People v. Miller ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • Filed 5/18/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                           A161601
    TONIKA LYNETTE MILLER,
    Defendant;                           (San Mateo County
    Super. Ct. No. 18SF014403B)
    LION SHARE INVESTMENTS, LLC,
    Real Party in Interest and
    Appellant.
    An elderly victim signed a purchase agreement conveying her home
    (Property) to Rex Regum, LLC (Rex Regum), a corporation controlled by
    Justin Hall. Based on false representations by defendant Tonika Lynette
    Miller, the victim believed she was instead signing a document to obtain
    a reverse mortgage for $500,000. Unaware of that transaction, and believing
    Rex Regum was the lawful owner of the Property, real party in interest Lion
    Share Investments, LLC (Lion Share), purchased the Property from Rex
    Regum. Rex Regum thereafter executed a grant deed transferring title to
    Lion Share.
    Miller later pled no contest to procuring and offering a false or forged
    instrument and to unlawfully taking real property from the victim. (Pen.
    Code, §§ 115, subd. (a), 487, subd. (a); undesignated statutory references are
    to the Penal Code.) Pursuant to section 115, subdivision (e) (section 115(e)),
    1
    the People moved to void the deed conveying the Property to Rex Regum.
    Partially relying on Miller’s no contest plea, the trial court found the deed
    was false and forged and thus void from its inception.
    On appeal, Lion Share argues Miller’s no contest plea “was not an
    adjudication of the alleged falsity or forgery” of the deed and was thus an
    insufficient basis for the trial court’s voiding the deed under section 115(e).
    Without a full determination of the facts, Lion Share contends, the court’s
    finding was not supported by the record. Lion Share also argues that, as
    a matter of due process, the court should have deferred to Lion Share’s
    pending quiet title action to afford a full adjudication of its claim to the
    Property. We disagree and affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Sara J., an elderly woman, owned the Property in Redwood City and
    resided there with her husband, who has dementia, and Cynthia S., a tenant.
    In 2018, San Mateo County informed Sara that she owed property taxes and
    faced a foreclosure sale. Miller, a real estate salesperson, contacted Sara and
    offered to secure a reverse mortgage to help save the Property. Sara agreed;
    she believed a reverse mortgage would allow her to use her equity in the
    Property to pay the taxes. Miller and her employer, Hall, indicated they
    would pay Sara’s tax obligation, and Sara would reimburse them by sending
    them $150 every month. Cynthia coordinated with Miller on Sara’s behalf.
    Sara agreed to pay $25,000 from the proceeds of the transaction to Cynthia
    as compensation for her assistance.
    On July 23, 2018, Miller provided Sara with a document to sign. At the
    time, Sara believed the document was to secure a $500,000 reverse mortgage.
    Sara also thought that after she signed the document, Miller would pay the
    owed property taxes to prevent a foreclosure sale. Miller pressured Sara to
    2
    sign the document quickly, explaining she needed to pay the overdue
    property taxes before the county office closed for the day. Sara did not
    read the document but nonetheless signed it. In fact, the document was
    a purchase agreement resulting in the sale of the Property to Rex Regum for
    $500,000.1 Although Sara’s delinquent taxes were paid, a deed transferring
    title of the Property from Sara to Rex Regum was recorded the same day.
    Sara did not learn that she had sold her property until August 2, when an
    inspector from the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office notified her of
    the sale. Later in August, Lion Share purchased the Property from Rex
    Regum. A deed reflecting Lion Share’s title to the Property was recorded on
    August 27.
    In December 2018, the San Mateo County District Attorney charged
    Hall and Miller with several criminal offenses arising from the transfer of the
    Property from Sara to Rex Regum and subsequently to Lion Share. In
    November 2019, Miller pled no contest to unlawfully and knowingly
    procuring and offering a false or forged instrument to be filed in a state
    public office and recorded under state and federal law. (§ 115, subd. (a).) She
    also pled no contest to grand theft of the Property. (§ 487, subd. (a).) Hall
    pled not guilty to all charges including procuring a false or forged instrument
    and grand theft of real and personal property.
    Shortly after the criminal complaint was filed against Miller and Hall,
    Lion Share filed a quiet title action in January 2019 and asserted ownership
    of the Property. At her deposition, Sara consistently testified she did not
    intend to sell her house. Rather, she believed Miller gave her the document
    to obtain a reverse mortgage. She was shocked when the inspector notified
    It is unclear from the record whether Sara received this money from
    1
    Rex Regum.
    3
    her that she sold the Property to Rex Regum. She stated, “I had no idea that
    I had sold my house.” In response, Rex Regum produced text messages from
    Cynthia, some conveying Sara’s purported happiness regarding the
    availability of possible homes for purchase. In her deposition, however, Sara
    explained she did not believe she had any choice but to move as she no longer
    had a home because it had been stolen from her. Cynthia refused to appear
    for a deposition.
    While the quiet title action was pending, but after Miller pled no
    contest, the People filed a motion to void the deed conveying Sara’s home to
    Rex Regum. (§ 115(e).) In multiple rounds of briefing and oral arguments,
    Lion Share opposed the motion and argued the trial court should defer to the
    quiet title action as the appropriate forum for an adjudication of the parties’
    respective real property rights. Lion Share supported its position with,
    among other things, various declarations, portions of Sara’s deposition
    testimony, and Cynthia’s text messages.
    Citing Miller’s no contest pleas to procuring and offering a false or
    forged instrument and to grand theft of real property, as well as Sara’s
    deposition testimony, the trial court determined the deed was forged. It
    found Sara relied on Miller’s false representations and believed she was
    signing documents for a reverse mortgage, not a grant deed. The court
    further stated the “instrument is false because the property . . . was stolen
    from Sara . . . as indicated by defendant’s conviction” for theft of real
    property. The court also concluded the matter was more appropriately
    addressed in the criminal proceeding rather than the quiet title action based
    on the interests of judicial economy, giving finality to Miller’s criminal case,
    providing victim restitution, and potential prejudice to Sara resulting from
    4
    a lengthy civil proceeding. The court then adjudged the deed void from its
    inception.
    DISCUSSION
    Section 115 makes it a felony to knowingly procure or offer “any false or
    forged instrument to be filed, registered, or recorded in any public” state
    office. (§ 115, subd. (a); People v. Schmidt (2019) 
    41 Cal.App.5th 1042
    , 1055
    (Schmidt).) A defendant violates this provision by either “procuring or
    offering a false instrument for filing,” or “by procuring or offering a forged
    instrument for filing.” (Schmidt, at p. 1056.) Section 115 was crafted “to
    prevent the recordation of spurious documents knowingly offered for record”
    and to protect the integrity of judicial and public records. (Generes v.
    Justice Court (1980) 
    106 Cal.App.3d 678
    , 681–682; People v. Tate (1997)
    
    55 Cal.App.4th 663
    , 666.)
    After “a person is convicted of a violation of [section 115], or a plea is
    entered whereby a charge alleging a violation of this section is dismissed and
    waiver is obtained pursuant to People v. Harvey (1979) 
    25 Cal.3d 754
    , upon
    written motion of the prosecuting agency,” the court “shall issue a written
    order that the false or forged instrument be adjudged void ab initio if the
    court determines that an order is appropriate under applicable law.” (§ 115,
    subd. (e)(1).) “The order shall state whether the instrument is false or forged,
    or both false and forged, and describe the nature of the falsity or forgery.”
    (Ibid.) Section 115, subdivision (f) sets forth the process for a hearing on
    a motion to void a false or forged instrument. Among other things, the
    subdivision requires that any hearing must be held with notice to all parties
    who have an interest in the property; any such parties have the right to be
    heard and present information to the court. (§ 115, subd. (f)(1), (7)–(8).)
    Moreover, “if the court determines that the interests of justice or the need to
    5
    protect the property rights of any person or party so requires . . . the court
    may decline to make a determination” that the instrument is void under
    subdivision (e). (Id., subd. (f)(9)(A).)
    We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo, but otherwise
    review a judgment for substantial evidence. (Schmidt, supra, 41 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1056; § 115, subd. (h) [section 115(e) order is considered a judgment].)
    I.
    Lion Share contends a section 115(e) motion to declare the deed void
    from its inception cannot be based on a no contest plea. After reviewing the
    text of section 115 and giving its words their usual and ordinary meaning, we
    disagree. (People v. Abrahamian (2020) 
    45 Cal.App.5th 314
    , 332.)
    Section 115(e) allows a prosecuting agency to move for an order that an
    instrument is void “[a]fter a person is convicted . . . or a plea is entered
    whereby a charge alleging a violation of this section is dismissed and waiver
    is obtained pursuant to People v. Harvey (1979) 
    25 Cal.3d 754
    .” (Italics
    added.) Nothing in section 115’s text indicates a prosecuting agency can
    move to declare an instrument void only if a person is convicted after a jury
    trial or a guilty plea rather than a plea of no contest. (Ibid.) “ ‘Courts may
    not rewrite statutes to supply omitted terms or to conform to an assumed,
    unexpressed legislative intent.’ ” (People v. Harper (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 520
    , 524.) We will not infer any such requirement here.
    Nor does the Penal Code generally make such distinctions. “A guilty
    plea convicts the defendant of the charged crime without proof at trial.”
    (People v. Voit (2011) 
    200 Cal.App.4th 1353
    , 1364.) Such a plea admits
    every element of the charged crime and “ ‘is the “legal equivalent” of
    a “verdict” . . . “tantamount” to a “finding.” ’ ” (People v. Wallace (2004)
    
    33 Cal.4th 738
    , 749.) And the legal effect of a no contest plea to a crime
    6
    punishable as a felony is “the same as that of a plea of guilty for all
    purposes.” (§ 1016, subd. (3), italics added; Voit, at p. 1364.) Thus, Miller’s
    no contest plea to section 115, subdivision (a), a felony, admitted every
    element of that charged crime. In other words, it established Miller “did
    unlawfully and knowingly procure and offer a false and forged instrument to
    be filed, registered, and recorded in a public office within this state.”
    (Wallace, at p. 749; § 115, subd. (a).) Hence, her plea of no contest constitutes
    a “conviction” under section 115(e).
    Lion Share insists a section 115(e) motion must be predicated on a prior
    adjudication of the facts that the instrument is false or forged or both. In
    Lion Share’s view, there was no adjudication here because Miller simply
    pled no contest to procuring or offering a false or forged instrument. Lion
    Share’s narrow interpretation is belied by the statute’s text. For example,
    a prosecuting agency may base the motion on a dismissed section 115 charge
    that includes a Harvey waiver. (§ 115(e).) A Harvey waiver permits a court
    to consider facts underlying unfiled or dismissed charges when determining
    an appropriate disposition for offenses for which the defendant is convicted.
    (People v. Moser (1996) 
    50 Cal.App.4th 130
    , 132–133; People v. Beck (1993)
    
    17 Cal.App.4th 209
    , 215.) In those circumstances, section 115(e)
    contemplates the voiding of an instrument even when there may not be any
    prior adjudication that an instrument is false or forged.
    Alternately, Lion Share urges us to limit the use of no contest pleas in
    section 115(e) motions because they are unreliable indicators of guilt. But
    the cases cited by Lion Share — all which limited the collateral use of no
    contest pleas to misdemeanors in subsequent civil proceedings — are
    inapplicable here. In Kirby v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board
    (1969) 
    3 Cal.App.3d 209
     (Kirby), the court determined a liquor license
    7
    revocation could not be based on a no contest plea to a misdemeanor charge.
    (Id. at p. 219.) In County of Los Angeles v. Civil Service Com. (1995)
    
    39 Cal.App.4th 620
     (County of Los Angeles), the court ruled a deputy sheriff’s
    no contest plea to a misdemeanor charge of receiving stolen property could
    not be used in an administrative disciplinary hearing regarding the sheriff’s
    termination. (Id. at pp. 624, 628–629.) And in Cartwright v. Board of
    Chiropractic Examiners (1976) 
    16 Cal.3d 762
     (Cartwright), the court
    addressed “the question of whether statutory authorization of professional
    discipline or other punitive or regulatory action on account of a ‘conviction’ ”
    as used in the Chiropractic Act and similar civil statutes, “can be the basis for
    administrative or judicial imposition of punishment grounded in a conviction”
    stemming from a no contest plea. (Cartwright, at pp. 768, 773.) It concluded
    a misdemeanor conviction for keeping a disorderly house based on a no
    contest plea cannot be considered a “conviction” under the Chiropractic Act
    for the purposes of revoking a chiropractor license. (Cartwright, at p. 773.)
    These cases are unlike the circumstances present here. In this case,
    Miller’s no contest plea was used as the basis for a motion in the same
    criminal proceeding, not a separate civil or administrative proceeding as in
    the other cases. (§ 115, subd. (e)(1).) (Lion Share’s attempt to characterize
    a section 115(e) motion as a separate civil proceeding is unpersuasive.) And
    while Cartwright observed a no contest plea has reduced reliability as an
    indicator of actual guilt because a “defendant’s reservations about admitting
    guilt for all purposes and . . . the willingness of the district attorney to
    agree . . . indicate weakness in the available proof of guilt” that observation
    was based, in part, on a former version of section 1016. (Cartwright, supra,
    16 Cal.3d at pp. 772–773, fns. omitted.)
    8
    Originally, section 1016 “prohibited use of a [no contest] plea in a
    subsequent civil suit whether the plea was to a felony or to a misdemeanor.”
    (County of Los Angeles, supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at p. 631, fn. 10.) “In 1982, the
    Legislature amended the section to permit use of a [no contest] plea to
    a felony in a subsequent civil suit but to bar use of a [no contest] plea to
    a misdemeanor in a subsequent civil suit.” (Ibid.) As amended, section 1016
    required a defendant’s no contest plea to a crime punishable as a felony to be
    the same as a guilty plea for all purposes. (County of Los Angeles, at p. 628;
    § 1016, subd. (3).) That amendment “substantially narrowed the practical
    impact” of Cartwright. (County of Los Angeles, at p. 628.) And unlike
    Cartwright, Kirby, and County of Los Angeles, all which involved no contest
    pleas to misdemeanor charges, Miller pled no contest to a felony charge of
    section 115.
    In sum, the People’s section 115(e) motion was properly premised upon
    Miller’s conviction via plea of no contest. The additional cases upon which
    Lion Share relies do not compel a different result.
    II.
    Lion Share also contends there is insufficient evidence that the deed
    conveying the Property to Rex Regum was forged because the trial court
    relied entirely on Miller’s no contest plea to support its finding. After
    reviewing the record for substantial evidence in the light most favorable to
    the judgment, we reject Lion Share’s argument. (People v. Avila (2009)
    
    46 Cal.4th 680
    , 701.)
    Forgery involves a defendant, who “by fraud or trickery, causes another
    to execute a deed of trust or other document where the signer is unaware, by
    reason of such trickery, that he is executing a document of that nature.”
    (People v. Parker (1967) 
    255 Cal.App.2d 664
    , 672.) Specifically, “[w]here
    9
    a person who has no intention of selling or encumbering his property is
    induced by some trick or device to sign a paper having such effect, believing
    that paper to be a substantially different instrument,” the signed paper is
    a forgery. (Buck v. Superior Court (1965) 
    232 Cal.App.2d 153
    , 162; see also
    Parker, at pp. 667, 672 [deed of trust forged where victims signed based on
    representation the document was a contract for aluminum siding].) In People
    v. Astorga-Lider (2019) 
    35 Cal.App.5th 646
     (Astorga-Lider), for example, the
    victims believed they were signing a document — an agreement
    consummating the purchase of real property — that was substantially
    different from the actual document they signed — a deed of trust securing
    a loan for $275,000 in hard money that the defendant then controlled. (Id. at
    pp. 649, 653.) The victims were unaware they were borrowing that money
    and had no intention of encumbering their property with a deed of trust, thus
    the court determined the deed was a forgery. (Id. at p. 653.)
    The circumstances here are comparable. Sara consistently testified to
    her belief, based on Miller’s representations, that she was signing a reverse
    mortgage allowing her to retain and reside in her home. Instead, the
    document Sara signed was a purchase agreement selling the Property to Rex
    Regum — a substantially different document. (Astorga-Lider, supra,
    35 Cal.App.5th at p. 653.) Like the victims in Astorga-Lider, Sara repeatedly
    noted she lacked any idea she was selling the Property and did not discover
    she had done so until August 2, 2018, the date an investigator notified her of
    the sale. (Id. at pp. 650, 653.) At her sentencing hearing, Miller confirmed
    she told Sara the document was “ ‘like a reverse mortgage,’ ” but the
    document she actually provided was an agreement to buy the house
    “outright.” Hence, substantial evidence supports the trial court’s conclusion
    10
    the deed was forged. (Buck v. Superior Court, supra, 232 Cal.App.2d at
    p. 162.)
    Lion Share disputes this conclusion by citing text messages from
    Cynthia conveying Sara’s happiness and her eagerness to find another house.
    According to Lion Share, these messages demonstrate Sara subsequently
    ratified the sale despite her earlier intent to retain her home. This argument
    ignores the standard of review. (People v. Farnam (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 107
    , 143
    [“judgment may not be reversed simply because the circumstances might also
    reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding”].) The trial court rejected
    these text messages as speculative and unpersuasive evidence given Miller’s
    no contest pleas to procuring and offering a false or forged instrument and
    Sara’s deposition testimony. That testimony includes Sara’s repeated
    statements that she would never have sold the Property. Rather than
    ratifying the sale, Sara testified she was resigned to moving because she was
    told she sold the Property and had no other alternative. (Ibid. [appellate
    courts presume in support of the judgment the existence of every fact the
    trier could reasonably deduce from the evidence].)
    To the extent Lion Share argues a no contest plea alone cannot
    constitute substantial evidence for finding a deed forged or false, resolving
    that issue here is unnecessary. In addition to Miller’s no contest pleas, the
    court relied on Sara’s testimony in which she unequivocally stated her belief
    that she was signing a reverse mortgage, not a document to sell her home.
    We further reject Lion Share’s assertion Sara is bound by the purchase
    agreement because she signed the document despite failing to read it. Even
    in the civil context, “one who signs an instrument may not avoid the impact
    of its terms on the ground that he failed to read the instrument before
    signing” if “in the absence of fraud.” (Hulsey v. Elsinore Parachute Center
    11
    (1985) 
    168 Cal.App.3d 333
    , 339, italics added.) Here, Sara is a victim of
    criminal fraud and signed the purchase agreement based on Miller’s
    misrepresentations. Thus, Sara’s signing the purchase agreement does not
    preclude the outcome here.
    Substantial evidence supported the court’s finding the deed was forged
    and hence void. (§ 115(e).) In light of this conclusion, we need not address
    the parties’ arguments regarding the sufficiency of the evidence for finding
    the deed false. (Astorga-Lider, supra, 35 Cal.App.5th at p. 657 [affirming
    trial court order finding deed of trust void solely based on the finding the
    deed was forged]; People v. Marquez (1992) 
    1 Cal.4th 553
    , 578 [“the trial
    court’s ruling must be upheld if there is any basis in the record to sustain
    it”].)
    III.
    Lion Share contends the trial court abused its discretion by resolving
    the validity of the deed under section 115, rather than deferring to the
    pending quiet title action. Not so. The decision to proceed under section 115
    rather than waiting for the resolution of the quiet title action was well within
    the court’s discretion. (Astorga-Lider, supra, 35 Cal.App.5th at p. 656 [abuse
    of discretion standard of review for determinations under section 115, subd.
    (f)(9)(B)].)
    Section 115 acknowledges there may be circumstances when a civil
    proceeding may be more appropriate for adjudicating the validity of
    a challenged instrument. It provides, in relevant part, “if the court
    determines that the interests of justice or the need to protect the property
    rights of any person or party so requires, including, but not limited to,
    a finding that the matter may be more appropriately determined in a civil
    proceeding, the court may decline to make a determination under subdivision
    12
    (e).” (§ 115, subd. (f)(9)(A).) Indeed, the statute explicitly contemplates that
    someone may have filed “a quiet title action that seeks a judicial
    determination of the validity of the same false or forged instrument that is
    the subject” of the pending section 115(e) motion, “or the status of an
    interested party as a bona fide purchaser of . . . the property affected by the
    false or forged instrument.” (§ 115, subd. (f)(9)(B).) In those circumstances,
    “the court may consider that [civil suit] as an additional but not dispositive
    factor in making its determination under subdivision (e).” (Ibid., italics
    added.) Nothing in these provisions mandates deference to an ongoing civil
    quiet title action. Rather, the statute confers the court with the discretion to
    either address the validity of an instrument or the interested party’s status
    as a bona fide purchaser in a section 115(e) proceeding or defer to a civil
    proceeding.
    In evaluating Lion Share’s request that the trial court defer to the quiet
    title action, the court found Sara would be prejudiced by a lengthy civil
    proceeding that restricts her ability to make decisions regarding the
    Property. The record indicates the Property is Sara’s only substantial asset,
    and uncertainty regarding title would restrict her ability to make financial
    decisions about her living situation and her husband, who has dementia. Far
    from ignoring Lion Share’s status as a crime victim and a potential bona fide
    purchaser, as Lion Share contends, the court noted that resolving the deed’s
    validity under section 115 would allow it to order victim restitution for both
    Lion Share and Sara.2 This decision was not so irrational or arbitrary to
    2 Moreover, the trial court’s conclusion that the deed was forged, and
    thus void from its inception, was fatal to Lion Share’s bona fide purchaser
    argument. Unlike fraud in the inducement, “ ‘a forged document is void ab
    initio and constitutes a nullity’ ” and cannot be relied upon by a bona fide
    purchaser. (Schmidt, supra, 41 Cal.App.5th at p. 1058.)
    13
    constitute an abuse of discretion. (People v. Carmony (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 367
    ,
    377.)
    IV.
    Lion Share contends reliance on Miller’s no contest plea to declare the
    deed void and the trial court refusal to defer to the quiet title action deprived
    it of a full and fair opportunity to adjudicate its title claim to the Property in
    violation of its due process rights. Leaving aside Lion Share’s failure to cite
    any relevant standards for assessing a due process claim, its argument
    ignores the record.
    Section 115 states, in relevant part, “the prosecuting agency shall
    provide written notice by certified mail to all parties who have an interest in
    the property affected by the false or forged instrument.” (§ 115, subd. (f)(1).)
    That written notice “shall inform the interested parties that a criminal action
    has commenced that may result in adjudications against the false or forged
    instrument or the property affected by the false or forged instrument.”
    (§ 115, subd. (f)(3).) Significantly, the notice must inform “the interested
    parties of their right to be heard if a motion is brought under subdivision (e)
    to void the false or forged instrument.” (Ibid.) At a section 115(e) hearing,
    those interested parties “shall have a right to be heard and present
    information to the court.” (§ 115, subd. (f)(8).) An interested party’s due
    process rights are not violated where the party is presented with several
    opportunities to oppose the People’s section 115(e) motion, present evidence
    — including deposition testimony of the victims — and “challenge the
    evidence relied on by the People.” (Astorga-Lider, supra, 35 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 656.)
    Lion Share filed multiple briefs; provided substantial exhibits including
    declarations, deposition testimony from Sara, and text messages from
    14
    Cynthia; and made oral arguments on two occasions regarding the People’s
    section 115 motion. In doing so, Lion Share challenged the People’s evidence
    regarding whether the deed was false or forged. (During oral argument, Lion
    Share conceded it did not seek to present witness testimony at the section
    115(e) hearing, nor did it challenge Sara’s version of events during her
    deposition.) Lion Share further urged the trial court to defer to the quiet title
    action.
    In deciding whether the deed constituted a forged document, the trial
    court had before it not only Sara’s deposition testimony, but also the evidence
    presented by Lion Share. (Ante, at pp. 11–12; compare with Estate of
    McGowan (1973) 
    35 Cal.App.3d 611
    , 618 [conclusive presumption of no
    contest plea in a subsequent civil proceeding regarding the disposition of
    decedent’s estate may deprive a third party of due process, and noting court
    must examine whether a defendant actually committed the offense alleged
    for the purposes of the proceeding].) In sum, Lion Share had the “opportunity
    to be heard . . . ‘at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.’ ”
    (Today’s Fresh Start, Inc. v. Los Angeles County Office of Education (2013)
    
    57 Cal.4th 197
    , 212.) Lion Share was not denied due process.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    15
    _________________________
    Rodríguez, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Tucher, P. J.
    _________________________
    Fujisaki, J.
    A161601
    16
    Superior Court of San Mateo County, Elizabeth K. Lee, Judge.
    Steyer Lowenthal Boodrookas Alvarez & Smith, Jeffrey H. Lowenthal,
    Edward Egan Smith, Stacey C. Quan, for Real Party in Interest and
    Appellant.
    Stephen M. Wagstaffe, District Attorney, Kimberly A. Perrotti, Deputy
    District Attorney, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A161601

Filed Date: 5/18/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/18/2022