FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Facts
Plaintiff and appellant QDOS, Inc. (QDOS) is in the business of offering team-specific, sports-related content over the Internet and on mobile devices. QDOS does business as "DeskSite." Richard Gillam (Gillam) is DeskSite's CEO.
In early 2011, DeskSite asked Fazliq Dean Kader (Kader) to raise funds for its business, although DeskSite never hired him as an employee. In late 2011, Kader secured a $3 million investment.
In December 2011, Kader approached Gillam with a "unique business proposal"-namely, DeskSite would put up the money to buy a 2012 Lamborghini Aventador and then immediately resell the car for a profit of at least $200,000, and the profit would be deemed additional fundraising revenue for DeskSite. Kader suggested buying the car from The Auto Gallery, which was operated by defendant and respondent Motorcars West, LLC. Kader was one of The Auto Gallery's "preexisting client[s]," and Kader had previously told The Auto Gallery's employees that he owned "hundreds of companies." Gillam agreed to the proposal. Because Gillam "trusted" Kader, Gillam did not at that time put anything in writing and just orally told Kader to vest title to the car in DeskSite's name. The exact nature of DeskSite's funding of the car purchase was disputed by Gillam himself: Contemporaneously, he referred to the money used to buy the car as a "loan," but after litigation started, said it was "not ... a loan."
In July 2012, Kader sold the car back to The Auto Gallery for $428,111 and a trade-in car. Two weeks later, The Auto Gallery sold the car to defendant and respondent Premier Financial Services, LLC (Premier), who financed its purchase with a loan from defendant and respondent Signature Financial, LLC (Signature). Premier then leased the car to defendant and respondent Rick Jenkins, M.D., Inc. (Jenkins).
II. Procedural Background
A. QDOS/DeskSite's Operative Complaint
In the operative first amended complaint, DeskSite sued Kader, The Auto Gallery, Premier, Signature, and Jenkins. Specifically, DeskSite sued Kader for (1) breach of contract, (2) breach of fiduciary duty, (3) fraud, (4) fraudulent concealment, (5) conversion (of the car), and (6) conversion (of an additional $150,000 that DeskSite loaned Kader so Kader could obtain a loan to pay off DeskSite's $516,000 investment in the car). DeskSite sued The Auto Gallery for (1) aiding and abetting Kader's breach of fiduciary duty, (2) aiding and abetting Kader's fraud, (3) aiding and abetting Kader's fraudulent concealment, (4) aiding and abetting Kader's conversion of the car, and (5) negligence. All of the those claims were premised on The Auto Gallery's conduct in "helping" Kader with the transaction and/or not investigating why Kader was paying with QDOS/DeskSite's checks. DeskSite sued Premier, Signature,
B. Kader's Default
Kader did not respond to DeskSite's operative complaint, and the trial court entered a default against him.
C. Motion for Summary Adjudication
The Auto Gallery, Premier, Signature, and Jenkins filed a motion for summary judgment and/or summary adjudication. After full briefing and a hearing, the trial court granted summary adjudication as to all five claims against The Auto Gallery, but denied summary adjudication as to the declaratory relief claim against Premier, Signature, and Jenkins (collectively, the remaining defendants). With regard to the claims against The Auto Gallery, the court ruled that The Auto Gallery had no "legal duty to [DeskSite] to investigat[e] whether Kader's statements to [The] Auto Gallery were true." Specifically, the court rejected the notion that "every car dealer has to check to make sure the name on the check exactly matches the name on the title" because such a rule would create "a new burden ... that ... would throw ... any other business where [a merchant is] selling things or, at least, large price tagged things into total disarray." With regard to
D. Trial on Declaratory Relief Claim
In anticipation of the trial on DeskSite's declaratory relief claim, the remaining defendants filed motions in limine to exclude evidence regarding (1) any alleged negligence by The Auto Gallery, and (2) DeskSite's claims against The Auto Gallery. The trial court granted both motions. At the hearing on the motions, DeskSite acknowledged that the question whether The Auto Gallery was negligent and the question whether Kader was a "thief" incapable of passing title (hence entitling DeskSite to declaratory relief) were "totally separate questions," but nevertheless urged that "one could inform the other." The trial court was unpersuaded, ruling that it would not "allow testimony about [The] Auto Gallery [because] [t]hey're not" in the case.
E. Default Judgment Against Kader
Several weeks after the jury returned its verdict, the trial court held a hearing for DeskSite to prove up its damages against Kader. In the proposed default judgment it lodged with the court, DeskSite sought $901,098 in compensatory damages and an equal amount in punitive damages. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court ruled that DeskSite had proven up $901,098 in compensatory damages, but declined to award any punitive damages. DeskSite introduced evidence that Kader was involved with one "active" corporation and two expired corporations; that he was renting an "extremely opulent house"; that he had bought an Audi for his wife at The Auto Gallery at some point; and that he "maintains a flamboyant lifestyle." However, DeskSite was "not able to come up with any assets" owned by Kader. This was consistent with DeskSite's prior representations to the court that it thought it was "unlikely that ... Kader has assets." What DeskSite offered was its investigator's opinion that "[s]ince [the investigator] was not able to find any such assets, ... Kader has employed methods to prevent his assets from being located and traced to him." The trial court found this showing to be insufficient: "You got no evidence. All you are giving me is rhetoric. I have to hear evidence of some net worth, and I haven't heard it."
F. Judgment and Appeal
Following the trial court's entry of judgment, DeskSite filed this timely appeal.
DISCUSSION
DeskSite raises three challenges to the trial court's judgment, arguing that the trial court (1) erred in concluding that The Auto Gallery owed it no duty, and thus in granting summary adjudication to The Auto Gallery, (2) erred in granting the motions in limine excluding evidence of The Auto Gallery's alleged negligence during the remaining defendants' declaratory relief trial, and (3) erred in awarding no punitive damages against Kader after the
Summary adjudication, like summary judgment, is appropriate when the moving party shows "[it] is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law" ( Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c) ) because, among other things, the nonmoving party (here, DeskSite) cannot establish "[o]ne or more of the elements of [its] cause of action" ( Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (o )(1) ; see
"The general rule in California is that '[e]veryone is responsible ... for an injury occasioned to another by his or her want of ordinary care or skill in the management of his or her property or person ....' " ( Cabral v. Ralphs Grocery Co. (2011)
The Biakanja considerations are similar to, but not identical with, the policy considerations set forth in Rowland v. Christian (1968)
As a general rule, courts have recognized that a person or entity-whether it be a bank or a merchant-engaged in a financial transaction with a
Courts have sorted the circumstances that constitute red flags from those that do not. Red flags include: (1) when a bank's customer tries to have the proceeds of the third party's check that was made out to someone else placed in the customer's own personal account ( Sun 'n Sand , supra , 21 Cal.3d at pp. 693-695,
Because Kader presented two checks payable to The Auto Gallery and bearing Gillam's valid signature on behalf of DeskSite, this case presents
We conclude that the answer to this question is "no," and do so for two reasons.
First, the policy considerations set forth in Biakanja and Rowland counsel against the recognition of such a duty.
Foreseeability is the "chief" determinant of duty because three of the considerations enumerated in Biakanja and Rowland address it-namely, the foreseeability of harm to the plaintiff, the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, and the closeness of the connection between the defendant's conduct and the injury suffered by the plaintiff. ( Vasilenko v. Grace Family Church (Nov. 13, 2017, S235412)
The remaining factors also counsel against recognizing any duty. In evaluating " 'the extent to which the transaction [is] intended to affect the plaintiff,' " we must ascertain the " 'primary purpose' " of the transaction and ask whether the plaintiff's interest is central or " 'collateral' " to that purpose. ( Summit Financial , supra ,
Second, Burns has already held, in a similar but slightly different context, that "the fact that an account payment came from a third party is not enough to put [a merchant] on notice of a potential fraud." ( Burns , supra , 173 Cal.App.4th at pp. 486, 488,
First, it urges a different weighing of the pertinent policy considerations. More specifically, DeskSite argues that we may not consider its own negligence in failing to monitor Kader's use of its money because doing so would run afoul of the rule that a party's contributory negligence is no longer a bar to tort relief in California. (E.g., City of Santa Barbara v. Superior Court (2007)
DeskSite next argues that the burden can be lessened if the duty to investigate is limited to merchants who receive third party checks that are used to pay for a substantial portion of bigger ticket items. However, this argument poses more questions than it answers: What is a bigger ticket item? What is a substantial portion of the item's price? More to the point, this narrowing at most reduces the universe of merchants or transactions so burdened, but in no way alters our analysis of the other Biakanja and Rowland factors as to that smaller universe, all of which counsel against recognizing a duty.
DeskSite further asserts that merchants can buy general purpose insurance to cover any liability they might incur if they do not investigate or, even if they investigate, if they do not successfully ferret out restrictions or special instructions accompanying third party checks. This assertion speaks only to the potential availability of insurance, but not to its "cost" or "prevalence." ( Rowland , supra ,
Second, DeskSite contends that Sun 'n Sand , supra ,
Third, DeskSite urges that the trial court erred in refusing to consider the testimony of its expert witness that merchants like The Auto Gallery have "a duty to" "investigat[e] and conduct[ ] appropriate due diligence" whenever "one party is paying and another party is receiving title" to merchandise. We need not consider whether DeskSite, by challenging the trial court's refusal to consider this testimony for the first time in its reply brief, waived the issue on appeal ( Raceway Ford Cases (2016)
Lastly, DeskSite posits that money laundering is a "known concern" within the automobile industry, especially with high-end exotic cars. Even if we accept this to be true, the use of a third party's check to pay for a car by itself is still not a red flag of money laundering, particularly where, as here, the check contains a memo line with the customer's initials on it. Further, courts have refused to fashion new duties to deal with similar endemic problems such as identity theft and have justified that refusal with reasoning that is equally applicable here: "Given the scope of the problem and the consequences to the community of imposing a noncontractual duty with resulting liability for breach, a decision to shift the burden of loss from the actual victim to a third party duped by the thief is one to be made, if at all, by the Legislature, not the judiciary." ( Rodriguez , supra ,
In sum, we independently conclude that The Auto Gallery owed DeskSite no duty of care and, in the absence of such a duty and any evidence indicating The Auto Gallery's actual knowledge of the oral agreement between DeskSite and Kader regarding who should hold title to the car, the trial court properly granted summary adjudication to The Auto Gallery on all of DeskSite's claims against it.
II.-III.
The judgment is affirmed. The Auto Gallery, Signature, Premier, and Jenkins are entitled to their costs on appeal.
We concur:
ASHMANN-GERST, Acting P.J.
GOODMAN, J.
Notes
The Auto Gallery, Premier, Signature, and Jenkins filed a counter-complaint against DeskSite, but the trial court sustained DeskSite's demurrer to that counter-complaint without leave to amend, and that ruling was never appealed. The Auto Gallery, Premier, Signature, and Jenkins also filed a cross-complaint against Kader for implied indemnity, apportionment of fault, and declaratory relief; that action is also not before us on appeal.
DeskSite subsequently asked the court to "clarify" that the jury's special verdict pertained only to Kader's theft of the car (rather than the $150,000 DeskSite loaned him to buy back the car), but the trial court denied the motion.
In the absence of " 'extraordinary and specific facts,' " banks and merchants generally do not owe complete strangers to a transaction any duty to investigate the suspicious activities of the bank's or merchant's customers. (Gil v. Bank of America, N.A.(2006)
DeskSite also points to the deposition testimony of some employees of The Auto Gallery, who noted that Kader "portrayed himself as a big shot" and a "pretentious" "wannabe," but DeskSite does not contend that these views of Kader's penchant for self-promotion are red flags that he was deceitful, particularly in light of Kader's presentation of a bona fide check from DeskSite to The Auto Gallery with a memo line bearing Kader's initials.
See footnote *, ante.
Retired judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
