Borden v. Stiles

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 2023
DocketG062001
StatusPublished

This text of Borden v. Stiles (Borden v. Stiles) 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
Borden v. Stiles, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/6/23

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ALEX R. BORDEN, as Administrator, etc., G062001 Plaintiff and Appellant, (App. Civ. No. Super. Ct. No. 30- v. 2021-01223685; Super. Ct. No. 30- 2021-01182200) LORETTA STILES, OPINION Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Kimberly Knill, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Request for judicial notice. Denied. Law Offices of Liddle & Liddle, Layne L. Liddle, George Lee Liddle, Jr. and Raymond Zakari for Plaintiff and Appellant. Public Law Center, Gina Verraster, Kenneth Babcock, and Monica Eav Glicken for Defendant and Respondent. Defendant Loretta Stiles lives in a Laguna Woods residential unit (the property) that was owned by Dan Blechman. Stiles was permitted to live at the property by Blechman without provision for the payment of rent or the duration of her stay. Stiles had worked for Blechman for many years and, instead of being paid a salary, he allowed her to live at the property beginning in 2011 and also paid her expenses. After Blechman passed away, the administrator of his estate, plaintiff Alex R. Borden, served Stiles with a 30-day notice to quit the property. After Stiles refused to leave the property, he filed the instant unlawful detainer action. Borden filed a motion for summary judgment against Stiles. Stiles in turn filed a motion for summary judgment against Borden, arguing Borden’s notice to quit failed to state just cause for terminating her tenancy, as required by the Tenant Protection 1 Act of 2019 at Civil Code section 1946.2. The parties agreed in their respective motions Stiles had a tenancy at will. The trial court concluded section 1946.2 applied to Stiles’s tenancy and consequently granted Stiles’s motion and denied Borden’s motion on the ground Borden’s 30-day notice failed to state just cause for terminating the tenancy as defined in the statute. Borden appealed to the Appellate Division of the Orange County Superior Court (Appellate Division), which affirmed the trial court’s judgment in favor of Stiles. We granted Borden’s petition to transfer the case to this court and we now reverse. We publish because our analysis involves the interplay of statutes enacted almost 150 years ago regarding the hiring of real property with the relatively recently enacted section 1946.2. Our record contains evidence suggesting the tenancy at issue was created by a hiring under section 1925, as it shows Blechman permitted Stiles to live at the property in exchange for work she had performed for him at unspecified times. Such a

1 All further statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise specified.

2 tenancy that is “terminable at the pleasure of one of the parties,” however, would have terminated under section 1934 when Stiles was notified of Blechman’s death. At that point, Stiles would have become a holdover tenant, and no longer in lawful occupation of the property. As section 1946.2, subdivision (i)(3) defines “‘[t]enancy’” to be “the lawful occupation of a residential real property” (italics added), section 1946.2 would not apply to such an unauthorized occupancy. The record, however, is silent on the specifics regarding the timeframe in which Stiles performed work for Blechman in exchange for her tenancy, when Blechman passed away, when Stiles was notified of his death, and whether thereafter Borden had potentially entered into a tenant relationship with Stiles. Because triable issues of material fact exist as to whether Stiles was in lawful occupation of the property within the meaning of section 1946.2, subdivision (i)(3), summary judgment should not have been entered in either party’s favor. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) In light of the foregoing, we do not need to decide whether Stiles’s tenancy with Blechman had been a tenancy at will or whether section 1946.2 applies to tenancies at will in general.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND SUMMARY OF UNDISPUTED FACTS I. THE VERIFIED UNLAWFUL DETAINER COMPLAINT AND THE VERIFIED ANSWER On February 1, 2021, Borden filed a verified complaint for unlawful detainer against Stiles alleging “prior to February 15, 2019, Dan Blechman, by oral agreement, allowed [Stiles] to take possession of the real property . . . without any specified term for such possession and without any specific reservation of rent, thereby creating a tenancy at will.” In the complaint, Borden further alleged that after he was made the administrator of Blechman’s estate, he served a 30-day notice on Stiles requiring her to quit and deliver up possession of the property. Borden alleged Stiles did

3 not comply and instead “holds over and continues in possession of said demised premises, without the permission of [Borden] and under no claim of right.” Borden alleged the reasonable value for the use and occupancy of the property is $66.66 per day. He stated he sought that amount as damages “for January 15, 2021, and for each day thereafter until the date of judgment.” Borden prayed for restitution and possession of the property, for termination of Stiles and Blechman’s agreement, damages, and costs of suit. Stiles filed a verified answer in which she alleged as an affirmative defense, among others, Borden’s “demand for possession of a residential tenancy is based on a reason other than nonpayment of rent or other financial obligations, and [Borden] lacks just cause for termination of the tenancy, as defined in Civil Code section 1946.2(b).” II. THE PARTIES’ DUELING MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT Borden moved for summary judgment on the grounds there were no triable issues of material fact, Stiles had no legal defenses to the unlawful detainer complaint, and Borden was “entitled to judgment for possession as a matter of fact and law.” The same day, Stiles filed a motion for summary judgment brought on the ground Borden “cannot establish a necessary element to the cause of action” as his “Notice to Quit failed to state a just cause reason for terminating [Stiles’s] tenancy as required by Civil Code section 1946.2.” The relevant evidence offered by the parties in support of and in opposition to the motions was undisputed and very limited in scope, confirming the following facts: (1) Blechman orally agreed to allow Stiles to take possession of the property without any specified term or reservation of rent; (2) Stiles took possession of the property before February 15, 2019, has continuously occupied the property for more than 12 months, and has never paid money for her occupancy; (3) on April 8, 2020, Borden was made administrator of the estate of Dan Blechman; (4) on December 15, 2020, Borden served a

4 30-day notice to quit which did not state a just cause reason under section 1946.2; and (5) after the notice period expired and Stiles continued to occupy the property, Borden initiated this unlawful detainer action. The parties stipulated if section 1946.2 were to apply, none of the exemptions specified in that section would apply here. In addition, Stiles, in opposition to Borden’s motion for summary judgment, produced her verified responses to form interrogatories Borden had propounded on her.

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Bluebook (online)
Borden v. Stiles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borden-v-stiles-calctapp-2023.