MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 2024
DocketB321859
StatusUnpublished

This text of MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4 (MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4) 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
MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 5/23/24 MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

MBC PROPERTIES, INC., et al., B321859

Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 19STCV42840) v.

611 CATALINA BUILDING, LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Christopher K. Lui, Judge. Affirmed. Bice Murphy Law, Brandon C. Murphy, for Defendant and Appellant. Eric M. Schiffer; ACI Law Group, Jacob B. Bach, for Plaintiff and Respondent MBC Properties, Inc. No appearance by Plaintiff and Respondent M&C Property Management. Defendant and appellant 611 Catalina Building, LLC (Catalina) appeals from judgment following a bench trial on the scope of a 1978 Grant of Easement (the Easement) for parking spaces in the City of Los Angeles. The trial court held the Easement did not require MBC Properties, Inc. (MBC) to reimburse Catalina for its proportionate share of increased property taxes levied against the property due to Catalina’s voluntary improvements. We agree with this interpretation, decline to consider new issues raised by Catalina, and affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND The original grantor of the Easement (Manufacturers Life Insurance Company) owned an unimproved parking lot in the City of Los Angeles. In 1978, the original grantor and original grantees (Larry and Grace Latt) executed the Easement giving the original grantees the right to park 17 vehicles in the lot. The original grantor retained ownership of the lot (defined as the “servient tenement”), which is comprised of 53 total parking spaces. By separate deed, the original grantor conveyed other real property (defined as the “dominant tenement”) to the original grantees. The Easement contains an integration clause and declares it will “bind and inure to the benefit” of heirs and successors and assignees of the parties. At trial, the parties stipulated Catalina is the successor in interest to the original grantor and MBC is successor to the original grantees.1

1 The stipulation did not include plaintiff and Respondent M&C Property Management, LLC (M&C), which has not appeared in this appeal.

2 The parties’ dispute concerns the extent to which MBC must reimburse Catalina for certain real property taxes. The dispute implicates two paragraphs in the Easement. Paragraph six of the Easement, entitled “Taxes & Maintenance on Servient Tenement,” requires the original grantees “to pay 17/53rds of all reasonable maintenance costs incurred, including cleaning, restriping and resurfacing and all real property taxes levied against the [servient tenement]. Grantor shall provide Grantee with a bill not more than often than monthly for said expenses and semi-annual bills for taxes . . . and Grantee shall pay same within 15 days of mailing of said bills. . . .” Paragraph eight of the Easement, entitled “Right to Improve Servient Tenement,” reserves the original grantor’s “right to improve the [s]ervient [t]enement in any manner allowed by law provided that Grantee shall be entitled to 17 parking spaces in any new improvement, of a similar size and type as those provided [in the Easement]. . . . Any incremental cost per space incurred by reason of the new improvements shall not be borne by Grantee and Grantee shall continue to be responsible only for the same type[ ] of reasonable maintenance costs as would be incurred in connection with the parking lot as it is as of the date of this Grant of Easement.” For any period of improvement, the original grantor must provide 17 parking spaces of similar size within a reasonable distance from the dominant tenement. From the time Catalina purchased the servient tenement in 1995 until 2015, the property remained an unimproved surface lot. In 2015, Catalina began construction of a 57-unit mixed use apartment building. Construction concluded in 2018.

3 Catalina sent MBC yearly invoices beginning in 2009. Each yearly invoice had one entry for “Property tax and maintenance.” Between 2009 and 2015, the amount charged on the invoices ranged between $531 and $550 per year. During construction, Catalina agreed to pay MBC $95 dollars per month for lost use of each parking space. Catalina paid MBC for many months but stopped payment in late 2018. Catalina continued to issue yearly invoices for property tax and maintenance in 2015 ($463), 2016 ($480), 2017 ($6,664), 2018 ($21,833), and 2019 ($71,174). Following construction, in roll year 2018–2019, the county reassessed the servient tenement, valuing the land at $65,826 and improvements at $5,550,000. The county reassessed the servient tenement again the following roll year, valuing the land at $67,142 and improvements at $18,491,000.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. The Complaints and Answers The parties filed competing complaints for breach of easement and injunctive and declaratory relief.2 Both complaints sought a judicial determination of the parties’ rights and obligations of reimbursement under the Easement. Beyond generally denying the allegations in the complaint, Catalina’s answer asserted various affirmative defenses, including the “fail[ure] to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action . . . upon which relief may be granted” against it.

2 The original complaint, filed by MBC and M&C, alleged MBC granted a subeasement to M&C for seven of its 17 parking spaces. Finding no competent evidence establishing a subeasement, the trial court held M&C had no easement rights or obligations.

4 MBC denied the allegations in the cross-complaint and raised its own defenses not relevant here.

B. Trial Proceedings The matter proceeded to a three-day bench trial. The parties submitted opening briefs, an original and amended joint exhibit list, and joint witness list. The trial briefs identified two issues for trial. The first issue raised by the parties was whether Catalina breached the Easement by failing to pay MBC for lost use of the parking spaces, or by declining to provide alternative parking spaces to MBC, during construction. As for the second issue, the parties disputed whether the original grantees (and their successors) were required to reimburse the original grantor (and its successors) for 17/53rds of the real property taxes levied against the servient tenement for assessed value after voluntary improvements by the servient tenement owner. The parties provided their own interpretations of the Easement (discussed post) and called various witnesses to testify. Several leaders of MBC testified about its lost use of the spaces and Catalina’s partial payments for the spaces during construction. Frank Nosrati, the sole owner and member of Catalina, testified his “understanding was, and is, that [Catalina] provided an easement for 17 parking spaces to . . . [MBC].” Nosrati acknowledged Catalina “became the servient tenement when [he] purchased that property” and MBC “became the dominant tenement” when it purchased the land defined as such under the Easement. At the end of trial, the court admitted various trial exhibits and set a briefing schedule for closing briefs in which the parties

5 were directed to focus on their “claims and theories.” At Catalina’s request, the court agreed to issue a written statement of decision. In its closing brief, MBC argued the integration clause in the Easement precluded any use of extrinsic evidence.

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MBC Properties v. 611 Catalina Building CA2/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mbc-properties-v-611-catalina-building-ca24-calctapp-2024.