360 So Reeves, LLC v. Dutton

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 2026
DocketJAD26-01
StatusPublished

This text of 360 So Reeves, LLC v. Dutton (360 So Reeves, LLC v. Dutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
360 So Reeves, LLC v. Dutton, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 2/27/26

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION APPELLATE DIVISION OF THE SUPERIOR COURT STATE OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES

360 SO REEVES, LLC, ) 24APLC00389 ) Plaintiff and Respondent, ) Santa Monica Trial Court ) v. ) No. 24SMUD00990 ) JEFF DUTTON, ) ) OPINION Defendant and Appellant. ) )

APPEALS from a judgment and orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, George F. Bird, Judge. Affirmed in part and dismissed in part. Law Offices of Ben Gharagozli, Ben Gharagozli for Defendant and Appellant. JZ LAW GROUP, P.C., Jacob Zadeh for Plaintiff and Respondent.

* * *

1 Following a court trial in a residential unlawful detainer action for non-payment of rent, Jeff Dutton (defendant) appeals the judgment entered in favor of 360 So Reeves, LLC (plaintiff) and from the denial of his post-judgment motions for new trial and to set aside the judgment. Defendant seeks reversal on two grounds. First, the three-day notice was defective by including late fees and overstating the rent due. Second, it was plaintiff’s burden to prove, as a component of its prima facie case, that it complied with the notice obligations in Civil Code section 1962.1 We publish this opinion to clarify that a lessor’s noncompliance with section 1962 is an affirmative defense for which the lessee bears the burden of proof.2 Because defendant did not prove that plaintiff failed to comply with the statute, we affirm the judgment and the appealable post-judgment order. BACKGROUND In a first amended complaint filed on May 21, 2024, plaintiff sought possession of a residential unit occupied by defendant in the City of Beverly Hills. The complaint alleged that on December 9, 2013, defendant became a tenant of the unit pursuant to a written lease agreement made with plaintiff’s agent. Defendant’s initial rent was $1,595 payable on the first day of each month, and the rent was subsequently increased to $1,831. On April 12, 2024, defendant was served by a registered process server with a three-day notice demanding that he pay past-due rent of $7,236—accounting for the period between June 2023 and April 2024—or relinquish possession of the premises. Defendant failed to pay the past-due rent or quit possession after the notice period expired. Defendant’s answer denied each allegation in the complaint and asserted affirmative defenses, including that the three-day notice was void by overstating the rent due, and that plaintiff failed to comply with the disclosure requirements in section 1962. After the court denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the action was tried without a jury on September 25, 2024. Plaintiff’s case consisted of three exhibits (the lease,

1 All further statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise indicated. 2 See California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(b), (c)(3)-(4).)

2 three-day notice, and proof of service of the notice), in addition to the testimony of Joublin Manoochehri and defendant, who was called pursuant to Evidence Code section 776. Defendant was the only defense witness. In 2013, when defendant signed the lease agreement, the property was owned by Edith Newman and managed by K & B Property Management. JNM Realty took over as the property manager at least five years before the trial. Manoochehri is the assigned property manager. Newman died a few years before the trial and her children inherited ownership of the property. In 2023, ownership of the property was transferred to plaintiff, an LLC. Manoochehri confirmed that a written notice of change of ownership “was given” to defendant “within the last 12 months,” “towards the end of 2023,” but he did not bring the notice to court. The notice was posted on defendant’s door and in the common area of the complex near the mailboxes, and it was separately mailed to defendant. According to Manoochehri, the document contained “all the information pertaining to the new ownership” and “anything else I [sic] needed to know . . . where to pay rent and everything like that.” Manoochehri could not recall whether the notice contained any information other than notification of the change of ownership and where to pay rent. Manoochehri believed he also called defendant to notify him of the changes. Manoochehri testified that defendant accumulated a minimum of $7,236 in past-due rent between June 2023 and April 2024, as reflected in the rent ledger.3 He reviewed the three-day notice prepared by plaintiff’s counsel and confirmed the information on the notice was accurate. The rent ledger reflected defendant was charged $50 late fees multiple times during his tenancy, but the statement of rent due in the three-day notice did not include late fees. Defendant failed to pay the rent owed or quit possession of the premises after the three-day notice period expired. In his testimony, defendant did not dispute that his monthly rent was $1,831 or that he received a copy of the three-day notice to pay rent or quit. When asked if he attempted to pay the rent owed, defendant replied, “I believe I mailed a check or communicated with the office at

3 A rent ledger in the clerk’s transcript was attached to a pretrial pleading but was not introduced as an exhibit at trial.

3 that time to make an arrangement to get caught up.” According to defendant, his partial rent check was “mailed back to [him]” after service of the three-day notice. Defendant did not have the returned check with him, and he could not recall the dollar amount of the check. He has only paid rent by check. Defendant was aware that JNM Realty was the property manager, but he was unsure of the office address for the manager, and he only knew the phone number to report maintenance issues. Prior to the initiation of the unlawful detainer, defendant was not aware that plaintiff was the new owner of the property; however, he admitted his rent checks were made out to plaintiff. Defendant received a change in ownership document from plaintiff4 which “stated the new owner, [and] where to mail the rent check.” When asked if the document identified the agent for service of process defendant replied, “[n]o, I don’t believe so.” No other change of ownership document was provided to him. The parties proceeded to make closing arguments. Plaintiff maintained it proved each element of its prima facie case—that defendant was served with a valid three-day notice to pay rent of $7,236 or quit the premises, and that defendant failed to pay the rent owed or relinquish possession of the premises and thereafter continued in possession. Defendant argued the notice was defective because it overstated the amount of rent due by including late fees in its calculation. Additionally, relying on Group XIII Properties LP v. Stockman (2022) 85 Cal.App.5th Supp. 1 (Group XIII), defendant argued that section 1962 is “a jurisdictional requirement[,] so it is not an affirmative defense,” and that plaintiff failed to satisfy the requirements in section 1962. In response, plaintiff argued it was defendant’s burden to prove the affirmative defense under section 1962, and he failed to satisfy this standard. The trial court agreed with defendant that section 1962 was “a jurisdictional issue” and not an affirmative defense. However, the court found that plaintiff satisfactorily proved each

4 The clerk’s transcript contains a November 28, 2023-dated letter which informed the tenants that all future rent checks were to be made out to plaintiff and included the office phone number for management. This document was attached to plaintiff’s opposition to defendant’s motion for summary judgment, but it was not introduced into evidence at trial.

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360 So Reeves, LLC v. Dutton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/360-so-reeves-llc-v-dutton-calctapp-2026.