Filed 12/31/14 Ferguson v. Yaspan CA2/2
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION TWO


JOLINE FERGUSON,                                                     B253338

         Plaintiff and Appellant,                                    (Los Angeles County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. BP125282)
         v.

ROBERT M. YASPAN,

         Defendant and Respondent.



         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Michael
Levanas, Judge. Affirmed.


         Greenberg Traurig, Scott D. Bertzyk; Law Offices of Steven W. Kerekes, Steven
W. Kerekes, for Plaintiff and Appellant.


         Oldman, Cooley, Sallus, Birnberg & Coleman, Marshal A. Oldman, Justin B.
Gold, and Jamie N. Gonzalez, for Defendant and Respondent.




                                                   *         *         *
                               1
       Allyn Ferguson (Allyn) and his wife, plaintiff Joline Ferguson (Joline),
(collectively, the Fergusons) offered to sell their attorney, defendant Robert M. Yaspan
(Yaspan) and his wife (collectively, the Yaspans) an interest in a London flat they owned.
At Yaspan’s suggestion, the Fergusons hired independent counsel and the parties
exchanged five drafts before signing a written agreement in 1995. The trial court
concluded that Joline’s 2011 petition to set aside the agreement as a product of Yaspan’s
undue influence was untimely and without merit. We agree, and affirm the judgment.
                       FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
       In the 1980’s, Allyn and Joline bought a flat in London overlooking Hyde Park for
approximately $200,000, and put title to the property in the Wellington Trust (Trust).
       In the early 1990’s, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) sought to
collect $2 million from Allyn and three others who had guaranteed a loan made to a
music school. Allyn hired Yaspan, an attorney, to represent him. The FDIC agreed to
settle for $800,000, with $200,000 coming from each guarantor, but Allyn did not have
that amount available. Allyn’s accountant, who was also one of the guarantors, loaned
Allyn the money, secured by a $210,000 note interest in the flat (the Note). Yaspan
continued to represented Allyn with respect to the FDIC through 1999.
       In 1995, Allyn approached Yaspan with a business deal. Yaspan and his wife
would become 50 percent co-owners of the Trust with Allyn and Joline; in exchange, the
Yaspans would assume half of the Note and pay Allyn the equivalent of $200,000. This
proposal enabled the Fergusons to recover nearly all of their original purchase price for
the flat and still own half of it. Both the Fergusons and the Yaspans wanted to be
partners with each other and not each others’ children, so they agreed that whichever
couple outlived the other would have the right to buy out the deceased couple’s interest in
the Trust before that interest could pass to anyone else.




1       Because the Fergusons and their daughter share the same last name, we use their
first names for clarity. We mean no disrespect.

                                              2
       Recognizing the potential conflict of interest, Yaspan advised Allyn that he should
hire independent counsel to advise him in drafting their tentative agreement. Allyn
retained Keith Zimmet (Zimmet), who was an associate at the law firm of Lewitt,
Hackman, Hoefflin, Shapiro, Marshall & Harlan (Lewitt Hackman). Yaspan had nothing
to do with Allyn’s selection of Zimmet. Because Lewitt Hackman had represented
Allyn’s accountant, who still owned the Note, the Fergusons waived the conflict between
themselves and the accountant in writing.
       Zimmet and Yaspan started negotiating. Yaspan prepared the initial draft. Over
the next five months, Zimmet produced five more drafts, including the final draft.
       All of the drafts, as well as the final agreement (Agreement), contained a “buy-
out” provision: The substance of that provision remained the same in every draft, but the
language used to effectuate it changed (and became increasingly “complicated”). In the
first two drafts, paragraph 7.0 explained that “[i]n the event of the death of both of the
FERGUSON’S [sic] or both of the YASPAN’S [sic] then the Trust shall buy out their
interest at 50% of a deemed total value of $650,000 [and] shall fund such buy-out with a
10-year . . . life insurance policy . . . .” Later drafts relied on two different sections
(sections 11 and 13) to provide that (1) the Trust would buy insurance and fund a
$325,000 payment upon the death of the second spouse of either couple (paragraph
11(d)), and (2) either couple had the right to buy the others’ share at $325,000 if the
property was to be “sold” or “transferred” (paragraph 13), which Yaspan opined might
apply to testamentary transfers as well. The Agreement also contemplated the
simultaneous execution of a Second Amendment to the Trust itself, which contained the
buyout and right of first refusal terms and also made the trust irrevocable.
       The parties signed the Agreement in September 1995. At that time, Allyn and
                                  2
Joline were 70 and 68 years old, and Yaspan and his wife were 49 and 47. Because the
Fergusons were represented by Zimmet, Yaspan did not explain to them the terms of the

2      Joline is now in her 80’s. We accordingly grant the parties’ joint request for
calendar preference. (Warren v. Schecter (1997) 57 Cal.App.4th 1189, 1198-1200; Code
Civ. Proc., § 36.)

                                                3
Agreement or its respective benefits and drawbacks. When Zimmet testified in 2013, he
stated that he could not recall specifically what he told the Fergusons in 1995, but
testified that he advised them regarding the Agreement and ensured they understood it
before they signed it.
       Neither couple took out the life insurance policies the Agreement contemplated.
In 1999, Allyn and Yaspan asked the current trustee of the Trust to resign, and became
cotrustees. That same year, Yaspan bought the Note. Some time thereafter, both the
Fergusons and the Yaspans lost their copies of the signed Agreement, although the
Fergusons did have copies of the initial and penultimate drafts. In 2004, the Fergusons
retained a trust and estates lawyer who explained these drafts to them.
       A year after Allyn passed away in 2010, Joline filed a petition and an amended
Petition For Order Rescinding Second Amendment seeking, among other things,
rescission of the Agreement, “general damages,” and accounting. Yaspan filed a
counterclaim to enforce the Agreement. The parties agreed to try the issue of the
Agreement’s validity first, and did so on eight days over the course of eight months.
       The trial court upheld the Agreement. The court concluded that Joline’s petition
was barred by the four-year statute of limitations. On the merits, the court ruled that
(1) Yaspan had been representing the Fergusons at the time the Agreement was signed,
(2) the transaction did not comply with California Rules of Professional Conduct, rule 3-
300 and was presumptively unfair under Probate Code section 16004, but (3) Yaspan had
rebutted that presumption by demonstrating that the Agreement was fair and reasonable,
and that Zimmet had served as independent counsel who had explained the Agreement
and its implications to the Fergusons. In making these determinations, the trial court
found Yaspan and Zimmet to be credible, and some of the testimony of Allyn and
Joline’s daughter Jillian Ferguson (Jillian) not to be credible.
       The court entered judgment, and Joline timely appealed.




                                              4
                                       DISCUSSION
I.     Timeliness of Joline’s petition
       The trial court ruled that Joline’s petition was barred by the statute of limitations
for seeking rescission under Code of Civil Procedure section 337 because she did not file
within four years of the end of her attorney-client relationship with Yaspan in 1999 or
within four years of when her trust attorney in 2004 explained the buyout provision
contained in the two drafts she possessed (and which were substantively identical to the
final draft).
       Joline argues that this ruling is incorrect for three reasons: (1) no statute of
limitations applies because she is asserting rescission defensively and is not seeking
affirmative relief; (2) the limitations clock has yet to start running because it has been
tolled while Yaspan has acted as a fiduciary to the Fergusons (as an attorney from 1995
to 1999, and as cotrustee of the Trust from 1999 until the present); and (3) Yaspan lulled
the Fergusons into inaction by preventing them from obtaining a copy of the Agreement
until 2010, and by misrepresenting to the Fergusons at a 2007 meeting that the
Agreement contained no buyout provision.
       We review the application of a statute of limitations de novo when the facts are
undisputed. (Aryeh v. Canon Business Solutions, Inc. (2013) 55 Cal.4th 1185, 1191.)
We review the trial court’s factual findings for substantial evidence by examining the
whole record, including conflicting evidence, in the light most favorable to the ruling
below to determine whether there is reasonable, credible evidence of solid value to
support that ruling. (People v. Boyce (2014) 59 Cal.4th 672, 692 (Boyce); People v.
Jackson (2014) 58 Cal.4th 724, 749-750 (Jackson).)
       A.       Rescission as a defense
       The invalidity of a contract may be asserted either as a basis for affirmative relief
or as a defense. (See Schuman v. Ignatin (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 255, 266.) When a
litigant seeks affirmative relief, her claim may be barred if filed outside the statute of
limitations period. (Styne v. Stevens (2001) 26 Cal.4th 42, 51-52.) However, where
invalidity is raised solely as a defense, there is no limitations period because statutes of

                                              5
limitations are designed to “act as a bar to actions or proceedings”— not to individual
claims or defenses. (French v. Construction Laborers Revision Trust (1975) 44
Cal.App.3d 479, 485-486.) Although the validity of the Agreement is germane as a
defense to Yaspan’s cross-claim, it is also a central component of Joline’s petition—
which seeks not only a declaration of rescission, but also general damages. Joline is
accordingly seeking affirmative relief, and the four-year limitations period applies.
(Code Civ. Proc., § 337.)
       B.     Delayed accrual
       As a general rule, statutes of limitations begin to run once every element of a
cause of action has occurred. (Strasberg v. Odyseey Group (1996) 51 Cal.App.4th 906,
916 (Strasberg).) But this rule does not apply when the putative defendant is in a
fiduciary relationship with the putative plaintiff; in that situation, the statute of limitations
clock does not begin to tick until “the [putative plaintiff] has knowledge or notice of the
act constituting a breach of fidelity.” (Eisenbaum v. Western Energy Resources, Inc.
(1990) 218 Cal.App.3d 314, 325 (Eisenbaum); Strasberg, at p. 916.) The existence of the
fiduciary relationship limits the plaintiff’s duty of inquiry by eliminating the plaintiff’s
usual duty to conduct due diligence, but it does not empower that plaintiff to “‘sit idly
by’” when “‘“facts sufficient to arouse the suspicions of a reasonable [person][]”’”
“‘come to his [or her] attention.’ [Electronic Equipment Express, Inc. v. Donald H. Seiler
& Co. (1981) 122 Cal.App.3d 834], 855).” (Czajkowski v. Haskell & White LLP (2012)
208 Cal.App.4th 166, 176-177, italics omitted; Graham-Sult v. Clainos (9th Cir. 2014)
756 F.3d 724, 743; Eisenbaum, at p. 325.)
                                                                                          3
       Even if we assume Yaspan has been a fiduciary to the Fergusons since 1995, the
trial court did not err in concluding that the statute of limitations began to run by the time
the Fergusons discussed the draft agreements with their trust attorney in 2004. Both
drafts are substantively identical to the Agreement, and the language of the penultimate


3      Because of this assumption, we do not need to decide whether Yaspan’s status as a
cotrustee of the Trust from 1999 until 2013 further invoked the delayed accrual rule.

                                               6
interim draft is nearly identical to the language in the Agreement. Once the Fergusons’
trust attorney explained the significance of that language, the Fergusons had before them
sufficient facts to raise the voidability argument that she waited until 2011 to assert in her
petition (and which we address below).
       C.     Tolling due to lulling
       A limitations period that has started to run can nevertheless be tolled if the
putative defendant engages in “fraud in concealing a cause of action.” (Grisham v. Philip
Morris, Inc.(2007) 40 Cal.4th 623, 637.) Joline contends that Yaspan lulled her and
Allyn into inaction (1) by keeping them from obtaining a copy of the Agreement and
(2) by misrepresenting to them in 2007 that the Agreement did not contain a buyout
provision (a) by making a statement to that effect and (b) by giving Joline a document
purporting to “restate” the Agreement’s terms that did not include a buy-out provision.
The trial court ruled that the evidence did not support either contention.
       Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s ruling. Yaspan was never
designated as the repository for the Agreement; Yaspan opened his files to the Fergusons
when they asked him for a copy of the Agreement; and Zimmet, the Fergusons’ own
lawyer, was the one who provided a copy of the Agreement when Yaspan inquired of
him. This evidence adequately supports the trial court’s finding that Yaspan was not
concealing the Agreement. The trial court also found credible Yaspan’s trial testimony
that at most he said he was uncertain about the Agreement’s contents and that he did not
himself draft or review the “restatement.” Because we are not at liberty to disagree with
these credibility findings (Jackson, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 749), the trial court’s ruling on
this ground is also supported by substantial evidence.
       For these reasons, the trial court’s ruling that Joline’s claim is time-barred was not
erroneous.4


4      Joline also appears to attack the trial court’s ruling that the equitable doctrine of
laches does not apply. We need not address this issue because the ruling favors Joline
and because the statute of limitations bar makes it unnecessary to address the further bar
of laches.

                                              7
II.    Validity of Agreement
       Attorneys are fiduciaries who owe their clients the “most conscientious fidelity.”
(Fair v. Bakhtiari (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 1135, 1140-1141 (Fair).) The law accordingly
takes a jaundiced view of business transactions between attorneys and their clients. (See
Mayhew v. Benninghoff (1997) 53 Cal.App.4th 1365, 1369 (Mayhew) [“the law
presumes” attorneys engaging in such transactions “wear” a “black” hat].) Such
transactions are not prohibited, but they are disfavored. California Rules of Professional
Conduct, rule 3-300 subjects a lawyer to discipline if he or she “enter[s] into a business
transaction with a client” without first satisfying certain substantive and procedural
prerequisites. (Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 3-300.) Rule 3-300 does not itself “provide a
basis for civil liability” (BGJ Associates v. Wilson (2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 1217, 1227
(BGJ)), but its statutory counterpart—Probate Code section 16004—erects a presumption
that transactions between an attorney and client “by which the [attorney] obtains an
advantage” are a breach of the attorney’s fiduciary duty and are the product of undue
                                            5
influence. (Prob. Code, § 16004, subd. (c) [“A transaction between the trustee and a
beneficiary which occurs during the existence of the trust . . . and by which the trustee
obtains an advantage from the beneficiary is presumed to be a violation of the trustee’s
fiduciary duties.”]; Fair, supra, 195 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1152-1153 [applying section
16004 “to the fiduciary relation between attorney and client” and noting that section
16004 is a “statutory complement” to rule 3-300]; BGJ, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1221 [noting presumption of “undue influence”].) The presumption is rebuttable, and
the attorney’s inability to do so renders the transaction voidable at the client’s option.
(BGJ, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at p. 1229.)
       The trial court concluded that Yaspan was acting as the Fergusons’ lawyer when
they entered into the Agreement in 1995, so the pertinent question is whether the trial
court erred in concluding that Yaspan rebutted section 16004’s presumption of undue
influence. The presumption is rebutted by a showing that (1) “the dealing was fair and


5      All further statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise indicated.

                                                8
just, and [(2)] the client was fully advised.” (BGJ, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1227-
1228, quoting Felton v. Le Breton (1891) 92 Cal. 457, 469 (Felton); Fair, supra, 195
Cal.App.4th at pp. 1152-1153.)
       Joline argues that Yaspan failed to establish either requirement because (1) the
Agreement was not fair and reasonable, and (2) she and Allyn were never fully advised of
the terms of the agreement by Yaspan himself or by Zimmet, who was not truly
“independent” counsel. We review the trial court’s factual findings for substantial
evidence (Boyce, supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 692), and the court’s assessment of the fairness
of the deal and adequacy of disclosures de novo because both are measured by an
objective legal standard (see Haworth v. Superior Court (2010) 50 Cal.4th 372, 385).
       A.     Fairness of the Agreement
       Joline argues that the Agreement is unfair and unjust because the buyout provision
guaranteeing the surviving couple the right to buy the nonsurviving couple’s 50 percent
interest in the Trust for a fixed price of $325,000 unfairly benefits the Yaspans over the
Fergusons because (1) the value of the flat was more likely to appreciate than depreciate
over time (making the $325,000 buyout price an unreasonably low price), and (2) the
Fergusons were less likely than the Yaspans to be the beneficiaries of this windfall
because they were older and thus statistically more likely to die first. Joline contends that
the irrevocability of the Trust and the de facto requirement that both couples consent
before either couple can sell its 50 percent interest to any third parties make the
statistically probable and unfair outcome unavoidable. The trial court rejected these
arguments. Joline asserts that the trial court erred by (1) looking at the fairness of the
Agreement as a whole rather than focusing on terms she identifies as unfair, and (2)
giving insufficient weight to the statistical likelihood that the buyout provision would
favor the Yaspans. The trial court did not err.
              1.     Focus on the Agreement as a whole
       Contractual language is construed “‘“in the context of the instrument as a whole.”’
(Bay Cities Paving & Grading, Inc. v Lawyers’ Mutual Ins. Co. (1993) 5 Cal.4th 854,
867.)” (Regional Steel Corp. v. Liberty Surplus Ins. Corp. (2014) 226 Cal.App.4th 1377,

                                              9
1390.) There are good reasons to take the same approach in evaluating the fairness and
reasonableness of contracts. Contracts contain many terms, with some terms favoring
one party and other terms favoring the other party. Focusing on just the unfavorable
terms would invariably lead to the conclusion that a contract is unfair, even though other
terms a court would be required by Joline’s rule to ignore make the overall contract
evenhanded and fair.
       We agree with the trial court that Yaspan established that the Agreement, as a
whole, is fair and reasonable to the Fergusons. Although it is not dispositive (Hawk v.
State Bar (1988) 45 Cal.3d 589, 599), it is worth noting that the idea to sell the flat was
Allyn’s. Allyn then set the price that was at fair market value in 1995 and at an amount
that enabled the Fergusons to recoup their initial investment in the flat and retain a half
interest in it. The Agreement reflected the couples’ mutual decision to keep the Trust’s
ownership between the couples and not their children. Zimmet negotiated to have the
Yaspans pay half of the insurance premiums even though the premiums were higher for
the Fergusons than the Yaspans. And Allyn said he was “happy” with the Agreement
before he signed it.
              2.       Focus on fairness at the time of signing
       “‘It is blackletter law that whether a contract is fair . . . is determined with
reference to the time when the contract was made and cannot be resolved by
hindsight . . . .’” (Coon v. Nicola (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 1225, 1238, quoting Yeng Sue
Chow v. Levi Strauss & Co. (1975) 49 Cal.App.3d 315, 325; O’Connell v. Lampe (1929)
206 Cal. 282, 285 [looking to fairness at “the inception of the agreement”].) This case
confirms why this focus makes sense. The buyout provision could be either a boon or a
curse to the Fergusons depending on two variables unknown to the parties in 1995:
(1) whether the flat would appreciate or depreciate in value (which could make the
locked-in $325,000 buyout price a good or bad deal); and (2) whether the Fergusons or
Yaspans would live longer. Although the buyout provision could to this day be better for
the Fergusons if the property suddenly declines in value or if Joline outlives both
Yaspans, Joline asks us to declare the Agreement invalid based upon the statistical

                                              10
likelihood of the various scenarios. We decline to do so. Injecting actuarial and other
statistical studies into the assessment of fairness not only transgresses the “blackletter
law” discussed above, it is also particularly inappropriate here where both variables—the
parties’ respective ages and the elasticity of real estate values—were obvious to the
parties at the time the Agreement was signed. For these reasons, the trial court did not err
                                                                                             6
in evaluating the Agreement’s terms based on what was known to the parties in 1995.
We also deny Joline’s request to take judicial notice of Yaspan’s conduct vis-a-vis the
Trust in 2014.
       B.     Adequacy of disclosures
       Joline further contends that Yaspan did not sufficiently establish that he advised
her and Allyn of the “pros and cons” of the Agreement and its buyout provision. More
specifically, she argues that (1) Yaspan was himself personally required to counsel the
Fergusons on the drawbacks of the buyout provision, whether or not they retained
independent counsel, (2) Zimmet, the counsel the Fergusons hired, was not in actuality
“independent”, and (3) Zimmet did not do a good job advising them about the
Agreement’s benefits and drawbacks. The trial court rejected all three arguments. So do
we.
              1.     Duty to advise
       An attorney rebuts section 16004’s presumption of undue influence by showing
that the client was “fully advised” regarding the contract. (BGJ, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1227-1228.) Rule 3-300 similarly requires “full[] disclos[ure]” (Rules Prof.
Conduct, rule 3-300), and courts have interpreted this ethical rule (and its predecessor) to
obligate the attorney to give “‘to his client “all that reasonable advice against himself that
he would have given him against a third person.”’” (Beery v. State Bar (1987) 43 Cal.3d
802, 813, quoting Felton, supra, 92 Cal. at p. 469; Passante v. McWilliam (1997) 53
Cal.App.4th 1240, 1248; Mayhew, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at p. 1369.)

6      For the same reasons, we reject Joline’s related argument that the 50/50 split in the
costs of the trust were unfair because of the small statistical likelihood that she would
outlive both Yaspans.

                                             11
       Yaspan made no such disclosures to the Fergusons in this case; instead, he
followed rule 3-300’s requirement to advise the Fergusons to obtain independent counsel
and they did so. So the question becomes: Can the duty to advise a client be discharged
by the independent counsel the client retains?
       Joline argues it cannot, while the trial court ruled it can. We agree with the trial
court. Joline cites language in BGJ indicating that a client’s retention of independent
counsel does not absolve the lawyer of his or her duty under rule 3-300 to obtain the
client’s consent in writing to the terms of the transaction. (BGJ, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1226-1227.) From this, Joline extrapolates the principle that a client’s retention of
independent counsel does not absolve the attorney of the duty to personally advise his
clients of the pros and cons of the proposed transaction.
       We reject this extrapolation for three reasons. First, BGJ was construing rule
3-300, not section 16004. Noncompliance with rule 3-300 triggers section 16004’s
presumption (Fair, supra, 195 Cal.App.4th at p. 1153), but is not dispositive of section
16004; if it were dispositive, section 16004’s presumption would be conclusive rather
than rebuttable. Second, and more to the point, BGJ did not deal with the interaction of
the same two requirements of rule 3-300 as are at issue here. BGJ held that a client’s
retention of independent counsel to give unbiased advice was not a substitute for having
the client’s written consent to the terms of the transaction. Here, the issue is whether the
client’s retention of independent counsel to give unbiased advice is a substitute for
having the attorney entering into the transaction give advice. It is, at least where the
attorney does not have any information bearing on the advisability of the transaction that
is unavailable to independent counsel. Third, the alternative Joline proposes would
disserve the purposes of rule 3-300 and section 16004 because it would not only permit—
but require—the lawyer who is by law presumed to be exerting undue influence to give
his clients advice about the proposed transaction even when those clients have retained a
disinterested attorney to do the same. The potential for mischief arising when clients
receive conflicting advice from their interested lawyer and their disinterested independent
counsel is considerable.

                                             12
              2.     Zimmet’s independence
       Joline next argues that Zimmet did not, in fact, act as independent counsel because
(1) he was just a “scrivener” who did not provide them with any substantive analysis of
the Agreement, (2) he did little more than rubber stamp Yaspan’s initial draft, and (3) he
labored under a conflict of interest.
       Joline’s first argument is belied by the record. Joline cites two snippets of
testimony in which Zimmet is characterized as a “scrivener,” but these pertain to his role
in drafting the first amendment to the Trust and the letter requiring one of the Trust’s
trustees to resign. These passages do not have anything to do with Zimmet’s role in
drafting the Agreement or the Second Amendment to the Trust. Joline also cites portions
of Zimmet’s testimony in which he admits he cannot recall giving the Fergusons advice
regarding the Agreement. However, she completely ignores his further testimony that his
lack of recall pertains solely to how he gave advice; Zimmet testified that he was
“absolutely” sure that he advised them regarding the advantages and disadvantages of the
Agreement and ensured they understood it before allowing them to sign it. Joline lastly
cites Jillian’s testimony that Zimmet was present merely “to observe a signature”, but
ignores Jillian’s further concession that she was living in Seattle in 1995 and had “limited
knowledge” of her parents’ business transactions, and ignores the trial court’s finding that
Jillian was not credible in many respects.
       Substantial evidence also supports the trial court’s finding that Zimmet acted as
independent counsel. Zimmet drafted five of the six drafts of what eventually became the
Agreement, and in those drafts substantially altered the language of the terms and also
negotiated some of them to the Yaspans’ detriment. The trial court found Zimmet’s
account of what he did to be “highly credible and compelling.”
       The trial court also correctly determined that the conflict that the Fergusons
waived between the Zimmet’s firm’s representation of the Fergusons and Allyn’s
accountant had “nothing to do” with Yaspan. In any event, that conflict was knowingly
waived in writing by the Fergusons. Joline also cites a 1999 letter in which Yaspan
indicates that Zimmet had been representing both himself and the Fergusons in 1995, but

                                             13
the contemporaneous evidence was to the contrary; Zimmet testified he only represented
the Fergusons, and Yaspan “credibly” testified that his statement in the 1999 letter was
incorrect.
                 3.   Zimmet’s competence
       Joline finally argues that Zimmet did a poor job representing them as independent
counsel. Even if true, her remedy lies with a malpractice suit against Zimmet, not a
finding that the Agreement is invalid. But the evidence does not reveal any deficiency:
The Fergusons were properly advised and expressed their “happ[iness]” with the
Agreement before they signed it.
       Joline seeks to impeach that conclusion with Jillian’s testimony regarding Allyn’s
understanding of the Agreement years later, and with Yaspan’s testimony that Allyn said
he had unanswered questions before he signed the Agreement. However, the trial court
found Jillian’s testimony not to be credible, and Yaspan testified that he advised Allyn to
speak with Zimmet before signing the Agreement. At most, the evidence on these points
is conflicting, but that does not make it insubstantial. (Jackson, supra, 58 Cal.4th at pp.
             7
749-750.)




7       In light of these conclusions, it is not necessary to decide whether the Fergusons
ratified the invalid Agreement or whether the Agreement is severable.

                                             14
                                 DISPOSITION
     The judgment is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to Yaspan.
     NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS.


                                       _______________________, J.
                                              HOFFSTADT
We concur:




____________________________, P. J.
             BOREN


____________________________, J.
      ASHMANN-GERST




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