Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 2024
DocketF085249
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5 (Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5) 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
Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 2/28/24 Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

DERRECK CAO, F085249 Defendant and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 20C0142) v.

JCH FAMILY PARTNERSHIP, OPINION Plaintiff and Respondent.

THE COURT* APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kings County. Valerie R. Chrissakis, Judge. Gomez Law Group, Alvin M. Gomez and Boris Smyslov, for Defendant and Appellant. Law Offices of Michael J. Lampe, Michael P. Smith, for Plaintiff and Respondent. -ooOoo-

* Before Hill, P. J., Smith, J. and Meehan, J. Plaintiff JCH Family Limited Partnership (JCH) owned a house next to a vacant lot owned by defendant Derreck Cao. The vacant lot became a homeless encampment, with large accumulations of junk, trash, and assorted detritus. When a fire broke out at the encampment, it soon spread to JCH’s property, propelled by the detritus accumulated on the lot. JCH’s house suffered fire damage. JCH sued Cao for damages. After a bench trial, the trial court ruled in JCH’s favor and awarded damages to it. Cao appealed. We affirm. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND JCH filed a complaint against Derreck Cao on May 20, 2020, initiating this action. The complaint asserted causes of action for negligence, premises liability, private nuisance, and violation of Health and Safety Code section 13007, and sought monetary damages. After a one-day bench trial, the trial court found Cao was liable to JCH and ordered Cao to pay damages to JCH in the amount of $30,744.68. The trial court issued a detailed (amended) statement of decision setting forth its reasoning. This appeal followed. FACTUAL BACKGROUND JCH is a home rental business. Among other properties, JCH owns two rental homes on the same lot on Miller Street in Hanford. The home at the front of the lot is 319 Miller Street and the home at the back of the lot is 319½ Miller Street. Since June 2019, Andrew Melkonian has served as the property manager for the Miller Street properties, on behalf of JCH. Next door to these properties is a vacant lot, 409 Miller Street, owned by Derreck Cao. Derreck Cao acquired the vacant lot at 409 Miller Street by means of a grant deed that transferred title to him on February 4, 2019. The purchase price of the property was $5,000. The grant deed was recorded on January 2, 2020. Since June 2019, Andrew Melkonian, the property manager, would go by JCH’s Miller Street properties twice a week. He would therefore regularly see the condition of

2. the neighboring vacant lot. Melkonian testified: “It was always a good amount of trash on it. There would be homeless people walking about through it and there were different tents throughout the property and some weeds and brush.” He added: “[The] majority of the time, there has been trash, tents, homeless people, garbage,” including “tents connected to the fence that bordered the property,” separating it from the JCH properties. On February 6, 2020, the Kings County Department of Health received a complaint about the condition of the vacant lot at 409 Miller Street. The complainant alleged as follows (as described by Kings County personnel): “A lot of transients living on the property and have a lot of trash on the property and have made it a gated community”; “Transients defecating and urinating on the property and [it] is smelling very bad”; and “Has seen rodents and is afraid they are going to end up on his property.” Troy Hommerding of the Kings County Department of Health went to inspect the vacant lot on February 13, 2020. At trial, Hommerding described the conditions he found: “There [were] several items out there. Trash. Garbage. People living on it.” Consequently, that same day, i.e., February 13, 2020, Hommerding prepared a notice of violation with regard to 409 Miller Street and mailed it to the owner of record, Derreck Cao, at a San Diego address on file at the county assessor’s office. The notice of violation named Cao as “the owner of record and thus, the responsible party.” The notice stated: “The conditions on the property constitute[] violations of the following sections of the Kings County Code of Ordinances (KCCO): [¶ ] 1. KCCO § 13-12(a) Private property to be free of excess solid waste and litter[;] [¶ ] 2. KCCO § 13-12(d) Accumulation of solid waste to be removed[; and] [¶ ] 3. KCCO § 14-36 Nuisance; maintenance of property.” The notice of violation further stated: “All waste on the property must be removed and properly disposed of in a permitted facility (e.g., landfill or transfer station), and all nuisance conditions must be otherwise abated by March 16th, 2020.”

3. Hommerding attached a photograph of the vacant lot to the notice of violation; the photograph depicts conditions consistent with Hommerding’s description of the property in his trial testimony. (Ex. 101.) The parties stipulated that while Hommerding mailed the notice of violation to Cao’s residence in San Diego, he specified an incorrect zip code, 92116, as obtained from the county assessor; the correct zip code for Cao’s San Diego residence was 92114. In February 2020, 319½ Miller Street (JCH property) was occupied by a tenant paying $340.00 in monthly rent. On February 19, 2020, a little over a year after Cao acquired the adjacent vacant lot, a fire originated on Cao’s vacant lot (Cao lot or Cao property) and spread to the JCH property, causing damage. Captain John Wilson of the Kings County Fire Department testified for the plaintiff, JCH, as a fire investigation expert. Wilson had been in the Fire Department’s fire investigation unit since November 2019, and had investigated numerous fires. Wilson responded to the Cao lot when the fire broke out on February 19, 2020. A total of five firefighting units responded to the Cao lot, four from Kings County Fire Department and one from Hanford City Fire Department. Wilson testified that “[m]ultiple tents and debris” on the Cao lot were engulfed in fire and a physical dwelling on an adjacent lot, that is 319½ Miller, was on fire as well. Plaintiff’s counsel asked Wilson: “Sir, based on your personal observation of the fire and your interviewing of witnesses and your investigation at the time of the fire, is it your opinion that the fire started in the homeless encampment in the vacant lot?” Wilson responded: “Yes, sir.” Wilson believed that vagrants, who were trespassers on the lot, caused the fire – there was also evidence a candle had been lighted. However, Wilson clarified: “I was not able in this case to define a specific area of origin, and since I was not able to point to a spot where the fire started, I was unable to determine the cause.” As for the role played by the debris on the vacant lot, Wilson testified it contributed to the

4. spread of the fire. Wilson confirmed the fire started in the homeless encampment and then moved to the JCH property to the south. The fire damaged the JCH property adjacent to, and south of, the Cao lot. Wilson described the fire damage to the JCH property: “Fire was at the siding on the north side.

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Cao v. JCH Family Partnership CA5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cao-v-jch-family-partnership-ca5-calctapp-2024.