McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 2024
DocketA163856
StatusUnpublished

This text of McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2 (McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2) 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
McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 3/13/24 McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

DANA McADOO et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A163856, A165895 v. WELLINGTON PROPERTY (Alameda County COMPANY et al., Super. Ct. No. RG19010799) Defendants and Respondents.

Oakland tenants Dana McAdoo and Livia Baldaccini, a married couple, brought suit against their former landlord alleging their rental home experienced toxic mold contamination and damage due to water leaks and moisture intrusion. Following a seven-week trial, they were on balance unsuccessful. A jury found in their favor on two of their claims (constructive eviction and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing) but rejected their nine other claims. It awarded them a fraction of the total damages they had sought. The trial court subsequently awarded the defendants approximately $565,631 in attorney fees and costs pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure 998 because plaintiffs had rejected a more favorable offer of settlement prior to trial. Offset against their damages, this award yielded a sizable monetary judgment in defendants’ favor.

1 Plaintiffs appeal from both the judgment and the post-judgment award of attorney fees and costs. We reject their claims of error and will affirm both. BACKGROUND In December 2015, husband and wife Dana McAdoo and Livia Baldaccini (plaintiffs) and their young daughter moved into a rental home in Oakland, California. The property was owned by Jesse Lomask (“landlord”) and managed by Wellington Property Company (“Wellington” or “property manager”). Before plaintiffs’ move-in, Wellington inspected the property and reported to Lomask that the carpeting in a “bonus room” under the garage had water damage because the door was “not meant to weather the elements.” Lomask did not replace the carpet but hired a licensed contractor to replace the door. Neither the garage nor the bonus room are attached to the house. The contractor who performed the work testified there was no mold. Plaintiffs claimed that shortly after they moved in they smelled a musky smell and saw mold in the kitchen, reported the situation to two Wellington employees and then cleaned the mold themselves. About five months after moving in, on May 7, 2017, water began leaking through the ceiling from an upstairs bathroom and Wellington sent in a third-party repair team. Plaintiffs claimed that one of the third-party service workers hired by Wellington found mold in the wall of the master bedroom and said he would inform Wellington. About seven months later, with no follow-up from Wellington about the mold supposedly detected in the master bedroom, plaintiffs renewed their lease, in December 2017.

2 About a month later, on January 21, 2018, the washing machine malfunctioned and flooded the upstairs and downstairs levels of the home, causing extensive water damage. The property manager sent a remediation company, Servicemaster, out to the home the next day, and plaintiffs moved to a hotel for about three weeks while the water damage was repaired. They submitted a claim under their renters’ insurance policy for their expenses. The water damage was remediated but no mold testing was undertaken. A representative for the company that did the remediation work indicated on an initial inspection form that mold testing was needed but also testified there was no visible mold when the work was carried out. Baldacinni testified that she visited the home while the remediation work was underway and saw mold. She took photographs and reported her mold concerns to Christine de Asis, a claims adjuster for Farmer’s Insurance who was plaintiffs’ point of contact for their renters insurance claim. De Asis also was the claims adjuster for Lomask and Wellington on their claim under their own Farmer’s Insurance policy for the washing machine leak. The parties thus stipulated that de Asis was an agent of both plaintiffs and defendants. De Asis acknowledged at trial that Baldaccini said she thought there was mold, could not recall mentioning mold to Lomask but did tell him plaintiffs didn’t feel safe staying in the home. She testified Lomask told her he felt the same way about it being unsafe and instructed her to contact Wellington, and then she told Wellington there was a “possible mold issue” and it wasn’t safe for plaintiffs to remain in the home. De Asis also emailed Farmers Insurance on January 30, 2018, telling Farmers plaintiffs didn’t feel comfortable staying in the home and also

3 mentioned there was mold in the home and it was unsafe. She testified she wrote the email because Baldaccini was frustrated and just wrote what Baldaccini had told her to write. She testified, “I was trying to represent the client as helpful as I could be, and I think she was very frustrated at that time. And so, of course, as an agent, . . . I go by what the client says and see if I can make their . . . claims experience . . . be better . . . .” She hadn’t visited the home herself and testified she would defer to ServiceMaster as to whether mold was actually present after the washing machine leak because they were the experts. There was a factual dispute as to whether Baldaccini also told Wellington employee Ted Kearns about having seen mold in the home during this period. Plaintiffs moved back to the home on February 15, 2018. Plaintiffs testified they told two Wellington employees they were concerned there was still mold in the home when they moved back in; the employees disputed they were told this. About seven months later, in September 2018, Wellington hired a third-party service provider to do a moisture inspection and moisture was detected. Servicemaster, the company that had performed the water damage remediation from the washing machine leak, also inspected the home but found no moisture and no mold. Servicemaster’s inspector (Barbara “Jean” Hughes) could not even smell anything resembling mold (“Q: Did you smell any musky or moldy odor? A. No. And I am an odor specialist. I can smell a fly fart.”) Plaintiffs testified that sometime in late September, after Servicemaster told them no moisture was found, they decided they would not renew their lease when it came up for renewal in December.

4 After that, they hired their own mold expert, Jim Koniuto, who inspected the home in October 2018 and found visible mold and elevated mold levels in the air throughout the home. He opined this was due to the washing machine leak, moisture penetration through a wall of the master bedroom,1 and a stained bedroom carpet that had never been replaced. The inspector urged plaintiffs to move out of the home immediately, and they did so on October 1, 2018. But there was evidence that Koniuto’s testing and inspection methods failed to follow industry standards in several respects, including by engaging in destructive testing that a defense expert concluded had contaminated the entire home with mold. There was also evidence that, by this time, plaintiffs already had been planning to move to San Jose, and were just exploiting the situation to manufacture a claim for wrongful eviction. For example, they told their doctor on October 1, 2018, they were moving to a new house in December. By October 9, they had picked out a school for their child in San Jose and had been pre-approved for a $2 million mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
McAdoo v. Wellington Property Co. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcadoo-v-wellington-property-co-ca12-calctapp-2024.