Court Opinion

ID: 2857330
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-04 23:02:34.720108+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:13:32.079070
License: Public Domain

Filed 9/4/15

                            CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                             FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                     DIVISION THREE

WA SOUTHWEST 2, LLC et al.,

    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                        G050445

        v.                                            (Super. Ct. No. 30-2012-00613565)

FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE                        OPINION
COMPANY et al.,

    Defendants and Respondents.

                 Appeal from judgments of the Superior Court of Orange County, Kim
Garlin Dunning, Judge. Affirmed.
                 Catanzarite Law Corporation, Kenneth J. Catanzarite and Eric V. Anderton
for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
                 Rutan & Tucker, Layne H. Melzer and Karen E. Scott for Defendant and
Respondent First American Title Insurance Company.
                 Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Robert Brundage, J. Warren Rissier and Jordan
McCrary for Defendants and Respondents Trammell Crow Company and CBRE, Inc.
                 Lester & Cantrell, Mark S. Lester, David Cantrell and Colin A. Northcutt
for Defendant and Respondent Hirschler Fleischer.
              This lawsuit arose from the rubble of a failed multimillion dollar
investment in commercial real estate. The trial court sustained a series of demurrers and
entered judgments of dismissal as to numerous defendants. We affirm the three
judgments of dismissal at issue here because the applicable statutes of limitations
foreclose recovery.

                               PROCEDURAL HISTORY

                       1
              Plaintiffs are seven investors in Southwest Corporate Center (the
Property), a three-story office building in Tempe, Arizona. The 30 defendants played
various roles in acquiring the Property and marketing ownership shares therein to
plaintiffs.
              Plaintiffs filed their initial complaint in November 2012. Three amended
complaints followed in response to motion practice by defendants. This appeal does not
involve the parties from whom plaintiffs actually purchased their investments, including
defendant WA Southwest Acquisitions, LLC (Acquisitions). Instead, this appeal
concerns three judgments of dismissal entered on May 15, 2014, in favor of four
defendants (the respondents to this appeal) on the periphery of the transaction: (1) First
American Title Insurance Company, which provided escrow and closing services in
connection with the acquisition of the Property; (2) Hirschler Fleischer, a law firm that
worked on the investment offering and prepared a tax opinion in connection therewith;
(3) Trammell Crow Company (Trammell Crow), which acted as real estate broker for the
original seller of the Property and then entered into a property management and leasing

1
              Plaintiffs (and appellants) are (1) WA Southwest 2, LLC; (2) WA
Southwest 15, LLC; (3) WA Southwest 19, LLC; (4) James Shee; (5) Jensen Enterprises,
Inc.; (6) Thomas Olson; and (7) LaVonne Misner.

                                             2
agreement with plaintiffs; and (4) CBRE, Inc. (CBRE), which acquired Trammell Crow
                                        2
and became its successor in interest.
              For purposes of this appeal, the 13 causes of action listed in the third
amended complaint can be boiled down to breach of fiduciary duty claims (against all
respondents), fraud claims (against all respondents), a legal malpractice claim against
Hirschler Fleischer, and a conversion claim against Trammell Crow and CBRE.

                                            FACTS

              In conducting our de novo review, we “must ‘give[] the complaint a
reasonable interpretation, and treat[] the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly
pleaded.’ [Citation.] Because only factual allegations are considered on demurrer, we
must disregard any ‘contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law alleged . . . .’”
(People ex rel. Gallegos v. Pacific Lumber Co. (2008) 158 Cal. App. 4th 950, 957.)
              By stipulation, the parties agreed to the authenticity of certain operative
documents that were in plaintiffs’ possession at the time of their investments, including
the confidential private placement memorandum and the purchase agreements signed by
the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs did not object (below or here) to the use of these documents in
connection with defendants’ demurrers. Like the trial court, we rely on these documents
as if they were exhibits to the operative complaint. (See SC Manufactured Homes, Inc. v.

2
              Three other defendants were also dismissed from the action following
successful demurrers, as discussed in a concurrently filed opinion. (Olson et al. v.
Steckler & Wynns Insurance Services, Inc. et al. (Sept. 4, 2015, G050455) [nonpub.
opn.].) It appears from a comment made by the court that at least some of the remaining
defendants were in the process of arbitrating plaintiffs’ claims.

                                              3
Liebert (2008) 162 Cal. App. 4th 68, 83 [“If the allegations in the complaint conflict with
                                                                                3
the exhibits, we rely on and accept as true the contents of the exhibits”].)

Allegations of Wrongdoing
               The essence of plaintiffs’ case is that they were misled (by a variety of
misrepresentations and misleading statements) about the “sales load” of their investments
(i.e., the fees, expenses, and commissions paid) and the risks they were required to incur
as a result of their investments. According to plaintiffs, they would not have invested in
the Property had they known that the total sales load percentage actually exceeded the 15
percent capital gains tax they had sought to defer by making the investments. The
respondents to this appeal (i.e., an escrow company, a law firm, and two real estate
broker/management firms) participated in the investment transactions and knew about
plaintiffs’ sensitivity to the “sales load,” but did not warn or inform plaintiffs about the
true nature of the investment.
               Plaintiffs “had cash from a prior sale of real property with deferred long
term capital gain on deposit with a qualifying intermediary which met the requirements
of Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 . . . .” Syndicated tenancy-in-common
acquisitions of real property (like the structure of the investment in the Property) can be
“used to defer gain on ‘like-kind’ real property sales so the gain realized by the taxpayer-
investor . . . on a sale of real estate . . . can be invested on a tax deferred basis in a ‘like-
kind’ property . . . , here the fractional interest [i]n the Property.”
               A particular alleged oral misrepresentation made by certain defendants was,
in substance and effect, the following: “‘I recommend this Southwest Corporate Center

3
             Hirschler Fleischer’s request that we take judicial notice of the private
placement memorandum is unnecessary, as the private placement memorandum and
related documents are already in the record and were treated like exhibits to the third
amended complaint by the trial court, without objection by plaintiffs.

                                                 4
tenant in common investment because it has been subjected to thorough due diligence
review, is designed and structured by experts for the tenants in common, offers long term
professional experienced management and leasing and will allow you to invest more of
your money in income producing property because the sales loads are less than 10%
while the taxes you will have to pay if you do not timely invest will be 15%.’”
               From December 2005 to March 2006, plaintiffs collectively invested
$5,050,000. But “[a]fter all undisclosed and misrepresented Sales Loads are considered,
only $3,780,000 was available for investment, resulting in true Sales Loads that exceeded
20%, i.e., a material increase” from the amount represented and “more than the 15%
capital gains tax sought to be deferred.” This true sales load was supposedly hidden by
way of a “double escrow.” Acquisitions acquired the Property in the first escrow, then
sold it to plaintiffs in the second escrow. The purchase agreement represented that
plaintiffs would each be responsible for only $3,500 in closing costs in connection with
this second escrow. This disclosure about the closing costs at the second closing misled
plaintiffs about the other components of the sales load they were actually paying.
               A lender foreclosed on the Property on an unspecified date and the
plaintiffs’ investment was lost. Plaintiffs allegedly discovered wrongdoing by defendants
in September 2012 (just before the filing of the initial complaint in November 2012).
The discovery occurred at this time because “experts in taxation and accounting reviewed
the record related to the discharge of indebtedness issue presented only by the
foreclosure.” Prior to this, plaintiffs “held no suspicion as to a possible fraud because
they received the described interest in the [P]roperty, the represented cash flow and
thought they had received the [Internal Revenue Code] Section 1031 benefit of deferred
capital gain taxes. Plaintiffs had no cause to review the bona fides of [the] Section 1031
deferred capital gains vehicle until the Property was foreclosed upon and plaintiffs sought
counsel for the negative implications of the tax reporting for a discharge of indebtedness
for the tax year of the foreclosure . . . .”

                                               5
Information Disclosed to Plaintiffs at Time of Investment
               Among other challenges to the third amended complaint, respondents
advanced a statute of limitations defense in their demurrers, based on the contention that
written disclosures provided to plaintiffs at the time of their investment (in particular, the
private placement memorandum) put plaintiffs on notice of the sales load and riskiness of
the investment.
               The first page of the private placement memorandum set forth the
highlights of the investment offering. Acquisitions expected to purchase the Property
from its prior owners for “$11,600,000, plus closing costs, financing costs, and related
transactional costs.” Acquisitions offered investors the opportunity to purchase tenancy-
in-common ownership interests in the Property. A 1 percent interest consisted of $50,500
of equity (i.e., cash), paired with a $81,200 share of debt. The maximum offering amount
was $5,050,000 of equity and $8,120,000 of debt (in the form of a nonrecourse loan to be
obtained by Acquisitions).
               Obviously, the “Investment Cost” ($13,170,000 — $5,050,000 equity plus
$8,120,000 debt) to be collected by defendants exceeded the purchase price of the
Property ($11,600,000). The first page of the summary of offering terms in the private
placement memorandum stated, “The Investment Cost consists of the purchase price of
$11,600,000 payable to the seller plus the costs described herein, including: (i) the
Acquisition Fee of $505,000 payable to Acquisitions for identifying and analyzing the
Property, negotiating the contract to purchase the Property and assigning the purchase
contract to the Purchasers; (ii) selling commissions and due diligence allowances;
(iii) organizational and offering expenses; (iv) loan costs and fees payable to the Lender;
(v) closing costs . . . ; (vi) working capital reserves . . . ; and (vii) $300,000 in reserves
which Acquisitions expects the Lender will withhold from Loan proceeds.”
               The private placement memorandum also included a detailed chart setting
forth the estimated use of investment proceeds, including a scenario in which the full

                                                6
                                                       4
$5,050,000 of “equity” was raised (as happened here). In this scenario: $3,780,000
                                                                   5
(74.9 percent) would be used as a down payment on the Property; $505,000 (10 percent)
would be used to pay an acquisition fee to Acquisitions; $353,500 (7 percent) would be
used to pay selling commissions; $138,800 (2.7 percent) would be held in reserve;
$126,250 (2.5 percent) would be used to pay loan fees, loan costs, and closing costs;
$95,950 (1.9 percent) would be used for organization and offering expenses; and $50,500
(1 percent) would be allocated for marketing and due diligence expenses.
              The chart did not, however, classify all of the expenses the same way.
Three categories of expenses (amounting to 9.9 percent) were subtracted from the gross
offering proceeds of $5,050,000, resulting in a line item (labeled “Available for
Investment”) of $4,550,050. Below this line, the remaining fees and expenses were
accounted for, including the down payment on the Property and the $505,000 fee paid to
Acquisitions. A footnote to the chart, emphasized by plaintiffs at oral argument, stated:
“Acquisitions will receive an Acquisition Fee of $505,000 (based on the Maximum
Offering Amount) for identifying and analyzing the Property, negotiating the contract to
purchase the Property, and assigning the contract to the Purchasers. . . . Acquisitions will
defer any unpaid portion of the Acquisition Fee if the Maximum Offering Amount is not
raised. Therefore, the value of the Property and the related proceeds to be raised in this
offering should be considered increased by this additional cost.” (Italics added.)
              In the section of the private placement memorandum discussing risk
factors, the following disclosure was made: “Acquisitions intends to purchase the
Property for $11,600,000, plus closing costs, financing costs, and related transactional
and offering costs. . . . The purchase price for the [investments] is determined
4
              We include a copy of this chart as an appendix to this opinion.
5
             The $3,780,000 down payment, paired with the $8,120,000 loan, equals
$11,900,000 (the $11.6 million purchase price, plus the $300,000 lender reserve
mentioned above).

                                             7
unilaterally by Acquisitions and [a related company]. The purchase price likely does not
reflect the current market value of the Property and is not based on an arms length
negotiation with the [investors] or supported by an appraisal of the Property. In fact, the
total purchase price for the [investments] will be significantly higher than the price to be
paid by Acquisitions in its acquisition of the Property from the Seller. Based on the
foregoing, the [investors] should not, therefore, anticipate or expect that the price paid for
their investment is reflective of the fair market value of the Property on a stand-alone
basis. The [investors] are, however, acquiring their [investments] based on the existence
of the financing and the Management Agreement and the management expertise provided
thereunder by the Property Manager. Nevertheless, there is no evidence that such
additional rights support the increase in the purchase price.”
              By signing their purchase agreements, plaintiffs acknowledged their receipt
and review of the confidential private placement memorandum, which made clear the
investment was only being offered to accredited investors. The confidential private
placement memorandum repeatedly warned potential investors about the risks inherent to
an investment in the Property. We quote a few representative examples. “THE
INTERESTS AND INVESTOR UNITS OFFERED HEREBY ARE HIGHLY
SPECULATIVE. AN INVESTMENT IN THE INTERESTS OR INVESTOR
UNITS INVOLVES SUBSTANTIAL INVESTMENT AND TAX RISKS.” “THE
PURCHASE OF INTERESTS AND INVESTOR UNITS INVOLVES
SIGNIFICANT RISKS. INVESTORS MUST READ AND CAREFULLY
CONSIDER THE DISCUSSION SET FORTH BELOW IN ‘RISK FACTORS.’”
“PURCHASE OF THE INTERESTS AND INVESTOR UNITS IS SUITABLE
ONLY FOR PERSONS OF SUBSTANTIAL MEANS WHO HAVE NO NEED
FOR LIQUIDITY IN THEIR INVESTMENT.”

                                              8
                                        DISCUSSION

              The court sustained the demurrers at issue on statute of limitations grounds.
Our de novo review of the orders “is limited to issues which have been adequately raised
and supported in [appellants’ opening] brief.” (Reyes v. Kosha (1998) 65 Cal. App. 4th
451, 466, fn. 6; see McGettigan v. Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist. (1997) 57 Cal. App. 4th
1011, 1016, fn. 4.)
              Applicable California statutes of limitations in this case range from one to
four years. (See Code Civ. Proc., §§ 338, subds. (c) [conversion, three years], (d) [fraud,
three years], 340.6 [action against attorney, one year after discovery or four year limit],
343 [claim not provided for, including nonfraudulent breach of fiduciary duty, four
years].) To the extent they might apply, Arizona statutes of limitations are within the
same range. (See Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 12-543 [three years, fraud]; Mohave Elec. Coop. v.
Byers (Ariz.Ct.App. 1997) 189 Ariz. 292, 310 [two years, breach of fiduciary duty].)
Plaintiffs’ briefs do not identify the applicable statutes of limitations or contest the notion
that the longest potentially applicable statute of limitations in this case is four years.
              Plaintiffs purchased their interests in the Property in late 2005 to early
2006. The initial complaint was not filed until November 2012. The only argument
plaintiffs make on appeal is that the court should have applied the delayed discovery rule
to postpone accrual of the statute of limitations. “By their reliance on the ‘discovery
rule,’ plaintiffs concede by implication that, without it, their claims are barred by one or
more statutes of limitations.” (McKelvey v. Boeing North American, Inc. (1999) 74
Cal. App. 4th 151, 160, superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in Grisham v.
Philip Morris U.S.A., Inc. (2007) 40 Cal. 4th 623, 637, fn. 8.) Unless the discovery rule
applies, the statute of limitations began running when plaintiffs made what they now
deem to be unsuitable investments, paid what they now deem to be an unreasonable (and
undisclosed) “sales load,” and had in their possession documents disclosing the

                                               9
downsides of the investment (e.g., the risks of the investment and the expenses beyond
the acquisition price of the Property). As stated in their reply brief, plaintiffs “do not
                                                                              6
argue that an injury was not suffered when [they] made their investment.”
              “An important exception to the general rule of accrual is the ‘discovery
rule,’ which postpones accrual of a cause of action until the plaintiff discovers, or has
reason to discover, the cause of action.” (Fox v. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. (2005) 35
Cal. 4th 797, 807.) “The discovery rule only delays accrual until the plaintiff has, or
should have, inquiry notice of the cause of action.” (Ibid.) A plaintiff relying on the
discovery rule must plead “‘(1) the time and manner of discovery and (2) the inability to
have made earlier discovery despite reasonable diligence.’” (Id. at p. 808.) Plaintiffs
have an obligation to plead facts demonstrating reasonable diligence. (Ibid.
[“‘conclusory allegations will not withstand demurrer’”].)
              “Where a fiduciary obligation is present, the courts have recognized a
postponement of the accrual of the cause of action until the beneficiary has knowledge or
notice of the act constituting a breach of fidelity. [Citations.] The existence of a trust
relationship limits the duty of inquiry. ‘Thus, when a potential plaintiff is in a fiduciary
relationship with another individual, that plantiff’s burden of discovery is reduced and he
is entitled to rely on the statements and advice provided by the fiduciary.’” (Eisenbaum
v. Western Energy Resources, Inc. (1990) 218 Cal. App. 3d 314, 324.) But, even assuming
for the sake of argument that each of the respondents had a fiduciary duty to plaintiffs,
6
               Receipt of investment disclosures can trigger the statute of limitations in
appropriate cases. (See, e.g., Dodds v. Cigna Securities Inc. (2d Cir. 1993) 12 F.3d 346,
347 [“when an investor is provided prospectuses that disclose that certain investments are
risky and illiquid, she is on notice for purposes of triggering the statute of limitations that
several such investments might be inappropriate in a conservative portfolio”]; Calvi v.
Prudential Secs. (C.D.Cal. 1994) 861 F. Supp. 69, 71 [“the statute of limitations begins to
run when a plaintiff should have discovered the alleged fraud, and . . . the receipt of a
prospectus disclosing risks puts a plaintiff on notice of any misrepresentations or fraud
concerning those risks”].)

                                              10
this does not mean that plaintiffs had no duty of inquiry if they were put on notice of a
breach of such duty. (See Miller v. Bechtel Corp. (1983) 33 Cal. 3d 868, 874-875.)
              Plaintiffs argue the statute of limitations only began running when they
consulted with tax and accounting experts in September 2012. The problem with this
position is that the private placement memorandum provided to plaintiffs prior to their
investments clearly disclosed the fees, expenses, and commissions that would be paid out
of their cash investments, as well as the risky nature of the investments. These were
illiquid, unregistered securities, which were only made available to accredited investors.
Reasonable diligence in such circumstances does not consist of ignoring a private
placement memorandum received prior to making an investment. (See Casualty Ins. Co.
v. Rees Investment Co. (1971) 14 Cal. App. 3d 716, 719-720 [tenant plaintiff failed to
plead reasonable diligence in discovering unfair terms of lease in its possession]; Marlow
v. Gold (S.D.N.Y., June 13, 1991, No. 89 Civ. 8589) 1991 U.S.Dist. Lexis 8106, p. *27
[“plaintiff abrogated his duty of inquiry of reasonable diligence by recklessly failing to
familiarize himself with the prospectus”].) This is not a case in which the plaintiff
“possessed no factual basis for suspicion.” (E-Fab, Inc. v. Accountants, Inc. Services
(2007) 153 Cal. App. 4th 1308, 1326.) The information and disclosures in the private
placement memorandum put plaintiffs on notice of the falsity of any communications
they may have received about the sales load, tax advantages, or risk-free nature of the
investments. The delayed discovery rule does not apply.
              According to plaintiffs, there is an issue of fact as to whether they were on
notice of the full sales load because of potentially misleading disclosures in the private
                          7
placement memorandum. For instance, the chart in the private placement memorandum

7
               The case law cited by plaintiffs on this point (e.g., Boschma v. Home Loan
Center, Inc. (2011) 198 Cal. App. 4th 230, 249) addresses the question of whether parties
sufficiently pleaded fraud. Plaintiffs do not cite authority holding that parties who ignore
or misunderstand written warnings and thorough (if complex) disclosures in their
possession may thereby delay the accrual of the statute of limitations.

                                             11
estimating the use of investment proceeds does not classify the $505,000 fee paid to
Acquisitions as a cost to investors in the same way as selling commissions or
organization and offering expenses. And the footnote emphasized by plaintiffs can
arguably be read to suggest that the $505,000 fee somehow increased the value of the
Property, though this potential implication was specifically disclaimed elsewhere in the
private placement memorandum. But it cannot be denied that the entire sales load,
including the $505,000 fee, was disclosed to plaintiffs in the private placement
memorandum. The payment of these fees was the alleged harm suffered by plaintiffs.
One can certainly question, particularly in retrospect, the value of the services provided
by Acquisitions and the reasonableness of the total sales load. But the only issue here is
whether plaintiffs were on notice of the total sales load and the risks of the investment.
They were.
              Plaintiffs also point out that they did not receive a clear explanation of the
“sales load” for their specific investment (i.e., a dollar breakdown), or even an
explanation of the “sales load” for each one percent investment share. But the
disclosures made clear that the total investment costs significantly exceeded the expected
costs of acquiring the Property and set forth the percentage of the cash raised from
investors that would be used for various expenses. This was sufficient to put plaintiffs on
notice that the “sales load” exceeded the capital gains tax rate. This is not akin to a
situation in which a party relies on the statements of a fiduciary about, for instance, the
legality of a complicated transaction. (Eisenbaum v. Western Energy Resources, Inc.,
supra, 218 Cal.App.3d at pp. 320, 324-325.) Plaintiffs only needed the private placement
memorandum and a calculator to obtain the information they now deem essential.
              In sum, plaintiffs failed in their effort to plead the applicability of the
delayed discovery rule. Moreover, we see no viable way for plaintiffs to adequately

                                              12
plead the discovery rule. The court correctly sustained respondents’ demurrer to the third
                                            8
amended complaint without leave to amend.

                                     DISPOSITION

             The judgments are affirmed. Hirschler Fleischer’s request for judicial
notice is denied. Defendants shall recover costs incurred on appeal.

                                                 IKOLA, J.

WE CONCUR:

RYLAARSDAM, ACTING P. J.

ARONSON, J.

8
              Each of the respondents’ briefs includes arguments in the alternative for
affirming the judgments. As we agree with the court’s stated reason for sustaining the
respondents’ demurrers, we need not address the respondents’ backup arguments.

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