At issue in this appeal are defendants' and American General's separate motions for summary judgment, which the trial
For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
A. PLAINTIFFS' COMPLAINT
Husband and wife, Nelson Choi and Jeannie Choi (the Chois), and their closely-held corporation Choice Instruments, Inc. (together "plaintiffs") filed this action in November 2010 against their former financial advisors (individuals Matthew Roberson and Richard Brown, and Sagemark Consulting, Lincoln Financial Advisors, and Lincoln National Corporation-together "defendants"), asserting causes of action for negligence, fraud and deceit, and breach of contract.
According to the complaint, the Chois consulted in 2003 with Roberson and Brown of Sagemark Consulting, who also were authorized agents of Lincoln Financial, for assistance with investments, asset protection, and tax planning. Defendants advised the Chois that an Internal Revenue Code section 412(i) Plan retirement account was ideal for them and would provide tax advantages, asset protection, and steady income. It required a complex program of several steps. First, plaintiffs were to purchase large amounts of "whole life" insurance and pay annual premiums on a five-year schedule. Second, after five years the Chois would purchase the whole life policies from the 412(i) Plan at a low " 'cash surrender value,' " leaving cash in the 412(i) Plan account while the Chois would own the whole life policies personally. This allegedly would create a " 'springing' " or increasing cash value for plaintiffs. The third step was a " 'power play' " exchange of the whole life policies for certain American General Universal Life " 'Platinum Provider' " policies, which would allow plaintiffs to take advantage of generous borrowing provisions and tax-free cash flow based on the increased policy values.
Per defendants' recommendation, Choice Instruments bought the Chois individual American General whole life policies in 2003, which required annual premium payments on a five-year schedule through 2007, for a total purchase price of $1,275,000. Defendants urged the Chois to buy similar policies in 2004, requiring premium payments over five years through 2008, for a total purchase price of $439,000. The policies comprised 70 to 75 percent of the 412(i) Plan portfolio. Defendants allegedly touted the "certainty of the immediate deductibility of such contributions" to the 412(i) Plan account, which they "assured ... was appropriate and authorized by applicable tax law." They allegedly assured plaintiffs that the program was " 'bullet proof,' " time-tested, and carried no substantial risk of adverse IRS action or tax consequences.
The IRS audit began in 2006. Plaintiffs alleged damages beginning in 2008, when contrary to the previously-represented " 'exit strategy' " of
Plaintiffs alleged additional damages in 2008 and 2009 from the purchase of whole life policies through Penn Mutual, which they claimed defendants falsely advised was necessary to comply with the requirements of the converted 412 Plan and resulted in an "immediate loss" in cash value of approximately $470,000. Plaintiffs further alleged that in 2009, after the IRS audit ended, they were required to pay in excess of $440,000 in back taxes and interest for disallowed deductions under the 412(i) Plan, plus $60,000 in additional penalties, and faced future estimated payments of $100,000 to the Franchise Tax Board of California and anticipated IRS penalties of $600,000 for not reporting the transactions on form 8886.
Plaintiffs in sum alleged that defendants "misrepresented, concealed and failed to disclose" the risk that: (1) the "great weighting of life insurance policies" in excess of 50 percent of plan assets would render the 412(i) Plan "suspect and defective in the view of the IRS"; (2) the IRS would disallow the deductibility of contributions into the 412(i) Plan account for the life insurance purchases; (3) the " 'springing' " cash values would be suspect and unlikely to be approved by the IRS, so plaintiffs would be forced to pay far more (fair market value) than the low cash surrender value; (4) the "irrevocable right" to "power play" exchange the whole life policies for the superior " 'Platinum Provider' " policies was not guaranteed, because American General had a reservation of rights to change or withdraw policies; and (5) the policy purchases were most likely "reportable transactions to be listed on Form 8886" and could be considered abusive tax shelters. They alleged that they would have been better served by purchasing all or mostly annuities in a 412(i) Plan, or by "conventional investments," and that defendants' representations that the 412(i) Plan was time-tested and carried little risk of disallowance were false.
Defendants answered the complaint, pleading as an affirmative defense the bar of "the applicable statute of limitations, including but not limited to California Code of Civil Procedure section 338." Defendants also cross-complained against American General for indemnity and comparative fault. Defendants assert on appeal that the cross-complaint was "wholly derivative" of plaintiffs' complaint, so if they were found not liable to plaintiffs, American General would not be liable to them.
C. SUMMARY JUDGMENT PROCEEDINGS
Defendants moved for summary judgment
Defendants argued that plaintiffs could not prevail as a matter of law as to each cause of action, that plaintiffs' claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations, and that the corporate defendants were not proper parties to the action. In support of the statute of limitations defense, defendants requested judicial notice of the filing date of plaintiffs' complaint (November 12, 2010) and of an IRS revenue ruling from March 2004. We summarize the evidence and arguments pertaining only to the statute of limitations issue.
Based on the November 2010 filing date of plaintiffs' complaint, defendants argued that plaintiffs were time-barred from asserting a negligence or breach of implied contract claim that accrued prior to November 2008, or a fraud claim that accrued prior to November 2007 (based on the applicable statutes of limitations for negligence (former § 339.1)), breach of contract (§ 339), and fraud ( § 338, subd. (d) ). Defendants offered two communications to show that plaintiffs were informed as of November 2006 that the IRS had identified defects in the 412(i) Plan, and as of September 2007 that there would be IRS penalties and damages accruing.
First, in a letter dated November 28, 2006, from the IRS to Choice Instruments, the IRS listed defects of the 412(i) Plan and recommended that plaintiffs unwind the plan and distribute the policies, or convert to a section 412 Plan.
Plaintiffs opposed the motion for summary judgment on each of the asserted grounds, including the statute of limitations defense, and purported to dispute most of defendants' 32 material facts by citing their "Statement of Facts and Opposing Evidence Below Applicable to Motion Generally Nos. 33-105." They asserted that the November 2006 letter from the IRS merely informed them that the 412(i) Plan would be audited, and that a threat or possibility of damages is insufficient to complete the cause of action and trigger the statute of limitations. Rather, they contended that damages did not begin to accrue until at least 2009, when the audit and negotiations with the IRS concluded, and back taxes and penalties began to
The trial court issued a tentative ruling to grant defendants' motion for summary judgment on the statute of limitations defense. The court found that undisputed evidence showed plaintiffs "were on notice of the IRS penalties imposed on them no later than September 2007." Specifically, plaintiffs "were aware that the IRS would be seeking penalties and ... were looking to others to cover those penalties." The court rejected plaintiffs' argument that damages did not accrue until completion of the audit in 2009. Citing the two-year and three-year statutes of limitations applicable to plaintiffs' causes of action, the court concluded that the action, filed in November 2010, was time-barred.
The trial court indicated that it also would grant American General's motion for summary judgment on the cross-complaint, since there was "no basis for liability against defendants in the complaint, there [were] no triable issues of fact with respect to" defendants' claims for indemnity, contribution, and comparative fault.
Plaintiffs contested the tentative ruling. At the hearing, plaintiffs filed a notice of errata and requested leave to file a motion to amend their separate statement in opposition to defendants' summary judgment motion. The notice of errata sought to correct the inadvertent omission of two deposition exhibits from plaintiffs' evidence filed in support of their opposition. Plaintiffs' counsel explained that the omitted exhibits were a "key piece of evidence" showing that defendants, in their capacity as financial advisors, had advised plaintiffs to be patient and not file lawsuits because defendants' attorneys were optimistic about the audit and defendants were going to cover some lawyers' fees as well. He argued that plaintiffs should be allowed to submit additional evidence of communications between the Chois and defendants regarding the IRS audit and negotiations, to contravene defendants' assertion that the Chois were aware of damages in September 2007.
Regarding the statute of limitations defense, plaintiffs pointed out that the September 2007 e-mail did not confirm they would suffer damages, because Brown expressed hope that some or all penalties could be recaptured in 2007 deductions or covered by American General. More broadly, they argued that the limitations defense related only to the damages arising from tax penalties and the audit, whereas plaintiffs' claims encompassed other damages that accrued later. Plaintiffs objected that defendants' "very narrow
The trial court rejected plaintiffs' attempt to introduce evidence and legal theories that were not included in the written opposition and explained that it
II. DISCUSSION
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no triable issues of material fact such that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on all causes of action. ( § 437c ; Schachter v . Citigroup , Inc . (2009)
We review an order granting summary judgment de novo, applying the same three-step analysis as the trial court. ( Aguilar v . Atlantic Richfield Co . (2001)
B. GROUNDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The trial court granted summary judgment based solely on the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs contend that the court erred, both as to its determination of when the statute of limitations began to run on plaintiffs' claims and as to
Because we will affirm the grant of summary judgment based solely on the statute of limitations, we need not address any alternate grounds argued in defendants' motion.
The crux of plaintiffs' claim on appeal is that the trial court erred in finding that the September 2007 e-mail exchange between Brown and the Chois apprised the Chois of damages based on IRS penalties. Plaintiffs argue that the e-mail exchange, at most, put the Chois on notice that damages might occur in the future, depending on factors including the pending IRS audit, the offset of penalties with 2007 tax deductions, and the possibility that American General might cover certain costs. Plaintiffs argue that the court's finding that plaintiffs were "on notice" of damages contravenes the principle that the possibility of future damages does not commence running of the statute of limitations.
Plaintiffs further argue that even if the September 2007 e-mail exchange constituted notice of damages, the court erred in failing to consider whether the fiduciary relationship between the Chois and defendants as their investment advisors tolled the statute of limitations or lessened plaintiffs' burden to discover the wrongful conduct. In support of this argument-and for
We first address plaintiffs' efforts to supplement the evidence and invoke legal theories that were not included in their written opposition to the motion for summary judgment. We then consider plaintiffs' statute of limitations arguments.
1. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Refusing to Consider Plaintiffs' Tardy Submissions
On the day of the summary judgment hearing, plaintiffs sought to supplement the record with evidence to bolster their arguments opposing the statute of limitations defense. In a notice of errata, plaintiffs' counsel declared that two deposition exhibits had been inadvertently omitted. Counsel explained that the exhibits were not new evidence, because defendants had attended the deposition using those exhibits and had notice of their content based on plaintiffs' responsive separate statement.
Plaintiffs also requested leave to file a motion to amend their separate statement. They maintained that if the trial court was inclined to grant summary judgment on the statute of limitations issue, "[i]t would be gravely
The trial court refused both requests and rejected plaintiffs' legal arguments that relied on the late-filed evidence. The court observed that a "very substantial part of the argument presented this morning is based on a legal theory that's nowhere in the opposition. Defendants haven't heard it before. They haven't had a chance to think about it, to reflect on the facts on which the plaintiffs are relying, many of which were not in the record until today, and the legal authorities that the plaintiffs are presenting now for the first time. [¶] So that is not appropriate." Plaintiffs filed objections to the denial of leave to amend and attached the excluded evidence, arguing that the additional evidence "would have further bolstered Plaintiffs' contention that a triable issue of fact existed in light of the Court's tentative ruling."
On appeal, plaintiffs rely in part on several of the late-filed exhibits and argue that the trial court "had discretion to and should have considered these additional documents." They suggest that since the statute of limitations argument "constituted a very small part" of the motion for summary judgment-comprising only one of five issues to be adjudicated-"it was not unreasonable" for plaintiffs to seek leave to introduce additional evidence bearing on that defense, given the trial court's tentative ruling. Yet plaintiffs cite no legal authority to support the contention that the court erred in refusing to consider the evidence and related arguments.
The exhibits appended to plaintiffs' notice of errata and motion to amend the responsive separate statement-filed on the day of the hearing-were untimely. A party must file and serve opposition to a motion for summary judgment "not less than 14 days" prior to the scheduled hearing, "unless the court for good cause orders otherwise." ( § 437c, subd. (b)(2).)
2. The Statute of Limitations Period on Plaintiffs' Claims Commenced Upon Inquiry Notice of Wrongful Conduct Causing Damages
The thrust of plaintiffs' complaint is that defendants wrongly advised the Chois to establish the section 412(i) Plan despite known risks and increasing IRS scrutiny, causing plaintiffs to suffer financial losses, back taxes, and government penalties. Plaintiffs' claims sound in tort and are subject to a two- or three-year statute of limitations.
If the last element to occur in a tort action is damages, "the statute of limitations begins to run on the occurrence of 'appreciable and actual harm, however uncertain in amount,' that consists of more than nominal damages." ( San Francisco Unified School Dist. v. W.R. Grace & Co . (1995)
But a cause of action does not accrue, and the limitations period does not begin to run, "until the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the cause of action." ( Atlantic Richfield , supra ,
"The resolution of a statute of limitations defense is typically a factual question for the trier of fact. However, summary judgment is proper if
As previously noted, defendants relied on two exhibits for their statute of limitations defense: (1) the November 2006 letter from the IRS to Choice Instruments informing plaintiffs of specific defects in the 412(i) Plan and recommending that plaintiffs "unwind the plan and distribute the policies" or treat the Plan as subject to Internal Revenue Code section 412, and (2) the September 2007 e-mail between Brown and plaintiffs informing them that "there will be penalties ...." The parties primarily dispute the effect of the September 2007 e-mail.
Plaintiffs acknowledge that in the e-mail, Brown notified the Chois that the IRS intended to impose penalties on them. But they argue that when read in its entirety, the e-mail communicated Brown's expectation that some or all penalties would be recaptured in the Chois' 2007 deduction, and American General would offer to improve the insurance products in order to avoid financial loss to the Chois. Plaintiffs argue that Mr. Choi's response reflected these assurances, and the fact that penalties had not been assessed shows that damages remained uncertain, as did any indication that defendants had acted wrongfully. Plaintiffs posit that the September 2007 e-mail presented, at best, a triable issue of material fact regarding whether the Chois were "on notice" of actual and present damages, given speculation about the outcome of the IRS audit. Defendants respond that while the amount of damages was unknown, the September 2007 e-mail provides undisputed evidence that plaintiffs were aware of the existence of damages, which under well-established case authority completes the cause of action and triggers the limitations period.
Our resolution of this question turns on what constitutes notice of " 'appreciable and actual harm' " ( SFUSD , supra ,
We begin with International Engine Parts , Inc . v . Feddersen & Co . (1995)
Plaintiffs argue that because the September 2007 e-mail informed the Chois that the IRS audit was ongoing and the amount of penalties and any potential offset were unknown, the reasoning of Feddersen should apply here. Plaintiffs maintain that there is no principled basis to distinguish between applying the statute of limitations in the context of IRS audit proceedings caused by negligent tax preparation and identical proceedings caused by faulty investment advice. Similar attempts to apply Feddersen in non-tax preparation cases, however, have been rejected by subsequent case authority.
For example, in Sahadi v . Scheaffer (2007)
After a detailed review of California Supreme Court and appellate court jurisprudence on when professional negligence causes actual injury, the court elected not to extend the Feddersen rule to the accountants' alleged, negligent misrepresentation. ( Apple Valley , supra , 98 Cal.App.4th at pp. 944-947,
In Van Dyke v . Dunker & Aced (1996)
On appeal, the Van Dyke plaintiffs argued that their cause of action did not accrue until the completion of negotiations, when the IRS "finally determined" their tax obligations. ( Van Dyke , supra ,
Plaintiffs offer no persuasive justification to depart from Apple Valley , Van Dyke , and the Supreme Court's own authority, including Adams and Jordache -all cases that rejected proposals to extend Feddersen 's bright-line rule for determining "actual injury" to claims based on conduct other than the
Because Feddersen 's bright-line rule does not dictate when the statute of limitations began to run on plaintiffs' causes of action in this case, our determination is governed by the general rules articulated in Jordache and later in Fox , and applied in Apple Valley and Van Dyke . Plaintiffs do not seriously dispute that they had reason to suspect negligent conduct causing loss or damage as of the September 2007 e-mail exchange, but contend that the damage had not manifested and any anticipated damages were too uncertain and speculative to constitute actual injury. (See Apple Valley , supra ,
Certainly, as of the September 2007 e-mail, plaintiffs "discover[ed] or should have discovered" ( Atlantic Richfield , supra ,
Contrary to plaintiffs' assertion that "there was no certainty" that the Chois "knew of Defendants' wrongful acts," this exchange satisfies the requirement under the discovery rule that "[a] plaintiff has reason to discover a cause of action when he or she 'has reason at least to suspect a factual basis for its elements.' " ( Fox , supra ,
Generally, once plaintiffs "have reason to at least suspect that a type of wrongdoing has injured them," the cause of action begins to accrue. ( Fox , supra ,
Here, plaintiffs were aware of facts that should have put them on inquiry notice of the cause or causes of action arising from defendants' investment advice. ( Jolly , supra , 44 Cal.3d at pp. 1110-1111,
The IRS's notice to plaintiffs in November 2006 of numerous defects in their 412(i) Plan and the need to unwind or otherwise alter the Plan structure raised suspicion about plaintiffs' ability to realize the promised value of their insurance investments. The September 2007 e-mail certainly indicated "legally cognizable damage" ( Jordache , supra ,
We recognize that defendants did not show that plaintiffs had incurred calculable damages as of September 2007. On that basis, plaintiffs contrast their circumstances upon learning of impending IRS penalties with the "actual injury" in Van Dyke , which as noted earlier, accrued when the plaintiffs transferred their property based on the accountant's faulty advice and were assessed higher taxes than expected. ( Van Dyke , supra ,
However, by the time plaintiffs learned that the IRS's adverse assessment of the 412(i) Plan would result in penalties, neither the lack of a numeric assessment nor the hope of offset by another source negated the fact that plaintiffs were on notice of actual injury. Not only had plaintiffs already invested substantial money into the program, but Brown told them they would have to pay IRS penalties, and the IRS had notified them that the 412(i) Plan components promising springing cash value and exchange rights for a higher-value policy were defective. As the Supreme Court reiterated in Jordache , " '[t]he mere breach of a professional duty, causing only nominal damages, speculative harm, or the threat of future
Plaintiffs' reliance on SFUSD , supra ,
3. The Statute of Limitations Period Was Not Tolled While Plaintiffs and Defendants Cooperatively Challenged the IRS Assessment of the Plan
Plaintiffs contend that even if the September 2007 e-mail constituted notice of actual damages, causing the action to accrue, longstanding tolling rules applicable to professions including lawyers and doctors dictate that the statute of limitations does not run in favor of a fiduciary while the fiduciary relationship continues. Plaintiffs urge us to apply the rule here, where defendants continued to advise and advocate on behalf of the Chois during the IRS audit of the 412(i) Plan. Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in failing to consider the continuing relationship between plaintiffs and defendants while they cooperatively sought to defeat or minimize IRS penalties. Defendants respond that plaintiffs improperly seek to raise this argument for the first time on appeal. They argue that even if a fiduciary relationship existed between plaintiffs and defendants, no legal authority supports plaintiffs' contention that the statute of limitations was tolled while the parties cooperatively tried to minimize plaintiffs' damages.
An appellate court ordinarily "will not consider an argument 'raised in an appeal from a grant of summary judgment ... if it was not raised below and requires consideration of new factual questions.' " ( Noe v . Superior Court (2015)
Plaintiffs propose that so long as a financial advisor continues to advise the client or represent the client's interest in the transaction that gives rise to legal claims, the action should be tolled until the advisor-client relationship
In other cases, a confidential or fiduciary relationship between a defendant and a plaintiff will toll the statute of limitations. ( Amtower v . Photon Dynamics , Inc . (2008)
Plaintiffs assert that the relationship between a client and financial planner or investment advisor is fiduciary as a matter of law ( Hasso v . Hapke (2014)
Here, the only conclusion to be drawn from the evidence leading up to and including the September 2007 e-mail is that plaintiffs were not shielded from the knowledge that the IRS was questioning the validity of 412(i) Plan, had identified multiple defects that would require unwinding or conversion to another type of plan, and had informed Cunning of forthcoming penalties. Plaintiffs, in fact, had agreed in August 2006 to share the legal costs of defending against the IRS actions. Like in Amtower , in which we declined to apply the tolling principles to a scenario in which the defendants had "disclosed the facts necessary to support" the plaintiff's cause of action ( Amtower , supra ,
4. Accrual of the Statute of Limitations Was Not Limited to a Single Cause of Action or Damages Claim
Plaintiffs challenge the trial court's application of the statute of limitations
As a general proposition, plaintiffs are correct that under California's "primary right" theory of code pleading, we determine the causes of action alleged in the complaint "based on the injury to the plaintiff, not on the legal theory or theories advanced to characterize it." ( Skrbina v . Fleming Companies (1996)
In support of their argument that the statute of limitations defense narrowly addressed injury only in the form of IRS penalties, plaintiffs seek to differentiate each iteration of alleged harm and relate it to a different injury or primary right. For example, they contend they were first damaged "based upon the advice regarding deductibility" when they converted their 412(i) Plan to a traditional 412 Plan and had to pay additional excise tax because the deductions previously taken were not deductible under the 412 Plan. They contend that they were separately damaged by defendants' incorrect advice about the need to file a form 8886 with their 2004 and 2005 tax returns-resulting in IRS penalties, and by advice that they would have an "irrevocable contractual right" to purchase certain universal life policies in year eight of the program-resulting in the loss of promised benefits when the policies were not available, and by advice to buy new life insurance policies for the converted
We are not persuaded by this piecemeal interpretation of injury post hoc. "The most salient characteristic of a primary
Even more to the point, application of plaintiffs' theory would be somewhat novel here, given that the "primary right theory has a fairly narrow field of application" most commonly invoked "when a plaintiff attempts to divide a primary right and enforce it in two suits." ( Crowley , supra ,
Plaintiffs' citations to case authority do not suggest otherwise, but offer some guidance on assessing distinct and separate claims. In E-Fab , supra ,
In Pooshs v . Philip Morris USA , Inc . (2011)
Finally, in Hindin , supra , 118 Cal.App.4th at pages 1258 through 1259,
As applied here, Hindin is inapposite, because this case is not a malicious prosecution action in which the underlying litigation involved different primary rights. Fineman and E-Fab are distinguishable based on the nature of the claims at issue. Whereas in Fineman , the processing of each fraudulent check represented "a separate and distinct wrongful act" that could be assessed independently as a separate cause of action ( Fineman , supra ,
In sum, our conclusion that the statute of limitations began to run on plaintiffs' causes of action as of September 2007 extends to all claims arising from the allegations that defendants improperly induced the Chois into establishing the 412(i) Plan and funding it in a manner that was bound to trigger IRS scrutiny. The trial court consequently did not err in finding that plaintiffs' action was time-barred.
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed as to defendants and cross-appellants Richard Brown, Matthew Roberson, Sagemark Consulting, Lincoln Financial Advisors,
Each side shall bear its own costs on appeal.
WE CONCUR:
Mihara, J.
Grover, J.
Notes
Plaintiffs alleged a difference of approximately $212,000 for the 2003 policies and approximately $77,000 to $82,000 for the 2004 policies.
The record on appeal does not contain a copy of the cross-complaint against American General. We rely on defendants' statement that the cross-complaint was "wholly derivative" of plaintiffs' complaint only insofar as it appears to be consistent with the trial court's ruling on the motion for summary judgment, which addressed both defendants' and American General's motions for summary judgment.
Unspecified statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
Defendants Brown and Roberson apparently referred plaintiffs to third parties Dennis Cunning and Pension Professionals of America to administer the 412(i) Plan and help respond to the IRS audit. Several documents that plaintiffs cite in support of their arguments on appeal, including those that were not timely submitted in opposition to the motion for summary judgment (see Discussion section II.C.1., post), include communications with Dennis Cunning.
We requested supplemental briefing on whether two legal theories raised in plaintiffs' opening brief had been forfeited and have considered the parties' responses in our analysis.
If this court were to reach any of the grounds not relied upon by the trial court, section 437c, subdivision (m)(2) requires only that we "afford the parties an opportunity to present their views on the issue by submitting supplemental briefs." It does not mean this court cannot decide issues that were briefed for the trial court and addressed by both sides on appeal. (See, e.g., Bains v. Moores(2009)
Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in considering any statute of limitations other than section 338, which defendants expressly cited in their answer. Plaintiffs are correct that a defendant who pleads the statute of limitations by reference to the statute must specify the section and, if applicable, particular subdivision(s). (§ 458; Brown v. World Church(1969)
In fact, Jordache expressly overruled an earlier Supreme Court decision-also involving legal malpractice-that Feddersen relied on by analogy in identifying when a client suffers "actual injury" in the context of an accountant's negligent preparation of income tax returns. (Jordache, supra, 18 Cal.4th at pp. 762-763,
The listed defects identified those characteristics of the Plan that plaintiffs allege defendants represented would bring them substantial financial value and were " 'bullet proof.' " The IRS identified the defects as "1. Listed Transaction under Revenue Ruling 2004-20 [¶] 2. Springing Cash Values [¶] 3. Exchange Rights for a policy with higher value [¶] 4. Values provided by the contracts significantly exceed amounts needed for benefits under the Plan (including IRC 415 ) [¶] 5. Excessive surrender/expense charges [¶] 6. No separate agreement for flexible premium deferred annuity contracts [¶] 7. Non-level premiums [¶] 8. Benefits provided by the contracts are not equal to the benefit provided by the plan under one or more forms."
One of the exhibits cited by plaintiffs' counsel appears to support our earlier conclusion that plaintiffs were subject to actual and appreciable harm as of September 2007. (See ante, Discussion section II.C.2.) The evidence shows that plaintiffs, in August 2006, agreed to pay a $5,000 retainer and share up to a maximum of $12,500 in additional legal fees with Pension Professionals to defend against the IRS audit, constituting another form of cognizable legal damages caused by establishment of the 412(i) Plan. (See Apple Valley,
Fiduciary duties may be imposed by law, as in " 'certain technical, legal relationships such as ... trustees and beneficiaries, principals and agents, and attorneys and clients,' " or may be determined as a question of fact, based on the nature of the confidential relationship that gives rise to a fiduciary duty under common law. (Hasso v. Hapke, supra,
