Court Opinion

ID: 4682469
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-29 18:02:40.876887+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:08.576721
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/29/21

                             CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                              FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION THREE

 NISSAN MOTOR ACCEPTANCE
 CASES.                                               G055748

 NISSAN MOTOR ACCEPTANCE
 CORPORATION,                                         (JCCP No. 4613
                                                      Super. Ct. No. 30-2009-00305125)
    Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and
 Appellant,                                           OPINION

                   v.

 SUPERIOR AUTOMOTIVE GROUP,
 LLC, et al.,

    Defendants, Cross-complainants and
 Appellants.

                  Appeal from posttrial orders of the Superior Court of Orange County,
Thierry Patrick Colaw, Judge. Affirmed.
              Rutan & Tucker, Richard K. Howell and Gerard M. Mooney; Miller
Barondess, Louise R. Miller, Amnon Z. Siegel and J. Mira Hashmal for Defendants,
Cross-complainants and Appellants.
              Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr., Bradley J.
Hamburger; Severson & Werson, Jan T. Chilton and Mark Joseph Kenney for Plaintiff,
Cross-defendant and Respondent.
                        *             *              *               *
              This case is a commercial lending dispute. Plaintiff, cross-defendant and
appellant Nissan Motor Acceptance Corporation (NMAC) is a subsidiary of nonparty
Nissan Motors of North America. NMAC is a specialty lender that loaned money to
Nissan automobile dealers.
              Defendants, cross-complainants and appellants, Michael A. Kahn (Kahn)
and his wife Tami L. Kahn, plus a group of now defunct limited liability company auto
dealerships they owned, were NMAC borrowers. These entities and individuals refer to
themselves collectively as “Superior” and we will do the same.
              This appeal and cross-appeal arise out of the retrial of Superior’s cross-
claims against NMAC. The jury awarded Superior $256.45 million in compensatory and
punitive damages based on two promissory fraud theories—negligent misrepresentation
and fraudulent concealment. The trial court granted NMAC’s motion for new trial based
on juror misconduct, but denied NMAC’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict (JNOV).
              Superior contends NMAC forfeited its right to complain about juror
misconduct. It also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s
discretionary decision to grant NMAC’s new trial motion. We conclude NMAC did not
forfeit the basis for its new trial motion and substantial evidence supported the court’s
juror misconduct findings. Contrary to Superior’s claim, we perceive nothing arbitrary or
capricious in its prejudice ruling. We affirm the new trial order.

                                             2
              In the cross-appeal, we conclude substantial evidence supported the trial
court’s denial of NMAC’s motion for JNOV. Consequently, we affirm the trial court’s
order granting a new trial and its order denying NMAC’s JNOV motion.
                                               I
                            FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Basic Dispute
              In 2008 Superior owned and operated seven dealerships, including four
Nissan stores. NMAC provided financing for six of the seven Superior dealerships.
Because independent automobile dealers, like Kahn, generally do not pay cash for the
vehicles on their lots, they often borrow the money, from the financing arm of the auto
maker whose cars they sell, and use those cars as collateral for the loan. (E.g., Elfman
Motors, Inc. v. Chrysler Corp. (E.D.Pa. 1977) [1977 US Dist. LEXIS 14564].) In the
industry, this practice is known as “floorplan lending.” (E.g., GMAC, LLC v. Hiatt
Pontiac GMC Trucks, Inc. (W.D.Wash. 2009) [2009 US Dist. LEXIS 113456].)
              The standard floorplan lending agreement requires the auto dealer to pay
back a pro rata portion of the loan within a certain period after each individual vehicle is
sold and driven off the dealer’s lot. If a dealer fails to pay within the agreed time after a
vehicle is sold, the dealer is “SOT,” which stands for “sale out of trust.” In other words,
the dealer has violated the lender’s trust by converting a loan secured by the right to
repossess the unsold vehicles into an unsecured loan.
              The floorplan lending agreement between NMAC and Superior had a
“2- day/10-day” rule. Superior was obligated to pay NMAC within two days after it
received payment for the car, or within 10 days after the sale, regardless of whether the
dealer had received payment.
              According to Kahn, NMAC did not strictly enforce the 2-day/10-day rule.
Instead, NMAC tolerated late payments up to 25 percent of Superior’s vehicle sales. This
posed no difficulty since Superior was profitable.

                                              3
               Prosperity came to a grinding halt during the severe economic recession of
2008. By June 2, Superior’s accumulated SOT with NMAC was around $1.36 million.
During the summer Superior’s vehicle sales dropped 40 percent from prerecession levels.
By October 10 Superior’s accumulated SOT—the amount of money Superior owed
NMAC—had grown to $4.5 million.
               At that point Kahn and NMAC’s president, Steve Lambert, had several
conversations which form the heart of this dispute. According to Kahn, in early October
2008 Lambert expressly approved Superior’s continued accumulation of floorplan
                                                                       1
inventory SOT debt to help Kahn’s dealerships survive the recession.
               After several conversations, Kahn and Lambert struck the following oral
agreement: In return for Kahn selling his dealership in San Juan Capistrano—even if he
incurred a big loss—NMAC would continue financing Superior at least through the end
           2
of 2009.

       1
           Kahn testified: “So I said to him [Lambert]—I said I need to get cash quickly so
that we don’t have a problem. And I said why don’t you just let me operate out of trust,
and as I sell off the cars I’ll gather up some cash, and in short order we’ll be in good
shape. And he said Mike I can’t knowingly just let you operate out of trust. You know,
we’re a public company, we’re a finance company, we can’t let you operate out of trust.
And I said it’s the quickest way to do it. He said, all right, do what you got to do. And
I’ll look the other way.” (Italics added.)
       2
            Specifically, Kahn testified: “And I said, well, Steve, if I’m going to sell that
dealership in this market we’re now into October of 2008. Truly the worst time ever in
my lifetime by far, I think everybody’s, and I said I’m going to lose a great deal of money
if I sell this dealership. [¶] And he in turn said, Mike, this is what we need to do. We’ve
got to sell that property, pay us down debt, and then that gives us an opportunity to loan
you back money to get you through the storm. [¶] And we went back and forth for quite
awhile on the phone and the end result is that at the end of the conservation he said this is
the deal: You sell San Juan and I will get you through ‘09.” (Italics added.)

                                             4
              On November 4, 2008, Superior and NMAC entered into a forbearance
agreement superseding NMAC’s earlier forbearance agreements. The agreement
included a $7.7 million loan to Superior to satisfy its existing SOT debt and Kahn’s
agreement to secure the loan with deeds of trust on some of his real property. The
agreement also included a $4 million loan so Kahn could finish building a new Oakland
dealership.
              According to Kahn, four days before the forbearance agreement was
signed, NMAC’s director of credit services, Kevin Cullum, called Kahn to go over the
agreement’s “bullet points” and advised NMAC would loan $6.6 million. Kahn testified
that when he protested the amount was less than what Lambert had agreed to, Cullum
replied Superior could take the offer “or [Cullum would] just come, shutdown [Superior,]
and pick up all the cars.” Again according to Kahn, three days later on November 3, the
day before the forbearance agreement was signed, Lambert called Kahn and gave him the
following assurance: “Mike, nobody is shutting you down. Relax. Don’t worry about it.
Put it behind you.”
              During the same general time period—i.e., leading up to the signing of the
November forbearance agreement—Lambert sent an internal e-mail to NMAC executives
incorporating his e-mail conversation with Superior’s president of real estate companies
concerning “open questions” about Superior and NMAC’s relationship after the sale of
Superior’s San Juan Capistrano dealership. The executives shared their viewpoints with

       Elaborating, Kahn testified: “And I said, Steve, if I got to cut my pinkie off to
save my arm I’m going to lose $10 million making this deal. I said I’ll do it if I know I
have your support 100 [percent]. He said you sell that dealership with one condition: I
want it sold by the end of the year. It’s got to be sold by December 31, 2008, and you got
my support. I will get you through ‘09. And then he asked me what he thought – what I
thought it was going to take to get through ‘09. And I said, worse case scenario could be
12 to $15 million. Who knows at this point because the economy is going crazy and
things are changing daily. And he said you’re probably right. Sounds like the right
number. And that was the deal.” (Italics added.)

                                            5
Lambert, including Cullum’s “recommend[ation] that [NMAC] move towards a complete
separation [from Superior].” In the other e-mail conversation, Lambert asked for
information about different possible scenarios, “to go over how to proceed with
Kahn/Superior.”
              According to Kahn, on January 5, 2009, Lambert asked for a projection of
Superior’s revenue and losses in the next six months. Kahn testified Lambert said, “Get
me the pro forma, we’ll get everything documented, and we’ll get you the money, and
we’ll be in good shape.” In sum, Kahn testified he relied on the following
representations: Lambert’s assurance in early October 2008 that NMAC would “look the
other way” on SOT’s to help Superior stay in business; Lambert’s assurance in late
October 2008 he would “get” Superior “through” 2009 if Kahn sold his San Juan
Capistrano dealership by the end of December 2008; Lambert’s assurance on November
3 that “nobody is shutting you down,” and Lambert’s assurance on January 5, 2009 that
NMAC would “get” Superior “the money” if Kahn got the pro forma to NMAC.
              Kahn claimed he fulfilled Superior’s side of the bargain. He sold his San
Juan Capistrano dealership on December 18, 2008, though it meant a $10 million
personal loss. And in early 2009, he took other steps on the assumption he would
continue to receive financing, including using his home and other assets as collateral in
giving NMAC a personal guarantee on February 9 to cover Superior’s debts. But
according to Kahn, NMAC did not keep its promise to continue financing Superior
through 2009; rather, it cut off Superior’s floorplan lending on February 11, 2009, two
days after receiving Kahn’s guarantee.
              Lambert’s version of the understanding between him and Kahn was more
conditional. Lambert testified he agreed to finance Superior “through 2009,” but only on
the condition that Superior “not go SOT.” And he “never said” he would “look the other
way” if Superior “sold cars out of trust.” In fact, Lambert testified he specifically told
Kahn that Superior could not sell cars out of trust.

                                              6
              As the recession deepened in early 2009, NMAC grew concerned about
Kahn’s prospects. On January 16, 2009, Kahn signed an extension of the November
forbearance agreement which continued forbearance on existing floorplan loans to the
end of March 2009. When the parties signed the agreement Superior had an SOT of $1.5
million. A cover letter to the extension advised Superior there would be “no further
tolerance for non-payment of sold units due [i.e., SOT sales].”
              Kahn signed the extension agreement and over the next few weeks
provided more collateral security to NMAC while Superior finished construction of the
Oakland dealership. Then on February 11, NMAC sent Kahn a notice of default,
demanding payment in full within 24 hours. Two days later NMAC foreclosed on
Superior’s assets, which included Kahn’s personal residences and the newly finished
Oakland dealership. Superior’s dealerships stopped doing business.
The First Trial and First Appeal
              After NMAC declared the default Superior still owed NMAC money.
NMAC sued Superior for breach of contract on the various debts Superior owed it.
Superior cross-complained for breach of contract and three forms of fraud, including
negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent concealment. After an eight-day jury trial, the
court granted NMAC’s nonsuit motion on all of Superior’s promissory fraud cross-
claims.
              The trial court granted nonsuit based on Kahn’s breach of the written
agreements. There was nothing in those written agreements to support Kahn’s claim
NMAC orally promised to keep lending Superior money through 2009. Only parol
evidence of Kahn’s conversations with Lambert supported Superior’s promissory fraud
claims. In granting nonsuit, the court relied on Bank of America etc. Assn. v.
Pendergrass (1935) 4 Cal.2d 258 (Pendergrass), which held a party may offer parol
evidence to prove fraud only if the evidence shows an independent fact or representation
that does not directly contradict the terms of the written contract. (Id. at p. 263.) The

                                              7
jury, left with only the competing contract claims to consider, awarded about $40 million
to NMAC, and nothing to Superior.
                Superior appealed. While its appeal was pending the California Supreme
Court decided Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn.
(2013) 55 Cal.4th 1169 (Riverisland), which squarely overruled Pendergrass. This court
then held Riverisland applied retroactively (Nissan Motor Acceptance Corporation (Jan.
16, 2014, G046914) [nonpub. opn.] (NMAC I)), thus resurrecting Superior’s promissory
fraud claims. Superior did not appeal from NMAC’s $40 million victory on its breach of
contract claims, meaning the retrial was limited to the promissory fraud claims alleged in
Superior’s cross-complaint. As a result, Superior became the de facto plaintiff in the
second trial.
The Second Trial
                The Jury Questionnaire and Juror Woodside’s Answers
                During jury selection, the parties used a 17-page questionnaire that
contained 56 questions, five of which are central to this appeal:
                Question No. 19: Have you, any members of your family, or close friends
ever filed a lawsuit against anyone?”
                Question No. 20: “Have you, any members of your family, or close friends
ever been sued?”
                Question No. 24: “Have you, a family member, or someone close to you
had any SIGNIFICANT training, education or work experience in any of the following
areas?” Then, under question No. 24, ten categories were listed: “Accounting,”
“Automotive Finance,” “Automobile Industry,” “Banking/Lending,” “Business
Management,” “Car Dealerships,” “Economics,” “Law,” “Real Estate Investment,” and
“Sales.” And to the right of each category there were three boxes, where the prospective
juror could check “Yes, self,” or “Yes, family” or finally “Yes, someone close.”

                                               8
              Question No. 43: “Have you ever been accused of breaching a contract or
failing to honor a commitment you made in a business or other deal?”
              Question No. 49: “If there is any matter not covered by this questionnaire
that could affect your ability to be a fair and impartial juror?”
              The answers of one prospective juror, Angela Woodside Beckstrom
(Woodside), became the focal point of NMAC’s new trial motion. Woodside answered
“no” to all the questions except question No. 24.
              On question No. 24 Woodside checked, “Yes, self” for sales, “Yes, family”
for automobile industry, and “Yes, someone close” for business management.
Responding to the request to “please explain” any yes answers, Woodside wrote: “Auto
industry = step son works in industry management = husband worked in management
sales = have received sales training in different jobs over lifetime.” Woodside did not
check any of the boxes to the right of “Car Dealerships.”
              During voir dire, Superior’s counsel questioned Woodside about her
stepson’s “auto sales” experience and what the job entailed. Woodside stated her stepson
was employed by an “auction” company that sold cars wholesale to dealers. NMAC’s
counsel did not question Woodside on voir dire and Woodside was seated on the jury.
              The Timing Belt Question
              On April 3, 2017, before opening statements, the trial court admonished the
jury not to do any outside research and to base their verdict only on the evidence
presented during the trial. The court also told them not to form an opinion about the case
until it was submitted to them.
              The trial court instructed the jurors: “If during the trial you have a question
that you believe should be asked of a witness, you may write out the question and send it
to me through my courtroom staff. I will share your question with the attorneys and
decide whether it may be asked. [¶] Do not feel disappointed if your question is not
asked. Your question may not be asked for a variety of reasons. . . . Because the

                                              9
decision whether to allow a question is mine alone, do not hold it against any of the
attorneys or their clients if your question is not asked.” The court added, “Your question
should be posed in as neutral a fashion as possible.”
              The next day, Kahn took the stand and explained how he built a chain of
dealerships, and how he and NMAC had a mutually prosperous relationship until 2008.
He recounted the difficulties he encountered during the 2008 recession and Lambert’s
oral promises made on NMAC’s behalf to look the other way on his SOT’s and otherwise
finance him through 2009.
              Shortly after Kahn’s afternoon testimony started, Woodside submitted a
three-page list of 14 handwritten questions. One question raised a matter Kahn had not
discussed in his first day of testimony—defective timing belts: “From 2006-2008 Nissan
withheld defaulty [sic] timing belts manufactured on 6 different models – did they
disclose this potential liabi[lity] that they put Mr. Kahn in?”
              That afternoon, after the jury went home, NMAC’s counsel moved to
excuse Woodside, asserting she was either “dishonest with us in voir dire or has been
doing some research since this case began.” Superior’s counsel argued she probably had
known about the timing belts from some news article, but observed, “God knows where
she got this information from.”
              The trial court addressed the issue during the morning recess the next day.
The court voiced its concern about the timing belt question, which, the court observed,
created, “a little tiny mouse of doubt” about “where that came [from]. . . .” The court
also noted it “never had a juror ask so many questions that are so pointed and so
pertinent.” At the lunch recess, the court excused the jury but asked Woodside to remain.
              The trial court asked Woodside directly where she got the information
posed in her question about timing belts. She responded she picked up the information in

                                             10
                                                                                 3
family gatherings with her brother and father, all of whom are car enthusiasts. She
added that she personally was loyal to Mercedes as a brand and she would never buy a
Nissan.
              The conversation ended with the trial court asking, “And you can assure me
that you [won’t] use the Internet or talk to your brother or, I guess, son-in-law, about cars
or about this case at all?” Woodside responded, “No, no, no. I’m looking forward to
when this is over.”
              After Woodside left for lunch, the trial court asked the attorneys, “[d]o you
want me to excuse her?” NMAC’s counsel said he’d “like to think about that,” while
Superior’s counsel said: “Obviously not, your Honor. There’s no reason to excuse her.”
              The Formal Motion to Excuse Woodside
              During the next three weeks Woodside continued to submit more questions.
Several questions focused on the theme of predatory lending, insinuating NMAC could
be held responsible for lending Superior too much money. For example, on April 11 she
asked: “Regardless of dealer/owner willingness, wouldn’t NMAC have to carefully
assess a ‘tipping point’ of overlending to any one dealer group and own . . . partial
responsibility of [sic] inevitable financial hardships on an over-lended owner.” She also
asked “What is [NMAC] procedure for restoring stability to dealer/owners that NMAC
‘over lends’ to?”
              On April 26, NMAC filed a formal written motion to excuse Woodside or
designate her as an alternate. NMAC based its motion solely on the tenor of the
questions Woodside had submitted during the trial. Taking up the motion, the trial court

       3
         The following is Woodside’s response to the trial court’s question: “So I have
three older brothers. I’m the only girl. So being raised in a house where my dad would
rebuild dune buggy engines and my oldest brother has worked in the auto shops, he’s
now a mechanic instructor at UTI, and so whenever we have family gatherings . . . . [¶]
The court: Cars? [¶] [Woodside]: Yeah. And my stepson is involved with cars, so, you
know, it’s in the topic of conversation.”

                                             11
began by noting, “I never had that many questions from one juror,” and observed
“[NMAC’s] brief raises an issue that worries me.” But after reviewing Woodside’s
answers to the questionnaire, the court concluded her answers were “innocuous” and
denied the motion, although it acknowledged the denial may result in a new trial motion.
              The Jury Deliberations and the Verdict
              On May 2, 2017, the jury began their deliberations. On May 8, after
lengthy and apparently difficult deliberations, the jury reported it was deadlocked. But
deliberations continued, and on May 10, the foreperson notified the trial court the jury
had reached a 9-3 verdict on Superior’s fraudulent concealment claim.
              Deliberations continued over the following week. On May 16, the
foreperson sent a six-page letter to the court expressing several concerns. Item No. 7
stated, “One juror did research on the case at home and argued facts not in evidence
during deliberations.” But after a jury vote, item No. 7 was crossed out of the letter. The
juror in question was Woodside.
              The trial court again interviewed Woodside outside the presence of the
other jurors, and asked her whether she had done outside research. Woodside denied
having done so, stating “No, I did not.”
              Concerning the foreperson’s six-page letter, Woodside described how she
reacted indignantly at the notion she had done outside research: “I said . . . are you
insinuating I researched at home? And he said, well, you brought information in here.
How would you know that? And I said my brother teaches at UTI engine repair at a
college, he’s done this his whole life, he’s 58, my family grew up talking about cars, this
information was just in lifestyle, and I resent you making the assumption that I searched
at home on the Internet.” After Woodside’s explanation, the trial court allowed the jury
to continue deliberating.
              On May 17, 2017, the jury found NMAC liable on two of Superior’s
promissory fraud theories, negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent concealment, and

                                             12
awarded Superior $121.9 million in compensatory damages. The jury found in favor of
NMAC on a third theory, false promise fraud, and specifically found it intended to
perform its promise.
              On May 22, 2017, there was a short punitive damages trial. That afternoon
the jury returned a punitive damages verdict for $134.55 million, bringing the total award
to $256.45 million.
The New Trial Motion
              On September 8, 2017, NMAC filed a motion for new trial. Two issues
emerged: Whether Woodside committed misconduct by conducting outside research
during the trial and jury deliberations, and whether she gave untruthful answers on the
jury questionnaire.
              Woodside’s Outside Research
              NMAC supported its new trial motion with declarations from three of the
jurors, Juror Nos. 3, 6, and 1. Juror No. 3 recounted that while the jury discussed
damages, Woodside “said that there were several large recalls of Nissan vehicles around
the time the Superior dealerships closed.” Woodside claimed “the Superior Oakland
dealership had many more service bays than a normal dealership and this recall work
would give [Kahn] a lot of extra income.” Juror No. 3 further noted a “few” jurors
“responded . . . [by] “saying it was improper to raise things which were not in evidence.”
              Juror No. 6 also said Woodside brought up the subject of “several large
recalls of Nissan vehicles around the time the Superior dealerships closed” and the extra
income the Oakland dealership would receive from its “numerous service bays.”
              Juror No. 6 described how Woodside responded when confronted about
discussing information that was not in evidence. According to Juror No. 6, Woodside
replied: “‘I discussed this with the Judge,’” and then she added, “‘[w]e have to consider
it.’” While Juror No. 6 made it “clear that [Woodside] did not say the Judge had said you
must consider it,’” the “way she put those sentences made it seem that way.”

                                            13
               Juror No. 1, the foreperson, corroborated Juror Nos. 3 and 6’s statements
that Woodside raised the subject of the large number of recalls around the time the
dealerships closed, and the Oakland dealership’s large number of service bays, which
Woodside claimed refuted a NMAC expert’s cash flow projections in computing
damages.
               Further corroborating Juror No. 6, Juror No. 1 also noted Woodside
responded, “I think we have to consider it” when told it was improper to look at outside
information.
               Woodside’s Answers to the Jury Questionnaire
               NMAC’s new trial motion argued that Woodside provided untruthful
answers to the jury questionnaire. Although Woodside claimed she had never been sued,
NMAC presented evidence she had been sued several times in both civil actions and
unlawful detainers. Woodside also stated her stepson had worked in the “auto industry,”
but it turned out he had worked in an Ontario car dealership (CNC Motors) from 2012 to
2014, and beyond that had owned a wholesale car dealership business. The evidence also
showed her daughter-in-law had worked in that same car dealership for a few years. That
dealership, CNC Motors, advertised itself as a “family owned and operated pre-owned
exotic car dealership.”
               Superior’s opposition to the new trial motion argued NMAC’s claim
Woodside had done Internet research during the case was mere speculation, and
Woodside’s reference to recalls was a brief comment made during the deliberations on
damages. Superior also contested NMAC’s claim Woodside deliberately falsified her
answers on the questionnaire. Superior noted all the lawsuits were 20 to 30 years old,
none more recent than 17 years, and Woodside simply did not remember these older
cases. Woodside did not believe her son-in-law’s employer was a car dealership, like the
franchised dealerships Kahn owned, and her daughter-in-law’s employment at CNC
Motors was only “brief.”

                                            14
                                                                           4
              Superior supported its opposition with 10 juror declarations. The
declarations were not identical, but several themes emerged: Woodside did not say “we
have to consider” recalls. Any “recall” comment Woodside made was during
consideration of the lost revenue Superior sustained from the closure of Kahn’s Oakland
                                                           5
Toyota dealership with its large number of service bays. Woodside never talked about
any Nissan recalls.
              NMAC submitted five declarations in response to Superior’s opposition.
Two of those reply declarations touched on rules of professional conduct: May trial
counsel treat discharged members of a jury to a postverdict dinner after they have
returned a favorable verdict for the attorney’s client? These declarations were from two
private investigators who observed and videotaped Superior’s team of lawyers
entertaining a group of jurors at an upscale restaurant on May 24, 2017, just two days
after the punitive damages phase of the trial concluded.
              Superior’s trial counsel addressed the issue concerning dinner with the
jurors at the October 13, 2017 hearing on the new trial motion. He acknowledged six
jurors showed up for the dinner, and explained it was planned after the compensatory
damage award but before the punitive damage award. The invitations already were
printed, and the jurors received the invitations the same day they returned the punitive
                                                           6
damages verdict to “thank” them for their “jury service.” Superior’s lead trial counsel

       4
          Juror No. 3 gave declarations for both sides.
       5
          There was undisputed testimony that an auto dealer makes money on a recall by
billing the auto maker.
       6
          Trial counsel offered the following explanation: “First of all, I’ve done dinners
with jurors on a number of cases we won. Okay. This dinner was planned, and we had
invitations printed out before we even had the punies argument, thinking maybe, if the
jury comes back today, we’ll give them the invitation, because the dinner is going to be in
a few days. It’s to thank them for their jury service. Absolutely.”

                                            15
never addressed NMAC’s counsel argument that a juror’s service continues until the new
trial motion.
                The trial court, however, focused on Woodside’s timing belt question and
her answers on the juror questionnaire. After taking the motion under submission, the
                                    7
court granted a new trial motion.
                The trial court first noted two falsehoods in Woodside’s answers to the voir
dire questionnaire: (1) Woodside failed to tell the court “she had been personally sued
multiple times in civil actions,” in “several unlawful detainer actions” and also had been
an officer, director, and agent for service of process of corporations sued by the state of
Florida for securities violations; and (2) Woodside failed to disclose her stepson had
“worked for several years at a car dealership” and “also owned at one time a wholesale

       7
          The trial court did not rely on or reference Superior’s postverdict dinner with the
jurors. But that dinner could have furnished a sound basis for granting a new trial if the
court determined it prejudicially impacted NMAC’s efforts to show it was entitled to a
new trial.
        Jury service doesn’t end with a verdict. There is always the possibility of a new
trial motion based on alleged juror misconduct, in which discharged jurors could be
percipient witnesses to the alleged misconduct. (See Lind v. Medevac, Inc. (1990)
219 Cal.App.3d 516 (Lind).) Since jury declarations are the obvious and, in many cases,
the only source of information about juror misconduct that might warrant a new trial,
their “service” extends to the time they might be asked to give declarations on the topic.
(Id. at pp. 520-521.)
        Although Superior’s trial counsel claimed there was nothing wrong with the juror
dinner, rule 3.5, subdivisions (g) and (h) of the Rules of Professional Conduct (former
rule 5-320 at the time of the dinner, and before that former rule 7-106), forbids attorneys
from attempting to influence jurors regarding their “present or future jury service,” even
after those jurors have been discharged.
        In Lind, jurors received a letter from the winning attorney warning that “a fellow
member of the bar might employ ‘sharp investigative tactics’ to ‘impeach’ the jury’s
verdict and have it set aside as ‘improper.’” The appellate court held that counsel’s letter
violated former rule 7-106. (Lind, supra, 219 Cal.App.3d at p. 521.) A postverdict
dinner at an upscale restaurant poses a similar if not more substantial risk of influencing
jurors to favor counsel and his client at a new trial motion.
        We note none of Superior’s appellate attorneys from the Rutan firm participated in
the juror dinner.

                                              16
car dealership business” while her daughter-in-law “since 2012 worked for an exotic car
dealership in Ontario, California.”
                The trial court also focused on Woodside’s timing belt question on the first
day of trial. The court noted there had been no evidence presented about a timing belt
issue. “While the other questions at that time seemed to show that [Woodside] was
perhaps just thinking about the issues, in hindsight, it is very clear to this judge that she
had information from some source that was outside the evidence.”
                As to prejudice, the trial court noted the nine to three vote on liability, and
citing Weathers v. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals (1971) 5 Cal.3d 98, 110 (Weathers), the
court concluded the following: “When the verdict is that close, the serious misconduct of
a single juror, even conduct that did not influence the other jurors, is usually deemed
prejudicial because a different verdict may have been rendered without the misconduct.”
             SUPERIOR’S APPEAL FROM THE NEW TRIAL ORDER
                NMAC’s new trial motion alleged juror Woodside concealed her bias
toward NMAC by providing false or misleading answers on the juror questionnaire.
NMAC claimed it learned of Woodside’s misconduct only after its postverdict
investigation uncovered Woodside’s alleged duplicity.
                Superior disputes NMAC’s claim it was unaware of Woodside’s
            8
misconduct. In arguing NMAC waived or forfeited the right to a new trial based on
Woodside’s misconduct, Superior relies on the well-settled rule that a party aware of jury
misconduct during trial but waits to object until after the jury’s verdict cannot later raise
the issue in a new trial motion. (Weathers, supra, 5 Cal.3d at p. 103.) Superior argues
NMAC “indisputably knew or should have known several weeks before the verdict many

       8
         NMAC argues Superior itself has forfeited its waiver arguments by failing to
provide us with a transcript of the voir dire proceedings. We need not address NMAC’s
waiver argument because we reject Superior’s forfeiture arguments on the merits.

                                               17
of the facts supposedly constituting Woodside’s ‘misconduct,’ but failed to explore those
matters in voir dire or raise them before filing its New Trial Motion.”
              The trial court implicitly rejected Superior’s forfeiture arguments when it
granted a new trial. We review orders granting a new trial for abuse of discretion.
(Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 859.) “[A] trial court does not
abuse its discretion unless its decision is so irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable
person could agree with it.” (People v. Carmony (2004) 33 Cal.4th 367, 377; People v.
Jordan (1986) 42 Cal.3d 308, 316 [abuse of discretion occurs when a court makes a
decision in an “arbitrary, capricious or patently absurd manner that resulted in a manifest
miscarriage of justice”].) We must consider the legal principles and policies governing
the court’s discretion in evaluating whether the court stepped outside the scope of its
discretion. (Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California (2012)
55 Cal.4th 747, 773.) But we may overturn the new trial order only if a manifest and
unmistakable abuse of discretion occurs. (Jiminez v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1971)
4 Cal.3d 379, 387 [appellate court will not set aside new trial order “[s]o long as a
reasonable or even fairly debatable justification under the law” is shown].)
              In turning aside Superior’s forfeiture argument, the trial court necessarily
had to resolve several factual disputes concerning when NMAC knew Woodside may
have committed misconduct. “‘Even under [the abuse of discretion] standard, there is
still a substantial evidence component. We defer to the trial court’s factual findings so
long as they are supported by substantial evidence, and determine whether, under those
facts, the court abused its discretion.’” (McDermott Will & Emory LLP v. Superior Court
(2017) 10 Cal.App.5th 1083, 1121.) Substantial evidence is defined as evidence that is
reasonable, credible, and of solid value. (Roddenberry v. Roddenberry (1996)
44 Cal.App.4th 634, 651.) In evaluating the evidence, we must draw all inferences in
favor of the prevailing party and accept the trial court’s resolution of conflicts in the
evidence. (Clark v. Superior Court (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 37, 46-47.)

                                              18
              In Weathers, the California Supreme Court held that an attorney forfeits the
right to seek a new trial based on juror misconduct if the lawyer knew of the misconduct
but did not raise the issue until after the jury’s verdict. (Weathers, supra, 5 Cal.3d at
p. 103.) The court explained the rule’s purpose is to prevent a party or its attorney “from
gambling on the outcome of the jury’s deliberations while secretly preserving the error”
for a new trial motion if the jury returns an unfavorable verdict. (Ibid.) Consequently,
trial courts require a “‘no knowledge’” declaration from the moving party in a new trial
motion based on juror misconduct. (Ibid.)
              Here, NMAC’s defense team met this requirement when they filed
declarations stating neither NMAC nor its lawyers knew before the verdict Woodside’s
answers to the questionnaire were false or misleading. The key declaration summarized
the extent of their knowledge: they knew (1) she filed bankruptcy in 1998; (2) her
answers to the questionnaire; (3) her questions during trial; (4) her answers in open court;
(5) the contents of the jury foreperson’s letter during deliberations; and (6) all the facts
stated in NMAC’s formal motion to discharge her brought before the case was submitted
to the jury. These declarations showed NMAC’s attorneys did not know Woodside’s
answers were false or misleading until they uncovered evidence of her malfeasance in
their postverdict investigation. The trial court implicitly found these declarations credible
because it rejected Superior’s forfeiture arguments when it granted NMAC a new trial.
Normally, this would end our analysis because we may not second-guess the trial court’s
credibility determinations. (Grobeson v. City of Los Angeles (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th
778, 795 [“out of the question” to disturb trial court’s resolution of factual issues].)
              Superior, however, contends the trial court abused its discretion in rejecting
its argument NMAC forfeited its juror misconduct claim because the evidence as a matter
of law does not support the court’s conclusion. (See People v. Cluff (2001)
87 Cal.App.4th 991, 998 [“A trial court abuses its discretion when the factual findings
critical to its decision find no support in the evidence”].) Specifically Superior asserts the

                                              19
evidence supports only the following conclusion: (1) NMAC knew or should have
suspected Woodside committed misconduct but forfeited the issue because it did not
object until after the verdict; and (2) NMAC’s failure to immediately ask the court to
excuse Woodside when she submitted her timing belt question forfeited NMAC’s right to
complain she obtained information from outside sources. We address each issue in turn.
              Question No. 24
              NMAC’s new trial motion claimed Woodside falsely answered “No” to
question No. 24 on the questionnaire, which asked whether the prospective juror, a family
member, or close friend had significant training, education, or work experience in several
fields, including the automotive industry, car dealerships, management, and sales. As
noted, Woodside’s expanded answer stated her stepson worked in the auto industry, her
husband worked in management, and she “received sales training in different jobs over
lifetime.” In an earlier answer to question No. 15, Woodside stated her stepson worked
in “auto sales,” and his spouse was a “homemaker.” NMAC’s new trial motion presented
evidence Woodside’s brother worked in car repair shops and was a “UTI engine
instructor at college”; Woodside had significant informal training and experience in the
automobile industry; and her stepson worked in sales at a car dealership and previously
owned and managed a wholesale car dealership.
              Superior contends NMAC forfeited the right to complain about these
apparent nondisclosures. As to Woodside’s failure to disclose her brother worked in
automobile repair shops and taught students about car engines in a trade college class,
Superior argues NMAC knew about Woodside’s misconduct when she revealed this
information in open court when questioned about her timing belt inquiry on the second
day of trial. Superior also argues Woodside disclosed her knowledge about cars when
answering the trial court’s inquiry about her timing belt question, explaining her family

                                            20
                                                9
often discussed cars during family gatherings. According to Superior, Woodside’s
disclosures in explaining her timing belt question shows NMAC was aware of any
purported concealment.
              Woodside’s explanation about her timing belt question suggested her
answer to question No. 24 was incomplete. NMAC argues Woodside’s disclosures in
open court meant NMAC did not keep this information hidden while gambling on a
favorable verdict and revealing it only later in a new trial motion. (People v. Adame
(1973) 36 Cal.App.3d 402, 410 [“‘no knowledge’” rule inapplicable when both court and
counsel learn the basis for a new trial motion].) Superior correctly points out, however, a
party cannot “simply sit” on information showing juror misconduct, even if the
information is disclosed to the trial court. Thus, Superior concludes Woodside’s
disclosures on the second day of trial supports only one conclusion as a matter of law:
NMAC knew Woodside committed misconduct because she did not reveal this
information on the juror questionnaire and therefore NMAC forfeited the right to rely on
this evidence in a new trial motion when it failed to raise the issue during trial.
              This is not the only conclusion the trial court could draw from the evidence,
however. An inadvertent or unintentional nondisclosure does not necessarily reveal a
juror’s prejudicial bias. (In re Manriquez (2018) 5 Cal.5th 785, 796-797 [juror’s
unintentional nondisclosure caused by an honest mistake during voir dire provides no
basis to overturn the judgment unless evidence shows the incomplete answer hid juror’s
bias].) At this point in the trial NMAC could have assumed Woodside’s nondisclosures
in answering question No. 24 were unintentional, especially since she voluntarily
disclosed the information when explaining the basis for her timing belt question. No
evidence shows NMAC’s attorneys suspected Woodside provided false or misleading

       9
         After hearing Woodside’s explanation, the trial court described her as a “Marisa
Tomei,” the actress in the movie, “My Cousin Vinny.” Tomei played a character who
qualified as an expert witness on cars.

                                              21
answers to question No. 24 or to the other questions on the questionnaire. But even if
NMAC suspected Woodside deliberately provided false answers to the questionnaire, a
suspicion is not equivalent to having knowledge a juror committed misconduct.
Moreover, suspicion is an insufficient basis to challenge a sitting juror. This requires
evidence the juror held a fixed bias under the demonstrable reality test, which is “more
comprehensive and less deferential” than the substantial evidence standard. (People v.
Barnwell (2007) 41 Cal.4th 1038, 1052-1053; Shanks v. Department of Transportation
(2017) 9 Cal.App.5th 543, 550 [demonstrable reality test requires “a higher level of
scrutiny” than the typical substantial evidence review].) Without evidence to meet this
more stringent standard, NMAC had no obligation to lodge a formal objection when
doing so would be futile. (Id. at p. 551.) Under these circumstances, the court
reasonably could find NMAC’s “‘no knowledge’” declaration credible.
              As to Woodside’s failure to disclose her stepson owned a car dealership and
worked for another dealer, Superior constructs a connect the dots argument to impute
knowledge of her concealment to NMAC. Superior notes Woodside disclosed her
stepson worked in “auto sales” when answering question No. 15, and that he had
significant training, education, and work experience in the “automobile industry.” When
asked about this on voir dire, Woodside stated her stepson presently worked for an
“auction” company that sold cars to “car dealerships.” Because these answers “strongly
suggest” her stepson was working “in ‘auto sales,’ as or with a ‘dealer,’” Superior
concludes NMAC forfeited the misconduct issue because it was “on full notice of
[stepson’s] involvement with ‘auto sales’ but asked no questions of Woodside” on voir
dire.
              This argument glosses over the fact Woodside never disclosed her stepson
formed and owned a car dealership and currently was working for another car dealer
when answering question No. 24 or questions posed to her during voir dire. Superior,
however, argues NMAC should have known Woodside’s stepson worked at a car

                                             22
dealership because Vehicle Code section 285 includes an auto auction company in its
definition of a “dealer.” Superior concludes Woodside’s voir dire answers and the
Vehicle Code definition of a dealer point only to one conclusion as a matter of law:
NMAC knew Woodside’s stepson worked at a car dealership. The argument borders on
the frivolous.
                 Superior never explains why NMAC should have known Woodside relied
on the Vehicle Code definition of “dealer” when she stated her stepson worked at a car
auction company. It is evident the trial court reasonably could conclude Woodside’s
reference to the car auction company was not a veiled reference to the Vehicle Code’s
definition of a dealer, but rather based on the common understanding that a car auction is
entirely different from a car dealership. Even if Woodside secretly meant to rely on the
Vehicle Code definition of dealer, the court could conclude NMAC was unaware of this.
Woodside’s failure to state directly that her stepson worked at a car dealership, either in
her answer to question No. 24 or during voir dire, conveyed to NMAC her stepson had
something to do with auto sales but nothing to do with car dealerships. Nothing about
Woodside’s responses undermines NMAC’s “‘no knowledge’” declaration.
                 Questions Nos. 19, 20, and 43
                 Question Nos. 19 and 20 on the juror questionnaire asked whether “you,
any members of your family, or close friends” had filed a lawsuit or been sued. Question
No. 43 asked if the prospective juror had been “accused of breaching a contract or failing
to honor a commitment you made in a business or other deal.” Woodside answered “no”
to all three of these questions. In its new trial motion, NMAC presented evidence from
Woodside’s 1998 bankruptcy case showing she had been sued seven times, including
three unlawful detainer actions. The same bankruptcy filings revealed Woodside had her
car repossessed, which meant she defaulted on her conditional sales contract.
                 Superior argues this was not newly discovered evidence because during
voir dire NMAC’s attorneys knew Woodside had filed bankruptcy. NMAC’s legal team

                                             23
discovered this when conducting Internet searches of the prospective jurors. But that fact
was all they knew. The record shows they were unable to learn anything about her
bankruptcy because the federal courts’ Web site did not make the underlying records
available. NMAC requested the records but did not receive them until after the verdict.
              Superior argues NMAC should not have delayed its request for the records
and claims the records would have arrived before the jury began its deliberations if
NMAC had ordered them promptly. But the fact Woodside filed bankruptcy in 1998
does not suggest she deliberately falsified answers on the juror questionnaire. The trial
court could conclude NMAC acted reasonably in viewing her failure to mention her
bankruptcy on the questionnaire as an innocent nondisclosure. Nothing here shows the
court abused its discretion in concluding NMAC had no basis at this early stage of the
trial to claim Woodside harbored a prejudicial bias against NMAC based solely on her
1998 bankruptcy petition.
              Relying on Donovan v. Poway Unified School Dist. (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th
567 (Donovan) and People v. Green (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1001 (Green), Superior
argues NMAC forfeited its right to raise Woodside’s concealment in a new trial motion
because it did not question Woodside during voir dire about her bankruptcy.
              Superior’s argument rests on the faulty premise NMAC did not ask about
these matters in voir dire. But NMAC and Superior prepared a juror questionnaire for
voir dire containing 56 questions with several questions asking jurors to describe their
background and experience. And contrary to Superior’s suggestion, neither Donovan nor
Green declare that a party forfeits its right to raise juror misconduct in a new trial motion
because it did not question the prospective juror who failed to disclose material
information or gave false and misleading answers during voir dire. (Donovan, supra,
167 Cal.App.4th at p. 625 [no forfeiture because juror “did not conceal or provide false or
misleading information during voir dire”]; Green, supra, 31 Cal.App.4th at pp 1015-1016
[no forfeiture because juror did not deliberately conceal information and parties did not

                                             24
ask about juror’s background].) Here, in contrast, the trial court found Woodside’s
“patently false” and “misleading” answers misled NMAC, and had she accurately
answered certain questions NMAC’s counsel likely would have asked probing follow-up
questions. Ultimately, whether NMAC orally questioned Woodside is beside the point.
If NMAC had evidence Woodside committed misconduct it had an obligation to raise the
issue immediately, whether or not it questioned Woodside during voir dire. And if
NMAC was unaware of Woodside’s false or misleading answers it could not knowingly
waive the issue when it relied on her answers to the questionnaire in deciding not to
orally question her during voir dire.
              Finally, Superior contends NMAC forfeited its argument Woodside based
her timing belt question on information obtained outside of court and not part of the
evidence presented in trial. In its new trial motion, NMAC’s attorney submitted a
declaration describing how he searched Google for the term “‘Nissan lawsuit,’” which
revealed a recent class action lawsuit over Nissan’s allegedly defective “timing chains.”
Since the evidence at trial did not mention faulty timing belts on Nissan cars, NMAC
surmised the “most likely explanation” was that Woodside researched the matter on the
Internet.
              Superior argues “Nissan plainly knew its own class action litigation” and
therefore Woodside’s “outside research was known to Nissan from Day 1, and the Court
could not reasonably have found otherwise or properly relied on it.” Superior again
overstates its case.
              Superior offers no evidence NMAC knew about the class action lawsuit
over “timing chains,” nor does it explain why the trial court could not simply believe
NMAC’s claim it was unaware of the class action lawsuit against Nissan. And contrary
to Superior’s claim, NMAC is not Nissan, but a finance company and a separate
corporate entity from Nissan North America, Inc. The court reasonably could rely on

                                            25
NMAC’s claim it had no knowledge Woodside based her question on outside research.
We will not second-guess the court’s credibility determinations.
              In sum, substantial evidence supports the trial court’s express and implied
factual determinations. It therefore follows the court did not abuse its discretion in
rejecting Superior’s forfeiture arguments.

The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Granting NMAC’s New Trial Motion
              Superior challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial
court’s order granting NMAC’s new trial motion based on juror misconduct.
Fundamental principles of appellate review compel us to reject Superior’s arguments.
              As noted, we apply the abuse of discretion standard to the trial court’s
written order granting a new trial for juror misconduct. (Weathers, supra, 5 Cal.3d at
p. 109; Ovando v. County of Los Angeles (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 42, 59 (Ovando).)
When the exercise of the court’s discretion depends on how it resolves questions of fact,
we must defer to the court’s “‘credibility determinations and findings on questions of
historical fact if supported by substantial evidence.’” (People v. Collins (2010)
49 Cal.4th 175, 242.) Whether those facts constitute misconduct is a legal question we
review independently. (Ibid.)
              Here, the trial court in its written order found Woodside’s failure to
disclose material information on the juror questionnaire reflected a state of mind that
“would prevent [her] from acting impartially.” The court also found Woodside’s timing
belt question, “in hindsight,” showed “she had information from some source that was
outside the evidence.” The court concluded Woodside’s “serious” misconduct in a close
case was prejudicial to NMAC.
              In reaching these conclusions, the trial court found that Woodside
concealed her bias with “patently false” or misleading voir dire answers. The court
specifically focused on her failure to disclose “she had been personally sued multiple

                                             26
times in civil actions,” including several unlawful detainer actions. The court also
referred to Woodside’s failure to disclose her stepson had owned a wholesale car
dealership and he and his wife worked for a car dealership. The court rejected
Woodside’s explanation she “‘forgot’” to mention her lawsuits, misunderstood certain
questions, or thought the nondisclosed material was not responsive to the question,
finding her explanations “‘not credible.’” The court found Woodside based her timing
belt question on “some source that was outside the evidence,” and noted there had been
“no such evidence presented on any timing belt issue.”
              Superior contends no substantial evidence supports the trial court’s
conclusions, arguing Woodside’s nondisclosures were unintentional because either she
“very reasonably forgot” about the requested information or misunderstood “a complex
and extensive questionnaire.” As to Woodside’s timing belt question, Superior argues
NMAC presented “absolutely nothing” to show Woodside based her question on outside
sources. To support its argument, Superior substantially relies on Woodside’s declaration
and faults the court for not crediting her explanations because it was uncontradicted.
From this perspective, Superior offers a detailed exploration of the evidence showing that
Woodside did not commit misconduct.
              Adopting Superior’s analysis would turn the standard of review on its head.
We must not review the evidence to determine whether substantial evidence supports the
losing party’s version of the evidence. Instead, we must determine if there is any
substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, to support the trial court’s findings.
(Campbell v. Southern Pacific Co. (1978) 22 Cal.3d 51, 60 [the appellate court “‘looks
only at the evidence supporting the successful party, and disregards the contrary
showing’” in determining the sufficiency of the evidence (italics omitted]; Pope v. Babick
(2014) 229 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1245.) “‘[I]t is not our role to reweigh the evidence,
redetermine the credibility of the witnesses, or resolve conflicts in the testimony, and we

                                             27
will not disturb [the new trial order] if there is evidence to support it.’” (Williamson v.
Brooks (2017) 7 Cal.App.5th 1294, 1300.)
              Voir Dire Nondisclosures
              Applying these principles, we conclude substantial evidence supports the
trial court’s factual findings that Woodside failed to disclose “she had been sued multiple
times in civil actions” and she failed to disclose her stepson’s and daughter-in-law’s
connections with car dealers. Substantial evidence also supports the court’s finding
Woodside’s nondisclosures stemmed from “a state of mind that would prevent a person
from acting impartially.”
              Woodside answered “No” to questions on the juror questionnaire asking
whether “you, any members of your family, or close friends” had filed a lawsuit or been
sued. NMAC, however, presented evidence in its new trial motion that Woodside was a
defendant in three unlawful detainer actions, a defendant in two personal injury lawsuits
from 1985 and 2000 involving auto accidents, and was an officer, director, and agent for
service of process for a corporation sued by the State of Florida for securities violations.
              Superior, at the new trial motion and on appeal, relies on Woodside’s
declaration claiming she did not recall two of the unlawful detainer actions and the other
unlawful detainer action named a different person with the same name. Nor did she
recall the two personal injury lawsuits or the lawsuit against her corporation, which was
controlled by her former husband. Woodside also claimed she did not consider her
stepson’s involvement to be a car dealership because he acquired and sold rare or
“exotic” vehicles to clients. Superior argues the evidence, which includes Woodside’s
declaration, does not support the trial court’s finding Woodside was biased toward
NMAC because her nondisclosures were unintentional.
              The trial court, viewing the evidence as a whole, rejected Woodside’s
explanations, specifically finding it “not credible” that she “‘forgot’ her lengthy litigation
history or simply did not consider it worth mentioning or applicable to questions Nos. 19,

                                             28
20, 24, 43 and No. 49.” The court found it likely Woodside’s nondisclosures were
intentional and therefore revealed Woodside had a state of mind that prevented her from
acting as an impartial juror. Substantial evidence supports the court’s factual findings.
              Based on the scope of Woodside’s nondisclosures and the implausibility of
some of her explanations, the trial court reasonably could infer Woodside’s omissions
concealed a state of mind that prevented her from being an impartial juror. The court did
not believe her explanations and we must defer to the court’s credibility findings.
Consequently, we may not credit Woodside’s explanations, “regardless how
‘overwhelming’ it is claimed to be.” (Beck Development Co. v. Southern Pacific
Transportation Co. (1996) 44 Cal.App.4th 1160, 1204.) The extent of her nondisclosures
also supports the court’s finding it was likely her nondisclosures were intentional, which
raises a presumption of prejudice. (In re Manriquez, supra, 5 Cal.5th at p. 798.) As the
court noted, even an unintentional nondisclosure may mask actual bias if it shows a state
of mind which prevents a juror from acting with “‘entire impartiality.’” (Id. at pp. 798-
799.)
              The Timing Belt Question
              After the morning session on the first day of trial, Woodside submitted nine
questions, including the following inquiry: “From 2006 to 2008, Nissan withheld faulty
timing belts manufactured on six different models. Did they disclose this potential
liability that they put Mr. Kahn in?” Because neither party introduced evidence or even
suggested that Nissan had a problem with malfunctioning timing belts, the trial court
questioned Woodside because it was concerned she based her question on information
received outside court. Ultimately, the court accepted Woodside’s explanation she
obtained this information during family discussions with her father and brothers and did
not research the issue.
              NMAC’s new trial motion presented evidence undermining Woodside’s
claim she learned about Nissan’s problems with timing belts from her family.

                                            29
Specifically, the evidence showed there were no Nissan recalls during the 2006 to 2008
period Woodside referenced in her question. Rather, a Google search for “Nissan
lawsuit” around the time of opening statements showed numerous links to Web pages
containing articles about several class action lawsuits alleging that “Nissan concealed
from its customers defective timing chains on six specific models from approximately
2004 to 2009.”
              The trial court found that Woodside’s timing belt question, “in hindsight,”
showed she had obtained information “from some source that was outside the evidence.”
The court also found, based on “the totality of the circumstances,” Woodside’s question
showed a likely bias against NMAC.
              Superior contends the trial court based its factual findings on nothing more
than speculation. Superior again relies on Woodside’s claim she learned about Nissan’s
timing belt issues from family discussions before reporting for jury service. Superior also
emphasizes the Internet articles about class action lawsuits against Nissan over “timing
chain” defects did not mention timing belts, the lawsuits predated the trial, and numerous
public Web sites spread news of these lawsuits.
              We again emphasize we must defer to the trial court’s credibility findings.
Here, the court reasonably could find Woodside’s specific references in her question
belied her claim she learned about Nissan’s timing belt defects from general
conversations about cars at family gatherings. Woodside’s timing belt question closely
matched available online information describing the nature of the lawsuits against Nissan.
Indeed, Woodside’s question referenced the precise number of Nissan models identified
in various articles. Based on evidence of Woodside’s misconduct on voir dire, her lack
of credibility, and the specific facts referenced in her question, the court reasonably could
infer Woodside had obtained information outside the evidence produced at trial.

                                             30
              Prejudice
              Superior contends the trial court erred in finding Woodside’s misconduct
reflected a bias toward NMAC that prevented her from acting impartially. Superior relies
on its arguments contesting the court’s finding of misconduct, arguing any “supposed
‘misconduct’ in this case is ‘trifling’ and could not have prevented Nissan from having a
fair trial.” Superior’s arguments fail to persuade us the court abused its discretion in
finding Woodside’s misconduct was prejudicial.
              We must review the record “liberally” to determine whether the trial court
abused its discretion in granting a new trial. (People v. Ault (2004) 33 Cal.4th 1250,
1255.) We also must extend deference to orders granting new trials because “‘[t]he trial
judge is familiar with the evidence, witnesses and proceedings, and is therefore in the
best position to determine whether, in view of all the circumstances, justice demands a
retrial.’” (Id. at p. 1261.) As one court observed, an appellant seeking to overturn a trial
court’s discretionary ruling faces “more than a daunting task [and] an uphill battle” in
demonstrating the court exercised its discretion arbitrarily and unreasonably. (Estate of
Gilkison (1988) 65 Cal.App.4th 1443, 1448.)
              Civil litigants are constitutionally entitled to a fair trial before an unbiased
jury. (McDonald v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co. (1999) 71 Cal.App.4th 256,
266; see People v. Holloway (1990) 50 Cal.3d 1098, 1112 [defendant “entitled to be tried
by 12, not 11, impartial and unprejudiced jurors”].) Juror misconduct violating the right
to an impartial jury raises a rebuttable presumption of prejudice. (Ovando, supra,
159 Cal.App.4th at p. 58.) “Misconduct was prejudicial if there is a substantial likelihood
that the juror was biased and that the misconduct affected the verdict.” (Ibid.)
              Here, the trial court expressly found Woodside’s “answers during voir dire,
some of which were patently false, and others misleading, concealed her bias,” which
deprived Nissan of its right to an impartial jury. The court also found Woodside obtained
information outside the evidence presented at trial in posing her timing belt question,

                                              31
which in turn revealed a substantial likelihood she was biased against NMAC. Finally,
the court concluded Woodside’s bias prejudiced NMAC because it may have obtained a
more favorable verdict “without the misconduct.”
              The trial court found Woodside’s voir dire nondisclosures prejudiced
NMAC, explaining that if Woodside had provided accurate responses she “could have
been challenged for cause and nearly certainly challenged peremptorily by [NMAC].”
We see no basis to fault this conclusion. Even assuming an unsuccessful challenge for
cause, it is difficult to see why NMAC’s trial counsel would have wanted Woodside on
the jury given her litigation history as a defendant and her likely empathy for Superior
since her stepson once owned a car dealership. But NMAC lost the opportunity to
remove Woodside because her inaccurate and incomplete answers concealed her bias.
(See Ovando, supra, 159 Cal.App.4th at p. 58 [“[o]ne of the purposes of voir dire is to
expose the possible biases of potential jurors,” but voir dire “‘cannot serve this purpose if
prospective jurors do not answer questions truthfully’”].) Nondisclosures during voir dire
“eviscerate a party’s statutory right to exercise a peremptory challenge and remove a
prospective juror the party believes cannot be fair and impartial.” (In re Hitchings (1993)
6 Cal.4th 97, 111.)
              The trial court also expressly found Woodside’s timing belt question
showed a substantial likelihood she was biased against NMAC. The court found
Woodside based her timing belt question on “information from some source that was
outside the evidence.” Three jurors declared Woodside raised the topic of Nissan recalls
during deliberations on the amount of damages. (People v. San Nicolas (2004)
35 Cal.4th 614, 649 [juror commits misconduct when expressing opinion based on
specialized knowledge obtained from outside source].) Even if the other jurors did not
rely on Woodside’s information about Nissan recalls, the fact remains she voted with the
majority in finding NMAC liable by a nine to three vote. As the Supreme Court observed
in Weathers, a litigant who lost by a nine to three vote was entitled to a new trial because

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“the disqualification for bias of any one of the majority jurors could have resulted in a
different verdict.” (Weathers, supra, 5 Cal.3d at p. 110.)
              In sum, Superior has not rebutted the presumption of prejudice or shown
the trial court acted arbitrarily or capriciously in finding Woodside committed prejudicial
                                                                                            10
misconduct and awarding NMAC a new trial. We therefore affirm the new trial order.
              NMAC’S CROSS-APPEAL FROM THE JNOV ORDER
              NMAC contends the trial court erred when it denied NMAC’s motion of
JNOV on the negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent concealment claims. We
conclude substantial evidence supports the court’s decision to reject NMAC’s JNOV
motion.
              We review whether substantial evidence supports the verdict, viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the party obtaining the verdict. We must accept as
true the evidence supporting the verdict, disregard conflicting evidence, and draw every
legitimate inference in favor of the verdict. We do not weigh the evidence or judge the
credibility of the witnesses. We uphold the trial court’s denial of JNOV only if sufficient
evidence supports the verdict. (Colaco v. Cavotec SA (2018) 25 Cal.App.5th 1172,
1182.)

         10
          Superior complains NMAC engaged in what it calls “post-verdict juror
character assassination” of Woodside when it researched social media, court records, and
other sources of information concerning Woodside and her family. NMAC supported its
new trial motion with evidence it obtained in its postverdict investigation, and Superior
does not contend the nature of NMAC’s investigation precludes us from reviewing that
evidence on appeal. We note in passing the American Bar Association has concluded
lawyers violate no ethical standards in reviewing what jurors publicly post in social
media. (See ABA Approves Researching Jurors’ Public Presence on Internet, Criminal
Justice, Vol. 29, No. 3 (2014) “In Formal Opinion 466 (Apr. 24, 2014) . . . the standing
committee explains that Model Rule 3.5(b) prohibits a lawyer from communicating ex
parte with a juror or prospective juror, but a lawyer may review a juror’s public presence
on the Internet”].) Of course, postverdict investigations must not harass or violate the
privacy rights of former jurors.

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              Negligent Misrepresentation
              “The elements of a negligent misrepresentation are ‘(1) the
misrepresentation of a past or existing material fact, (2) without reasonable ground for
believing it to be true, (3) with intent to induce another’s reliance on the fact
misrepresented, (4) justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation, and (5) resulting
damage.’” (Tindell v. Murphy (2018) 22 Cal.App.5th 1239, 1252.)
              A negligent misrepresentation is “[t]he assertion, as a fact, of that which is
not true, by one who has no reasonable ground for believing it to be true.” (Civ. Code,
§ 1710, subd. (2).) The misrepresentation applies only to past or existing material facts.
“‘[P]redictions as to future events, or statements as to future action by some third party,
are deemed opinions, and not actionable fraud.’” (Tarmann v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co. (1991) 2 Cal.App.4th 153, 158.) “Although a false promise to perform in the future
can support an intentional misrepresentation claim, it does not support a claim for
negligent misrepresentation.” (Stockton Mortgage, Inc. v. Tope (2014) 233 Cal.App.4th
437, 458 (Stockton).)
              NMAC contends Superior’s negligent misrepresentation claim fails as a
matter of law because no evidence showed Lambert misrepresented a past or existing
fact. Relying on Stockton, NMAC argues Lambert’s statements were promises of future
performance, which “cannot be the basis for a negligent misrepresentation cause of
action.” (Stockton, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at p. 458.) NMAC also contends no evidence
showed Superior justifiably relied on Lambert’s promises when “it repeatedly negotiated
and executed contrary written agreements.”
              Superior contends the doctrine of law of the case applies to bar NMAC’s
challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence raised in its JNOV motion. Although
Superior reads our decision in NMAC I to “implicitly” hold that sufficient evidence
supported every element of the negligent misrepresentation claim, our opinion in NMAC

                                              34
I did not decide whether there was sufficient evidence Lambert’s statements constituted a
past or existing material fact.
              “‘“The doctrine of ‘law of the case’ deals with the effect of the first
appellate decision on the subsequent retrial or appeal: The decision of an appellate
court, stating a rule of law necessary to the decision of the case, conclusively establishes
that rule and makes it determinative of the rights of the same parties in any subsequent
retrial or appeal in the same case.”’” (Leider v. Lewis (2017) 2 Cal.5th 1121, 1127.) The
doctrine does not apply to legal issues that might have been but were not decided in the
earlier appeal, but it applies “‘to questions not expressly decided but implicitly decided
because they were essential to the decision on the prior appeal.’” (Ibid.) Law of the case
doctrine applies to a subsequent appeal even if the court that issued the opinion becomes
convinced its earlier opinion was wrong. (Santa Clarita Organization for Planning the
Environment v. County of Los Angeles (2007) 157 Cal.App.4th 149, 156.)
              In addition to addressing the retroactivity of Riverisland, our opinion in
NMAC I also resolved NMAC’s claim any error was harmless because “no reasonable
juror could conclude [Superior] justifiably relied on [Lambert’s] supposed oral promise.”
NMAC based its harmless error claim on the evidence Superior offered at the trial court’s
pretrial hearing. (NMAC I, supra, at p. 17) We rejected NMAC’s argument and
concluded Superior “did manage to present substantial evidence that Kahn reasonably
relied on Lambert’s oral promises of continued funding regardless of SOT’s. That
evidence consisted of NMAC’s course of conduct in tolerating SOT’s even after the
November [forbearance agreement], as well as the personal trust Kahn placed in Lambert
as a result of their longstanding working relationship, ‘CEO to CEO.’” (Id. at pp. 18-19.)
Because Superior presented this evidence again at the trial we are reviewing, our decision
in NMAC I established that substantial evidence showed Superior justifiably relied on
NMAC’s representations. Consequently, under the law of the case doctrine, NMAC may
not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on the element of justifiable reliance.

                                             35
              NMAC, however, did not argue in NMAC I the negligent misrepresentation
claim failed as a matter of law because the evidence showed Lambert’s statements were
promises of future performance and not statements of existing or past facts. We therefore
did not expressly or implicitly decide whether Lambert’s statements constituted
substantial evidence of negligent representation or whether they involved past or existing
material facts. Consequently, we now must decide whether Superior presented at trial
sufficient evidence to support these elements.
              Superior based its negligent misrepresentation claim on several of
Lambert’s assurances during the latter part of 2008 and early 2009, including a
November 3, 2008 call concerning Superior’s sales out of trust. According to Kahn,
Lambert told him not to worry about the out of trust sales, explaining, “Just do the best
you can. Everything is going to be fine.” Lambert also stated, “Mike, nobody is shutting
you down.” But just two weeks earlier on October 14, Kevin Cullum, the Director of
Commercial Credit, sent an e-mail to Lambert recommending a “complete separation”
from Superior, explaining, “I simply do not trust [Kahn’s] plan or his ability long-term to
manage profitable dealerships and to pay us as agreed.”
              On October 28, 2009, an internal e-mail from Cullum noted Lambert had
asked him about various “scenarios,” including the cost of shutting Superior down. The
e-mail also identified the option to continue NMAC’s relationship with Superior, even if
that meant more sales out of trust. To answer Lambert’s questions, Cullum directed the
preparation of a spreadsheet evaluating whether Kahn could meet his obligations to
NMAC.
              Based on this evidence, the jury reasonably could conclude NMAC was
actively investigating whether to shut Superior down when Lambert assured Kahn
“nobody is shutting you down.” Because Lambert had not yet determined whether
NMAC would continue to support Superior, the jury could view the evidence of
Lambert’s assurance as an honest assertion of fact without a reasonable basis for

                                            36
believing it to be true since he and his advisers were contemplating the path he assured
Kahn NMAC would not take: shutting Superior down.
              The special verdict form asked the jury to determine whether NMAC was
liable for a negligent misrepresentation. The evidence of Lambert’s November 3
assurance he would not shut Superior down constitutes substantial evidence of a
negligent misrepresentation. Accordingly, we need not discuss whether substantial
evidence supports the other statements Superior claims were negligent
misrepresentations. Based on the evidence of Lambert’s November 3 statement to Kahn,
the trial court properly denied NMAC’s JNOV on the negligent misrepresentation claim.
Fraudulent Concealment
              NMAC contends the trial court should have granted JNOV on the
fraudulent concealment claim because there “is no duty to disclose in advance either the
intention not to perform a good-faith promise or the intention to enforce a contract.”
Alternatively, NMAC argues that even if it had a duty to disclose, it did so when it
“repeatedly disclosed in writing that it had the right to discontinue lending if Superior
breached its obligations under the loan agreements.” Finally, NMAC argues Superior
failed to prove detrimental reliance. We are not persuaded by any of these contentions.
              The elements for a fraudulent concealment claim are: “‘“ (1) the defendant
must have concealed or suppressed a material fact, (2) the defendant must have been
under a duty to disclose the fact to the plaintiff, (3) the defendant must have intentionally
concealed or suppressed the fact with the intent to defraud the plaintiff, (4) the plaintiff
must have been unaware of the fact and would not have acted as he did if he had known
of the concealed or suppressed fact, and (5) as a result of the concealment or suppression
of the fact, the plaintiff must have sustained damage.”’” (Boschma v. Home Loan Center,
Inc. (2011) 198 Cal.App.4th 230, 248.)
              No liability for concealment exists unless there is a duty to disclose.
“‘[W]here material facts are known to one party and not to the other, failure to disclose

                                              37
them is not actionable fraud unless there is some relationship between the parties which
gives rise to a duty to disclose such known facts.’” (LiMandri v. Judkins (1997)
52 Cal.App.4th 326, 336-337 (LiMandri).) A fiduciary or confidential relationship
creates a duty to disclose, but other relationships also support imposing disclosure duties.
These other relationships can only arise “as a result of some sort of transaction between
the parties.” (Id. at p. 337.) Examples include “the relationship between seller and
buyer, employer and prospective employee, doctor and patient, or parties entering into
any kind of contractual agreement.” (Ibid.)
              Relevant to the element of duty for fraud and deceit claims, “[i]n
transactions which do not involve fiduciary or confidential relations, a cause of action for
nondisclosure of material facts may arise in at least three instances: (1) the defendant
makes representations but does not disclose facts which materially qualify the facts
disclosed, or which render his disclosure likely to mislead; (2) the facts are known or
accessible only to defendant, and defendant knows they are not known to or reasonably
discoverable by the plaintiff; (3) the defendant actively conceals discovery from the
plaintiff.” (Warner Constr. Corp. v. City of Los Angeles (1970) 2 Cal.3d 285, 294, fns.
omitted.)
              The jury specifically found the relationship between NMAC and Superior
created a duty to disclose. When asked on the special verdict form, “Did NMAC and
Superior have a relationship based on their transactions which give rise to a duty to
disclose,” the jury answered “yes.” The jury also found NMAC did one or more of the
following: “(a) disclose some facts to Superior but intentionally fail[ed] to disclose other
facts, making the disclosure deceptive; [] (b) intentionally fail[ed] to disclose facts that
were known only to it and that Superior did not know and could not reasonably have
discovered; [] (c) prevent[ed] Superior from discovering certain facts.” The jury also
found NMAC intended to deceive Superior by its concealment. Ample evidence supports
these findings.

                                              38
              NMAC and Superior had an ongoing transactional relationship since 2001.
During late 2008 and the beginning of 2009, the parties entered into several forbearance
agreements. Based on Kahn’s testimony, there was evidence NMAC and Superior had
several oral agreements concerning how to get through the ongoing financial crisis. As
LiMandri explains, a duty to disclose may arise when parties enter into “any kind of
contractual agreement.” (LiMandri, supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at p. 337.)
              Substantial evidence also supports the jury’s conclusion NMAC
intentionally failed to disclose material facts it had a duty to disclose. For example,
according to Kahn, Lambert represented NMAC would finance Superior through 2009
and assured Kahn NMAC would continue working with Superior even if Superior’s
payments missed the 2 day/10 day deadline. On November 3, 2008, Lambert told Kahn
NMAC would not shut Superior down while at the same time he and his staff were
contemplating that option. On January 5, 2009, Lambert represented that once Superior
provided financial projections for 2009 “we’ll get you the money and we’ll be in good
shape.” Three days later Lambert decided to “pull the plug” on Superior, but did not
inform Superior. Instead, Cullum made plans to foreclose on Kahn’s real estate assets,
including his home. None of this was disclosed. After Kahn on February 9 signed a deed
of trust on his home, NMAC terminated its lending to Superior two days later on
February 11. Despite several representations NMAC would continue to finance Superior
and continue to move forward on the same terms as it had in the past, NMAC failed to
disclose its January 8 decision to “pull the plug.” These nondisclosures occurred even
though NMAC normally would inform a dealership of its decision to stop financing the
dealership, according to Mike McConnell, NMAC’s Vice-President of Operations and
Commercial Lending.
              NMAC argues it had no duty to disclose its intention not to perform its oral
promises because the jury found “all of NMAC’s promises were made in good faith.”
The jury, however, found NMAC made “a promise to Superior” and intended to perform

                                             39
“this promise.” The jury’s finding NMAC’s good faith intent to perform a promise did
not prevent the jury from considering whether NMAC breached its duty to disclose
material information that was at odds with its earlier oral promises.
              Marketing West, Inc. v. Sanyo Fisher (USA) Corp. (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th
603 (Marketing West) is instructive. There, several sales representatives worked for the
defendant under an oral agreement that provided they could be terminated only for good
cause. After a corporate merger, the defendant’s Senior Vice-President presented the
sales representatives with written employment agreements that permitted terminating
employment without cause, superseding the oral agreement. The vice-president,
however, told the employees the written agreements “‘“did not mean anything”’” and did
not change the terms of their employment relationships, but were merely a
“‘“formality”’” for reorganizing the business. (Id. at p. 609.) The appellate court held
these facts presented a triable issue of material fact for a fraudulent concealment claim
because the employer concealed its decision to terminate the representatives’
employment. (Id. at p. 613 [applying Warner Constr. Corp., supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 294].)
              Thus, the employer in Marketing West concealed its decision to fire its
sales representatives while simultaneously assuring them their existing employment
relationship would continue as before if they signed a new contract. Similarly, NMAC
concealed its decision to shut down Superior while simultaneously assuring Kahn its
relationship with Superior would continue as before through 2009. NMAC’s
concealment furthered its goal of securing more collateral from Kahn, including his
home.
              NMAC asserts there is no duty to disclose deliberations about whether to
enforce a binding contract or breach a good-faith promise since the law does not require a
party to warn the other party to a contract of its intention to breach, even if those
deliberations are with the exclusive knowledge of the breaching party. Superior,
however, based its fraudulent concealment claim on more than NMAC’s decision to

                                              40
breach a promise. Superior based its claim on NMAC’s failure to disclose material
information that would have shown NMAC’s disclosed representations were false or
misleading. As Marketing West observes, “‘[t]he rule has long been settled in this state
that although one may be under no duty to speak as to a matter, “if he undertakes to do
so, either voluntarily or in response to inquiries, he is bound not only to the state truly
what he tells but also not to suppress or conceal any facts within his knowledge which
materially qualify those stated. If he speaks at all he must make a full and fair
disclosure.” (Marketing West, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 613.)
              NMAC also contends Superior’s fraudulent concealment claim fails as a
matter of law because NMAC did not present any evidence of detrimental reliance “in the
brief period in January 2009 between NMAC’s decision not to extend additional loans to
Superior and its disclosure of that decision to Superior.” NMAC raised the same claim in
our earlier opinion. We noted Superior presented evidence that Lambert’s promise to
continue funding Superior induced Kahn to provide substantial additional collateral,
personal guaranties, money, and incur more debt to complete the Oakland Toyota store.
We concluded “[t]his evidence easily established the element of detrimental reliance.”
(NMAC I, at p. 21.) Superior presented the same evidence in the retrial. Consequently,
we need not revisit the issue under the law of the case doctrine. Even if the doctrine did
not apply, ample evidence supports the jury’s finding Superior would have acted
differently if NMAC had met its disclosure obligations.

                                              41
Punitive Damages
              NMAC contends punitive damages on the fraudulent concealment claim
violates due process because NMAC did not receive fair notice its conduct could subject
it to punishment “based on Superior’s brand new, vastly expanded version of
concealment.” Of course, fraudulent concealment is an intentional tort that may support
a punitive damage award. (See Roddenberry v. Roddenberry, supra 44 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 665-667.) In any event, any issues concerning punitive damages should be addressed
to the trial court on remand.
                                    DISPOSITION
              The new trial order and the JNOV orders are affirmed. Each party to bear
its own costs on appeal.

                                                ARONSON, J.

WE CONCUR:

MOORE, ACTING P. J.

THOMPSON, J.

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