L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 2015
DocketC074082
StatusUnpublished

This text of L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3 (L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3) 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
L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/21/15 L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sutter) ----

L J SUTTER PARTNERS, L.P.,

Plaintiff and Appellant, C074082

v. (Super. Ct. No. CVCS081016)

ODYSSEUS FARMS et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

This is the third appeal in the continuing saga of litigation over real property owned by Odysseus Farms (Odysseus)1 in South Sutter County. (See South Sutter, LLC v. LJ Sutter Partners, L.P. (South Sutter I) [(C057843) dismissed after the parties notified us of a settlement]; S. Sutter, LLC v. LJ Sutter Partners, L.P. (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th

1 LJ Sutter’s second amended complaint was filed against Odysseus Farms, a California general partnership, Elysian Farms, Inc., and Robert Leal, as trustee of the Leal Family Trust. We refer to defendants and respondents collectively as Odysseus.

1 634, 640 (South Sutter II).) This appeal concerns an option held by LJ Sutter Partners L.P. (LJ Sutter) to buy “mitigation” property from Odysseus. Mitigation property refers to real property that developers must acquire and set aside when proceeding to build residential and industrial developments. When the deadline loomed for LJ Sutter to make a large payment to preserve its option, it asked Odysseus for a loan and extension of time to make the option payment. When Odysseus refused, LJ Sutter engaged in a ruse by purporting to exercise the option but while imposing an impossible-to-fulfill condition. Odysseus eventually balked, and LJ Sutter sued for causes of action that included breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, fraudulent concealment, and intentional interference with prospective economic advantage. A trial was conducted by a referee and culminated in a judgment for Odysseus. On appeal, LJ Sutter contends (1) the referee erred by finding LJ Sutter impliedly repudiated the option agreement by imposing the unreasonable condition that Odysseus provide assurances it could convey the mitigation property and (2) any implied repudiation was nullified by Odysseus’s failure to treat the demand for assurances as a breach of contract. LJ Sutter’s arguments focus exclusively on the referee’s implied repudiation ground for rejecting the breach of contract claim. We reject LJ Sutter’s arguments for lack of prejudice. LJ Sutter has not addressed a second ground on which the referee based his decision, namely that LJ Sutter was equitably estopped from demanding assurances when it had argued in the collateral litigation that Odysseus unquestionably had clear title to the mitigation property. Moreover, LJ Sutter fails to discuss a third ground given by the referee for rejecting the breach of contract claim, namely abrogation of the contract by mutual intent of the parties. Thus, even if the contract had not been unilaterally repudiated by LJ Sutter, there are two other grounds for affirming the judgment for Odysseus: (1) LJ Sutter was

2 equitably estopped from demanding reassurances from Odysseus; and (2) the option agreement was mutually abrogated by the parties. Accordingly, we affirm. BACKGROUND We recount the factual and procedural history only to the extent pertinent to the resolution of the repudiation of contract arguments raised on appeal by LJ Sutter. An Expensive Option Becomes a Problem for LJ Sutter In 2004, South Sutter County was the focus of numerous developers who wanted to build residential and industrial projects. Part of Odysseus’s property appeared to be valuable as mitigation property. In 2005, Odysseus sold a long-term option for acquisition of its mitigation property to LJ Sutter Partners. A crisis loomed for LJ Sutter when a payment of $1,750,000 to renew the option was coming due in January 2008. With the severe downturn in the real estate market, LJ Sutter had run into financial difficulties, lawsuits, and roadblocks in its attempts to develop property in Sutter County. As the referee found, “by the end of 2006, it had become clear that LJ Sutter would not be able to realize the substantial profits contemplated when it entered into the O[ption] A[greement] with Odysseus in January, 2005. . . . [¶] Similarly, the only apparently available means to turn a profit from a different deal –- either with [the owners of the Sacramento] Kings or with Lynch [Developments, Inc.] –- also vanished with time. Thus, by the end of 2006, LJ Sutter was holding rights to acquire property for development with no real prospect of realizing profit on the deal.” LJ Sutter sought a loan from Odysseus and to have Odysseus extend the deadline for the option payment. When Odysseus refused, LJ Sutter purported to exercise the option and demanded assurances Odysseus could deliver title to 63 acres of mitigation property. At the time, the 63 acres were still part of litigation in South Sutter II that would not be resolved within the short option exercise window. Both LJ Sutter and

3 Odysseus went through the motions on the option purchase –- by opening escrow and even surveying the property –- even though neither side actually intended to follow through on the option purchase. In January 2007, Odysseus declared LJ Sutter to be in breach of the option agreement. Soon thereafter, LJ Sutter sued Odysseus for breach of contract and various other related causes of action. A 13-day trial before a referee resulted in a judgment in favor of Odysseus. The Referee’s Statement of Decision After trial, the referee issued a 43-page statement of decision. The referee found three bases for rejecting LJ Sutter’s claim that Odysseus breached the option agreement. 1. Implied Repudiation First, the referee found that “[t]he preponderance of the evidence establishes that the ‘assurances’ demanded by LJ Sutter at the time of the purported exercise of the option to purchase the 63 acres were not reasonable under the circumstances and constituted a repudiation of the Option Agreement by LJ Sutter.” As the referee explained, “the means by which LJ Sutter communicated the exercise of the option on the 63 acres appears to have been an attempt to ‘have their cake and eat it, too’ –- i.e., exercise the option while trying to engineer a breach by Odysseus in order to have a basis to seek return of their investment –- the option payments. Put in other words, LJ Sutter’s declaration that Odysseus was in breach of its obligations under the O[ption] A[greement] by virtue of the continuing litigation with South Sutter and its demands for ‘assurances’ that [Odysseus] could deliver title as required by the O[ption] A[greement] was, itself, a repudiation of the O[ption] A[greement].” 2. Equitable Estoppel Second, the referee found that “when South Sutter filed Sutter I and Sutter II, LJ Sutter vigorously defended the litigation, asserting the very opposite of the position underlying the request for assurances.” Thus, “as a separate ground of decision on this

4 issue, the Referee finds that, even if otherwise warranted on the facts, [LJ Sutter] is equitably estopped to assert the question of inability to deliver the property free of [LJ Sutter]’s claims as a basis for assurances.” (Italics added.) As the referee explained, “LJ Sutter uniquely knew what its view of South Sutter’s purported rights were and whether they had a true concern about those possible rights in connection with their own land acquisition from Odysseus.

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Bluebook (online)
L J Sutter Partners v. Odysseus Farms CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-j-sutter-partners-v-odysseus-farms-ca3-calctapp-2015.