We believe the central issue on appeal is whether Chase may reframe its action by amendment to omit a fatal allegation in its original complaint.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1999 Walter and Marijane Ward acquired real property in Valley Center (the property). They created the Walter Dean Ward and Marijane Frances Ward Trust Dated January 5, 1996 (the Trust) in 2002 and conveyed the property to it by grant deed. When Marijane passed away in December 2002, Walter became the sole successor trustee and lifetime beneficiary of the Trust.
In December 2007 Walter took out a loan for $402,876. As security he pledged the property to lender Washington Mutual Bank. The notary public certified that Walter executed the security instrument in his "authorized capacity." Walter signed the DOT in his name and represented in the note that he "ha[d] the right to grant and convey the Property."
The original DOT was never recorded and was later lost, damaged, or destroyed. The copy sent to Washington Mutual could not be recorded because it lacked Walter's original signature. Chase ultimately acquired the promissory note and DOT as Washington Mutual's successor-in-interest.
As a precursor to foreclosure, Chase asked Walter to re-execute and notarize a replacement deed of trust for purposes of recordation. Walter refused. On April 18,
"By an inadvertent error and misinformation, despite title being vested in Borrower in his capacity as the trustee of Borrower's Trust, Borrower executed Plaintiff's Deed of Trust in his individual capacity, and the true intent of the parties failed, in that, at the time of executing Plaintiff's Deed of Trust, Borrower did not hold title to the Property in his individual capacity." (Hereafter paragraph 18.)
The complaint asserted three causes of action. First, Chase sought an order quieting title to the property to ensure that it had the senior lien. It next sought reformation of the DOT in two respects. Believing Walter would challenge the level of detail in the DOT's property description, Chase sought to correct it to include "certain metes and bounds information" to match the full legal description of the property in the 1999 grant deed. Chase also sought to correct the DOT to reflect the "true intent of the parties" that the property would secure the loan. Finally, Chase sought declaratory relief as to the enforceability of the DOT, including a declaration that:
• As a revocable inter vivos trust, the Trust was merely a probate-avoiding device. Walter did not dispose of the property when he conveyed it to the Trust in the 2002 grant deed.
• Because Walter was the settlor and lifetime beneficiary of the Trust with power to direct Trust conveyances, he had the equivalent of full ownership.
• When he executed the DOT, Walter had full power to convey the property as security for the note, and the fact that it was held in the Trust did not prevent enforceability of the DOT to reach Trust property as security for the 2007 note.
• The DOT is valid and enforceable against any successor trustee of Walter's.
• The DOT was intended to secure the loan as a first lien against the property.
• The DOT in fact secures the loan as a first lien against the property.
In connection with these three causes of action, Chase sought contractual attorney fees and costs.
Walter passed away in September 2016, and his son David became successor trustee of the Trust. David filed two general demurrers to Chase's complaint, arguing all causes of action were barred by the statute of frauds and the applicable statute of limitations.
Represented by new counsel, Chase opposed the demurrers. It claimed the gravamen of its action was to enforce the DOT as written , not to correct a mistake in its execution. Relying on the same cases it cites on appeal, Chase explained that it was "of no legal consequence" that Walter did not expressly sign the DOT in his capacity as trustee of the Trust. If paragraph 18 suggested he did so in his "individual capacity," the DOT did not support that allegation.
After a judgment of dismissal was entered in his favor, David requested contractual attorney fees and costs. The court granted his motion, awarding $82,325 in fees and $3,967 in costs.
DISCUSSION
Chase appeals the judgment, arguing the demurrers were erroneously sustained without leave to amend. To the extent we accept this position, it challenges the postjudgment award of fees and costs.
The issues on appeal mirror those raised below. The parties diverge as to the gravamen of Chase's action, offering competing interpretations of paragraph 18 of the verified complaint. Chase minimizes the paragraph, claiming it seeks to enforce the DOT as written despite "inartfully" pleading mistake in its execution. Framed in this manner, Chase maintains the statute of frauds and statute of limitations present no bar. To the extent the complaint was confusing or unclear, it argues that leave to amend was improperly denied. In response, David emphasizes paragraph 18 to claim that the heart of Chase's action is to correct a mistake in the execution of the DOT. Invoking the sham pleading doctrine, David argues that Chase cannot simply omit that allegation in an amended pleading.
As we explain, reframed in the manner urged on appeal, Chase could assert a viable cause of action. Because a party may show that amendment is possible for the first time on appeal, we conclude the denial of leave to amend was an abuse of discretion. In doing so, we reject the contention that the proposed amendment would violate the sham pleading doctrine. Our result further compels reversal of the postjudgment award of attorney fees and costs.
A general demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint. On de novo review of an order sustaining of a demurrer, "we are guided by long-settled rules. 'We treat the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law.' " ( Blank v. Kirwan (1985)
A different standard applies to the denial of leave to amend. If the complaint, liberally construed, can state a cause of action under any theory or if there is a reasonable possibility amendment
2. Chase Articulates a Viable Legal Theory on Appeal
Chase claims the gravamen of its action was for declaratory relief to restore a lost deed pursuant to Civil Code, section 3415, subdivision (a). That statute provides: "An action may be maintained by any person interested in any private document or instrument in writing, which has been lost or destroyed, to prove or establish the document or instrument or to compel the issuance, execution, and acknowledgment of a duplicate of the document or instrument." Largely unchanged since its enactment in 1906, the statute reflects the longstanding remedy in equity for restoring lost instruments. ( Brown v. Anderson-Cottonwood Irrigation Dist. (1920)
Chase contends there is no statute of frauds problem with such a claim since it seeks to restore and enforce the DOT as written . We agree. A trust is simply a fiduciary relationship with respect to property. Legal title to property owned by a trust is held by the trustee , since the trust itself is simply
It follows that a signature by the sole trustee and beneficiary of an inter vivos revocable trust is sufficient to convey good title to trust property. ( Galdjie , supra , 113 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1349-1350,
David responds that the result should be different where "a party specifically pleads that a conveyance did not occur in a representative capacity." But as we later explain, Chase may amend its pleading to omit that allegation.
Although the analysis is more complex on this issue, we also conclude an action to enforce the DOT as written would not be untimely on its face. As
Chase claims it "desires a judicial declaration establishing the existence of the [DOT] so that it may enforce its rights thereunder and non-judicially foreclose its lien." An action seeking declaratory relief has the same limitations period as the underlying legal or equitable claim. ( Bank of New York Mellon v. Citibank , N.A. (2017)
"An action upon any contract, obligation, or liability founded upon an instrument in writing" carries a four-year statute of limitations. (§ 337, subd. (a).) But a claim is founded upon a writing only when it "relies upon the language within a written instrument or contract." ( Smeaton v. Fidelity National Title (1999)
For the first time during oral argument, David's counsel asserted a new statute of limitations defense. He claimed an action based on Civil Code section 3415, subdivision (a) would be barred under the three-year period generally applicable to actions "upon a liability created by statute." ( Code Civ. Proc. § 338, subd. (a).) But Civil Code section 3415 is not a liability statute; it provides for a means of obtaining judicial relief. Moreover, "[t]he restoration of lost instruments is an old and well-established function of courts of equity." ( Brown , supra ,
Although we have not found authority determining the limitations period for actions based on Civil Code section 3415, as we have noted we believe the four-year period in Code of Civil Procedure section 343 would apply to Chase's action as articulated on appeal. But regardless of which period applies, David does not demonstrate that Chase's action would be barred by accrual. "Critical to applying a statute of limitations is determining the point when the limitations period begins to run." ( Pooshs v. Philip Morris USA , Inc. (2011)
"Generally speaking, a cause of action accrues at 'the time when the cause of action is complete with all its elements.' " ( Fox v. Ethicon Endo-Surgery , Inc. (2005)
The complaint gives no indication Chase lost the original DOT; all it ever claimed to have was a copy that could not be recorded. Chase seeks "a judicial declaration establishing the existence of the [DOT]." In this context, the requirements for declaratory relief inform the accrual date. " 'The fundamental basis of declaratory relief is the existence of an actual, present controversy over a proper subject.' " ( City of Cotati v. Cashman (2002)
Drawing on Brown and section 1060's "actual controversy" requirement, Chase is correct that the limitations period for its reformulated declaratory relief action would accrue from the date Walter refused to execute the replacement DOT following Chase's demand. As it notes, the complaint is silent as to when that occurred.
Where a complaint does not reveal on its face that it is barred by the statute of limitations, a plaintiff has no obligation to plead around the defense. ( Union Carbide Corp. v. Superior Court (1984)
3. The Demurrer Was Properly Sustained to the Complaint as Pleaded
To withstand a demurrer, it is not enough that Chase could assert a viable theory. "A demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of factual allegations in the complaint ." ( Rakestraw v. California Physicians' Service (2000)
We agree with the trial court that paragraph 18 is central to Chase's complaint. Chase sought an order quieting title to reflect that it had the senior lien. Believing Walter would challenge the sufficiency of the legal description, it sought to correct it to reflect the true intent of the parties-i.e., that the property would secure the loan. Although it sought declaratory relief that the DOT in fact secured the loan as a first lien, even that cause of action highlighted the need to "correct the public records before third persons without knowledge of the errors and mistakes in the public records rely thereon to their detriment." The complaint's focus is correcting the mistake alleged in paragraph 18. Chase's contention that the gravamen of its complaint is for restoration of a lost deed under
4. Chase Should Be Granted Leave to Amend Notwithstanding the Sham Pleading Doctrine
Generally, if a verified complaint contains allegations fatal to a cause of action, a plaintiff cannot cure the defect by simply omitting those allegations in an amended pleading without explanation. ( Hendy v. Losse (1991)
Critically, the sham pleading doctrine "cannot be mechanically applied." ( Avalon Painting Co. v. Alert Lumber Co . (1965)
Contrary to David's contention, the sham pleading doctrine does not preclude Chase from omitting allegations of mistake in its complaint and reframing its action in the manner urged on appeal. In Callahan , supra ,
The sham pleading doctrine likewise did not apply in Avalon , supra ,
Similarly, in Jackson v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co . (1949)
Another helpful example is McGee , supra ,
Smyth v. Berman (2019)
We conclude the sham pleading doctrine does not prevent Chase from omitting its allegations of mistake in a reformulated action. The complaint was drafted by prior counsel, and Chase immediately distanced itself from such allegations in responding to the demurrer. This is not a situation where the proposed amendment impugns the trustworthiness of the pleading; new counsel and further legal research presumably revealed the fallacy of the assumption that Walter's signature had to specify that he signed as trustee in the name of the Trust. Indeed, paragraph 18 is best read as a characterization of Walter's signature on the underlying DOT, not as the assertion of a foundational fact that should bind Chase in all subsequent pleadings. ( Callahan , supra , 249 Cal.App.2d at pp. 699-700,
Our analysis does not depend on allegations in Chase's separate action for equitable
Because we reverse the underlying judgment that was the basis of the award, we also reverse the postjudgment order awarding attorney fees and
DISPOSITION
The judgment and postjudgment order are reversed, and the court is directed to enter a new order granting Chase leave to amend its complaint. Chase is entitled to recover its costs on appeal.
WE CONCUR:
McCONNELL, P. J.
BENKE, J.
Notes
We refer to members of the Ward family by their first names for clarity, intending no disrespect.
The record does not indicate what transpired in the litigation after the complaint was filed in April 2013 and before David filed the general demurrers in July 2017.
Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
This conclusion comports with our facts. Walter represented that he had the right to grant and convey the property, and the notary public certified having satisfactory evidence that Walter executed the instrument in his "authorized capacity."
Malerbi & Associates v. Seivert (1961)
Chase invokes the 10-year period from the date of maturity under section 882.020, subdivision (a)(1) of the Civil Code. That statute requires the maturity date to be "ascertainable from the recorded evidence of indebtedness." Thus, a recorded document must state the note's maturity date. (Miller v. Provost (1994)
Relying on sections 366.1, 366.2, subdivision (a), and 366.3, subdivision (a), David contends the probate limitations period prevents Chase from reformulating its claim against Walter's estate. This argument fails because an action against Walter is not "lost by reason of [his] death." (§ 377.20, subd. (a); see § 377.41; see Union Savings Bank v. Barrett (1901)
During oral argument, Chase's counsel ventured that Walter likely refused to execute a replacement shortly before Chase filed suit in April 2013. Additional clarity on the exact date may, of course, be revealed through the discovery process or at trial.
An important exception to the general rule defining accrual is the discovery rule, which "postpones accrual of a cause of action until the plaintiff discovers, or has reason to discover, the cause of action." (Fox , supra ,
Courts have held that an allegation as to a contracting party's intent "is a conclusion of fact, which need not be accepted for purposes of demurrer." (Poseidon Development , Inc. v. Woodland Lane Estates , LLC (2007)
See Salazar v. Thomas (2015)
We do not fault the trial court for denying leave to amend. Chase did not seek leave or cite any case law dealing with the sham pleading doctrine. Even so, a plaintiff may claim for the first time on appeal that amendment is possible, and on our record the sham pleading doctrine does not prevent Chase from omitting its prior allegation of mistake in paragraph 18. (See Hendy , supra ,
