Roberts v. Haro CA2/8 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 8/16/16 Roberts v. Haro CA2/8
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    MARIA D. ROBERTS,                                                       B266157
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                             (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. LC100835)
    v.
    ROBERT HARO,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Russell S.
    Kussman, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions.
    Steinhart Law Offices and Terran T. Steinhart for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Gabrielsalomons, Jonathan G. Gabriel and David S. Mayes for Defendant and
    Respondent.
    __________________________
    Plaintiff Maria D. Roberts appeals from the judgment of dismissal entered after
    the trial court sustained without leave to amend the demurrers of defendant Robert Haro
    to Roberts’s action to enforce an oral employment agreement that was made in
    conjunction with a written agreement to sell her house to Haro. We conclude Roberts has
    raised new factual allegations that warrant an opportunity to amend her pleading and
    remand for that purpose.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1
    Maria D. Roberts owned a home in Tarzana that she leased to Robert Haro.
    Roberts was having financial difficulties and arranged for a lender-approved short sale at
    the price of $480,400. Two potential buyers—Haro and another man—submitted offers
    to buy Roberts’s home. Both potential buyers offered to buy the property for $480,400.
    Roberts advised Haro and the alternative potential buyer that she had received offers
    from both of them, “which created competition between them to become the buyer of the
    Wilbur property.”
    The price of the property did not increase. Instead, “in addition to offering to
    purchase [the Wilbur] property at the aforesaid price [of $480,400] the alternative buyer
    orally offered to provide [Roberts] with an additional $100,000 in some manner that
    would be legal [while Haro] orally offered to procure [Roberts] an engagement as a
    marketing program/project manager with a third party . . . with payment for her services
    in one or more projects to be provided by [Haro] in the sum of $90,000[, with] the
    engagement to be for at least six months at no less than $1,300 per week.”
    On May 8, 2013, Roberts accepted Haro’s offer. A few days later, Haro orally
    agreed that Roberts would perform project management and marketing services for a
    company called Encon for a period of six to 11 months. In exchange, Roberts would be
    1    Our statement of facts comes from the allegations of Roberts’s operative second
    amended complaint which, as set forth in our standard of review, we must accept as true.
    2
    paid $90,000 funded by Haro through Encon, although she would be responsible for
    mileage and other business expenses.2 The sale of the house was completed two months
    later through the usual process of a written agreement handled through escrow.
    In July 2013, Haro gave Encon $5,000 as a start on Roberts’s compensation. One
    month later, however, Haro would not commit to paying the remainder of Roberts’s
    salary. Encon did pay Roberts the $5,000 Haro had provided. Haro assured Roberts that
    he would fund the rest of her salary, but in September 2013 repudiated the deal. Encon
    ended the employment relationship with Roberts. Roberts then sued Haro, alleging that
    he breached their oral agreement for her employment. Her complaint included a cause of
    action for fraud, alleging that Haro never intended to honor their oral employment
    agreement, the agreement was intended to dupe her into selling the house to him and not
    the other prospective buyer, she justifiably relied on Haro’s assurances, and, as a result,
    she lost out on the employment opportunity that the other potential buyer had promised.
    Haro demurred to the second amended complaint, contending that the oral
    agreement to employ Roberts was an integral part of their written agreement for the sale
    of Roberts’s house and, as such, was barred by the statute of frauds. (Civ. Code, § 1624,
    subd. (a)(3) [agreements for sale of land must be in writing].)3 Anticipating that Roberts
    might try to avoid the statute of frauds based on her part performance of the agreement,
    Haro argued that Roberts failed to plead facts showing the requisite unconscionable
    injury under that doctrine. Instead, he contended, she had unclean hands by going behind
    her lender’s back to obtain additional compensation outside the lender-approved short
    sale. Haro contended that the fraud cause of action was barred because Roberts was
    trying to enforce a contract that violated the statute of frauds, and because she failed to
    plead fraud with specificity.
    2       Haro’s relationship to Encon is not alleged in the complaint or otherwise explained
    in the appellate record.
    3      Neither the record nor Roberts’s appellate briefs explain the disposition of her
    original and first amended complaints.
    3
    In opposition to the demurrer, Roberts argued that the statute of frauds did not
    apply because: (1) the oral employment agreement was separate and divisible from the
    real estate purchase agreement: (2) Haro was equitably estopped to raise the statute of
    frauds because Roberts had changed her position by passing on the other prospective
    buyer’s purchase and employment offers; and (3) the agreement was partly performed
    when the sale closed and Haro paid the purchase price. Roberts also contended the fraud
    cause of action was viable in part because the statute of frauds does not operate to
    preclude fraud claims, and in part because she adequately alleged the elements of that
    tort.
    Haro’s reply asserted that Roberts could not rely on any equitable exception to the
    statute of frauds because no unconscionable injury would result from denying
    enforcement of the contract as she was attempting to defraud the bank by getting
    additional compensation for the sale of her home outside of escrow. Haro fleshed out his
    unclean hands argument by quoting a portion of the Federal National Mortgage
    Association’s (FNMA) website concerning short sales and the prohibition against
    undisclosed side agreements: “For a real estate transaction to be completed, all lien
    holders must sign off. In this fraud, one party (real estate agents involved, first mortgage
    lenders, second lien holders) might make certain demands outside of the escrow
    transaction before signing off, such as asking that real estate agents reduce their
    commissions or other parties (short sale negotiators, attorneys, etc.) get reduced pay or no
    pay. [¶] While these arrangements sound innocent enough, they are actually ‘off the
    books’ transactions, meaning they are not being recorded in the HUD-1 Settlement
    Statement. Someone will profit from that hidden cash.” Haro did not request the court to
    take judicial notice of the FNMA website or any FNMA regulations.
    In its minute order, the trial court said it was sustaining the demurrers without
    leave to amend for the reasons stated in the moving papers. Judgment for Haro was then
    entered.
    4
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When reviewing a judgment of dismissal after a demurrer is sustained without
    leave to amend, we assume the truth of all properly pleaded facts, and examine the
    complaint’s factual allegations to determine whether they state a cause of action on any
    available legal theory regardless of the label attached to a cause of action. (Fischer v.
    Time Warner Cable, Inc. (2015) 
    234 Cal. App. 4th 784
    , 790.) We do not assume the truth
    of contentions, deductions, or conclusions of fact or law, and may disregard allegations
    that are contrary to the law or to a fact that may be judicially noticed. (Ibid.) We also
    accept as true all facts that may reasonably be inferred from those expressly alleged, and
    read the complaint in context to give it a reasonable interpretation. (Richtek USA, Inc. v.
    uPI Semiconductor Corp. (2015) 
    242 Cal. App. 4th 651
    , 658.) Whether leave to amend
    should have been granted is reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard. (Fischer, at
    p. 790.)
    If there is a reasonable possibility that a defective pleading can be cured by
    amendment, then the trial court abused its discretion by sustaining a demurrer without
    leave to amend. The burden of showing such a reasonable possibility lies with the
    appellant. (Murphy v. BDO Seidman (2003) 
    113 Cal. App. 4th 687
    , 691-692.)
    DISCUSSION
    Roberts Has Alleged New Facts, Which Warrant Leave to Amend
    The statute of frauds requires that certain contracts, including those for the sale of
    realty, be in writing. (Civ. Code, § 1624, subd. (a).) The statute requires either a written
    contract or a note or memorandum signed by the party against whom the contract will be
    enforced. (Ibid.; In re Marriage of Benson (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 1096
    , 1108.) Because the
    statute of frauds is designed to prove that a contract exists, the writing need mention only
    certain essential or meaningful terms. Ambiguities can be resolved by extrinsic evidence.
    
    (Benson, supra
    , at p. 1104.)
    5
    We agree with Haro that the alleged oral agreement cannot be separated from the
    real estate purchase agreement and therefore falls within the statute of frauds. However,
    we conclude that at this stage of the proceedings, Roberts has alleged new facts with
    which she should be allowed to amend her contract cause of action.
    Under the doctrine of partial performance, enforcement of an oral contract that
    falls within the statute of frauds is permitted when the party seeking to enforce it has
    partially performed, so long as the performance unequivocally refers to the contract or
    clearly relates to its terms. (Secrest v. Security National Mortgage Loan Trust 2002-2
    (2008) 
    167 Cal. App. 4th 544
    , 555 (Secrest).) Such conduct satisfies the statute of fraud’s
    evidentiary function by confirming that an agreement was reached. (Ibid.)
    In addition to partial performance, the party seeking to enforce the contract must
    have changed position in reliance on the oral agreement so that application of the statute
    of frauds would result in an unjust or unconscionable injury that effectively amounts to
    fraud. 
    (Secrest, supra
    , 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 555.)
    Roberts has alleged for the first time on appeal that she can amend her complaint
    to demonstrate facts that satisfy the partial performance doctrine. Roberts has adequately
    alleged that she partially performed the oral agreement by working for Encon for about
    one month before Haro backed out of the deal, an act that clearly relates to the terms of
    the alleged oral agreement. She also alleged that Haro partly funded the employment by
    paying Encon $5,000 to cover some of her work. Roberts changed position in reliance on
    the oral agreement by passing on the other prospective buyer’s offer to purchase her
    house and provide her with work at his company for $10,000 more than the $90,000
    Roberts had agreed to cover.
    However, Haro challenges application of the part performance doctrine on the
    contention that no unconscionable injury has been alleged sufficient to deny application
    of the statute of frauds because Roberts was seeking to defraud her lender by personally
    garnering close to $100,000 in additional compensation above the approve short sale
    price of her home.
    6
    Roberts contends, for the first time on appeal, that she can amend her pleadings to
    allege that she and Haro were concerned about the legality of the agreement, and split the
    cost of legal fees when seeking out a lawyer who advised them the agreement was in fact
    lawful. That proposed allegation raises a possibility that the side agreement was legal.
    Taken as a whole, we believe the potential illegality of the side agreement requires an
    affirmance of the order sustaining the demurrer, but a reversal as to the order sustaining
    the demurrer without leave to amend. In short, at this stage of the proceedings, we are
    unable to determine whether the side agreement was either illegal or fraudulent, and
    conclude that Roberts should be given leave to amend to allege its legality if she can. We
    therefore remand for Roberts to file a new pleading that adequately alleges the lawfulness
    of the side agreement.
    We reach the same result as to the fraud cause of action. Haro contended below
    that Roberts’s fraud cause of action was barred because it was based on an agreement that
    violated the statute of frauds. First, Haro is legally wrong. (Riverisland Cold Storage,
    Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn. (2013) 
    55 Cal. 4th 1169
    , 1183 [fraud
    action not barred when allegedly fraudulent promise is unenforceable under the statute of
    frauds].) Second, the contention fails because we hold that Roberts has indicated she can
    amend the complaint in a manner that might allow her to invoke the partial performance
    exception to the statute of frauds, as outlined above.
    We disagree insofar as Haro contended below that Roberts failed to adequately
    allege the required elements of a fraud cause of action. Fraud requires: an intentional
    misrepresentation of material fact with knowledge of its falsity and intent to induce
    reliance, actual and justifiable reliance, and damages proximately caused by the reliance.
    (Chapman v. Skype Inc. (2013) 
    220 Cal. App. 4th 217
    , 230-231.)
    Roberts alleged that Haro’s promise to pay for her services at Encon was made
    without the intention to perform in order to induce her to sell her house to him, that she
    agreed to sell her house to Haro in justifiable reliance on that promise, that the other
    prospective buyer was ready, willing, and able to perform his promise to secure her
    7
    employment, and that as a proximate result she lost out on that other opportunity. These
    allegations are sufficient. (See Beckwith v. Dahl (2012) 
    205 Cal. App. 4th 1039
    .)
    The dissent opens with the view that the agreement between the parties is “plainly
    dishonest,” and continues with its assertion that by providing that Roberts would receive
    a salary for work to be performed by Encon, the contract was as a matter of law unlawful
    and Roberts, therefore, may not enforce it. Specifically, the dissent has determined that
    the contract defrauded Roberts’s lender. This accusation is found on three occasions in
    the dissent. (“It seems plain to me that plaintiff made an agreement with defendant to
    defraud the lender; and the three-way arrangement among plaintiff, defendant and Encon
    was a ploy to hide the money trail.” (Dis. opn. post, at p. 2.) “[T]he entire arrangement
    was for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff’s lender.” (Id. at p. 3.) “To the contrary, the
    purpose of the oral contract was to enable plaintiff to receive $90,000 outside of escrow
    and by so doing to defraud her lender which had agreed to grant her the benefits of a
    short sale.” (Id. at p. 5.)
    What is missing from this conclusion is any authority that this is so. The dissent
    clearly does not approve of the transaction and we agree that it is unusual, but is it
    unlawful or a fraud? At oral argument, Haro’s counsel was specifically asked if his
    position was that the contract was unlawful. He declined to take that position. In his
    respondent’s brief, Haro refers us to a website of the Federal National Mortgage
    Association (Fannie Mae) but does not ask us to take judicial notice of any Fannie Mae
    rules or regulations. In addition, the examples from the website do not deal with the
    current situation.
    It may very well be that this type of transaction is unlawful and should not be
    enforced. But the parties in the current appeal assiduously stayed away from the issue,
    and Haro in particular disavowed any intent to go down that road. In any event, we are
    not prepared to pursue on our own a theory that neither party has asserted. Perhaps, the
    fact that Roberts started work for which she was paid defeats such a claim. It thus seems
    appropriate to permit Roberts to amend her complaint to raise expressly the lawfulness of
    8
    the transaction and what impact that might have on issues such as part performance and
    estoppel.
    DISPOSITION
    We affirm the order to the extent it sustained the demurrers to Roberts’s second
    amended complaint, but reverse as to that portion of the order sustaining the demurrers
    without leave to amend. The matter is remanded to the trial court to permit Roberts leave
    to amend and for further proceedings. Appellant shall recover her appellate costs.
    RUBIN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    9
    Grimes, J., Dissenting.
    Respectfully, I dissent.
    In my view, the allegations of the operative complaint cannot be cured to bring
    this case within an exception to the statute of frauds. Plaintiff seeks to enforce an oral
    side agreement she made with the buyer of her home in a short sale by which she was to
    receive $90,000 outside of escrow. To me, the agreement is plainly dishonest, and thus,
    equity will not prevent application of the statute of frauds.
    Plaintiff’s home was encumbered by first and second deeds of trust in favor of
    Bank of America, and a third deed of trust in favor of Rushmore Capital Partners, LLC.
    Plaintiff defaulted on her mortgage payments and the three deeds of trust “went into
    default.” Plaintiff made a “payoff agreement” with Rushmore and a short sale agreement
    with Bank of America. In a short sale, a homeowner who is behind in making mortgage
    payments may make an agreement with the lender to sell the home for less than the
    balance remaining on the mortgage, with the lender forgiving any remaining loan
    balance.
    Plaintiff engaged the services of a real estate broker who brought plaintiff two
    offers to buy the property at the price approved by Bank of America. But this was not
    enough for plaintiff. Plaintiff advised defendant and the other potential buyer that she
    had received offers from both of them, “which created competition between them to
    become the buyer.” Both rose to the bait. The other potential buyer offered plaintiff
    $100,000 “in some manner that would be legal, such as his possibly directly engaging her
    as a project manager for one of his own business projects.” (Ahem.) The other,
    defendant here, offered plaintiff $90,000 to be paid to an unnamed third party over a
    period of six months, in exchange for plaintiff rendering unspecified marketing services
    to the unknown third party. Defendant would pay the third party, who would remit
    payment to plaintiff at the rate of “no less than $1,300 per week.”
    1
    On May 8, 2013, plaintiff orally accepted defendant’s oral offer and signed a
    written purchase agreement and escrow instructions the next day. Within five days after
    that, plaintiff and defendant orally modified their oral agreement for the payment of
    $90,000 outside of escrow, including that the money would be “provided to [third party]
    Encon by defendant . . . payable in advance in weekly, monthly or quarterly installments
    based on invoices to be provided by plaintiff.” Escrow closed on July 2, 2013.
    It was not until late June or early July 2013 that plaintiff and unnamed executives
    at the third party, Encon, began to discuss “the parameters of the Encon marketing
    project/program that plaintiff was to help formulate, and which she was to manage.” In
    other words, plaintiff and the third party did not know one another or communicate at all
    to discuss job responsibilities, compensation and other basic terms until about seven
    weeks after plaintiff agreed to sell her home to defendant.
    It seems plain to me that plaintiff made an agreement with defendant to defraud
    the lender; and the three-way arrangement among plaintiff, defendant and Encon was a
    ploy to hide the money trail. Who ever heard of a legitimate employer making such an
    arrangement? How could plaintiff have believed in good faith that the arrangement was
    above board? The general rule of liberal allowance of pleading amendment does not
    require us to turn a blind eye to the reality of the facts plaintiff alleged.
    1.     The First Cause of Action for Breach of Oral Contract
    Plaintiff invokes equity to save her breach of contract claim from the statute of
    frauds. Plaintiff argues “[t]he doctrine of part performance by the buyer is an exception
    to the statute of frauds only as applies to contracts for the sale or lease of real property.”
    The doctrine of part performance permits a real estate purchaser to enforce an oral
    contract to buy real property (i.e., take the contract out of the statute of frauds) when the
    buyer has taken actual, visible and exclusive possession that unequivocally manifests a
    new and distinctive ownership of the property. (Hambey v. Wise (1919) 
    181 Cal. 286
    ,
    290-291.) The doctrine applies when there is a claim that the buyer cannot enforce a
    contract that was not in writing. The doctrine does not apply when there is no dispute
    that the buyer acquired legal title to the property. Plaintiff does not dispute that
    2
    defendant has legal title and possession of her property. Plaintiff’s theory that defendant
    partly performed the agreement to pay her $90,000 outside of escrow, and she partly
    performed by her dealings with Encon, simply has nothing to do with the doctrine of part
    performance as an exception to the statute of frauds.
    Plaintiff is also mistaken in her assertion that “ ‘unconscionability’ is not an
    element of the part performance exception.” Unconscionability is an element of every
    expression of equitable estoppel. (Anderson v. Stansbury (1952) 
    38 Cal. 2d 707
    , 715
    [“Nor may plaintiffs successfully invoke the doctrine of part performance to overcome
    the bar of the statute of frauds. Before a party can be estopped to assert the statute due to
    the other’s part performance, it must appear that a sufficient change of position has
    occurred so that the application of the statutory bar would result in an unjust and
    unconscionable loss, amounting in effect to a fraud.”].)
    I cannot conceive a scenario by which a court would force defendant to pay
    plaintiff $90,000 for services she did not render to Encon, where there was no agreement
    between plaintiff and Encon as to the terms of her engagement, and the entire
    arrangement was for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff’s lender. Plaintiff proposes to
    add allegations that she and defendant consulted an attorney who advised them that the
    oral agreement to pay plaintiff $90,000 with respect to the short sale was not improper
    because plaintiff was earning it by working for an employer. Accepting as true that the
    parties consulted counsel who gave such poor advice, plaintiff cannot allege she suffered
    unconscionable injury, or serious change of position, or that defendant was unjustly
    enriched. And plaintiff cannot cleanse her hands by wiping them on the cloak of counsel.
    (See generally Bertero v. National General Corp. (1974) 
    13 Cal. 3d 43
    , 54, quoting
    Walker v. Jensen (1949) 
    95 Cal. App. 2d 269
    , 274 [advice of counsel must be sought in
    good faith and not as a mere cloak to protect oneself against suit].)
    I find this case is analogous to Blain v. Doctor’s Co. (1990) 
    222 Cal. App. 3d 1048
    (Blain) where the plaintiff, a doctor, filed a legal malpractice action against his attorney
    who had represented him in an earlier medical malpractice lawsuit. Plaintiff claimed that
    because he followed his attorney’s advice to lie during a deposition, he was exposed to
    3
    greater liability which injured him and his wife. The Court of Appeal affirmed the trial
    court’s sustaining of the defendant’s demurrer without leave to amend, reasoning that
    plaintiff had no cause of action for injury caused by his own misconduct. (Id. at pp.
    1062-1063.) The plaintiff was precluded from asserting the defense of reliance on advice
    of counsel due to the doctrine of unclean hands. (Id. at pp. 1063-1064 [“Even the most
    naive must know that lying under oath is illegal. A doctor who lies under oath about the
    incident for which he is being sued must know that if the lie is discovered it will
    adversely affect his defense.”].)
    Likewise, even the most naive must know that an oral agreement to receive
    significant sums outside of escrow in a short sale under a sketchy three-way employment
    agreement is unlikely to be favorably construed when discovered. Just like the plaintiff
    in Blain, plaintiff’s own allegations demonstrate as a matter of law she did not act in
    good faith so as to fall within any exception to the statute of frauds.
    2.     The Second Cause of Action for Promissory Fraud
    Plaintiff contends she stated a cause of action for promissory fraud under Tenzer v.
    Superscope, Inc. (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 18
    (Tenzer). Tenzer disapproved the rule of Kroger v.
    Baur (1941) 
    46 Cal. App. 2d 801
    and its progeny that an action for fraud cannot be
    maintained where the allegedly fraudulent promise is unenforceable as a contract due to
    the statute of frauds. Tenzer reasoned in part that the rule of Kroger was “inconsistent
    with the general rule ‘ “that the statute of frauds, having been enacted for the purpose of
    preventing fraud, shall not be made the instrument of shielding, protecting or aiding the
    party who relies upon it in the perpetration of a fraud or in the consummation of a
    fraudulent scheme.” ’ ” (Tenzer, at p. 29.) Tenzer was recently cited with approval in
    Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn. (2013)
    
    55 Cal. 4th 1169
    , 1183 (Riverisland). Thus, Tenzer and Riverisland establish that the
    statute of frauds should not be applied so as to facilitate a fraud.
    Tenzer and Riverisland do not save plaintiff’s cause of action for promissory fraud
    because plaintiff was complicit with defendant in the scheme by which plaintiff would
    receive significant sums outside of escrow that otherwise could have been applied to
    4
    reduce the mortgage debt the lender agreed to write off. No fraud will be perpetrated
    upon plaintiff by the court’s refusal to enforce the oral contract alleged here. To the
    contrary, the purpose of the oral contract was to enable plaintiff to receive $90,000
    outside of escrow and by so doing to defraud her lender which had agreed to grant her the
    benefits of a short sale.
    I would affirm the judgment.
    GRIMES, J.
    5