Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 2022
DocketG059220
StatusUnpublished

This text of Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3 (Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3) 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
Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 5/23/22 Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

BUSBY FAMILY, LLC et al.,

Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and G059220 Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00900308) v. OPINION ANDREW G. ZERVOS et al.,

Defendants and Respondents;

SUMMER Z CORP.,

Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Robert J. Moss, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. Motion for judicial notice. Granted. David B. Dimitruk for Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Appellants. Morasse Collins & Clark and Steven R. Morasse for Defendants, Cross-complainant and Respondents. INTRODUCTION Following heavy rainfall, water seeped through the ceiling of a building under lease for use as a restaurant and caused significant damage to the kitchen area. The culprit was the condition of the 37-year-old roof, which had a useful life, at most, of 25 years, and a questionable maintenance record. When the rains came, a plastic membrane was being installed over the roof structure, but work had stalled because the landlords and the tenant could not reach an agreement about which was responsible for disassembling and removing various items of equipment and debris from the roof to permit the roofing work to be completed. And life being what it is the rainwater leaked into the building through the very section of the roof over which the membrane had not been installed. This appeal centers on the rights and duties of the parties to that lease with regard to making repairs to the interior of the building, maintaining and repairing the roof, completing the roofing work or replacing the aging roof, and disassembling and removing the equipment on the roof. The landlords are Busby Family, LLC (Busby Family), Goldenwest/Edinger, L.P. (Goldenwest), and The Frank M. and Gertrude R. Doyle Foundation, Inc. (the Doyle Foundation). They are referred to collectively as the Landlords. The tenant is Summer Z Corporation (Summer Z). The Landlords sued Summer Z, along with Andrew Zervos, Cindy Zervos, 1 Shado Zervos, and Lily Brie Corporation (Lily Brie Corp.) for negligence, nuisance, waste, breach of contract, injunctive relief, and ejectment. The Landlords alleged Defendants were in breach of the lease by failing to repair in a timely manner the damages to the ceilings and walls of the restaurant caused by the rainfall, properly maintain and repair the leaky roof, procure and maintain insurance required by the lease,

1 Summer Z, Andrew Zervos, Cindy Zervos, Shado Zervos, and Lily Brie Corp. are referred to collectively as Defendants. Andrew Zervos and Cindy Zervos are husband and wife. Shado Zervos is the son of Andrew and Cindy Zervos.

2 and have a functioning makeup air unit. Defendants filed a cross-complaint for breach of contract and declaratory relief. Each side claimed the other had the duty to replace the roof or complete the installation of the membrane, as well as to disassemble and remove the various items of equipment on the roof. The Landlords contended the roof failure was attributable to poor maintenance and repair by Defendants; Defendants responded the roof failure was due its age. Following a bench trial, the trial court found against the Landlords on their complaint and in favor of Defendants on their cross-complaint. The court issued a mandatory injunction requiring the Landlords to complete the reroofing of the building and, at their own expense, remove the equipment from the roof. The Landlords’ appeal presents a host of issues. Although these issues can be quite complicated, certain core themes appear and are repeated in the Landlords’ appellate briefs: (1) the trial court failed to make necessary findings on whether Defendants breached compliance with laws and the maintenance and repair provisions of the lease; (2) Defendants failed to comply with the California Retail Food Code (Health & Saf. Code, § 113700 et seq.); (3) the trial court’s statement of decision includes a finding of a dangerous condition on the roof that contradicts or negates other findings; (4) the Landlords did not use the equipment on the roof and therefore were not responsible for it; (5) the trial court’s conclusion the Landlords had the duty to replace the roof was “ex nihilo” (out of nothing); and (6) the lease imposed on Defendants the duty to replace the roof. We address these themes in the course of deciding this appeal. We affirm, with one exception, the judgment in favor of Defendants on the Landlords’ causes of action for breach of contract, negligence, nuisance, and waste. The Landlords’ breach of contract cause of action was limited by the scope of a 30-day notice to perform covenants or quit, which did not mention the roof or cite its condition as a breach of the lease. Whether Defendants were liable for the condition of the roof and whether they had the duty to pay for its replacement therefore are issues that were not

3 squarely before the trial court and are not before us. The trial court’s findings in the statement of decision, though barebones, were legally sufficient and withstand scrutiny under the relevant standard of review. The one exception to affirmance on the complaint is that we find the trial court legally erred in concluding the tenants were not required by law to have a makeup air unit at the restaurant. We reverse the judgment in favor of Defendants on their cross-complaint. The trial court erred by issuing an injunction requiring the Landlords to complete the reroofing work. No express lease provision imposes that duty on the landlord, and injunctive relief could only be based on the lease. The trial court erred by concluding injunctive relief could be based on an oral contract, promissory estoppel, or breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing because Defendants did not plead any of those causes of action. The court erred by concluding the injunction could be based on a landlord’s tort liability to third parties for a dangerous condition on the leased premises. That duty exposes the landlord to liability for damages and does impose an affirmative duty on the landlord to remediate the condition. The maintenance and repair provision of the lease does not impose on the tenant the duty to replace a dilapidated roof or make substantial repairs. But that does not mean, as Defendants contend, the landlord has such duty by default: When no express covenant requires a landlord to replace a dilapidation, and no government rule or order specifically directs the dilapidation be rectified, it is possible that no party to the lease has such a duty. That is the situation here. Finally, the trial court awarded Summer Z $2,000 in damages based on the Landlords, unreasonable withholding of consent to a sublease. We reverse because those damages were not caused by the Landlords, withholding of consent.

4 FACTS I. The Lease of the Restaurant Building The Landlords are the fee owners of a shopping center, called Goldenwest Plaza Shopping Center (the Shopping Center) in Huntington Beach. The Shopping Center has several large buildings, including a single-tenant building located at 7148 Edinger Avenue (the Restaurant Building), which was constructed in 1979. In 1993, the Landlords’ predecessors in interest entered into a lease of the entire Restaurant Building (the Lease) to Spires Restaurants, Inc. (Spires) for use as a restaurant.

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Busby Family, LLC v. Zervos CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busby-family-llc-v-zervos-ca43-calctapp-2022.