Source: http://www.ecjlaw.com/lawyers-know-mostly-dont-financial-elder-abuse-claims/
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 12:40:38+00:00

Document:
What Lawyers Should Know (But Mostly Don’t) About Financial Elder Abuse Claims « Ervin Cohen & Jessup LLP « Taking your business personally.
The financial elder abuse and fraud cases playing out in court right now surrounding Marvel Comics icon Stan Lee trace back to state laws enacted many years ago like the California Elder Abuse Act, designed to protect those over 65. However, many lawyers remain unfamiliar with them.
Here are 11 pointers on the California Elder Abuse Act for practitioners who may encounter financial elder abuse — the most common and fastest growing form of elder abuse.
First: The act contains a unilateral attorney’s fee and costs provision. If an abused elder prevails by a preponderance of evidence in a financial abuse case by obtaining a net positive monetary award under the act, the elder will be allowed to recover “reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.” But fees and costs will not be awarded to the alleged abuser who defeats the suit. Oddly, in cases of physical abuse, an elder can recover attorney’s fees and costs only if physical abuse is proven by clear and convincing evidence.
Second: A plaintiff is authorized to seek the provisional remedy of an attachment pursuant to the act, a remedy which is otherwise unavailable to tort claimants. The act’s remedies are cumulative, so a plaintiff may seek, among other things, preliminary and permanent injunctive and declaratory relief and the remedy of constructive trust.
Third: Counsel should consider alleging claims for unfair business practices, breach of fiduciary duty and aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty together when pleading a cause of action for financial elder abuse. For instance, if a finding of deceptive acts or unfair business practices directed at a senior is obtained, the fact-finder could treble the monetary award for the senior in certain circumstances under Civil Code § 3345 (a consumer protection statute which applies where penalty or deterrence remedies are authorized).
Sixth, neither the competence nor the sophistication of the victim determines who can make a claim for financial elder abuse. Often, the proudest, most savvy, and well-educated fall prey to the unscrupulous because they are self-reliant and in denial about their limitations. For instance, a 75 year old doctor, sharp as a tack, was bamboozled by a representative in a bank who put him in an unsuitable investment, promising returns of at least 4%. The victim doctor discovered almost immediately things were not right—it appeared that all his money had been put in the stock market without his knowledge or consent. He was too embarrassed at first to tell anyone in the family and tried to fix the situation himself. The representative told the victim that the situation would be fixed. It never was. Fortunately, the victim had a relative who is familiar with California elder law. The problem was quickly resolved after threats of legal action, with the bank asserting that the doctor knew what he was doing. What the bank and the broker would have learned had the doctor been forced to file suit is that blaming the victim is not a defense to a financial elder abuse claim.
Sixth: Neither the competence nor the sophistication of the victim determines who can make a claim for financial elder abuse. Often, the proudest, savviest and best-educated fall prey to the unscrupulous because they are self-reliant and in denial about their limitations. For instance, consider the case of a 75-year-old doctor, sharp as a tack, who was bamboozled by the representative of a bank who put him in an unsuitable investment, promising returns of at least 4 percent. The victim discovered almost immediately things were not right — it appeared that all his money had been put in the stock market without his knowledge or consent.
The senior sues for financial abuse. At trial, the abuser says that he meant well, that the victim should have known she was being treated unfairly and unequally, and that she failed to object or do anything about it. The abuser asserts there was no actual or justifiable reliance, because the victim would have acquiesced to the treatment anyway, and she did no due diligence. That the victim may have been deficient in managing her affairs misses the point: Financial elder abuse is a form of fraud where no actual or reasonable reliance must be shown — and in some instances, no intent to defraud need be shown either.
Eighth: When presented with a potential financial abuse claim, the practitioner should consider as a possible defendant everyone who had a close relationship with the victim, and may have known about the abuse. Failure to act by a professional who should have disclosed wrongful conduct may support a claim for financial elder abuse, such as where a lawyer engaged in self-dealing, or where an accountant prepared tax returns for both the victim and the abuser, yet did nothing to alert the victim she was treated inequitably. Accountants, attorneys, brokers and other fiduciaries may be sued for assisting, by silence, the commission of a bad act; simply not disclosing facts about mistreatment is enough to support a claim.
Ninth: An elder may not remember all material facts or who was involved, and may omit crucial information out of embarrassment, shame of even fear. The elder may believe that telling the whole story may cause a relative to limit the elder’s independence, and even worse, initiate conservatorship proceedings.The elder may not notice irregularities or even bother to read documents.
I had an elder client who never realized until we were midway through litigation that signatures on some documents were not hers, after she had testified mistakenly in deposition that the signatures were her own. It is important to get a tolling agreement from all potential defendants and to make efforts to recover documents quickly because the victim may be ill-informed or unaware. Sometimes, a client may be best advised to sue first on information and belief, if it isn’t possible to obtain a tolling or the information needed to make a decision about who to sue. It is wise to err on the side of inclusion.
Tenth: The practitioner should obtain all relevant documents, subpoena records and get forensic and other experts to help. In a case where we represented the estate of an elder and obtained a $1.8 million settlement just before jury selection, it was an uphill fight until we finished expert discovery. We knew that the elder had contributed funds and had proof of crookedness by the abuser, but until we gathered bank and backup financial records and invoices and hired a forensic expert, we could not prove how much money was taken from the victim and where the money went. The abuser had claimed the money went into a partnership construction project. While some of the money was used properly, we discovered double-charging and embezzlement.
Eleventh: Watch out for corporate real estate defendants in elder abuse cases. If an elder abuse claimant is a shareholder or limited partner and the defendants are majority owners, defendants may argue that the only claim is a derivative one (as if one must elect the sole theory to try at the outset). This is a common game played by corporate real estate defendants in elder abuse cases. Don’t fall for it! The victim should plead and pursue both direct individual claims and derivative claims. Sometimes this is a gray area, but plaintiffs should avoid getting caught failing to state alternative claims and be barred.
Other games defendants may play include demanding that a bond be posted as a requirement for a derivative suit, or trying to take away the plaintiff’s jury trial right by arguing that derivative claims dominate and should be bifurcated and tried first to the court. Similarly, to frustrate dissolution claims, defendants may move to initiate an expensive statutory buy-out procedure that would be unfavorable to the elder. Careful pleading and strategic thinking is required when combining financial elder abuse claims with accounting, dissolution and direct and derivative causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty in the same action involving a corporate entity in which the elder is a minority investor.
Geoffrey M. Gold is a trial lawyer specializing in business and real estate matters at Ervin Cohen & Jessup of Beverly Hills.
Disclosure: The author served as counsel in Rose v. Bolin, discussed in this article.
The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the organization, or Portfolio Media Inc., or any of its or their respective affiliates. This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal advice.
 Welf. & Inst. Code § 15765.5(a).
 Welf. & Inst. Code § 15765(b).
 Hobbs v. Bateman Eichler Hill Richards Inc. (1985) 164 Cal.App.3d 174, 201-202.
 Welf. & Inst. Code §15610.30(a).
 Wood v. Jamison , 167 Cal.App.4th 156, 165 (2008).
 Rose v. Bolin, Los Angeles Superior Court Case No. BC 425691.

References: § 3345
 v. 
 § 15765
 § 15765
 v. 
 §15610
 v. 
 v.