Elworthy v. Spiva CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 2013
DocketH037747
StatusUnpublished

This text of Elworthy v. Spiva CA6 (Elworthy v. Spiva CA6) 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
Elworthy v. Spiva CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 11/6/13 Elworthy v. Spiva CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

BRUCE R. ELWORTHY, et al., H037747 (Monterey County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. M87603)

v.

STEPHAN SPIVA, et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

This litigation arises out of a real estate transaction in which Bruce Elworthy and Anne Marshall (husband and wife, jointly Buyers) purchased a home for $3 million from Stephan (Steve) and Barbara Spiva (Spivas or Sellers). After they discovered several defects with the home, many of which had to do with windows and doors that leaked, Buyers sued Sellers, Sellers’ real estate agents, and certain parties responsible for the construction of the home. After settling with some defendants and dismissing others, the case was tried to the court on Buyers’ claims for intentional misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, and rescission against Sellers. The court found for Buyers on their claim for negligent misrepresentation about the doors that leaked; it awarded Buyers $60,000 in damages. In this appeal, Buyers challenge the trial court’s ruling that rescission of the house purchase––as opposed to a $60,000 damages award––was not available to them as a remedy. Buyers contend the court erred when it refused to grant their request for rescission, abused its discretion when it found that Buyers were guilty of laches, and erred when it failed to consider that Sellers engaged in “more than mere ‘negligent misrepresentation.’ ” We conclude that the court properly found that rescission was not available to Buyers because they had lost the property to foreclosure. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment.

FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Respondents Steve and Barbara Spiva were planning to retire and decided to build a home at the Pasadera Golf Club on Highway 68 in Monterey. In March 2000, they purchased a lot (approximately eight tenths of an acre) at 612 Belavida Road, adjacent to the fifth green, for $665,000. They also hired Jerry Whitney, a draftsman who had designed other homes in the area, to draw up the plans for their new home. The Spivas liked their house in Hollister, and asked Whitney to use the same basic layout for their new home, but to design it on a grander scale. They told Whitney they wanted to look “right down the chute of the fairway.” In March 2001, the Spivas hired General Contractor Richard Avila to build the house. The contract price was $1,974,270. A building permit was issued in May 2001. Construction proceeded without significant problems; the project was completed on time and on budget. The 5,460-square-foot, two-story house had four bedrooms, seven bathrooms, an exercise room, and an office. The house had “eight windowed French doors” and made “extensive use of windows,” which provided “an openness with natural light.” Whitney specified the use of ADA-compliant, low-threshold patio doors on the south side of the house, which overlooked the golf course. The windows and the exterior doors were manufactured by Weather Shield Manufacturing, Inc. (Weather Shield). The Spivas did

2 not have any input into the decision to use low-threshold doors or the choice of window and door manufacturer. While the house was under construction, the seals failed in some of the double- paned windows in the master bedroom, which made the windows fog. Weather Shield repaired seal failures three times between March 19 and June 14, 2002. The repairs involved replacing the window panes where seal failures had occurred. During construction, Avila observed evidence of water intrusion through the threshold of the patio doors in the master bathroom and the upstairs office. After a rainstorm, Avila saw half a cup of water on the tile floor in the bathroom and noted dampness on the subflooring in the office (the carpeting had not yet been installed). He reported the problem to Weather Shield. Weather Shield gave him a new threshold, which his crew installed on the patio door in the office. Weather Shield also made adjustments to the other doors. Avila testified that toward the end of the construction, right before the final inspection, he told the Spivas that (1) there had been a problem with water intrusion in the master bathroom and the office; (2) he had had the doors adjusted; (3) he had installed a new threshold on the office door; and (4) everything should be alright.1 Avila also testified that he told the Spivas about the window failures that occurred during construction. But Steve Spiva testified that Avila never informed the Spivas that there were any problems with the doors or windows during construction. The Spivas moved into the home in June 2002. After they moved in, Weather Shield repaired windows on three occasions: (1) in October 2002, it replaced a scratched window; (2) in November 2002, it repaired seal failures in two panes of one window; and

1 At trial, Avila testified that he was worried about the low thresholds on the patio doors; he said he feared they would leak, and wished he had sent the thresholds back to Weather Shield. Avila expressed his concerns to Whitney, the draftsman, who told him that the low-threshold doors were used all the time “back east.” Avila did not discuss his concerns with the Spivas. 3 (3) in December 2002, it replaced a window pane that had a stress crack. Steve Spiva testified that he did not think the number of window failures was unusual; he experienced more problems with double-paned windows in other homes he had owned. After the Spivas moved in, they experienced one incident of water intrusion under the patio doors. In November 2002, during a rainstorm with “very heavy sideways rain,” the patio doors in the master bedroom, master bathroom, kitchen, and office, which were all on the south side of the house, leaked. Steve Spiva was away on a trip, but Barbara Spiva was home and noticed water coming in under the doors. She put rolled up towels at the thresholds and called Avila. Avila and a representative of Weather Shield inspected the doors. Avila adjusted the doors and the Spivas did not experience any other incidents of water intrusion under the patio doors during the two winters they lived in the house. They attributed the single incident of water intrusion to “post-construction fine tuning.” Steve Spiva played golf once or twice a day and was very happy at Pasadera. But Barbara Spiva felt isolated there. Barbara had family in San Diego and in the summer of 2003, the Spivas started splitting their time between San Diego and Monterey. In June 2003, they decided to sell the Monterey house and move to San Diego. They hired Realtor Jeff Davi and initially offered the property for sale at $4.8 or $4.9 million. In July 2003, they leased an apartment in San Diego. After that, they spent more time in Monterey than in San Diego. They did not experience any water intrusion during the winter of 2003-2004. After Christmas 2003, the Spivas started spending more time in San Diego than in Monterey. On March 31, 2004, they lowered the price on their Monterey home to $4,595,000. In June 2004, they bought a house in Solana Beach in San Diego County, and in July 2004, they moved their furniture from Monterey to Solana Beach. In November 2004, the Spivas lowered the price on their Monterey home to $3.5 million. While the Monterey house was on the market, the Spivas asked their realtor to check the 4 house for water intrusion whenever it rained.

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Elworthy v. Spiva CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elworthy-v-spiva-ca6-calctapp-2013.