substantial evidence to support the finding of collectability.
The principal thrust of Selik's testimony regarding past and future collectability was that the Wises could have used "reverse piercing" and obtained funds placed in the corporate entities by third party investors to satisfy the judgment against Cheng. On appeal, the Wises assert reverse piercing was not the only, or "arguably not even a significant basis," for Selik's opinion. However, the first example they cited on appeal for Selik's "other" bases for his opinion on collectability was Selik's testimony that a creditor can file a motion to amend the judgment to include the corporate entity or file a separate lawsuit. Selik did not state those were alternatives to reverse corporate piercing, but instead testified those were the methods he would have employed to effect a reverse corporate piercing. Moreover, it is irrelevant to our analysis whether reverse piercing was the principal predicate for Selik's opinion, or was merely one of many bases for his opinion, because our evaluation of whether substantial evidence supports the judgment requires an examination of whether he had some basis for concluding the judgment would have been collectable.
The only remaining factor cited by Selik in support of his opinion on past collectability was his conclusion that an aggressive collection effort could have included subpoenaing Cheng's investors under third party judgment debtor examination procedures, and these examinations would have exerted pressure on these investors to loan Cheng the money to pay the Wises.
Because all of the predicates for Selik's opinion on past collectability rely on speculation, factual assumptions unsupported by the record, or fallacious legal assumptions, his opinion "cannot rise to the dignity of substantial
The Wises also rely on Selik's testimony that the judgment would have been collectable in the future to assert there was substantial evidence to support the finding of collectability. However, Selik's opinion on "future collectability," premised on his prediction that Cheng would continue to convince investors to invest in his business schemes, explained that (1) if Cheng succeeded in getting new investors and the business became successful "we might have something ... in the millions and millions and millions to go after," and (2) even if the businesses continued to fail "it's probably just a few million dollars in investments that we will be going after." The latter basis for Selik's opinion on future collectability merely restates his "reverse piercing" theory and we conclude, for the reasons already discussed, it is entitled to no weight and cannot constitute substantial evidence. (Corrales, supra, 198 Cal.App.4th at p. 226.) We conclude, for distinct reasons, the former basis for Selik's opinion on future collectability is also entitled to no weight and cannot constitute substantial evidence to support the finding of collectability. The trial evidence showed none of the companies have any existing contracts or agreements, none of the companies have any assets, and the companies are "dead" without an infusion of new investment funds, which (Cheng conceded) had largely dried up. Selik's prediction of "millions and millions and millions [for the Wises] to go after," notwithstanding the absence of capital and Cheng's historical record of failed enterprises, is entirely speculative.
Similarly, in Greenwich S.F., LLC v. Wong (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 739 [118 Cal.Rptr.3d 531] (Greenwich), the court rejected an award of damages based on an expert's projection of lost profits because the claimed lost profits were "uncertain, hypothetical and entirely speculative." (Id. at p. 743.) There, the plaintiffs sought lost profits for breach of a real property sales agreement, and "presented evidence of lost profits through the testimony of [a] real estate appraiser," who testified about what the property would have been worth had it been developed according to the intended plans and specifications. (Id. at p. 749.) On appeal, the court found the resulting award of $600,000 in lost profits was without substantial evidentiary support because the "occurrence and extent of the projected lost profits were not proven with the requisite reasonable certainty in this case." (Id. at p. 760.) The court noted that, "The evidence in this case was insufficient to show that [either plaintiff] was an established business or had a track record of successfully developing or redeveloping properties. ... [¶] ... The existence of plans for a development does not supply substantial evidence that the development is reasonably certain to be built, much less that it is reasonably certain to produce profits." (Id. at p. 763, italics added.)
In reversing the award, the court stated that "[t]he lost profits claim was based on the assumption that [the plaintiffs] would have constructed the residence according to the plans and specifications without changes and that the venture would have been profitable. These assumptions were inherently uncertain, contingent, unforeseeable and speculative. The proposed real estate development project here involved numerous variables that made any calculation of lost profits inherently uncertain." (Greenwich, supra, 190 Cal.App.4th at p. 766, fn. omitted.) Other cases are in accord. (See, e.g., Kids' Universe v. In2Labs (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 870, 877-878 [116 Cal.Rptr.2d 158] [finding expert testimony insufficient to demonstrate lost profits where a small toy store claimed flood damage to the store caused by defendant led to $50 million in lost profits because plaintiff's new Web site would have allowed it to compete in the Internet toy marketing business]; Vestar Development II, LLC v. General Dynamics Corp. (9th Cir. 2001) 249 F.3d 958, 962 [applying Cal. law and holding too speculative award of lost profits for breach of agreement to negotiate where plaintiff sought "future profits that it hoped to earn from the shopping center it had planned to build on the parcel it was attempting to buy"].)
Selik's opinion that the Wises could collect their judgment in the future likewise rested on the hope that, notwithstanding Cheng's track record over the preceding two decades, one or more of Cheng's entities would earn future
The judgment is reversed. DLA is entitled to costs on appeal.
Benke, Acting P. J., and McIntyre, J., concurred.