Court Opinion

ID: 4677441
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-14 23:02:30.230959+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:03:38.394031
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/14/21 Rael & Letson v. Clark CA1/4

                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or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

                                      FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION FOUR

 RAEL & LETSON,
           Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                                                        A159255
 v.
 MICHAEL CLARK et al.,                                                  (San Mateo County
                                                                        Super. Ct. No. CIV523065)
           Defendants and Respondents.

         Rael & Letson (R&L or the company) brought this action against
defendants Michael Clark and the Clark Family Partnership (CFP), alleging
Clark, the company’s chief executive officer (CEO), misappropriated more
than $3,000,000 in company funds under the guise of business expenses.
Most of the R&L’s causes of action were presented to a jury, but the court
decided R&L’s cause of action for breach of the duty of loyalty. In an earlier
appeal, we concluded the trial court had misinterpreted the jury verdict, and
additionally directed the court to reconsider the measure of damages for the
cause of action for breach of Clark’s duty of loyalty to the company. (Rael &
Letson v. Clark (Nov. 20, 2018, A150322) [nonpub. opn.] (Rael & Letson I).)
In the current appeal, R&L contends the trial court violated our remand
instructions and erred in denying certain damages. We agree with R&L in
two respects only, and shall modify the amended judgment accordingly.

                                                               1
              FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
   A. Factual Background
       1. Ownership of R&L
       We begin by quoting at length from our opinion in Rael & Letson I:1
“R&L provides actuarial services for public employers and multi-employer
trust funds in connection with their pension and health and welfare plans.
Clark is an actuary, and he began working for R&L in 1969. He acquired all
of the company’s stock by 1986, after the retirement of Edward Letson and
the death of Juan Rael, two of its founders. He was its sole shareholder until
2003. . . .
       “In 2003, Clark sold 75 percent of his shares in R&L to its employees,
through a trust (the ESOT, or the trust) for $7,706,250, in what is referred to
as the ESOP (employee stock ownership plan) transaction. To finance the
purchase, the ESOP entered into a promissory note (the ESOT promissory
note), which included interest paid to Clark. Clark remained CEO and
director of the company until 2013. Clark’s employment with R&L was
suspended in April 2013, after the company learned he had misappropriated
its funds.
       2. The Financial Transactions
       “R&L’s bookkeeper, Celeste Koski, was responsible for writing checks
to pay bills. She reported to Clark and acted at his direction. It was Koski’s
understanding that Clark was the only person who managed R&L’s cash

       1 We take judicial notice of the appellate record in Rael & Letson I.
Additions or alterations to the quoted portion of our opinion in Rael & Letson
I are in brackets. Deletions are indicated by ellipses. Because we are
deleting discussions of transactions not at issue in this appeal, the
numbering of some of the sections is different than it was in the original. A
fuller summary of the facts is found in our prior opinion.

                                       2
flow. Beginning in 2007, R&L used the QuickBooks accounting program,
which prompted Koski to record checks in certain categories, such as office
supplies, travel, medical, or entertainment. If Koski was uncertain which
category to apply, she would seek guidance from Clark or R&L’s chief
financial officer, Jim Rhein. Clark would give Koski bills that he wanted her
to pay and direct her to write the checks, telling her how he wanted them to
be categorized. For instance, on one occasion, Clark asked Koski to write a
check for $13,120.68 to Bank of America and charge it to ‘travel other.’2 At
Clark’s direction, Koski made payments into Clark’s personal Vanguard
investment account and that of his family partnership, and paid Clark’s
personal credit cards bills and charges for his home utilities, airplanes, and
car. Koski did not see backup documentation for the expenses Clark
submitted for reimbursement, and Clark did not seek approval from anyone
else.
        “Two new trustees, Paul Graf and Alexandra Willson (the trustees),
were appointed in May 2012. They hired a new financial consultant, a firm
called Chartwell.
        “Chartwell asked for a report showing how much R&L had paid each of
its vendors, and R&L’s chief operating officer, Heidi Hagler, requested and
received such a report. After reviewing it, she became concerned that some of
the expenses, such as payments to a country club and to Clark’s personal
credit card, might not be proper.
        “Hagler investigated further and found that Clark had given Koski
invoices for different vendors. He directed her to account for them in the

       “R&L’s 2012 balance sheet had multiple subcategories for individual
        2

employees’ travel, including ‘Travel—Clark, Mike,’ as well as a final,
apparently catch-all, category of ‘Travel—Other.’ . . .

                                       3
categories of travel, employee benefits, and education conferences, and in
some cases the expenses had been deducted from income. She reported the
matter to R&L’s board of directors (the board), and on April 18, 2013, the
board removed Clark as CEO and suspended his employment with pay.
      “The board also authorized an independent forensic accounting of
R&L’s books and records from 2003 to 2013. R&L engaged John Kawamoto,
a certified public accountant, for this task in April 2013. He found
approximately $900,000 in payments made during 2011 and 2012 that
appeared to be questionable or fraudulent. Many of these transactions had
little or no supporting documentation and were for large dollar amounts. It
appeared to Kawamoto that Clark was using these funds for his personal use.
He reported his preliminary findings to the board, which terminated Clark’s
employment.
      “Kawamoto continued his investigation to include the years back to
2004, just after the ESOP bought a share of R&L. For the years 2004
through 2013, he found a total of $3,633,872 in charges that appeared to be
used for Michael Clark’s personal activities rather than legitimate business
expenses (the upper range). He also calculated a lower range, which assumed
that some of the charges reflected reasonable business expenses; the total for
the lower range was $3,194,129. For the period beginning in 2007, when
R&L began using QuickBooks, he calculated the upper range total as
$3,178,106 and the lower range total as $2,994,336.
      “These charges fell into several categories: aviation expenses; country
club dues and related charges; rent overpayments; offset of income; interest
overpayments; and a more general category of ‘Wine, Food, Gas, Phone,
Medical, Furniture, Vacations, Residence, . . . , Cars, etc.’ [We summarize
here the charges pertinent to the issues in this appeal.]

                                       4
            a. Aviation
      “Clark, who had a pilot’s license, had owned a Piper Malibu airplane
since 1990. He had homes in Woodside, California, and La Quinta,
California, and he stored the Piper in [hangars] convenient to R&L’s Foster
City offices and his Southern California residence. He charged costs related
to the Piper to R&L, including fuel, landing and takeoff fees, insurance, and
[hangar] costs, as well as his annual training for his pilot’s license.
      “Clark used the Piper for company travel up and down the West Coast.
He testified that when he first got his pilot’s license in 1980, Juan Rael
suggested to him that he use his license for business purposes. After the
ESOP transaction, Clark did not get approval from the board for continuing
to charge these expenses to the company; however, everyone in the company
knew he had a plane and many employees flew with him to business
meetings. He used the Piper to fly from his La Quinta home, where he lived
nine months of the year, to the company’s office in Foster City and to meet
with clients in the Bay Area. Clark testified that flying privately was an
efficient use of time; he could get to Sacramento in 18 minutes and to Fresno
in 40 minutes. He also testified that he did not use the Piper for personal
travel between the time of the ESOP transaction and the termination of his
employment.
      “Clark owned a 1/16 ownership interest in a second airplane, which he
purchased from Avantair in 2007 for $415,000. He also paid a management
fee, which included 50 hours of flight time per year; the fee in 2007 was
$116,362.56. He directed Koski to pay an amount equivalent to the
management fee and—over the course of several years—the cost of acquiring
the Avantair airplane to an account owned by CFP. Clark directed Koski to

                                        5
pay Avantair directly for fuel-related charges, providing redacted invoices
and having the charges categorized as ‘travel other,’ ‘educational expenses,’
or ‘employee benefits.’ No R&L employee other than Clark used the Avantair
plane, and he did not disclose to the board that CFP owned the plane and he
was having R&L pay for it. R&L paid approximately $801,000, either
directly to Avantair or to CFP for charges relating to the Avantair plane.
            b. Country Clubs
      “R&L paid all or part of Clark’s dues and fees for five golf or country
clubs, four in the La Quinta area and the Peninsula Golf and Country Club
(PGCC) in San Mateo. Clark’s membership at the PGCC was a family
membership, and he and his wife both incurred expenses there, including
locker room charges, food, and drinks, which R&L paid at Clark’s direction.
The charges at one of the other clubs[, the Hideaway,] included many items
for Clark’s wife, such as a cooking class, spa treatments, and haircuts.
Kawamoto calculated the total club charges that were personal in nature
during the post-ESOP period to be $295,745.
      “Clark testified that when he joined the PGCC in 1976, Rael told him
the company would pay the monthly club fees as long as Clark paid for the
membership. After the ESOP transaction, Clark did not disclose to the board
that R&L was paying his golf club membership dues and expenses. [¶] . . . [¶]
            c. Overpaid Rent
      “R&L entered into a ten-year lease on its office in Foster City in April
2006, personally guaranteed by Clark. Rather than having R&L pay the rent
directly to the landlord, Clark directed Koski to pay funds for ‘rent’ into
CFP’s Vanguard account, and used those funds to pay the rent due to the
landlord. Kawamoto’s investigation showed that the amount deposited into
CFP’s account exceeded the amount due under the lease by a total of

                                        6
$632,606. Clark testified that he kept the excess rent because he had
negotiated a good deal on the property, and because he ‘thought [h]e should
get something’ to compensate him for the personal guarantee. He did not
disclose to the board that he was collecting more for rent than was due to the
landlord. [¶] . . . [¶]
              d.     Interest Overpayments
       “R&L made the installment payments on the ESOT promissory note
directly into Clark’s personal Vanguard account. Between 2007 and 2011,
R&L paid Clark $136,243 more than was due [under] the note. There was no
indication anyone other than Clark directed the overpayments.
              e.     Other Charges
       “Kawamoto also identified a series of other improper or questionable
expenditures.
       “At Clark’s direction, R&L paid his personal credit card bills in full.
The credit card bills included charges for items such as dry cleaning,
gasoline, grocery stores, department stores, wine transactions of hundreds of
dollars each, television service, cable, appliances, medical services,
prescription drugs, a jewelry store, termite and pest services, a pool and patio
vendor, pizza, a hardware store, and a garage door vendor. [On occasion,
Clark paid the credit card bills himself and directed R&L to reimburse him
through his personal Vanguard account.]
       “Clark had some of the wine purchases categorized as ‘office supplies.’
He testified that it was his practice to give bottles of wine as gifts to clients,
but he acknowledged that he might have used some of the wine personally.
       “Clark had R&L . . . pay thousands of dollars for medical services,
including concierge medical services for himself and his wife, that were not
covered by the company’s medical insurance plan. He testified that R&L had

                                         7
a longstanding policy of paying uninsured medical expenses, but he did not
disclose to the board that he continued to charge medical expenses to the
company after the ESOP transaction. Trustee Willson denied that R&L had
such a policy.
      “At Clark’s direction, R&L paid for Clark, his wife, his son, his
daughter-in-law, and his granddaughter to travel to Hawaii and stay at a
resort for a week, at a total cost of almost $20,000. Clark and his son met
with two prospective clients while he was in Hawaii. He testified he brought
his family with him because he thought the prospective clients were also
bringing their families and he expected to socialize with them, but their
families did not accompany them. Also, Clark’s son, an architect, had
previously worked with the prospective clients. Clark did not tell anyone on
R&L’s board that he was bringing his family on the trip.
      “Clark went to London to play in a golf tournament. He did not recall
whether he disclosed to anyone on the board that R&L would be paying for
the trip. He testified that he participated at the invitation of a Canadian
prospective client, and he thought of the trip as a business opportunity.
      “Clark had R&L pay the lease payments for his cars, as well as $28,011
for the purchase price of a BMW at the end of a lease.
      “R&L also paid various other personal expenses for Clark, including
residential water services, utilities, phone service, and window washing.
      “Kawamoto calculated that R&L paid $1,127,823 for the category
‘Wine, Food, Gas, Phone, Medical, Furniture, Vacations, Residence, . . . ,
Cars, Etc.’ His ‘lower range’ estimate was $810,174.
   B. Procedural History
      “R&L brought this action against Clark, his wife Susan Clark, and
CFP, alleging several causes of action. By the time of trial, R&L had

                                       8
dismissed its causes of action against Susan Clark. Causes of action for
breach of fiduciary duty and breach of the duty of loyalty against Clark, and
for fraudulent concealment, fraudulent misrepresentation, and money had
and received against Clark and CFP, proceeded to trial. The cause of action
for breach of the duty of loyalty was tried to the court, and all other causes of
action received a simultaneous jury trial.
      “The jury found in favor of R&L on all causes of action. It awarded
damages of $1,672,845 against Clark and $1,267,129 against CFP. The court
interpreted the verdict to reflect a total award of $1,672,845 against both
defendants, rather than separate awards against them for a total of
$2,939,974.
      “The trial court issued a statement of decision regarding the cause of
action against Clark for breach of the duty of loyalty. . . . The court found he
had breached the duty in only two respects: the charges for the purchase and
use of the Avantair private jet, and excess rent on R&L’s office building. The
court characterized the remaining expenses as ‘luxurious “old school”
business practices,’ and concluded Clark did not breach his duty of loyalty in
incurring them. The court stated its award of $1,433,646 was ‘concurrent,
duplicative, and less than the monetary damages awarded by the jury
verdicts on the identical evidence, and is not in addition to those amounts.’
      “The court therefore entered judgment against Clark and CFP for
$1,267,129 jointly and severally, and in the additional amount of $405,716
against Clark only. The court awarded prejudgment interest only for the
period after the verdict.” The jury rendered its verdict on November 19,
2015, and the court entered judgment on October 3, 2016, and, after ruling on
posttrial motions, entered an amended judgment on December 6, 2016.

                                        9
      After this factual summary in Rael & Letson I, we reached several legal
conclusions. First, we concluded the trial court erred in interpreting the jury
verdict, and that the verdict, properly understood, awarded a total of
$2,939,974 in damages against Clark, with CFP jointly and severally liable
for $1,267,129 of that amount. Next, we concluded that the trial court
properly denied prejudgment interest on the jury award because the verdict
might have already included interest, but that it erred in denying
prejudgment interest on the court’s own award of damages for breach of the
duty of loyalty because those damages were sufficiently certain to support
such an award. Finally, we ruled the evidence did not support a conclusion
that Clark’s “ ‘old school’ ” expenditures were all undertaken to further R&L’s
interests rather than his own, nor that the board implicitly authorized these
expenditures.
      We therefore directed the court to make findings as to which of the
challenged expenses were incurred in violation of Clark’s duty of loyalty, to
award appropriate damages, and to determine whether those damages were
sufficiently ascertainable to support an award of prejudgment interest. We
explained that the director owes a corporation a fiduciary duty of loyalty,
under which “ ‘a director cannot, at the expense of the corporation, make an
unfair profit from his position. He is precluded from receiving any personal
advantage without fullest disclosure to and consent of all those affected.’
(Remillard Brick Co. v. Remillard-Dandini (1952) 109 Cal.App.2d 405, 419
(Remillard), italics added.)” Our disposition directed the trial court to
recalculate both damages for the breach Clark’s duty of loyalty and
prejudgment interest on the award, and to modify the judgment to reflect
either the correct jury verdict or a larger award from the trial court.

                                       10
        Upon remand, the trial court issued an order stating that it would issue
a postappeal statement of decision based on the evidence already presented
at trial, without the necessity of a hearing.
        The trial court issued its “Proposed Amendment to Statement of
Decision on Court Issue After Trial” in April 2019, awarding R&L $3,950,784,
calculated as actual damages of $2,578,536 plus seven percent prejudgment
interest of $1,372,249 and, after further proceedings, a “Final Amendment” to
the statement of decision on October 10, 2019. The court awarded
prejudgment interest totaling more than $900,000 for the previously awarded
Avantair and excess rent charges. It also awarded additional damages for
Clark’s breach of fiduciary duty, e.g., for having R&L pay for his personal
credit card charges, personal medical care for him and his wife, personal
vehicle expenses, personal phone bills, residential utility bills and window
washing, country club dues and expenses, other miscellaneous personal
expenses, and a large portion of the Piper airplane charges. The court
declined to award damages for overpayments on the ESOT promissory note,
and awarded no damages for the period from 2004 to 2006, before R&L began
using QuickBooks.
        After correcting a computational error to increase the award for the
Piper airplane charges by $6,250 and denying R&L’s motion for a new trial,
the court issued an “Amended Judgment” awarding damages against Clark of
$4,035,581, as to which CFP was jointly and severally liable for $1,267,129.
R&L has appealed from this judgment.
                                 DISCUSSION
   I.      Calculation of Postjudgment Interest
        The first question we face is whether R&L is entitled to postjudgment
interest from the date of the original judgment or from the date of entry of

                                       11
the amended judgment. The resolution of this question will depend on
whether the trial court’s action in response to Rael & Letson I was in effect a
modification or a new judgment after a reversal. (See Chodos v. Borman
(2015) 239 Cal.App.4th 707, 712 (Chodos).) The date from which
postjudgment interest should run is a question of law, which we review de
novo. (Ibid., citing Roden v. AmerisourceBergen Corp. (2010) 186 Cal.App.4th
620, 658.)
      The trial court’s judgment after the remand calculated prejudgment
interest at seven percent per year on the items subject to prejudgment
interest, through the time of the amended judgment. R&L contends
prejudgment interest should be awarded only through the time of the original
2016 judgment, and that interest after that time should be treated as
postjudgment interest, which carries a ten percent annual rate. (Code Civ.
Proc., § 685.010, subd. (a); cf., Civ. Code, § 3287, subd. (c) [prejudgment
interest no more than 7 percent].)
      R&L bases its argument on the wording of the disposition in Rael &
Letson I, which provided: “The judgment is reversed. On remand, the trial
court is directed, consistent with the views expressed in this opinion, to (1)
recalculate damages for the breach of Clark’s duty of loyalty, (2) recalculate
prejudgment interest on that award, and (3) modify the judgment to reflect
either a jury verdict making a damage award of $2,939,974 against Clark,
with CFP jointly and severally liable for $1,267,129 of that amount, or a
larger total award from the trial court.” Thus, R&L contends, the trial court
was authorized only to modify, not to amend, the original judgment. The
trial court rejected this argument, ruling, “[a]s the original decision was
reversed and remanded with instructions, the old judgment is no longer

                                       12
viable, the jury verdict is not the basis of calculation of the damages for the
new judgment, and an Amended Judgment will be entered.”
      A judgment bears interest from the date of its entry in the trial court,
even though it is still subject to attack on appeal. (Chodos, supra, 239
Cal.App.4th at p. 712; Code Civ. Proc., § 685.020.) “When a judgment is
modified on appeal, whether upward or downward, the new sum draws
interest from the date of entry of the original order, not from the date of the
new judgment. [Citations.] On the other hand, when a judgment is reversed
on appeal, the new award subsequently entered by the trial court can bear
interest only from the date of entry of such new judgment.” (Stockton
Theatres, Inc. v. Palermo (1961) 55 Cal.2d 439, 442–443, italics added; accord,
Munoz v. City of Union City (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 199, 203 (Munoz).)
      Whether an appellate disposition constitutes a reversal or a
modification—and hence, the date on which postjudgment interest begins to
run—“depends on ‘the substance of the order’ and not ‘mere formalism.’ ”
(Munoz, supra, 173 Cal.App.4th at p. 203.) An order of an appellate court “is
‘a reversal in the legal sense’ when it reverses the trial court and remands an
issue to the trial court for further hearing and factfinding necessary to the
resolution of the issue forming a basis for appeal.” (Chodos, supra, 239
Cal.App.4th at p. 713.) But where “an order stated in terms of reversal
amends a trial court order on remand to ‘state what it should have stated on
th[e] date’ of the original order, it is ‘in law and in fact, a modification.’ ”
(Ibid.)
      Applying this rule, our high court in Snapp v. State Farm Fire &
Casualty Co. (1964) 60 Cal.2d 816, 817–820 held that where a trial court’s
judgment holding an insurer liable for only a portion of the policy amount
was reversed on appeal with directions to enter judgment in the amount of

                                         13
the policy limit, interest on the resulting award should run from the date of
the original award. The court explained, “The legal effect of that reversal
was to determine that as of the date of the original judgment plaintiffs were
entitled to $25,000. Thus the original judgment was increased from
$8,168.25 to $25,000, based solely on the record then before the appellate
court. No issues remained to be determined. No further evidence was
necessary. Thus the so-called ‘reversal’ with directions, was, in fact and in
law, a ‘modification.’ ” (Id. at p. 820, italics added.)
      The rule that we look to the substance and effect of an order to
determine when postjudgment interest begins to run has been applied
consistently. In Munoz, the court concluded a modification, rather than a
reversal, took place where the appellate court reversed a judgment and
directed the trial court to enter a new judgment based on the jury’s original
calculation, noting that “there was no factual determination to be made, no
prerequisite to be satisfied before liability could be allocated properly,” and
concluding that “[s]ince the plaintiffs’ entitlement to recovery was established
by the original judgment,” postjudgment interest ran from the date of that
judgment. (Munoz, supra, 173 Cal.App.4th at pp. 206–207; see also Ehret v.
Congoleum Corp. (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th 202, 204, 210 [appellate decision
reinstating original jury verdict and calculating offsets based on original jury
verdict treated as modification rather than reversal]; Espinoza v. Rossini
(1967) 257 Cal.App.2d 567, 568, 573 [where trial court granted JNOV after
judgment was entered on jury verdict, and appellate court subsequently
reversed with direction to enter judgment in amount of jury verdict, interest
ran from time of original judgment].) As explained in Lucky United
Properties Investment, Inc. v. Lee (2013) 213 Cal.App.4th 635, interest begins
to accrue when the trial court “fixes the amount due or errs in fixing the

                                         14
amount due but that error is corrected on appeal without the need for further
factfinding in the trial court. When, on the other hand, the amount due is not
and cannot be fixed until after further factfinding on remand from appellate
review, interest does not accrue until the final determination is made. In
either case, it is the correct fixing of the amount of the award that triggers the
accrual of interest.” (Id. at p. 654, italics added.)
      These authorities persuade us that the trial court correctly concluded
postjudgment interest began to accrue only upon entry of the amended
judgment after remand. As pertinent to this issue, our opinion in Rael &
Letson I concluded two things: (1) the jury’s verdict reflected an award of
$2,939,974, and (2) the trial court must make new findings as to which
expenses were incurred in violation of Clark’s duty to loyalty and award
prejudgment interest for such damages that were sufficiently ascertainable.
To that end, we reversed the judgment and directed the trial court to make
those calculations. The trial court engaged in the factfinding we mandated
and, having reached a sum that was greater than the jury verdict, awarded
the larger amount in damages. These facts fall squarely within the rule that
postjudgment interest accrues from the date the amount due is fixed—in this
case, from the time of the amended judgment after remand.
      Against this conclusion, R&L points out that in Rael & Letson I, after
reversing the judgment we directed the trial court to “modify the judgment to
reflect” either the correct jury verdict or a larger award from the court.
(Italics added.) This argument might have more force if the trial court’s
award on remand was less than the amount of the correct jury verdict, which
would have resulted in an award of $2,939,974, the amount fixed by the jury.
But although our disposition employed the term “modify,” the substance of
what the trial court did was to make an award that was different from, and

                                         15
greater than, the original judgment, as we authorized. In the circumstances,
the trial court correctly concluded that interest did not accrue until, after
additional factfinding, the court fixed the amount due.
         In reaching this conclusion, we acknowledge that, as R&L points out,
the amount of actual damages the trial court calculated on remand,
$2,578,535.53, was less than the award calculated by the jury, and the reason
the trial court’s award of $4,035,580.86 was greater than the jury award was
the addition of prejudgment interest measured up to the date of the amended
judgment. R&L argues that the comparison of the two awards must be based
on the same date; that is, according to R&L, in deciding the amount of the
award, the trial court should have calculated the value of the actual damages
and prejudgment interest as of the date the jury made its award. This
contention is unpersuasive. First, R&L makes no showing that the trial
court’s amended award would have been smaller than the jury award even if
it had included prejudgment interest only through the time of the jury award,
an outcome we will not assume in light of the relatively small difference
between the court and jury awards and the extended length of time since
Clark’s wrongful acts began. In any case, the fact remains that the trial court
did not make its larger award on the same date the jury did; nor did it on
that date find the facts necessary to support the larger award it subsequently
made. Rather, it engaged in additional factfinding after remand and
rendered an award at that time.
   II.      Damages for Pre-QuickBooks Period
         The trial court declined to award damages for breach of Clark’s duty of
loyalty during the period between the ESOT transaction in 2003 and the
adoption of the QuickBooks accounting program in 2007 (the “pre-
QuickBooks period”). It cited several factors driving that decision: the

                                        16
evidence showed that R&L had preserved its financial records only from 2007
onward, its previous records having been lost, destroyed, or deleted; R&L had
no audited or independently prepared financial statements from before 2007;
Kawamoto had never before served as a forensic expert at trial; and R&L’s
“financial record keeping was shoddy and its financial oversight nonexistent”
in the pre-Quickbooks era. The court explained that R&L had “attempted to
cobble together potential losses in prior years, in various fashions: based
upon some source documents, extrapolations on what expenses were charged
in later years, [a] theory of percentage of revenue based upon later years,
assumption[s] of past conduct based upon subsequent conduct, etc.” The
evidence, the court found, was “speculative, hypothetical, inconclusive, and
not meeting the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence.”
      R&L contends the trial court erred in declining to award damages for
the pre-QuickBooks period for his dues and expenses for two country clubs,
and for charges to two credit cards: Piper airplane-related expenses on his
“WorldPoints” credit card and miscellaneous personal expenses on his
“Alaska Airlines” credit card. The parties agree on the standard of review for
such a challenge. Where the trier of fact has concluded that the party with
the burden of proof did not carry that burden, the question in an appeal
challenging that finding is “ ‘whether the evidence compels a finding in favor
of the appellant as a matter of law. [Citations.] Specifically, the question
becomes whether the appellant’s evidence was (1) “uncontradicted and
unimpeached” and (2) “of such a character and weight as to leave no room for
a judicial determination that it was insufficient to support a finding.” ’ ”
(Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream, Inc. v. County of Kern (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th
828, 838 (Dreyer’s).) We review all factual matters in the light most favorable
to the prevailing party and in support of the judgment. (Ibid.)

                                        17
Country Club Charges
      Clark testified at trial that since the time of the ESOP transaction, it
was his regular practice to have R&L pay all his dues and expenses for at
least two of his country clubs, PGCC and the Hideaway.3 Based on his
review of the records these clubs provided through discovery, Kawamoto
calculated that the payments for the years 2004 through 2006 totaled
$64,924.08. The records include invoices and an enumeration of the expenses
Clark incurred from 2003 through 2013. In light of Clark’s own admission
and this documentary evidence, which Clark makes no effort to challenge or
impeach, we conclude the evidence shows unambiguously both the amount of
the charges and the fact that R&L paid them. The trial court concluded all of
the country club charges calculated by Kawamoto for the QuickBooks period
were incurred in breach of Clark’s duty of loyalty, and there is no basis for a
different conclusion as to the charges in the earlier period. The trial court
erred in failing to award damages for this period. Because Clark has made
no effort to challenge Kawamoto’s calculation here, we conclude the amount
of the award for charges at PGCC and the Hideaway for the pre-QuickBooks
period should have been $64,924.08.
Credit Card Charges
      R&L also contends the trial court improperly denied damages for
charges on the WorldPoints and Alaska Airlines credit cards in the pre-
QuickBooks period. Clark testified that from the time of the ESOP
transaction he had R&L pay credit card charges that he considered to be
business expenses, and that he charged to the company all his out-of-pocket

      3 R&L does not raise any specific issue regarding payments for any of
the other clubs of which Clark was a member during the pre-QuickBooks
period.

                                       18
expenses for the Piper airplane. Kawamoto testified that he reviewed R&L’s
bank statements from 2006 through 2013 and determined that R&L had paid
the full amounts of the credit card bills, so he assumed that the same
occurred in the earlier years. He also testified that the records available for
the pre-QuickBooks period were limited to bank statements for 2006, credit
card statements, invoices from two country clubs, and tax returns, much of
this information obtained through third party discovery. R&L’s bank
statements prior to 2006 were unavailable.
      As to the personal aviation charges on the WorldPoints credit card, we
conclude R&L has met its burden to show the trial court erred in limiting
damages to expenses incurred beginning in 2007. The WorldPoints card was
used primarily for expenses related to Clark’s Piper airplane, although Clark
also used it for such business expenses as car rentals. Kawamoto calculated
aviation-related charges on this card of $35,601 for 2004, $32,133 for 2005,
and $44,107 for 2006, for a total of $111,841 in the pre-QuickBooks period.
For the full years from 2007 onward, Kawamoto calculated aviation-related
charges on this card that ranged from approximately $22,000 to $28,000,
amounts that the trial court accepted—to the penny—when awarding
damages for use of the Piper during the QuickBooks period.
      There is no indication that the charges at issue were any different in
the two time periods. Clark testified that his practice of charging all of his
out-of-pocket costs for the Piper airplane to R&L did not change from the
time he bought it until 2013. We discern no basis to treat the Piper airplane-
related charges on the WorldPoints credit card any differently in the two time
periods at issue here. The trial court thus erred in failing to award damages
for the personal aviation-related expenses charged to the WorldPoints card in

                                       19
the pre-QuickBooks period in the same manner as it did from 2007 onward.
We shall discuss the amount of the appropriate damages below.
      We reach a different conclusion as to the Alaska Airlines card. This
card was used not only for expenses that were clearly personal, such as wine,
medical care, and groceries, but also for expenses that had business purposes.
For the period after R&L began using QuickBooks, the trial court accepted
Kawamoto’s calculations of the amounts attributable to personal expenses,
concluding that, to the extent any of the charges “were legitimately tied to
R&L endeavors, the time to have made such allocation was at the time the
bills were submitted for payment.” But that does not mean the court was
required to accept all of his calculations, even for the earlier period when
R&L’s records were incomplete. R&L does not draw our attention to
anything in the voluminous record that documents what credit card charges
were made before 2007, that shows the charges were not in fact incurred in
the course of company business, or that proves the amounts that R&L paid.
R&L has not met its burden to show there was uncontradicted, unimpeached
evidence of such weight as to leave no room for a judicial finding that there
was insufficient evidence to support an award of Alaska Airlines credit card
payments in the pre-QuickBooks period. (See Dreyer’s, supra, 218
Cal.App.4th at p. 838.)
   III.   ESOT Overpayments
      Kawamoto calculated that R&L paid Clark $136,243 more than was
due on the ESOT promissory note between 2007 and 2011. In our original
opinion, we noted that there was no evidence anyone but Clark had directed
these payments and that Clark had made no effort in his appellate brief to
show that the overpayments did not further his private interests at the
expense of the company. These payments were included in the category of

                                       20
expenses as to which we directed the trial court to “make findings as to which
of the challenged expenses were incurred in violation of Clark’s duty of
loyalty and award appropriate damages.”
      On remand, the trial court declined to include any overpayments in its
calculation of damages, finding that R&L had failed to demonstrate by a
preponderance of the evidence the existence or amount of any interest
overpayments. For this conclusion, the court relied on the following: The
promissory note was payable over ten years from December 2003 until
December 2013, but was in fact paid off early, by December 2011. Kawamoto
acknowledged that the ESOP trustees, rather than R&L, should have made
the payments on the promissory note, and they should have calculated the
loan payments. The payments, however, were not “correlated to the terms of
the promissory note.” The court was not provided with the calculations made
by Kawamoto and R&L regarding the amount of the overpayments or with
the underlying evidence or data, and, the court noted, Kawamoto testified
any overpayment could have been the result of a good faith calculation
mistake.
      The court went on: “There is no document or testimony laying out any
analysis of all payments of principal (with amount and date) and all
payments of interest (with month and date). There is no evidence of any
table of the interest rates used by Kawamoto and his interest calculations
thereon, upon which he bases his opinion and calculations regarding alleged
overpayment of interest. He admitted it was hard to track payments to the
loan, and that payments were made randomly. . . . [H]e has no expert
opinion as to payments made (or not made) during the years 2004, 2005 and
2006 [citation.] Kawamoto opines that certain payments were for interest
rather than principal, but does not present evidence of what the specific

                                      21
payments were, how much was towards principal, how much was towards
interest, and how he calculated/determined [what] was or should have been
interest versus principal—he simply testified that his methodology was to
take payments and treat them as interest first and then principal, and
provides a total per year of what he determined to be the overage of interest
only, with no detail or supporting calculations or documents. The court is not
required to accept, as the trier of fact, the opinion of an expert for which the
underlying foundational facts were not presented, and thus uncertain.
Unlike some other categories of damages sought by Plaintiff, as to which the
evidence was that none of the expenses were legitimate, there is no doubt
that Clark was entitled to payments of principal and interest on the specific
ESOP promissory note.” (Fn. omitted.) The evidence, the trial court
concluded, was “simply too sporadic and unsubstantiated” to support an
award of damages for interest overpayments.
      R&L contends the court erred in so ruling, arguing the unrefuted
evidence establishes Clark overpaid himself in the amount of $136,243. In
support, R&L notes that Kawamoto testified about how he calculated the
overpayment, indicated that for an accountant like himself the calculation
was not complicated, and calculated the amount precisely. R&L also argues
the court’s expression of skepticism about Kawamoto’s expertise—based on
his use of the wrong interest rate when calculating prejudgment interest—
was unfounded. Moreover, R&L points out, the company’s chief financial
officer and ESOT trustee, Alexandra Willson, likewise testified that her own
calculations revealed overpayments of more than $100,000, although she
could not recall the precise amount. And, R&L argues, Clark neither refuted
nor challenged this evidence.

                                       22
         At trial, Kawamoto testified that he calculated the interest payments
by looking at payments made to Clark’s personal Vanguard account that
appeared to relate to interest or principal on the promissory note. Beginning
with the balance as of December 31, 2006, he applied an interest rate of the
prime rate plus one percent, in accordance with the promissory note, for each
month. By these calculations, Kawamoto concluded, Clark was paid $136,243
more than he was owed. But his testimony also revealed some uncertainty
about what payments to use in these calculations and that “it was hard to
track what the payments were for and how they pertain to the terms of the
loan.”
         While the evidence before the court might well have been sufficient to
support an award of the overpayments Kawamoto identified, the question
before us is whether the evidence compels such an award. (See Dreyer’s,
supra, 218 Cal.App.4th at p. 838.) In asserting that it does, R&L points out
that in the course of denying a motion during trial for a directed verdict on
the claim for overpayment of the interest, the trial court said that “the
evidence [was] undisputed that there was an overpayment,” and that there
was no evidence that Kawamoto’s calculations were wrong. But at the same
time, the court noted the evidence—which it said “seemed reasonable”—that
Clark thought someone was keeping track of the payments in a manner
consistent with the contract, which had an interest rate that changed
monthly with changes to the prime rate. Plaintiff has not shown there was “ ‘
“no room for a judicial determination” ’ ” that the evidence did not support a
finding either of the amount of any overpayments or that they were made in
violation of Clark’s duty of loyalty to R&L. (Dreyer’s, at p. 838.)
         We reject R&L’s contention that the trial court’s ruling on this issue is
barred by the doctrine of law of the case. This doctrine “dictates that an

                                         23
appellate court’s holding, on a rule of law necessary to an opinion, must be
adhered to throughout the case’s subsequent progress in the trial court and
on subsequent appeal, as to questions of law (though not as to questions of
fact).” (City of West Hollywood v. Kihagi (2017) 16 Cal.App.5th 739, 749; see
People v. Boyer (2006) 38 Cal.4th 412, 443.) The doctrine does not apply to
“arguments that might have been but were not presented and resolved on an
earlier appeal.” (Leider v. Lewis (2017) 2 Cal.5th 1121, 1130.) However, it
does apply to “questions not expressly decided but implicitly decided because
they were essential to the decision on the prior appeal.” (Estate of Horman
(1971) 5 Cal.3d 62, 73.)
      R&L argues this doctrine applies because in our earlier opinion, we
noted that Clark did not even try in the respondent’s brief to show that the
ESOT note overpayments did not further Clark’s private interests at the
expense of the company. But we did not consider the accuracy of Kawamoto’s
calculations on this point in the earlier appeal; rather, the question we
addressed was whether the trial court erred in treating these payments
together with airplane costs, country clubs, and miscellaneous personal
expenses collectively as “luxurious ‘old school’ business practices,” rather
than analyzing each to determine whether they were incurred in breach of
Clark’s duty of loyalty. Rather than compelling the trial court to award any
particular amount in damages, we directed it to look again at the evidence to
determine which expenses violated Clark’s duty of loyalty. Our prior opinion
did not bar the trial court from concluding the evidence on this point was
insufficient to support an award.
      R&L argues, however, that the trial court’s ruling on this point is
fatally inconsistent with its decision to award damages for Avantair charges
and rent overpayments, matters that it contends also required complex

                                       24
calculations, and with its acceptance of Kawamoto’s testimony, without
documentation, to show damages from credit card payments for personal
expenses. But there is no indication these matters involve either varying
interest rates or discrepancies that the court concluded might have been
caused by a good faith mistake as to the amount due. On this record, the
court was not obligated as a matter of law to award damages for
overpayments on the ESOT promissory note.
      Because we reach this conclusion, we do not consider the trial court’s
alternate finding that R&L lacked standing to challenge the ESOT
overpayments.
   IV.   Other Payments into Clark’s Personal Vanguard Account
      Kawamoto calculated that $185,261.08 of amounts Clark directed R&L
to pay into his personal Vanguard account (“Vanguard 0062”) between 2007
and 2011 were attributable to Clark’s personal expenses. The trial court
awarded no damages for these payments, and R&L contends this was error.
      The court’s final statement of decision did not discuss R&L’s claim for
these payments, except to say, “Plaintiff erroneously contends in its
Objections that the Court’s decision does not address the Vanguard 0062
account. The evidence is that the payments made by Plaintiff directly to the
Vanguard 0062 account pertained to the ESOP promissory note.” This
conclusion may have been based, at least in part, on Kawamoto’s testimony
at trial that the “vendor folder” for the Vanguard 0062 account contained no
supporting documentation, but that he “learned that there were notes, there
were directives, or at least some indication of what those charges pertain to.
In particular, they pertained to [an] ESOP note payment or interest
payments were some of the notations we saw.” The court also stated at the
conclusion of the final statement of decision, “All other claims for damages

                                      25
are denied for lack of sufficient supporting credible evidence, and thus a
failure to prove by a preponderance of the evidence.”
      In his brief on appeal, Clark acknowledges that some of the payments
into the Vanguard 0062 account may have been unrelated to the ESOT note,
but he argues R&L has failed to show what payments fall into that category.
      In support of its claim that the unrefuted evidence shows it suffered
damages from transfers unrelated to the ESOT note, R&L points to exhibits
showing Clark directed various payments into the Vanguard 0062 account,
some of which he said should be attributed to such items as travel, office
supplies, “Ed. conf.,” “Ee Ben Medical,” professional fees, repair and
maintenance, and subscriptions. The problem with these payments is that
for most of them, R&L does not point to any documentation indicating they
were not based on legitimate business expenses, and we cannot conclude the
evidence compels such a finding.
      R&L also points, however, to evidence that Clark occasionally paid his
credit card bills himself and directed R&L to reimburse him with payments
to the Vanguard 0062 account. And on three occasions in 2008, R&L points
out, the record shows Clark directed payments of precisely the amount of his
credit card bill into his Vanguard 0062 account. And the credit card
statements associated with two of those payments—for $17,525 and $10,745
respectively—contain multiple entries for charges at grocery stores, drug
stores, cleaners, wine, television service, and other items that, on their face,
appear unconnected to R&L’s business. We recognize that, with respect to
the credit cards bill that R&L paid directly, the trial court deemed all of the
charges to be personal. But not all of the charges on the statements Clark
himself paid are necessarily unattributable to proper business expenses, and
this isolated evidence is insufficient to show the court erred in not awarding

                                       26
damages for the sweeping amounts Kawamoto calculated for payments to the
Vanguard 0062 account for Clark’s personal expenses.
      We reach the same conclusion as to R&L’s claim for amounts it paid
directly to Clark between 2007 and 2013, totaling $56,668. None of the
evidence to which R&L directs our attention—neither Kawamoto’s testimony,
nor his report, nor R&L’s profit and loss statements—includes documentation
or any other evidence of the nature of those payments. Indeed, in the
testimony upon which R&L relies, Kawamoto testified he concluded a
transaction was personal in nature because it lacked supporting
documentation. Whether or not this evidence would have supported a
conclusion that the payments were for Clark’s personal advantage at the
expense of R&L’s, it does not compel such a finding. (See Remillard, supra,
109 Cal.App.2d at p. 419; accord, Angelica Textile Services, Inc. v. Park (2013)
220 Cal.App.4th 495, 509 [corporate officers and directors may not “ ‘ “use
their position of trust and confidence to further their private interests” and
must “refrain from doing anything that would work injury to the
corporation” ’ ”].)
      R&L argues, however, that we should not imply findings to support the
trial court’s denial of these amounts. The extent of its argument in its
opening brief, unsupported by authority or further analysis, is the bald
statement that because the trial court made no specific finding of ultimate
facts relating to these claims, there is no implied factual finding. We first
note that a point that lacks reasoned analysis and citation to authority may
be treated as waived. (Okasaki v. City of Elk Grove (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th
1043, 1045, fn. 1.) In its reply brief, R&L belatedly draws our attention to
Thompson v. Asimos (2016) 6 Cal.App.5th 970, but this case does not assist it.
Thompson explains that where a proper request for a statement of decision

                                       27
has been made, the court must issue a statement of decision “ ‘explaining the
factual and legal basis for its decision as to each of the principal controverted
issues at trial,’ ” and that if the statement of decision does not resolve a
controverted issue, and the omission is brought to the court’s attention, “ ‘it
shall not be inferred on appeal . . . that the trial court decided in favor of the
prevailing party as to those facts or on that issue.’ ” (Id. at p. 981, quoting
Code Civ. Proc., §§ 632 & 634.) Furthermore, “ ‘[t]he trial court is not
required to respond point by point to the issues posed in a request for
statement of decision. The court’s statement of decision is sufficient if it
fairly discloses the court’s determination as to the ultimate facts and
material issues in the case.’ ” (Thompson, at p. 983; accord, Ermoian v.
Desert Hospital (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 475, 499–500.) The court here
addressed at length many of R&L’s specific claims, awarded damages
accordingly, and concluded that all other claims were denied for a lack of
“sufficient supporting credible evidence, and thus a failure to prove by a
preponderance of the evidence.” This statement sufficiently encompasses
R&L’s claim for transfers to Clark’s Vanguard 0062 not already discussed in
the statement of decision and payments directly to Clark.
   V.     Piper Airplane Expenses
        Clark had R&L pay all of his out-of-pocket expenses for the Piper
airplane, such as fuel, maintenance, insurance, and the cost of hangar
storage. After the ESOP transaction, he never received formal permission to
continue charging the Piper airplane costs to the company, but he testified
that “everybody in the company” knew of the plane and many employees flew
with him to business meetings and he assumed they “thought [he] was
expensing something.”

                                        28
      In our prior opinion, we explained that the evidence that flying in the
Piper Airplane was an efficient way to make certain business trips, that
board members knew he used the airplane for business, and that before the
ESOP transaction Rael had suggested he use his pilot’s license for business
purposes “might show that not all of the expenses R&L challenges furthered
Clark’s private interests at the expense of the company” for purposes of a
breach of his duty of loyalty. Noting also the evidence that Clark had R&L
pay for a multitude of other personal expenditures, we remanded the matter
for the trial court to make findings as to which of the expenditures in
question violated Clark’s duty of loyalty.
      On remand, the trial court noted that Clark’s use of the airplane to
travel on R&L business was not a secret and that in fact he flew members of
R&L’s board and senior officers for company business, found that he charged
R&L only for actual out-of-pocket expenses and that he did so because it was
more efficient than driving or using a commercial airline, and explained there
was no evidence he made secret profits on the airplane. Pointing to evidence
that it is a valid business expense for corporate executives to travel on
business by private plane, the court also noted that the amount of the
expenses must be reasonable. The court found that the total amount Clark
charged to R&L for the airplane was not reasonable and set $2,000 a month,
or $24,000 a year, as a reasonable amount for this business expense. The
court did not explain how it arrived at this figure. The court subtracted
$24,000 a year from the total costs of $451,220 (an amount later adjusted to
correct a computational error), for a total damage award for this item of
$301,220.
      R&L contends it was improper for the court to reduce its recovery for
the Piper airplane expenses in this manner. It argues first that the court did

                                       29
not follow our remand instructions; that is, according to R&L, the trial court
improperly used an “employee business expense reimbursement rubric” to
analyze the Piper airplane expenses rather than making findings about
whether Clark breached his duty of loyalty in this respect, and in particular
whether he disclosed his practices to the company or received its consent. We
are unpersuaded. As we explained in our earlier opinion, the duty of loyalty
bars one from “mak[ing] an unfair profit from his position” or “receiving any
personal advantage without fullest disclosure to and consent of all those
affected.” (Remillard, supra, 109 Cal.App.2d at p. 419.) Although the trial
court did not expressly recite this standard, its finding that some portion of
the Piper airplane costs Clark charged to the company were incurred
legitimately in the course of openly carrying out R&L’s business was in effect
a finding that—however inappropriate it may have been to charge all of the
Piper costs to the company—to that limited extent Clark was not making an
unfair profit or receiving a personal advantage from the company.
      R&L argues, however, that the amount the trial court attributed to
legitimate costs of using the Piper airplane for company purposes—$2,000 a
month—is not supported by evidence in the record. In setting this amount,
R&L contends, the court improperly relied on evidence outside the record.
(See Heap v. General Motors Corp. (1977) 66 Cal.App.3d 824, 830–831
[improper for trial court to base findings on its own observations and
experiences, when contrary to evidence introduced].) We see nothing in the
record to indicate the court looked to extra-record evidence or its own
experiences in making its determination. And, as Clark points out—albeit
without citing authority—a court may properly make an approximation of the
amount of damages a party has sustained, so long as the determination of
damages is supported by substantial evidence. (Johnson v. Cayman

                                       30
Development Co. (1980) 108 Cal.App.3d 977, 983.) It is the appellant’s
burden to demonstrate error in this determination. (Ibid.)
      R&L has not met its burden. The evidence of how Clark used the Piper
airplane is derived from his credit card bills and other invoices that show
charges at airports. Kawamoto testified that approximately 80 percent or
more of the Piper airplane’s flights were between the airports in Thermal and
Hayward that Clark used to travel to and from his home in La Quinta, trips
on which his wife sometimes accompanied him, and the evidence shows
R&L’s policy was not to reimburse employees for the costs of commuting
between their homes and work, and that the policy applied to Clark as well.
But Clark also testified that he used the Piper airplane for business trips,
that he did not use it for personal travel, and that many of his visits to the
Bay Area were to attend meetings with clients. Moreover, Clark, rather than
the Company, paid for the Piper airplane when he acquired it in 1990. On
this limited record—bearing in mind that any calculation must necessarily be
an approximation—the trial court could reasonably attribute roughly one-
third of Clark’s Piper airplane expenses to charges that did not violate his
duty of loyalty to the company.
      The same monthly allowance for business-related use of the Piper
should be allocated against aviation expenses charged to the WorldPoints
credit card during the pre-QuickBooks period. Accordingly, $2,000 a month—
or a total of $72,000—should be deducted from the $111,841 in Piper-related
charges for 2004 to 2006, for an additional damage award on this item of
$39,841. We note that the total amounts attributable to the Piper were
significantly larger in the QuickBooks period, when the trial court included in
its calculation not only payments on the WorldPoints card, but also direct
payments to vendors for hangar rental, repairs, and insurance. Although

                                       31
records of any such expenses for the pre-QuickBooks period were unavailable,
there is no basis to conclude the cost of Clark’s business-related use of the
Piper airplane was any different in the two time periods.
   VI.   Prejudgment Interest
      R&L argues prejudgment interest should be awarded on all of the
amounts it seeks on appeal. To the extent we agree the trial court properly
denied recovery for these items, this question is moot.
      Civil Code section 3287 authorizes prejudgment interest on damages
that are “certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation” where the
right to recover is “vested in the person upon a particular day.” (Civ. Code,
§3287, subd. (a); Flethez v. San Bernardino County Employees Retirement
Assn. (2017) 2 Cal.5th 630, 640.) The primary purpose of such an award is to
“compensate the plaintiff for the loss of use of money during the period before
the entry of judgment, in order to make the plaintiff whole.” (Uzyel v.
Kadisha (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 866, 919 (Uzyel).)
      Damages are certain or ascertainable if the defendant knows the
amount of damages or could compute the amount from reasonably available
information, but not if damages must be determined from conflicting
evidence. (Uzyel, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 919.) Put another way, this
standard is met “ ‘where there is essentially no dispute between the parties
concerning the basis of computation of damages if any are recoverable but
where their dispute centers on the issue of liability giving rise to damage.’ ”
(Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co. (1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 1154,
1173.) On appeal, we determine independently whether damages are certain
or ascertainable for purposes of Civil Code section 3287. (Uzyel, at p. 919.)
      Applying these standards, we conclude the damages attributable to
PGCC and the Hideaway during the pre-QuickBooks period support an

                                       32
award of prejudgment interest. It is worth noting that, in awarding damages
for county club charges from 2007 onward, the trial court concluded they
were sufficiently certain to award prejudgment interest. As to the earlier
period, the clubs provided records showing the amounts and dates of all
payments made on Clark’s account. Clark draws our attention to no dispute
about the amount of the payments to be awarded; rather, the only issue was
whether he breached his duty of loyalty by directing R&L to pay those
amounts.
      As to the charges related to the Piper airplane, however, a
determination of the amounts properly attributable to costs that served
Clark’s advantage at the expense of R&L’s interests, as opposed to those
properly incurred in carrying out R&L’s business, could not readily be
calculated without a judicial determination based on conflicting evidence.
(Uzyel, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 919.) R&L points to the rule that
prejudgment interest “cannot be defeated by setting up an unliquidated
counterclaim as an offset.” (Chesapeake Industries, Inc. v. Togova
Enterprises, Inc. (1983) 149 Cal.App.3d 901, 907; accord, Howard v. American
National Fire Ins. Co. (2010) 187 Cal.App.4th 498, 535–536.) But the trial
court did not calculate an offset to an obligation that could be determined
with certainty; rather, it looked to conflicting evidence to calculate the share
of the Piper airplane charges that violated Clark’s duty of loyalty. We
conclude, as did the trial court, that these damages were not sufficiently
certain to support an award of prejudgment interest.
                                DISPOSITION
      The amended judgment is modified to reflect (1) an additional
$64,924.08 for PGCC and Hideaway charges during the pre-QuickBooks
period, (2) an additional $39,841 for Piper airplane expenses during the pre-

                                       33
QuickBooks period, and (3) an award of prejudgment interest on the PGCC
and Hideaway charges, the exact amount of which the trial court is to
calculate on remand. As so modified, the judgment is affirmed. The parties
shall bear their own costs on appeal.

                                             TUCHER, J.

WE CONCUR:

POLLAK, P. J.
STREETER, J.

Rael & Letson v. Clark (A159255)

                                        34