Bailey v. OUTDOOR MEDIA GROUP

66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 155 Cal. App. 4th 778, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1603
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2007
DocketE040071
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322 (Bailey v. OUTDOOR MEDIA GROUP) 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
Bailey v. OUTDOOR MEDIA GROUP, 66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 155 Cal. App. 4th 778, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1603 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

McKINSTER, Acting P. J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff and appellant, Gary Bailey (Bailey), from the judgment entered on November 29, 2005, in his favor and against defendants and respondents, Outdoor Media Group (OMG), Jon M. Gunderson, and Lamar Advertising Company (Lamar), following a court trial on Bailey’s complaint for, among other things, damages based on trespass, wrongful occupation of land, and a common *781 count for money had and received. The trial court awarded Bailey compensatory damages of $108,069 against OMG and Jon M. Gunderson, its principal, and an additional $86,131 against Lamar, on the noted causes of action. Bailey challenges the damage awards, contending that the trial court did not apply the correct statutory measure of damages with respect to Lamar, and failed to correctly calculate damages with respect to OMG. We agree with Bailey’s claim regarding Lamar, for reasons we now explain, and therefore we will modify the judgment accordingly.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1

Bailey sued OMG and Lamar, both of which are billboard advertising companies, to recover damages for trespass and wrongful occupation of a strip of land in the City of Grand Terrace that Bailey had leased from the property owners and then subleased to OMG, which constructed billboards on the land and sold the advertising space. When OMG’s 10-year sublease with Bailey expired in 1998, OMG continued to occupy the land and sell advertising on its billboards while it attempted to negotiate a new sublease agreement with Bailey. Bailey and OMG did not agree on the terms of a new sublease, and in 1999 Bailey sued OMG for damages based on, among other things, its wrongful occupation of Bailey’s leasehold. Bailey won that lawsuit (which the parties in this case refer to as Bailey I, a designation we adopt), 2 and recovered damages from OMG through August 2001. Although the trial court in that case awarded Bailey damages, it denied Bailey’s cause of action for ejectment on the ground that ejectment could result in waste because the City of Grand Terrace had outlawed new billboard construction with the result that if the billboards were removed from the property, they could not be replaced. Bailey appealed the damage award in Bailey I, 3 but he apparently did not challenge the trial court’s denial of his request to eject OMG from the property. In that appeal, this court modified the judgment by increasing the damage award and affirmed the judgment as modified. Despite its loss in Bailey I, both at trial and on appeal, OMG continued to occupy Bailey’s property and sell advertising space on its billboards until May 2003, when it sold the billboards to Lamar.

In the sale to Lamar, OMG represented that it had a valid sublease with Bailey on the subject property and that it would assign that sublease to Lamar. OMG provided Lamar with a copy of what OMG represented to be the sublease agreement. The purported sublease in fact was an offer that Bailey had made to OMG nine months earlier and that OMG had not *782 accepted and that Bailey subsequently revoked. Because Bailey had signed the sublease offer, OMG backdated its acceptance, and represented to Lamar that the document was a valid sublease agreement with Bailey. 4 When Bailey learned of the transaction between OMG and Lamar, which occurred shortly after the transaction took place, he notified Lamar that OMG did not have a sublease on the property. In addition, when Lamar sent Bailey what it represented to be its first rent payment, Bailey returned the check, and advised Lamar that no sublease existed between Bailey and OMG. Lamar continued to occupy the property and send monthly rent payments to Bailey, only to have Bailey return the payments with a letter advising Lamar that OMG did not have a lease on the property.

Bailey filed the instant action in July 2003, seeking among other things damages under Civil Code section 3334 for trespass measured by the gross revenue Lamar and OMG received from their respective sale of advertising space on the billboards located on Bailey’s leasehold. Bailey also sought to recover from OMG the price Lamar had paid to purchase the billboards from OMG. A court trial took place in March 2005 at the conclusion of which the trial court found in favor of Bailey and against both OMG and Lamar. The trial court awarded damages to Bailey against OMG measured by the net profit it generated from the billboards ($108,069), rather than by gross revenue ($168,850), and against Lamar measured by the reasonable rental value of the land ($86,131), rather than its net profit ($99,580.64). The trial court denied Bailey recovery of the purchase price OMG had received from Lamar, and also found that Bailey was collaterally estopped by Bailey I from seeking ejectment, and in any event, ejectment would cause waste. After the trial court issued its tentative decision, Bailey moved for a new trial on the issue of damages or in the alternative to vacate the submission and reopen the case to evidence. The trial court denied that motion. Bailey appeals from the subsequently entered judgment.

DISCUSSION

Bailey contends that the trial court incorrectly calculated the amount of damages to which he is entitled as the result of the wrongful occupation of his leasehold by OMG and Lamar. More particularly, Bailey claims that under Civil Code section 3334, he was entitled to recover the “benefits obtained” by both OMG and Lamar as a result of their respective wrongful occupations of *783 Bailey’s leasehold, and that the benefit obtained consists of the gross revenue, not the net profit, generated by the billboards, along with the proceeds of OMG’s sale of the billboards to Lamar. Although the trial court awarded Bailey the value of the use of the property measured by the benefits OMG obtained as a result of its wrongful occupation of Bailey’s leasehold, it determined that those benefits consisted of the profit OMG made on the billboards rather than its gross revenue, and did not include the proceeds of OMG’s sale to Lamar. With respect to Lamar, the trial court found that its occupation of the property was the result of a mistake of fact, and therefore the trial court assessed damages under Civil Code section 3334, subdivision (b)(2), quoted below, based on the reasonable rental value of the property, an award Bailey also challenges. We first address Bailey’s claim regarding the damage award against OMG, which turns on the meaning of the phrase “benefits obtained” as used in Civil Code section 3334.

1.

MEASURE OF DAMAGES UNDER CIVIL CODE SECTION 3334

Civil Code section 3334 5 provides in pertinent part: “(a) The detriment caused by the wrongful occupation of real property ... is deemed to include the value of the use of the property for the time of that wrongful occupation, ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 155 Cal. App. 4th 778, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 1603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-outdoor-media-group-calctapp-2007.