Attorneys for Plaintiff ABIGAIL SMITH SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF GRANITE

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1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Please note: This sample document is redacted from an actual research and writing project we did for a customer some time ago. It reflects the law as of the date we completed it. Because the law may have changed since that time, please use it solely to evaluate the scope and quality of our work. If you have questions or comments, please contact Jim Schenkel at 1--000, or email info@quojure.com. Attorneys for Plaintiff ABIGAIL SMITH ABIGAIL SMITH, vs. Plaintiff, SAGE BANK, FACTS Defendant. SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF GRANITE / Case No. 1-- TRIAL BRIEF OF PLAINTIFF ABIGAIL SMITH Date: Time: Dept. Complaint filed: Trial date: This action arises out of a loan evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a second deed of trust on plaintiff Abigail Smith s home. In, plaintiff fell behind on payments due under the promissory note. Defendant Sage Bank elected not to pursue nonjudicial foreclosure on the deed of trust, but instead sued plaintiff on the promissory note. Defendant obtained a monetary judgment against plaintiff, and recorded an abstract of judgment in Granite County on or about June 1,. After entry of the judgment, defendant agreed to accept plaintiff s payment of $,000 in $1,000 monthly installments as full satisfaction of the judgment. Plaintiff made the $1,000 monthly payments until, when she undertook to refinance her home. As part of that process, plaintiff contacted defendant s then-attorney, to whom she had been making the $1,000 monthly payments, and negotiated a lump-sum payoff. 1

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Plaintiff gave the attorney a cashier s check for the agreed sum payable to defendant and clearly marked settlement in full. In return, defendant s attorney gave plaintiff an executed Acknowledgment of Satisfaction of Judgment. Defendant thereafter discharged the attorney and attempted to block filing of the Acknowledgment, but nevertheless negotiated the settlement in full cashier s check a few days later. Despite the foregoing, defendant failed and refused to clear plaintiff s title to her home by reconveying the deed of trust. Furthermore, defendant continued to report plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off and refused to confirm that there was a zero balance due. As a result, plaintiff lost two otherwise-approved refinance loans and suffered other deleterious consequences. Plaintiff s complaint alleges claims for: (1) failure to reconvey the deed of trust in violation of Civil Code 1; () slander of title; () breach of contract; and () breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The evidence will establish plaintiff s right to recover under each of these theories. ARGUMENT 1. Defendant s refusal to reconvey the deed of trust, continued reporting of plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off, and refusal to confirm a zero balance due were entirely without justification. Code of Civil Procedure provides that there can be but one form of action for the recovery of any debt secured by a deed of trust. Under this one-action rule, a trust deed beneficiary who sues on the underlying debt to recover a personal judgment against the trustor without foreclosing on the deed of trust waives the security of the deed of trust. Security Pacific National Bank v. Wozab (0) 1 Cal.d 1, 0; Miller & Starr, CALIFORNIA REAL ESTATE (rd ed. 000) :1, at. Thus, even apart from defendant s agreement to accept plaintiff s lump-sum payment as full satisfaction of the judgment, defendant waived the security of the deed of trust simply by suing plaintiff on

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 the promissory note and obtaining a personal judgment against her. Defendant thereafter had no reason whatsoever not to reconvey the deed of trust. Defendant was also obligated to reconvey the deed of trust because the judgment on the promissory note was fully satisfied. A money judgment may be satisfied by payment of the full amount required to satisfy the judgment or by acceptance by the judgment creditor of a lesser sum in full satisfaction of the judgment. Code Civ. Proc..0(a). The attorney who negotiated the lump-sum payoff, accepted the settlementin-full cashier s check, and executed the Acknowledgment of Satisfaction of Judgment was defendant s attorney when he took those actions. Section.00(c)() expressly provides that an Acknowledgment of Satisfaction of Judgment may be executed by the attorney for the judgment creditor... unless a revocation of the attorney s authority is filed. Here, no such revocation was filed before the attorney executed the Acknowledgment. And although defendant later discharged the attorney and attempted to block filing of the Acknowledgment, it nevertheless negotiated the settlement-in-full cashier s check shortly thereafter. Knowingly cashing a check with such a notation discharges the debtor s obligation. Potter v. Pacific Coast Lumber Co. (1) Cal.d, ; In re Marriage of Thompson () 1 Cal.App.th, -0; Civ. Code 1. When an obligation secured by a deed of trust is satisfied, the deed of trust terminates and title to the property automatically revests in the trustor without a reconveyance. Snider v. Basinger () 1 Cal.App.d,. The trustor is entitled to a reconveyance, but the legal effect of reconveyance is only to clear the title of record. Ibid. Here, the deed of trust had terminated because (1) defendant waived the security of the deed of trust by suing on the promissory note; and () plaintiff paid and defendant accepted an agreed sum as full satisfaction of the judgment on the note. Thereafter, defendant had no rights under the deed of trust. But it nevertheless refused to clear plaintiff s title by reconveyance, continued to report plaintiff s loan as a $0,000

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 charge off, and refused to confirm a zero balance due, all without justification.. Defendant is liable for failure to reconvey the deed of trust in violation of Civil Code 1. When an obligor satisfies an obligation secured by a deed of trust, the beneficiary must reconvey the deed of trust. If the beneficiary fails to do so, the violator is liable in damages. Civil Code 1. 1 In this case, the evidence will show that the obligation secured by the deed of trust was satisfied, and that defendant wrongfully refused to execute and deliver to the trustee a request for reconveyance. This breach of statutory duty is a tort, which entitles plaintiff to all the damages proximately caused thereby, including damages for emotional distress. Pintor v. Ong () Cal.App.d, 1-; Miller & Starr, supra, :, at -. Furthermore, the evidence will show that an award of punitive damages is justified because defendant is guilty of malice and/or oppression. Malice means conduct that is intended to cause injury or despicable conduct carried on by the defendant with willful and conscious disregard of the rights or safety of others. Civ. Code (c)(1). Oppression means despicable conduct that subjects the plaintiff to cruel and unjust hardship in conscious disregard of his rights. Id. (c)(). It is almost inconceivable that defendant did not realize the deed of trust had terminated, both because it waived the security of the deed of trust when it sued on the promissory note without foreclosing, and 1 Civil Code 1 provides in relevant part: (b)(1) When the obligation secured by any deed of trust has been satisfied, the beneficiary or the assignee of the beneficiary shall execute and deliver to the trustee the original note, deed of trust, request for full reconveyance, and other documents as may be necessary to reconvey, or cause to be reconveyed, the deed of trust. * * * (e) The violation of this section shall make the violator liable to the person affected by the violation for all damages which that person may sustain by reason of the violation, and shall require that the violator forfeit to that person the sum of three hundred dollars ($00).

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 because plaintiff paid and defendant accepted an agreed sum as full satisfaction of the judgment. For that reason, together with defendant s continued reporting of plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off and refusal to confirm a zero balance due, the trier of fact can easily conclude that defendant s refusal to reconvey was willful, was intended to injure plaintiff, and was done with conscious disregard of her rights.. Defendant is liable for slander of title. Slander of title is the publication of a false statement disparaging another s property rights in land, chattels or intangible things, that the publisher should recognize as likely to result in pecuniary harm to the other through the conduct of third persons in respect to the other s interest in the property. Miller & Starr, supra, :0, at, quoting REST.D TORTS,. The elements of the tort are: (1) a publication; () without privilege or justification and thus with malice, express or implied; () false, either knowingly so or made without regard to its truthfulness; and () causing direct and immediate pecuniary loss. Howard v. Schaniel (0) Cal.App.d,. The evidence will establish each of the required elements. First, there was a false publication. The recordation of an instrument facially valid but without underlying merit will, of course, give rise to an action for slander of title. Seeley v. Seymour () 0 Cal.App.d,. Here, defendant refused to reconvey the deed of trust, and thus left it as a matter of record, even though it had terminated as a result of defendant s waiver of the security when it sued on the promissory note and when plaintiff satisfied the underlying obligation. Defendant made the publication in violation of a statutory duty, and thus without privilege or justification. Moreover, the fact that defendant must have known the deed of trust was terminated, together with other conduct such as continuing to report plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off and refusing to confirm a zero balance due, shows that the publication was made with malice. Finally, plaintiff has suffered direct and immediate pecuniary loss. The two

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 elements of damages generally recoverable for slander of title are: (1) pecuniary loss resulting directly and immediately from the conduct of third persons, and () the expense of measures reasonably necessary to counteract the publication, including litigation to remove the doubt the publication caused regarding plaintiff s title. Appel v. Burman () Cal.App.d,. The latter category of damages includes the attorney s fees incurred in the slander of title action itself (not as costs, but as damages). Id. at. In the present case, plaintiff has suffered substantial damages directly caused by third persons conduct, including the loss of two refinance loans and her disqualification from applying for a general-manager position where she was employed. Plaintiff is entitled to recover all such sums, together with her attorney s fees. In addition to compensatory damages, a slander-of-title plaintiff may also recover punitive damages. Castaic Clay Manufacturing Co. v. Dedes () Cal.App.d, 0-1. The evidence will show that defendant is guilty of malice and/or oppression, and that plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover punitive damages.. Defendant is liable for breach of contract. The elements of a cause of action for breach of contract are: (1) the contract; () plaintiff s performance or excuse for nonperformance; () defendant s breach; and () damage to the plaintiff. Witkin, CALIFORNIA PROCEDURE (th ed. ) Pleading,, at 0. Again, the evidence will establish each of the requisite elements. Plaintiff and defendant s then-attorney agreed to accept the lump-sum payoff as full satisfaction of the judgment against plaintiff. Plaintiff fully performed the agreement by delivering a cashier s check for the agreed amount marked settlement in full, and defendant s attorney executed an Acknowledgment of Satisfaction of Judgment. Although defendant discharged the attorney and attempted to block filing of the Acknowledgment, it nevertheless accepted plaintiff s performance by negotiating the settlement-in-full cashier s check. Because a client may ratify an attorney s unauthorized

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 acts and thereby be barred from denying the attorney s authority, that fact also precludes any claim that the attorney acted in excess of his authority. 1 Witkin, supra, Attorneys,, at 00. Defendant breached the agreement by refusing to reconvey the deed of trust, continuing to report plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off, and refusing to confirm a zero balance due. Although punitive damages and damages for emotional distress cannot be recovered on a breach of contract theory, defendant s breach entitles plaintiff to recover all other damages which will compensate the party aggrieved for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, or which, in the ordinary course of things, would be likely to result therefrom. Civ. Code 00.. Defendant is liable for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. In every contract there is an implied covenant that neither party will do anything that will have the effect of destroying or injuring the other party s right to receive the fruits of the contract. Locke v. Warner Bros., Inc. () Cal.App.th,. In the present case, plaintiff entered into the lump-sum-payoff agreement to satisfy the judgment against her and clear her title to the property so as to permit her to refinance her home. Defendant s refusal to reconvey the deed of trust, continued reporting of plaintiff s loan as a $0,000 charge off, and refusal to confirm a zero balance due had the precise effect of denying plaintiff the benefits she sought by entering into the contract. Defendant may therefore be held liable for breach of the implied covenant. Dated:, Respectfully submitted, Attorneys for Plaintiff