Daon Corp. v. Place Homeowners Assn.

207 Cal. App. 3d 1449, 255 Cal. Rptr. 448, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 127
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1989
DocketA039038
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 207 Cal. App. 3d 1449 (Daon Corp. v. Place Homeowners Assn.) 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
Daon Corp. v. Place Homeowners Assn., 207 Cal. App. 3d 1449, 255 Cal. Rptr. 448, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 127 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion

POCHÉ, J.

and cross-complainants, Daon Corporation and Warmington-Daon Venture (hereafter Daon), appeal from an order dismissing their cross-complaint after a general demurrer by cross-defendant, The Place Homeowners Association, was sustained. 1

Because a demurrer admits all material facts properly pled (Glaire v. La Lanne-Paris Health Spa, Inc. (1974) 12 Cal.3d 915, 918 [117 Cal.Rptr. 541, 528 P.2d 357]), we recite the facts as set forth in the pleadings. Defendants were owners of an apartment complex, Peninsula Place or The Place, in San Mateo, which they converted to condominium units. By a set of covenants, conditions and restrictions (CC & R’s) the defendants created Peninsula Place Homeowners Association (Association) which is responsible for operating, maintaining and repairing the common areas in the project. The Association is organized as a California nonprofit corporation.

*1452 On November 4, 1985, the Association filed a complaint naming Daon and various other entities as defendants. By a second amended complaint of October 21, 1986, the Association sought to recover from Daon on causes of action for breach of contract, breach of implied warranty, negligence, intentional and negligent misrepresentation, strict liability, and breach of fiduciary duty. The complaint alleges, among other things, that Daon is liable for foundation, plumbing and other structural defects in the complex and for failing to establish and maintain an adequate repair and maintenance fund for the Association.

Daon’s answer to the second amended complaint was filed December 16, 1986. Daon made a general denial of the various allegations against it and raised various affirmative defenses, including allegations that the Association was responsible for the problems in the complex and that Daon was entitled to indemnification from the Association for that portion of the injury which was attributable to the Association’s conduct.

On the same day Daon filed its answer it also filed a cross-complaint naming among numerous defendants the Association. By its cross-complaint Daon sought “total and/or partial equitable indemnity” in the event it was found liable to plaintiff Association for “defective design, inspection, budgeting, construction, repair and/or material and/or concealment or negligent misrepresentation. The Association’s general demurrer to the cross-complaint was sustained without leave to amend on April 17, 1987.

On April 21, 1987, the Association sent notice of the ruling on the demurrer. The record includes an undated, unsigned, and unfiled order 2 purporting to dismiss Daon’s cross-complaint as to the Association pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 581d. 3 On June 19, *1453 1987, the order dismissing the cross-complaint was signed and Daon filed a notice of appeal from “the judgment dismissing their cross-complaint.” The appeal was timely taken.

Discussion

As we have intimated there is substantial question whether this is an appealable order. Before we can resolve what is normally a threshold question, however, we must examine in some detail the pleadings in this case.

Daon contends the trial court erred in sustaining the Association’s general demurrer to its cause of action for equitable indemnity. Daon maintains that the Association has two capacities—one as a “surrogate plaintiff” for the owners of the individual condominium units and another in its own capacity as a cross-defendant. Thus, Daon argues the plaintiff Association is not the real party in interest, but merely sues on behalf of the owners of the condominium. As cross-defendant, however, the Association is the real party in interest because it is being sued for negligently performing its duties owed the condominium owners under the CC & R’s.

This argument was implicitly rejected by the trial court when it granted the Association’s general demurrer. The Association demurred on grounds that it was being named as “a cross-defendant in the same capacity as it has filed suit as plaintiff.” The Association maintained that its negligence, if any, will, under the principles of comparative negligence, be determined in the underlying suit and will proportionately reduce Daon’s liability to it.

When the Association filed its second amended complaint it expressly asserted that its standing to sue was derived from section 374. That section provides “An association established to manage a common interest development shall have standing to institute, defend, settle, or intervene in litigation, arbitration, mediation, or administrative proceedings in its own name as the real party in interest and without joining with it the individual owners of the common interest development, in matters pertaining to the following: flj] (a) Enforcement of the governing documents, [fl] (b) Damage to the common areas, [fl] (c) Damage to the separate interests which the association is obligated to maintain or repair, [fl] (d) Damage to the separate interests which arises out of, or is integrally related to, damage to the common areas or separate interests that the association is obligated to maintain or repair.”

*1454 Below and on appeal the Association maintains that because it invokes section 374 in its complaint it filed suit solely in its associational capacity, as manager of the complex. Thus, it argues that its action against Daon seeks recovery only for injury to common areas or for injury to the separate interest which derives from the Association’s duty to maintain and repair. Daon counters that the Association is not the real party in interest, but that it, by virtue of the narrow procedural exception created by section 374, is merely a surrogate plaintiff representing the interests of the homeowners. 4 Daon asserts “The Associations’s own interests are only impacted on the cross-complaint, wherein it is alleged that the Association negligently performed its duties to the owners.”

What capacity or capacities the Association acts in as plaintiff is critical. We turn to its second amended complaint. It does, indeed, allege that the Association derives its standing to sue from section 374. However, many of the allegations in the complaint involve injuries to individual owners as well as to the Association.

For example, the fifth cause of action for intentional misrepresentation alleges that “[individual members of Plaintiff and Plaintiff would not have purchased, nor accepted the conveyance of said condominium units sold by Defendants, . . ., nor taken possession thereof, but for the representations made to individual members of Plaintiff by said Defendants, in that the failure by Defendants to improve and adequately repair and replace the said construction and related systems would have and has, irreparably injured the enjoyment, safety, and welfare of Plaintiff and its members, in their use of the subject condominium units . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 Cal. App. 3d 1449, 255 Cal. Rptr. 448, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daon-corp-v-place-homeowners-assn-calctapp-1989.