Court Opinion

ID: 3180875
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-02-26 21:16:57.412948+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:36:31.203055
License: Public Domain

Filed 2/26/16 Rozier v. U.S. Bank Nat. Assn. CA4/3

                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION THREE

KAREN MICHELE ROZIER,

     Plaintiff and Appellant,                                          G050520

         v.                                                            (Super. Ct. No. 30-2012-00601310)

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,                                        OPINION

     Defendant and Respondent.

                   Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Sheila
Fell, Judge. Affirmed.
                   Karen M. Rozier, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                   Severson & Werson, Jan T. Chilton and Kerry W. Franich, for Defendant
and Respondent.
                                          INTRODUCTION
              Despite repeated warnings from bench officers that she was in over her
head in a lawsuit involving complex financial, statutory, and procedural issues, appellant
Karen Rozier steadfastly refused to hire counsel, apparently from an abiding conviction
that she could do the job as well as any lawyer. Events proved her wrong. Judgments
were entered against her after the trial court granted respondent U.S. Bank’s motion for
summary judgment and – in an unusual example of belt and suspenders – after the court
ordered terminating sanctions against her for misuse of the discovery process.
              Unfortunately, in the course of her self-representation, Rozier has violated
                                                              1
nearly every rule of the California Rules of Court regarding briefs and the record on
appeal. Her two-volume appellant’s appendix omits some crucial documents – like the
papers filed in connection with a demurrer she wants us to review and with U.S. Bank’s
motion for summary judgment, which she also wants us to review. U.S. Bank plugged
some of the holes in its four-volume respondent’s appendix, but some still remain, and it
is not the bank’s responsibility to make up for the inadequacies of appellant’s record.
              We do not write on a blank slate when we review a lower court’s judgment.
Instead, we assume it is correct and require the appellant to demonstrate error. We also
confine our review to matters in the record, so an inadequate record, such as the one
appellant supplied, severely restricts what we can even consider.
              We affirm the judgment entered after the court granted U.S. Bank’s motion
for summary judgment. Appellant did not appeal from the judgment granted after the
court ordered terminating sanctions, so that judgment would stand in any event without
our inspection. The other issues appellant raised on appeal are, as she has presented
them, meritless.

       1
              All further rule references are to the California Rules of Court.

                                                       2
                                                              2
                                                   FACTS
                 Appellant signed a deed of trust on her Buena Park residence on December
23, 2005. The lender was WMC Mortgage Corp. The trustee was Westwood Associates,
and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS), was the beneficiary and the
lender’s nominee. The deed of trust was recorded on January 4, 2006. MERS assigned
the deed of trust to Bank of America (BofA). BofA recorded a substitution of trustee –
Executive Trustee Services, LLC (ETS), in place of Westwood Associates – on April 11,
2011. On the same day, ETS recorded a notice of default and election to sell. ETS
recorded a notice of trustee’s sale on July 12, 2011; the sale was set for August 8.
                 On July 26, 2011, appellant recorded a grant deed transferring the Buena
Park property to an irrevocable trust named for her son (the family trust). The record
does not indicate a trustee’s sale on August 8. Appellant filed for bankruptcy protection
on August 22, 2011.
                 On January 13, 2012, BofA recorded an assignment of the deed of trust to
U.S. Bank. ETS recorded two identical notices of trustee’s sale, one on August 10 and
                                      3
the other on August 27, 2012. Both notices set the sale for September 4, 2012. The debt
at that point stood at $820,606. The sale took place on September 24, and the trustee’s
deed upon sale to BofA was recorded on September 26, 2012.
                 Appellant sued U.S Bank, BofA, MERS, ETS and another entity on
September 27, 2012. She alleged wrongful foreclosure and sought to have the sale of her
residence set aside and the deed upon sale canceled. The deed upon sale was rescinded
on October 4, 2012. On October 16, 2012, ETS recorded another notice of trustee’s sale,
the sale date being November 13, 2012. The record does not contain a deed of sale for
that date or any subsequent date.

        2
                 As we are required to do, we recite the facts in a manner most favorable to the judgment. (See SCI
California Funeral Services, Inc. v. Five Bridges Foundation (2012) 203 Cal. App. 4th 549, 552.)
         3
                 U.S. Bank obtained relief from bankruptcy stay on July 30, 2012.

                                                        3
               Appellant filed her first amended complaint, which is not part of the record,
on October 29, 2012. She filed her second amended complaint on February 4, 2013. She
alleged causes of action for wrongful foreclosure, slander of title, violation of Business
and Professions Code section 17200, negligence, defamation, and quiet title. The
plaintiffs were appellant, her husband, and her husband as trustee of the family trust. The
defendants were BofA, ETS, two other entities (not including U.S. Bank), and three
individuals.
               A lengthy hearing on the demurrer to the second amended complaint took
place on May 10, 2013. Counsel for U.S. Bank appeared and explained to the court that
U.S. Bank, not BofA, was the proper party to sue for wrongful foreclosure, as BofA had
assigned its interest in the property to U.S. Bank in January 2012. U.S. Bank would be
responsible for a wrongful foreclosure, assuming there was one.
               The court struck appellant’s husband as plaintiff in his capacity as trustee
because a non-attorney could not represent the family trust in court. Two of the
individuals and one of the entities had already been dismissed before the hearing, so the
                                    4
demurrer was moot as to them. The court sustained demurrers to the causes of action for
slander of title and defamation without leave to amend; it overruled the demurrer on the
cause of action for wrongful foreclosure. The court’s order further provided “[T]he Court
will allow [appellant] to file a third amended complaint with a proper caption and may
only file naming US Bank with a wrongful foreclosure cause of action.”
               Notwithstanding the May 10 order, the third amended complaint named
both appellant and her husband as plaintiffs, named BofA and two other entities in
addition to U.S. Bank as defendants, and alleged nine causes of action instead of one for
wrongful foreclosure. U.S. Bank demurred to the third amended complaint. The court
struck appellant’s husband as a plaintiff and struck all causes of action except wrongful

       4
               Appellant dismissed the third individual on February 13, 2013.

                                                      4
foreclosure. The court overruled U.S. Bank’s demurrer to the wrongful foreclosure cause
of action. The court also allowed appellant to go forward with a wrongful foreclosure
cause of action against BofA.
                  U.S. Bank moved for summary judgment on wrongful foreclosure, based
on requests for admission that had been deemed admitted after appellant failed to respond
to them. U.S. Bank also moved for terminating sanctions, again for appellant’s failure to
respond to discovery. Both motions were heard on the same day, and both were granted.
                  Judgment was entered against appellant pursuant to U.S. Bank’s motion for
summary judgment on June 5, 2014, and pursuant to its motion for terminating sanctions
on the same day. Appellant filed a notice of appeal from judgment following the order
                                                          5
granting summary judgment on July 2, 2014. The record does not contain a notice of
appeal from the judgment after the order granting terminating sanctions.
                                                DISCUSSION
                  The state of the record and of appellant’s briefs has greatly hampered our
review. Her appellant’s appendix does not begin to conform to the requirements of the
California Rules of Court for such documents. There is no register of actions, no notice
of appeal, no notice of election. (See rule 8.124(b).) The papers filed in connection with
the demurrer to the second amended complaint – which appellant wants us to review –
are missing. So are the summary judgment motion and the motion for terminating
             6
sanctions. Her briefs are likewise inadequate and improper, particularly when it comes
to citing to the (inadequate) record. (See rule 8.204(a)(1)(C).) For example, appellant

         5
                  Appellant filed a premature notice of appeal from the summary judgment before judgment was
entered. Her second notice of appeal, the one filed in July, included the notation after the box “Other” (which she
checked) “Rule 8.155(a). Motion to augment the record in support of preserving the status quo pending appeal.”
We do not know what this means.
         6
                  Appellant admits her appendix is incomplete, but excuses its defects on the ground that she
thought U.S. Bank would include its documents in its appendix. Rule 8.124(b)(1)(B) clearly requires an appellant’s
appendix to include any item “necessary for a proper consideration of the issues” and “any item that the appellant
should reasonably assume the respondent will rely on.” The rule also requires the documents to be arranged
chronologically (id. (d)(1)), another rule appellant ignored – increasing the difficulty of navigating her appendix.

                                                         5
repeatedly cites to a document’s docket number, using these citations to support factual
assertions. But the mere name of the document, gleaned from the docket helpfully
supplied by U.S. Bank (not by appellant), tells us nothing about the information conveyed
within the document itself and is meaningless as a reference to the record. Appellant also
frequently makes “factual” statements unsupported even by these meager citations. (See
id. (a)(2)(C).)
                  We would be well within the bounds of proper appellate practice to affirm
the judgment on the basis of an inadequate record. (See Gee v. American Realty &
Construction, Inc. (2002) 99 Cal. App. 4th 1412, 1416; Niederer v. Ferreira (1987) 189
Cal. App. 3d 1485, 1509.) Nevertheless, we will address the issues appellant raises insofar
as we can discern them amid the torrent of irrelevancies and tangents. We are guided in
these efforts by the headings in the argument section of appellant’s opening brief. (See
rule 8.204(a)(1)(B); Opdyk v. California Horse Racing Bd. (1995) 34 Cal. App. 4th 1826,
1830, fn. 4.)
                  After prolonged and dogged study of the record – a luxury not afforded the
trial court – we have been able to isolate three main components of appellant’s lawsuit.
First, she alleged she signed a note in December 2005, but later canceled it. There is a
valid note, she conceded, but that note is dated June 2006. Nevertheless, she alleged, the
December 2005 note is the one being used to foreclose on her property. Second,
appellant contended that nobody owns her debt, because of the way her note and deed of
trust were transferred. Specifically, she alleged that the note and deed of trust were
                                                                                            7
improperly transferred into a real estate trust after the trust had closed. Finally, she

         7
                   In the recently decided case Yvanova v. New Century Mortgage Corp. (Feb. 18, 2016, S218973)
___ Cal.4th ___ [2016 D.A.R. 1619], the California Supreme Court held that a borrower could base a claim for a
wrongful nonjudicial foreclosure on a void transfer, but not on a voidable one (Id., 2016 D.A.R. 1627); it explicitly
refused to decide whether a postclosing transfer into a real estate trust was void or voidable. (Id., 2016 D.A.R.
1622.) The Court also refused to decide whether a borrower could preempt an impending foreclosure proceeding by
alleging a void transfer. (Id., 2016 D.A.R. 1619, 1623-1624.)

                                                          6
alleged that BofA caused all the paperwork for a nonjudicial foreclosure and a trustee’s
sale to be recorded in September 2012, even though it had transferred its interest to U.S.
Bank several months before. The trustee’s sale was rescinded in October 2012.
Appellant alleged that between the time of the trustee’s sale and the rescission, BofA
engaged in a series of distressing activities, such as serving a notice to quit. Appellant
has referred in passing to numerous subsidiary issues, but these are the major ones. With
this background in mind, we address each of the issues singled out in the argument
section of appellant’s opening brief.
I.               Standard of Review
                 The standard of review for a denial of leave to amend a complaint after a
demurrer has been sustained is abuse of discretion. (Reynolds v. Bement (2005) 36
Cal. 4th 1075, 1091. We review an order granting summary judgment de novo. (Intel
Corp. v. Hamidi (2003) 30 Cal. 4th 1342, 1348). An order imposing discovery sanctions
is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (New Albertsons, Inc. v. Superior Court (2008) 168
Cal. App. 4th 1403, 1422.) Appellant’s discussion of the standard of review in her briefs
reflects her unfamiliarity with this concept.
II.              U.S. Bank’s Appearance
                 Appellant asserted both in the trial court and on appeal that U.S. Bank had
no right to appear in this case because her dispute was with BofA, specifically with
BofA’s conduct in September and October of 2012, when a trustee’s sale was held and
then rescinded. If appellant had confined her lawsuit to the events of that period, perhaps
this argument could have had some merit. When she challenged the validity of her note
and of the assignments and substitutions under the deed of trust in general, however, she
drew U.S. Bank into the fray. The original complaint and the second and third amended

                  Appellant did not allege in any of her pleadings that U.S. Bank foreclosed on her residence. The
deed of sale recorded by BofA in 2012 was rescinded. The third amended complaint did not allege an impending
foreclosure.

                                                         7
complaints all alleged just such challenges. U.S. Bank was BofA’s assignee, so if there
was something wrong with the note and the transfers, U.S. Bank was the affected party.
                 It certainly would have been preferable for U.S. Bank to file a complaint in
intervention under Code of Civil Procedure section 387, rather than to just show up at
hearings. But appellant did not raise that procedural irregularity in the trial court, and she
did not raise it on appeal. If U.S. Bank had filed a complaint in intervention, the trial
court would most likely have been required to allow it, as U.S. Bank was “so situated that
the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede [its] ability to
protect [its] interest.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 387, subd. (b).) Certainly appellant was given
every opportunity to protest U.S. Bank’s involvement in the lawsuit.
                 U.S. Bank unquestionably had an interest to protect that the allegations of
the second and third amended complaints threatened. It had a right to appear to defend
this interest.
                 Furthermore, the court did not, as appellant claims on appeal, allow BofA
to escape liability for wrongful foreclosure. Appellant alleged a wrongful foreclosure
cause of action against BofA in her third amended complaint, and the trial court
overruled BofA’s demurrer to it. The lawsuit included a cause of action against BofA for
wrongful foreclosure when both defendants finally answered.
III.             The Peremptory Challenge (Code of Civil Procedure section 170.6)
                 Appellant asserted that a defendant’s motion to disqualify a judge under
Code of Civil Procedure 170.6 was improperly granted. An order granting a motion
under this code section is not appealable in the first instance. It must first be challenged
by a writ. (See Orion Communications, Inc. v. Superior Court (2014) 226 Cal. App. 4th
152, 155.) Accordingly we do not address this issue.
IV.              Identity between U.S. Bank and BofA
                 The gist of appellant’s argument under this heading is indecipherable. She
asserts, first, that a lawyer representing BofA filed a fraudulent substitution of attorney,

                                                8
to which she objected. The supporting cites to the record are meaningless or incorrect.
She now asserts that “the [trial] Court should not have allowed the perjured [substitution
of attorney] to stand unpunished.” The issue or order we are supposed to review is
unspecified.
                  Appellant next contested U.S. Bank’s assertion that it had assumed BofA’s
liabilities, because U.S. Bank presented no evidence it had merged with BofA. U.S.
Bank never represented it had assumed all of BofA’s liabilities; it represented only that as
BofA’s assignee of appellant’s deed of trust, it was the proper defendant to sue for
wrongful foreclosure on appellant’s property.
                  The last portion under this heading is equally impenetrable. BofA held
appellant’s deed of trust as trustee for a trust identified as RAAC 2007RPI. The
assignment to U.S. Bank in January 2012 identified BofA as the trustee of RAMP
2007RPI. Appellant does not explain the significance of this difference in nomenclature
or how it could have affected U.S. Bank’s representation to the trial court that it would
assume all liability for wrongful foreclosure of appellant’s property – in other words, how
the difference would affect her. We see no issue for our review under this heading.
V.                Demurrer to Second Amended Complaint
                  Appellant asserted on appeal that the trial court should have given her leave
to amend the second amended complaint instead of striking everything but the wrongful
                                    8
foreclosure cause of action. The second amended complaint named appellant, her
husband, and her husband as trustee of the family trust as plaintiffs. The named
defendants were BofA, Residential Funding Company, GMAC Mortgage, ETS, and three
individuals. The causes of action were wrongful foreclosure, slander of title, violation of
Business and Professions Code section 17200, negligence, defamation, and quiet title. At

         8
                  The court did not strike any of the causes of action; it sustained the demurrers to two of them
without leave to amend.

                                                          9
the time, GMAC Mortgage and ETS were in bankruptcy, so the action was stayed as to
them.
                After a lengthy hearing on May 10, 2013, the court ruled as follows:
GMAC Mortgage and two of the individuals having been dismissed, the demurrer was
moot as to them. Appellant’s husband as trustee of the family trust was dismissed as a
                                                                                          9
plaintiff; he was not an attorney and could not represent the trust in court. The court
sustained the demurrers to the causes of action for slander of title and quiet title without
leave to amend and overruled the demurrer to the cause of action for wrongful
foreclosure. Appellant was given 15 days to file the third amended complaint; she was
ordered to substitute U.S. Bank for BofA in the wrongful foreclosure cause of action;
BofA had disclaimed any interest in her property, and U.S. Bank as BofA’s successor in
interest under the deed of trust had assumed responsibility for wrongful foreclosure,
assuming one occurred.
                Appellant does not assert that the trial court erred in sustaining the
demurrers; indeed, restricting her objection only to denying her leave to amend implicitly
conceded that the demurrers were properly sustained. “Whether to grant leave to amend
a complaint is a matter within the discretion of the trial court. [Citation.] On appeal, the
burden of proving a reasonable possibility exists that a complaint’s defects can be cured
by amendment rests ‘squarely on the plaintiff.’ [Citation.]” (Reynolds v. Bement, supra,
36 Cal.4th at p. 1091.)
                Leaving aside the obstacle to appeal resulting from appellant’s failure to
include any of the filings relevant to the demurrer – motion, opposition, reply – in her
appendix, there is no discussion in her briefs of how the third amended complaint,
appellant’s fourth try, could have been reframed to state claims for slander of title or

        9
                  GMAC Mortgage and Executive Trustee Services were the only defendants named in the causes of
action for negligence and defamation. The court therefore did not rule on these two causes of action.

                                                     10
               10
quiet title.        She therefore has not carried her burden to prove a reasonable possibility of
curing the defects by amendment.
                     Appellant’s other, related, complaint is that the court’s May 10 order
“forced” her to sue U.S. Bank as the sole defendant in the third amended complaint and
yet did not allow her to state causes of action other than wrongful foreclosure against this
defendant. After the May 10 hearing, appellant filed an ex parte application informing
the court of her intention to allege causes of action against U.S. Bank in addition to
                             11
wrongful foreclosure.             Construing this as a motion for leave to file an amended pleading
– one that ignored the requirements of rule 3.1324 – we cannot find any reference in the
record to a ruling on it. Having been provided with an inadequate record, we presume, as
we are required to do, that the trial court correctly denied the motion. (See Vo v. Las
Virgenes Municipal Water Dist. (2000) 79 Cal. App. 4th 440, 447.)
                     In any event, appellant disregarded the court’s May 10 order. Despite
being restricted to a single plaintiff (appellant), a single defendant (U.S. Bank), and a
single cause of action (wrongful foreclosure), the third amended complaint named
appellant’s husband as a plaintiff and BofA and two other entities in addition to U.S.
Bank as defendants. The complaint alleged eight causes of action in addition to wrongful
foreclosure. The court struck appellant’s husband as a plaintiff, the two entities, and the
extra causes of action, but allowed appellant to keep BofA as a defendant in the wrongful
foreclosure cause of action.
VI.                  U.S. Bank’s Discovery
                     Appellant next asserted that U.S. Bank had no right to propound discovery
on her, because her grievance was with BofA over the wrongful foreclosure of September

         10
                   Appellant neglected to include the 24 exhibits to which she referred in the complaint with the
filing itself. While she could have amended the complaint to add the exhibits, the court sustained the demurrers on
grounds other than the failure to include exhibits. Appellant has not explained how she could overcome these
defects.
           11
                   The claims appellant listed in the ex parte application as the ones she intended to assert against
U.S. Bank differed substantially from the causes of action actually alleged in the third amended complaint.

                                                         11
of 2012. We have already dealt with U.S. Bank’s participation in this lawsuit as BofA’s
assignee. If appellant believed U.S. Bank’s discovery was improper or exceeded the
scope of discovery (Code Civ. Proc., § 2017.010), she should first have addressed her
objections to the trial court through a motion for a protective order. (Code Civ. Proc., §
2019.030.) She cannot raise this objection for the first time in this court. (See Gray1
CPB, LLC v. SCC Acquisitions, Inc. (2015) 233 Cal. App. 4th 882, 897.)
VII.              Too Many Judges
                  Appellant’s disregard for the rules of appellate practice reaches some kind
of peak here. She claimed she was denied her right to obtain “fair and correct decision
making” because so many judges ruled on so many issues. This part of her brief contains
not a single correct citation to the record. She lists nine judges who ruled at some time
during the case, again without any citation to the record, attributing the variety of bench
officers involved to U.S. Bank’s making ex parte applications when the assigned judge
                      12
was unavailable.
                  Arguments made without citation to the record or unsupported by any
authority do not merit appellate review. (Thornbrough v. Western Placer Unified School
Dist. (2013) 223 Cal. App. 4th 169, 175, fn. 3 [citation to record]; Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Bd. (2002) 100 Cal. App. 4th
1066, 1078 [unsupported argument].) In any case, appellant has not specified any order
to be reversed or holding to be examined resulting from this plethora of judges.
                  But we cannot pass to the next topic without remarking on appellant’s
accusations against Judge Fell, the judge who entered judgment against her. In her briefs,
appellant charged Judge Fell with corruption and with conspiring with defense attorneys
to dismiss her case using “quasi-criminal means” and “trickery.” Appellant claimed,

         12
                   This case generated an extraordinary number of ex parte applications – more than 30 over the
course of just over two years. Both sides clearly regarded an ex parte application as a method of obtaining relief
superior to a noticed motion, ignoring the admonition of rule 3.1202(c) that an ex parte application is reserved for
“irreparable harm” or “immediate danger.”

                                                          12
without any supporting evidence, that Judge Fell “earns outside income lecturing to
various BAR associations,” and therefore ruled in U.S. Bank’s favor because it was
represented by a big law firm, while appellant represented herself. “Conceivably, if
[Judge Fell] were known to be favorable or even reasonable to pro se litigants, she might
lose her favored status with these various BAR associations and lose her outside source
of income. . . . [H]er behavior indicates she is biased against pro se litigants.”
              “Disparaging the trial judge is a tactic that is not taken lightly by a
reviewing court.” (In re S.C. (2006) 138 Cal. App. 4th 396, 422.) Impugning the court’s
integrity in a document filed with the court is an instance of direct contempt. (See In re
Koven (2005) 134 Cal. App. 4th 262, 271; In re White (2004) 121 Cal. App. 4th 1453,
1477-1478.) So is an unsupported accusation of bias toward a party. (In re White, supra,
121 Cal.App.4th at p. 1478.) Contempt is punishable by a fine or imprisonment or both.
(In re Koven, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at p. 271.) Appellant does not advance her cause
by concocting conspiracy theories to shift the blame for failures brought about by her
own deficiencies.
VIII.         Cumulative Effect of Errors
              This portion of appellant’s opening brief is a hodgepodge of complaints,
mostly about the law firms representing U.S. Bank and BofA. The remaining complaints
we have dealt with in the previous sections, and we do not need to repeat our
observations here.
              Appellant is aggrieved that the banks had law firms – large ones – to defend
them while she represented herself. She entertains the erroneous idea that a self-
represented party is entitled to particular assistance or leniency from the court. This is
not California law. California law requires self-represented parties to adhere to the same
rules that apply to attorneys. (Rappleyea v. Campbell (1994) 8 Cal. 4th 975, 984-985;
Kobayashi v. Superior Court (2009) 175 Cal. App. 4th 536, 543.) Moreover, it is a
violation of the canons of judicial ethics for a judge to help litigants prepare their cases.

                                              13
(See Adams v. Commission on Judicial Performance (1995) 10 Cal. 4th 866, 907-908.)
As one judge correctly told appellant, while urging her to get a lawyer, “I’m not going to
practice law on your behalf; I’m not going to give you legal advice.”
                 Appellant alleged that the family trust owned property in California,
Mexico, Maryland, and Virginia, in addition to other assets. It would perhaps have been
prudent for the trust to have expended some of these assets on legal counsel. Having not
done so, she cannot complain because courts will not do that work for her.
IX.              Terminating Sanctions
                 Appellant did not appeal from the judgment in favor of U.S. Bank after the
court granted its motion for terminating sanctions for discovery misuse. Ordinarily, this
would be the end of the line for an appellant. We have jurisdiction only when an
appellant files a timely notice of appeal. (Van Beurden Ins. Services, Inc., v. Customized
Worldwide Weather Ins. Agency, Inc. (1997) 15 Cal. 4th 51, 56.) And our jurisdiction is
limited in scope to the notice of appeal and the judgment appealed from. (Dakota
Payphone, LLC v. Alcaraz (2011) 192 Cal. App. 4th 493, 504.) The failure to file a timely
notice of appeal from the judgment regarding terminating sanctions requires the dismissal
of that appeal, and the trial court’s judgment of dismissal stands. (Hollister Convalescent
Hosp., Inc. v. Rico (1975) 15 Cal. 3d 660, 675.)
                 Because the trial court created some confusion by entering two separate
judgments, however, we will address the one entered after the court granted U.S. Bank’s
                                                                                 13
motion for summary judgment, from which appellant did appeal.                         We sympathize with
the trial court’s desire to use both a silver bullet and a stake through the heart of this case,
but generally a lawsuit can end in only one judgment of dismissal per defendant. (See
Nicholson v. Henderson (1944) 25 Cal. 2d 375, 378-379.)

        13
                 Both judgments were entered on the same day, so we cannot determine which is the official one
and which one should be set aside. (See Worthington Corp. v. El Chicote Ranch Properties, Ltd. (1967) 255
Cal. App. 2d 316, 325.)

                                                      14
X.                Summary Judgment
                  The ruling on U.S. Bank’s motion for summary judgment has its roots in
discovery. U.S. Bank propounded requests for admission on appellant, to which she did
not respond. U.S. Bank moved to have the requests for admission deemed admitted. The
record does not contain any opposition to this motion, which was granted on December
                                                                         14
11, 2013. We have not been asked to review this order.
                  Among the requests for admission deemed admitted were “Admit
[appellant] does not have a viable Wrongful Foreclosure claim against U.S. Bank”;
“Admit [appellant] is not entitled to any monetary damages from U.S. Bank”; “Admit
[appellant] is not entitled to any equitable relief from U.S. Bank.” Appellant also was
deemed to have admitted that she had not made a mortgage payment in over five years
and that her residence had no equity on September 24, 2012 (the date of the trustee’s
sale), on October 3, 2012 (the date the sale was rescinded), and on August 31, 2013 (a
date just after service of the requests for admissions).
                  As of the time of the summary judgment motion, the only cause of action
standing against U.S. Bank was wrongful foreclosure, a tort. By virtue of her deemed-
admitted requests for admission, she admitted that she was not entitled to damages or
equitable relief from U.S. Bank. Without damages, of course, she could not maintain a
cause of action for a tort. (See Bardis v. Oates (2004) 119 Cal. App. 4th 1, 10.)
                  Code of Civil Procedure section 437c requires a court to grant summary
judgment “if all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material
fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ.

         14
                   Appellant complained that she was unable to attend the hearing on the discovery motion because
she was on trial on Los Angeles Superior Court in a criminal matter. She did not notify the court that she would be
unable to attend or ask for a continuance. Without such a notice, the court was permitted to rule on the motion as if
she had appeared. (See rule 3.1304.)
                   Appellant moved to vacate the discovery orders on January 7, 2014. The record does not contain
any ruling on the motion, although one was evidently issued. In the absence of a complete record, we presume the
correctness of the trial court’s ruling, which was evidently to deny the motion. (See Vo v. Las Virgenes Municipal
Water Dist., supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at p. 447.)

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Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) In this case, the deemed admission that appellant had no
damages established the absence of a triable issue of fact as to the wrongful foreclosure
cause of action. Summary judgment was therefore properly granted.
              In addition, Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (b)(3)
requires a party opposing a summary judgment to file a separate statement responding to
the moving party’s separate statement. The record contains no such statement from
appellant. This defect alone is a sufficient basis for granting the motion. (Code Civ.
Proc., § 437c, subd. (b)(3).) Moreover, appellant failed to oppose the motion in any
meaningful way. She did not address the elements of her remaining cause of action,
demonstrating the existence of a triable issue of fact. The opposition dealt solely with
irrelevancies, and it contained not a shred of admissible evidence. (See Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 437c, subd. (d).) U.S. Bank made a prima facie case for summary judgment, so it was
up to appellant to submit evidence to establish a triable issue of material fact. (See
Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 826, 850-851.) She failed to do so.
              Finally, the issues appellant identified on appeal do not involve whether
U.S. Bank presented sufficient evidence to be entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Instead, she has argued that (1) U.S. Bank had no right to propound discovery on her, an
argument we have already dispatched; and (2) the trial court erred in continuing the trial
date so that the motion could be heard more than 30 days before trial. We review the trial
court’s decision to grant or deny a continuance for abuse of discretion. (Foster v. Civil
Service Com. (1983) 142 Cal. App. 3d 444, 448.)
              U.S. Bank filed and served its motion for summary judgment on January 8,
2014. The hearing was set for April 23, over 100 days after filing and service. Trial at
that point was set for April 28. On January 16, the court granted U.S. Bank’s ex parte
application to continue the trial date from April 28 to May 27, thereby allowing the
hearing date to be set more than 30 days before trial. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 437c,
subd. (a)(3).) Appellant’s appendix did not include any of the documents pertaining to

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U.S. Bank’s request for trial continuance. U.S. Bank’s appendix included the court’s
order granting its application to move the trial date to May 27.
              Appellant has not demonstrated to us that the trial court abused its
discretion in moving the trial date from April 28 to May 27. The summary judgment
motion was a case-dispositive one; granting it would obviate the necessity of a trial
altogether. Appellant has not shown how a delay of a month prejudiced her, especially as
the trial had been continued once before, for seven months. Her objection to continuing
the trial date is meritless. This is the only additional issue she has identified as the basis
for reversing the order granting U.S. Bank’s motion for summary judgment.
XI.           Requests for Judicial Notice
              Both appellant and U.S. Bank have filed requests for judicial notice.
Appellant asked us to take judicial notice of “twenty documents that have been filed in
various courts,” apparently federal courts of several persuasions. We say “apparently”
because although the request exceeded 500 pages, it was not paginated sequentially, so
we would have to examine each of the 500 plus pages to determine both the documents’
origins and where one document ends and the next one begins. We are not going to do
this. (See Myers v. Trendwest Resorts, Inc. (2009) 178 Cal. App. 4th 735, 745 [court will
not search through voluminous record].)
              Examining the table of contents indicates that the contents of all but one of
these documents are not judicially noticeable. With one exception, they are briefs or
declarations or similar documents. We may take judicial notice of the fact that they were
filed, but not of the truth of their contents. (See Day v. Sharp (1975) 50 Cal. App. 3d 904,
914.) They are not orders, findings of fact and conclusions of law, or judgments. (Ibid.)
Since the fact that these documents were filed in these other cases is irrelevant to this
one, we deny the request as to all but one of the documents on this basis.
              The exception is a memorandum opinion and order sustaining the Rescap
Borrower Claims Trust’s objections to the claim filed by appellant, a 44-page published

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opinion in a Southern District of New York bankruptcy case, filed on December 22,
2014, after judgment was entered against her in this action. (See In re Residential
Capital, LLC (S.D.N.Y 2014) 523 B.R. 24.) As set forth in the New York opinion,
appellant made claims in the Rescap bankruptcy identical to those made in this case. The
bankruptcy judge found all of them meritless, including her claim for wrongful
foreclosure, sustained the bankruptcy trustee’s objections, and disallowed and expunged
all of appellant’s claims in the Rescap’s bankruptcy. Why appellant would seek judicial
notice of this document is a mystery, as it only confirms her California case’s lack of
merit. It is irrelevant here, however, since the action underlying this appeal was
dismissed on other grounds, most prominently appellant’s failure to respond to discovery,
and before the New York court issued its opinion. We therefore deny the request to
judicially notice this document. (See Soukup v. Law Offices of Herbert Hafif (2006) 39
Cal. 4th 260, 295 and fn. 21.)
              U.S. Bank requested judicial notice of two proofs of claims filed in the
Rescap bankruptcy, claims that were disallowed in December 2014. U.S. Bank asserts
that the disallowance of these claims in December 2014 is res judicata in this appeal.
              Res judicata was not raised as an issue in the trial court, and we decline to
consider it for the first time here. Moreover, the bankruptcy court had not yet disallowed
appellant’s claims when the trial court entered its judgment(s) dismissing her California
case. “The doctrine of res judicata gives certain conclusive effect to a former judgment
in subsequent litigation involving the same controversy.” (7 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th
ed. 2008) Judgment, § 334, p. 938 (italics added).) The bankruptcy court’s disallowance
of appellant’s claims is not a former judgment; it was issued after judgment was entered
in this case. U.S. Bank’s request for judicial notice is denied.
              To conclude, appellant might have avoided many of the difficulties she
experienced during the course of this lawsuit by engaging competent counsel. Counsel
might have been able to straighten out the various strands of this case, thereby clearing up

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the confusion generated by calling everything “wrongful foreclosure.” Counsel most
probably would have responded to U.S. Bank’s discovery, preventing the deemed
admission of requests for admission and terminating sanctions for discovery misuse.
Counsel might have been able to mount a proper defense to a motion for summary
judgment, instead of giving away the store by failing to follow correct procedure and
making only irrelevant points. And competent counsel could have structured this appeal
so that the major issues were properly framed for review and not waived by a failure to
observe the rules of appellate practice. We can only echo what appellant was repeatedly
told as she made her way through the trial court: “You needed a lawyer.”
                                     DISPOSITION
              The appeal from the judgment entered after the entry of the order granting
respondent’s motion for terminating sanctions is dismissed. The judgment entered after
the order granting respondent’s motion for summary judgment is affirmed. The parties’
requests for judicial notice are denied. Respondent is to recover its costs on appeal.

                                                 BEDSWORTH, J.

WE CONCUR:

RYLAARSDAM, ACTING P. J.

THOMPSON, J.

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