Motion to appoint a Receiver
LEWIS WILLIAMS, an individual;
v.
RUSSELL HOMAN, an individual; GINA HOMAN, an individual; SOLOMON RAZO, an individual; TRUVIEW INK & GRAPHIC SUPPLY INC., a California corporation; and DOES 1 through 10, inclusive.
RUSSELL HOMAN, an individual; GINA HOMAN, an individual; SOLOMON RAZO, an individual; TRUVIEW INK & GRAPHIC SUPPLY INC., a California corporation;
v.
LEWIS WILLIAMS, an individual; and ROES 1 through 10.
PROCEDURAL/FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Before the Court is a motion by the Plaintiff seeking to appoint a Receiver to take
possession of, manage, preserve the assets, business, records and affairs of TruView Ink &
Graphic Supply, Inc.
This litigation concerns the claims of mishandling of a business. On June 1, 2023,
Plaintiff Lewis Williams (“Plaintiff” or “Williams”) filed his Complaint against Defendants
Russell Homan (“Russell”),1 Gina Homan (“Gina”) [Russell and Gina collectively referred to as
“Homan”], Solomon Razo (“Razo”), and TruView Ink & Graphic Supply Inc. (“TruView”,
1 Since the Homan defendants have the same last name, first names are used for the purpose of clarity. No disrespect is intended.
collectively “Defendants”). The Complaint pleads seven (7) causes of action: (1) Breach of
fiduciary duties against Russel and Razo; (2) Fraud against Russel and Razo; (3) Negligent
misrepresentation against Russel and Razo; (4) Conversion against all; (5) Breach of the implied
covenant against Russel and Razo; (6) Constructive trust against all; and (7) Accounting against
all.
The Complaint alleges that Williams, Russell, and Razo are shareholders of TrueView.
Williams holds a minority share. Russell is the Chief Executive Officer, Gina is the Chief
Financial Officer, and Razo is the Secretary of TruView (Comp., ¶¶ 1, 14-16). Williams
discovered that Russell and Razo have diverted funds from TruView to another company they
control. They used TruView’s assets for their personal and family use. They inflated its
expenses. When Williams inquired about TruView, Russell and Razo would provide false
information. They further refused his requests for copies of corporate filings, resolutions, board
minutes, tax filings, and financial records (Comp., ¶¶ 19-22, 24-26).
On August 9, 2023, Defendant TruView answered asserting a general denial and twenty-
five (25) affirmative defenses.
Defendants motion for leave to file a cross-complaint was granted by the Court on July
10, 2025. All Defendants filed an answer to the Complaint on July 21, 2025 consisting of a
general denial and twenty-five (25) affirmative defenses. The Cross-Complaint was also filed on
July 21, 2025, against Plaintiff Williams and asserted causes of action for: (1) breach of fiduciary
duty; (2) fraud; (3) negligent misrepresentation; (4) conversion; and (5) breach of the implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The cross-complaint asserts Williams improperly
diverted the funds of TruView; inflated and misrepresented his investment and control in
TruView in financial records and tax returns; and is attempting to obtain money and dividends
which they are not entitled to as minority shareholders. (X-Comp., ¶ 11.)
On August 28, 2025, Plaintiff/Cross-Defendant Williams answered the cross-complaint
with a general denial asserting thirty-nine (39) affirmative defenses. On December 3, 2025, this
Court so-ordered the parties’ stipulation to continue the trial until December 28, 2026.
On February 10, 2026, Plaintiff filed this present motion for the appointment of a receiver
together with his declaration and the declaration of Sam S. Yebri, Esq. in support.
On April 7, 2026, Defendants filed an opposition.
On April 13, 2026, Plaintiff filed a reply.
The declarations of Russell Homan and John R. Setlich, Esq., supporting the opposition,
were filed on April 14, 2026.
The Court held a hearing on April 20, 2026 and continued the matter to allow Plaintiff to
file a response to the late filing of Defendant’s declaration dated April 14, 2026. The matter was
continued to June 23, 2026.
On April 24, 2026, Plaintiff filed a response to the Russell Homan declaration.
DISCUSSION
Statement of Law
Receivers are agents of the court and may be appointed only where authorized by statute.
(Marsch v. Williams (1994) 23 Cal.App.4th 238, 246.) The moving papers must allege facts
establishing one of the statutory grounds for receivership. (Miller v. Oliver (1917) 174 Cal. 407,
410.)
Code Civ. Proc., § 564, entitled “Cases in which appointment of receiver is authorized”,
provides:
(b) A receiver may be appointed by the court in which an action or proceeding is pending, or by a judge of the court, in the following cases: (1) In an action by a vendor to vacate a fraudulent purchase of property, or by a creditor to subject any property or fund to the creditor’s claim, or between partners or others jointly owning or interested in any property or fund, on the application of the plaintiff, or of any party whose right to or interest in the property or fund, or the proceeds of the property or fund, is probable, and where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured... (6) Where a corporation is insolvent, or in imminent danger of insolvency, or has forfeited its corporate rights... (9) In all other cases where necessary to preserve the property or rights of any party.
Because the remedy of receivership is so drastic in character, "Ordinarily, if there is any
other remedy, less severe in its results, which will adequately protect the rights of the parties, a
court should not take property out of the hands of its owners.” (Alhambra- Shumway Mines, Inc.
v. Alhambra Gold Mine Corp. (1953) 116 Cal.App.2d 869, 873.) “California rigidly adheres to
the principle that the power to appoint a receiver is a delicate one which is to be exercised
sparingly and with caution.” (Morand v. Superior Court (1974) 38 Cal.App.3d 347, 351.) “It is
said by the state's courts that the appointment of a receiver is ‘an extraordinary and harsh,’ and
‘delicate,’ and ‘drastic,’ remedy to be used ‘cautiously and only where less onerous remedies
would be inadequate or unavailable....’ ” (Ibid.) “[A] receiver should not be appointed where
the desired result can be obtained by less stringent means calculated to protect the rights of all
parties.” (Dabney Oil Co. v. Providence Oil Co. (1913) 22 Cal.App. 233, 239.) “Where an
injunction will protect all the rights to which the applicant for the appointment of a receiver
appears to be entitled, a receiver will not be appointed.” (Ibid.)
“The rule is established that the appointment of a receiver rests largely in the discretion
of the trial court and that its action in appointing a receiver or its refusal of an application for the
appointment of such an officer will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing that the court's
discretion has been abused.” (City & County of S.F. v. Daley (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 734, 744.)
“[T]he availability of other remedies does not, in and of itself, preclude the use of a
receivership.” (Id., at 745.) “Rather, a trial court must consider the availability and efficacy of
other remedies in determining whether to employ the extraordinary remedy of a receivership.”
(Id.)
Declarations in support of Opposition filed on April 14, 2026. John Setlich, Esq. filed a
declaration stating the declaration of Russell Homan was supposed to be filed with the
opposition, but due to “an internal staff error, they failed to file the declaration with the other
responsive pleadings.”
The Russell Homan declaration is signed on April 14, 2026. Russell states that he is an
owner and President of TruView Ink & Graphic Supply, Inc. He has been actively involved in
the day-to-day operations of TruView since its formation and he oversees the company’s
business operations, finances and vendor relationships. TruView is an active California
corporation in good standing with the California Secretary of State and is currently operating in
the ordinary course of business. His declaration states in part:
5) TruView is solvent. The company maintains active bank accounts, generates revenue through its ongoing business operations, and continues to meet its ordinary business obligations, including vendor payments and operational expenses, as they come due.
6) TruView employs personnel and continues to service its customers without interruption. The company’s operations are stable and ongoing.
7) TruView has not transferred any assets outside the ordinary course of business within the past twelve months. All expenditures and payments made by the company are for legitimate business purposes.
8) There are no plans to liquidate, dissolve, wind down, or sell any substantial assets of TruView.
9) TruView maintains its corporate and financial records in the ordinary course of business, including financial statements, bank records, and tax-related documents. These records exist and are available for review.
10) Plaintiff has never participated in the day-to-day operations of TruView and has not been involved in managing the company’s business affairs.
11) Plaintiff did not attend board meetings and did not take an active role in the governance or management of TruView and has not been involved in managing the Company’s business affairs.
12) At all relevant times, Plaintiff had access to TruView’s books and records. Plaintiff’s decision not to review those records was not due to any refusal or prevention by Defendants.
13) TruView is prepared to comply with its discovery obligations in this action and to participate in the Court-ordered appraisal and mediation process.
14) TruView intends to continue operating its business in the ordinary course while this litigation proceeds.
15) There is no current threat that TruView’s assets are in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured.
16) Appointment of a receiver is a drastic and extraordinary remedy and is not applicable under these circumstances, therefore I hereby request that Plaintiff’s motion for the appointment of a Receiver be denied and the parties proceed with the current stipulation to retain a financial appraiser and mediate the dispute prior to trial.
Plaintiff’s Declarations in response dated April 24, 2026. Plaintiff argues the Court
should disregard the later opposition papers filed after the reply. The motion and evidence the
Plaintiff submits demonstrated:
(i) Despite the fact that TruView generated $27,788,954 in gross receipts and $7,000,835 in profits from 2017 to 2024, TruView paid no taxes whatsoever nor did the other defendants (R. Homan, G. Homan, and S. Razo) who are the majority owners of TruView and who paid virtually no personal income taxes during that time period (raising serious questions of tax fraud);
(ii) Despite these substantial revenues and profits, TruView did not provide any distributions whatsoever to Plaintiff, who owns 30% of TruView; (iii) TruView has failed, and continues to fail, to provide Plaintiff any K-1 tax documents despite the fact that Plaintiff owns 30% of TruView (which makes it impossible for Plaintiff to file accurate personal tax returns); (iv) Under Defendants’ mismanagement, TruView admitted to intentionally diverting TruView funds to pay the expenses of a separate entity called “TruSport” in which Plaintiff has no ownership interest but is instead owned and managed by Defendants R.
Homan, G. Homan, and (v) Defendants allegedly defrauded another investor in TruView (Casey Fein), which resulted in a lengthy and expensive litigation against Defendants and Plaintiff; (vi) TruView failed to make corporate filings required by California law, which resulted in TruView’s suspension by California’s Secretary of State in 2021. (See Williams Decl. ISO Motion.)
Nothing in the Homan declaration rebuts these facts. The Homan declaration attaches no
documents or correspondence to show that TruView ever held any board meetings or provided
any financial or corporate information to Plaintiff.
Analysis
Neither party disputes a receiver can be appointed in this type of action. This case was
commenced in 2023 and the parties, in December 2025, stipulated to continue trial from January
2026 to December 2026. Plaintiff’s main complaint appears to be that TruView and Defendants
have not responded to him regarding retaining a financial appraiser/accountant. (See footnote 1
on page 1 of the P&A and pp. 13-14 of the motion. “Defendants completely ignored nearly a
dozen emails and phone calls...”) (Footnote #1.)
The December 4, 2025, stipulation to continue the trial stated in part:
WHEREAS further discovery needs to be conducted by the Parties, including expert forensic and financial discovery.
WHEREAS the Parties have agreed to jointly retain a financial appraiser to evaluate the fair market value of TRUVIEW INK & GRAPHIC SUPPLY INC. and Plaintiff's interests therein and other issues, and to mediate this dispute prior to trial, and are meeting and conferring about said joint appraisal and the mediation.
WHEREAS the Parties want to focus their efforts over the next sixty (60) days on attempting to resolve this matter through settlement and/or mediation, rather than trial preparation.
WHEREAS the Parties have met and conferred regarding their pending discovery, the trial date, and all trial-related deadlines, and agree that a relatively brief one-time continuance of the trial date, including the related Final Settlement Conference and all other trial-related deadlines, will preserve judicial resources and allow the Parties to meaningfully engage in further settlement discussions and potentially resolve this matter without further litigation or court intervention.
The current trial is in approximately six months. Sixty days from the December
stipulation had passed when Plaintiff filed this motion. (12/4/25 to 2/10/26.)
There is evidence that the assets of TruView were utilized (money) to pay the rent of
another company in 2020. (See Yerbi Decl., ¶ 7, Ex. H, Depo, of Russell at 128.) This was
known by Plaintiff in November 2022, prior to this case being commenced. Plaintiff admits he
found out about the information from the Fein lawsuit, in which he was a Defendant and which
settled in April 2023. (Williams Decl., ¶ 15.) Mr. Yerbi’s declaration additionally states:
9. Since the filing of the lawsuit, Defendants have repeatedly ignored and flouted their discovery obligations; as a result, this Court has twice sanctioned Defendants and their counsel for discovery violations (with a third motion to compel and request for sanctions currently pending for hearing on March 12, 2026).
However, each discovery motion requires sanctions as a default premise, and if
Defendants really have not been providing the required discovery, other motions, likes ones for
terminating sanctions, would be more appropriate than a motion to appoint a receiver.
There appears to be, according to the chart in Yerbi Decl., ¶ 10, and motion at p. 6, a
chart showing gross receipt of sales and gross profit, but this is even more reason for the
stipulated financial accounting. There are inconsistencies in the declarations. Mr. Williams said
he has never been provided access to financial documents (William Decl., ¶¶ 9-10), while Mr.
Russell Homan states that Plaintiff has access to documents. (See Homan Decl., ¶¶ 9-12.) Mr.
Homan states TruView is an active California corporation in good standing. (Homan Decl., ¶ 4.)
The Court DENIES the request for receiver without prejudice. It does not appear that
anything right now is different from when this case was commenced in 2023, current or
imminent. The Court ORDERS the parties to meet and confer regarding retaining a
financial appraiser as mentioned in the December 4, 2025 so-ordered stipulation. The
parties shall have a financial appraiser in place and working by July 31, 2026; the Court
will set OSC hearing for August 3, 2026. The Court also ORDERS the parties to meet and
confer regarding the mediation and have one reserved by July 31, 2026.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, the Court DENIES the request for receiver WITHOUT
PREJUDICE. The Court ORDERS the parties to meet and confer on retaining a financial
appraiser as mentioned in the December 4, 2025 so-ordered stipulation and to have the financial
appraiser in place and working by July 31, 2026. The Court also ORDERS the parties to meet
and confer regarding the mediation and have one reserved by July 31, 2026.
The Court hereby SETS an OSC Hearing re Status of Financial Appraiser and
Status of Mediation for August 3, 2026 at 9:00 a.m.
Counsel for Defendants is ordered to provide notice.
10
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