Filed 1/12/16 Baik v. Oyang America, Inc. CA2/7
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 SEVEN


KYUEM HEUM BAIK,                                                     B258284

         Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and                              (Los Angeles County
         Respondent,                                                 Super. Ct. No. BC484129)

         v.

OYANG AMERICA, INC., et al.,

         Defendants, Cross-complainants
         and Appellants.




                   APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
Yvette Palazeulos, Judge. Affirmed.


                   Evan Michael Hess for Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants.


                   No appearance for Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Respondent.




                             ______________________________________
                                     INTRODUCTION


          Kyuem Heum Baik filed this action to collect a $100,000 debt from Oyang
America, Inc. and its principal, Kenneth Yoon. Oyang America and Yoon filed a cross-
complaint against Baik seeking to recover consequential damages caused by Baik’s filing
of a UCC financing statement that they claim disrupted their banking relationship and
damaged their business. After a court trial, Baik prevailed on his complaint and on
Oyang America and Yoon’s cross-complaint. Oyang America and Yoon appeal,
challenging only the trial court’s adverse ruling on their cross-complaint. Because Oyang
America and Yoon have not provided an adequate record to review their appeal, we must
affirm.


                    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND


          After making a demand for payment, Baik filed his complaint in this action against
Yoon and his import-export business, Oyang America, to collect a $100,000 debt. Oyang
America had given Baik a check for $100,000, but “the bank refused to honor the check
for payment stopped.” Baik asserted causes of action for money had and received,
account stated, and “account closed check.”
          Oyang America and Yoon filed a cross-complaint claiming that Baik had filed an
improper UCC-1 initial financing statement that hurt their business. Oyang America and
Yoon alleged that Baik did so with the “specific intent and design” of interfering with
their “ability to contract with third parties.” Specifically, Oyang America and Yoon
alleged that, when they “applied for additional financing and an extension of credit with
Royal Business Bank (‘RBB’),” “RBB declined to extend credit [or] financing” because
Baik had filed the UCC financing statement, which “was ahead of RBB’s financing
statement.” Oyang America and Yoon alleged that the UCC financing statement filed by
Baik caused RBB to refuse to extend Oyang America credit, and that their business came
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“to a grinding halt” so that they were “unable to buy and sell goods.” Oyang America
and Yoon asserted causes of action for declaratory relief, injunctive relief, statutory
damages under Commercial Code section 9625,1 interference with prospective economic
relationship, and slander of title.
       The case proceeded to a court trial without a court reporter to transcribe the
proceedings. Oyang America and Yoon argued that the $100,000 was not a loan, but
rather a fee for lobbying services in South Korea that they did not have to pay because
Baik’s lobbying efforts were unsuccessful. Oyang America and Yoon also argued that
Baik filed the UCC financing statement without their consent, as required by section
9509, and that section 9625 authorized them to recover lost financing and other
consequential damages. They claimed that, immediately after Baik filed the UCC
financing statement in April 2013, “Oyang America’s line of credit was cancelled” and
“income from sales plummeted,” and Oyang America’s business did not begin to recover
until RBB reinstated its line of credit in July 2013. Baik argued that Oyang America and
Yoon actually obtained the loan from RBB they claimed they were unable to obtain.
       The court issued a statement of decision finding that Baik had lent Oyang America
and Yoon $100,000, that they had not repaid any of the principal, and that they had
written “a $100,000 check payable to [Baik], but the check was returned when [Baik]
first attempted to cash it because [Oyang America and Yoon] had placed a ‘Stop
Payment’ order on it.” The court found that Oyang America and Yoon did hire Baik as a
lobbyist, and that two payments by Oyang America and Yoon totaling $22,220 were not
partial payments toward the $100,000 debt, but instead were payments for Baik’s
expenses incurred in lobbying South Korean “‘officials’ or ‘businessmen’ in connection
with [Oyang America and Yoon’s] business.” The court also found that Oyang America
and Yoon made $18,000 in interest payments.



1      All statutory references are to the Commercial Code.

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       On the cross-complaint, which is the subject of this appeal, the court found that
“the loan [from RBB] was, in fact, funded and . . . the filing of the Financing Statement
did not negatively impact the decision by [RBB] to make the loan.” The court ruled that,
although Oyang America and Yoon claimed that the UCC financing statement Baik had
filed caused RBB to deny them financing, the evidence in fact showed that RBB had
funded a $350,000 loan and that the filing of the UCC financing statement did not
damage Oyang America and Yoon. The court ruled that “[n]o evidence of damages was
presented” and that “the filing of the Financing Statement caused no injury” to Oyang
America and Yoon. As noted, Oyang America and Yoon appeal only the trial court’s
adverse ruling on their cross-complaint.
       The document they appeal from, however, is not a judgment. The trial court
initially filed an unsigned two-page document entitled “Tentative Decision/Judgment”
pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 3.1590,2 which stated, without giving any
factual or legal basis for the court’s decision, that Baik was entitled to judgment on the
complaint in the amount of $124,500, and to judgment on the cross-complaint by Oyang
America and Yoon. Oyang America and Yoon then requested a statement of decision
pursuant to rule 3.1590(d), specifying the “principal controverted issues” to be addressed.
The court, pursuant to rule 3.1590(f), ordered counsel for Baik to prepare the statement of
decision. Counsel for Baik complied, and filed a proposed statement of decision and a
proposed judgment, neither of which the court ever signed. Instead, the court issued a
different statement of decision, entitled “Statement of Decision in Support of Tentative




2      References to rules are to the California Rules of Court.



                                              4
Decision/Judgment.” Oyang America and Yoon appeal from that document. The court
never signed or filed a judgment.3


                                       DISCUSSION


       Oyang America and Yoon’s principal contention on appeal is that, in ruling on
their cross-complaint, the trial court erred by finding Baik did not have to obtain their
consent in order to file the UCC-1 financing statement. “In California, the filing of a
UCC-1 financing statement is generally required to perfect a security interest or
agricultural lien.” (Corona Fruits & Veggies, Inc. v. Frozsun Foods, Inc. (2006) 143
Cal.App.4th 319, 322.) Section 9521 prescribes a uniform form for such a financing
statement. Section 9509, subdivision (a), provides: “A person may file an initial
financing statement . . . only if either of the following conditions is satisfied: [¶] (1) The
debtor authorizes the filing in an authenticated record or pursuant to subdivision (b) or



3       We sent a letter to counsel for Oyang America and Yoon asking counsel to obtain
a judgment so that we could hear this appeal. Counsel for Oyang America and Yoon
complied, and contacted the trial court about obtaining a judgment. Counsel reported to
this court that the trial court’s clerk advised him that the “Conclusion” section of the
statement of decision “ordering a Final Judgment entered” was a judgment. It is not.
“[A] statement of decision is not a judgment” (MHC Financing Ltd. Partnership Two v.
City of Santee (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 1372, 1392; see Industrial Indemnity Co. v. City
and County of San Francisco (1990) 218 Cal.App.3d 999, 1003, fn. 3 [“[i]t is the
judgment, not the statement of decision, that is appealable”]), and titling a statement of
decision a “statement of decision/judgment” does not make it a judgment. We exercise
our discretion in this case to treat the statement of decision as a judgment (see Morgan v.
Imperial Irrigation District (2014) 223 Cal.App.4th 892, 904 [exercising discretion to
treat a statement of decision as an appealable, final judgment], although we “encourage
trial courts to avoid this issue in the future by using a separate” judgment, “signed by the
court and filed in the action, to conclude a case, rather than relying on” a statement of
decision. (Brehm v. 21st Century Ins. Co. (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 1225, 1234, fn. 5; see
Powell v. County of Orange (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 1573, 1578-1579 [following
Brehm].)

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(c). [¶] (2) The person holds an agricultural lien that has become effective at the time of
filing and the financing statement covers only collateral in which the person holds an
agricultural lien.”
       Oyang America and Yoon point to the following language in the trial court’s
statement of decision: “While the First Amended Cross-complaint alleges a violation of
California Commercial Code § 9625 when the Financing Statement was filed without the
written consent of Cross-complainants, Cross-complainants’ own expert . . . confirmed
that the borrower’s signature is not required on a UCC-1 Financing Statement before the
Statement could be filed.” Oyang America and Yoon appear to interpret this statement as
a finding that “it was not necessary for them to have consented to [Baik’s] wrongful
filing of a UCC-1 Financing Statement,” which they contend is an error of law under
section 9509, subdivision (a). They also contend that the trial court’s comment in its
statement of decision misstates the allegations of their cross-complaint, because they
alleged that Baik filed the financing statement without their consent, not that he filed it
without their “written” consent.
       Both contentions may have some merit. But the trial court also ruled that Oyang
America and Yoon failed to meet their burden of proving that Baik’s filing of the UCC
financing statement caused them injury, and that they did not present evidence of their
damages. Although Oyang America and Yoon argue that “the evidence showed
otherwise” and that the filing of the UCC financial statement caused them to lose
“months of business,” they do not and cannot cite to any such evidence in the record
because there is no record. In the absence of a reporter’s transcript or a settled statement
describing the testimony at trial, Oyang America and Yoon cannot challenge the trial
court’s findings that they did not meet their burden of proof on damages. (See Aguilar v.
Avis Rent A Car System, Inc. (1999) 21 Cal.4th 121, 132 [absence of a record of the oral
proceedings precluded challenge based on the insufficiency of the evidence to support the
judgment]; Navarro v. Perron (2004) 122 Cal.App.4th 797, 801 [“[w]here the appeal is
on the clerk’s transcript only, we must conclusively presume the evidence is sufficient to
                                              6
support the trial court’s findings [on] damages”]; City of Chino v. Jackson (2002) 97
Cal.App.4th 377, 385 [lack of reporter’s transcript precludes arguments about the
sufficiency of the evidence]; Estate of Fain (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th 973, 992 [“an
appellant who attacks a judgment but supplies no reporter’s transcript will be precluded
from raising an argument as to the sufficiency of the evidence”]; Stevens v. Stevens
(1954) 129 Cal.App.2d 19, 20 [“in the absence of a record of the evidence received at the
hearing it will be presumed that the trial court acted duly and regularly and received
substantial evidence to support its findings”].)4
       This conclusion “follows from the cardinal rule of appellate review that a
judgment or order of the trial court is presumed correct and prejudicial error must be
affirmatively shown. [Citation.] ‘In the absence of a contrary showing in the record, all
presumptions in favor of the trial court’s action will be made by the appellate court. “[I]f
any matters could have been presented to the court below which would have authorized
the order complained of, it will be presumed that such matters were presented.”’
[Citation.] This general principle of appellate practice is an aspect of the constitutional
doctrine of reversible error. [Citation.] ‘“A necessary corollary to this rule is that if the
record is inadequate for meaningful review, the appellant defaults and the decision of the
trial court should be affirmed.”’ [Citation.] ‘Consequently, [appellant] has the burden of
providing an adequate record. [Citation.] Failure to provide an adequate record on an
issue requires that the issue be resolved against [appellant].’ [Citation.].” (Foust v. San
Jose Const. Co., Inc. (2011) 198 Cal.App.4th 181, 187.)




4      The clerk’s transcript appears to include some of the trial exhibits, but Oyang
America and Yoon do not cite to them, nor is there any evidence explaining what the
documents are or any minute order stating that the court admitted them. Indeed, several
of the exhibit labels are stamped with the word “cancelled,” which suggests that the court
did not receive them into evidence.

                                              7
       Oyang America and Yoon do cite to the allegations in their cross-complaint,
which they say was “laden with specific allegations of damages,” and to their trial and
closing briefs, which they say “summarized” and “outlined the trial evidence” of their
damages. Allegations and arguments, however, are not evidence. (See Soderstedt v.
CBIZ Southern California, LLC (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 133, 154 [“pleadings are
allegations, not evidence, and do not suffice to satisfy a party’s evidentiary burden”];
Villacorta v. Cemex Cement, Inc. (2013) 221 Cal.App.4th 1425, 1433 [“[a]rgument by
counsel is not evidence,” and a reviewing court will “not consider counsel’s argument [at
trial] in determining whether there is substantial evidence to support the verdict”];
Gdowski v. Gdowski (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 128, 139 [“[s]tatements and arguments by
counsel are not evidence”].)
       In the absence of a reporter’s transcript or other record of the evidence at trial, we
presume the trial court properly found that Oyang America and Yoon failed to submit
sufficient evidence on the issue of damages. This is enough to affirm the judgment. (See
Donovan v. RRL Corp. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 261, 278, fn. 5 [“[w]e must affirm the trial
court’s judgment for defendant if it is correct on any ground”].)


                                      DISPOSITION


       The judgment is affirmed. Oyang America and Yoon are to bear their costs on
appeal.


              SEGAL, J.


We concur:




              PERLUSS, P. J.                                            ZELON, J.
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