Morrison v. Rudolph

126 Cal. Rptr. 2d 747, 103 Cal. App. 4th 506
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 4, 2002
DocketG028285
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 126 Cal. Rptr. 2d 747 (Morrison v. Rudolph) 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
Morrison v. Rudolph, 126 Cal. Rptr. 2d 747, 103 Cal. App. 4th 506 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion

ARONSON, J.

Jeffrey E. and Marta Morrison contend the trial court erred by granting summary judgment against them on their malicious prosecution claim. The court ruled the underlying suit by a buyer—for damages allegedly stemming from construction defects the Morrisons failed to disclose when selling their condominium—was not so untenable that no reasonable attorney would pursue it. We affirm. In the published portion of the opinion, we hold an attorney evaluating whether to initate legal proceedings may generally rely on information provided by the client. In the unpublished portion of the opinion, we decline Haight, Brown & Bonesteel’s request that we sanction the Morrisons and their attorney for bringing a frivolous appeal.

I

Cynthia Ping bought the Morrisons’ three-bedroom condominium in October 1991 for $168,561.46. She soon noticed several leaks in the roof. She also noticed an electrical outlet in the kitchen did not work during and shortly after rainstorms. Ping learned the homeowners association was initiating a lawsuit against the builder for pervasive construction defects. Her own problems worsened. She paid for repairs twice on a heating and air-conditioning unit that was the wrong size and type for her property. Rain and insects began to infiltrate her home through cracks and faulty seals. Mold grew along the living room baseboards. Ping occasionally lost power in both the powder room outlet and in the master bathroom, in addition to the kitchen outlet. The windows and front door leaked increasingly during rainstorms, soaking a comer of her living room carpet at least once. When it was not raining, dirt blew through cracks in the doors and windows.

Ping wanted to sell the condominium but knew she would have to disclose its substantial defects. She claimed neither the Morrisons nor the homeowners association alerted her to the defects before her own purchase. After her *510 purchase, the homeowners association did tell her that no repairs would be made until litigation with the builder was completed. Ping hoped to pay for repairs herself with cash from refinancing the condo, but the bank denied her application. In Ping’s words, “The prospective lenders advised me that the value of the property had decreased so drastically (approximately $20,000), due to the defect litigation and the numerous defects that no refinancing could be accomplished.” The bank also refused to temporarily restructure Ping’s loan until completion of the construction defect suit against the builder. Ping claimed she was “unable to make the payments on the loan, while at the same time . . . making the necessary repairs to the property to make it habitable.” She allowed the bank to foreclose on the condominium in January 1996. It eventually resold in foreclosure for $110,000, which was approximately $30,000 less than the outstanding balance on Ping’s loan.

The homeowners association sued Ping for unpaid assessments. In turn, Ping cross-complained against the association and the Morrisons for fraud and negligent misrepresentation regarding the defects in the condominium. The Morrisons moved for summary judgment. At the hearing, the court indicated it was inclined to rule against Ping on grounds that “the loss of the unit was because of her failure to have made the specific payments and her various other failures to present evidence to the contrary, so she has not met her burden which has been reversed back to her under section 437c, sub-paragraph (o)(2).” The court noted, “We don’t have any statements as to what it would have been to fix the various problems. We don’t have any refinancing information presented as to her ability or lack thereof to have refinanced under whatever market circumstance. We do not have any evidence that the market value of the premises declined because of these perceived defects.” “Tentatively,” the judge said, “I would grant the motion .... It seems to me that the cross-defendants have shown by their evidence presented that the cause of action has no merit as to causation . . . .”

Ping’s attorney insisted: “There is nothing indicated in the record that this lady had any problem making ends meet with her mortgage, her car, whatever other expenses came due. [f] What the record does show is that she could not pay monies for repair in addition to paying the mortgage. She wrote to the bank. She told them the problems. She alerted them to the repairs that were necessary and for that reason asked for the mortgage to be in some way restructured. [That wjasn’t done. She made the determination, based upon valuation that she just couldn’t stay there. That all is a result of the Morrisons’ suppression of facts because had they not suppressed the facts up front, she would never have bought this condominium to begin with. She would not have taken all of her life savings from 15 years of work and put it into this condo. She would have looked for a different property. That *511 is the kind of proximate cause, I would submit to the court, as being what is necessary to establish the claim.”

The court, however, responded: “Mr. Rudolph, it simply takes more than that, and I suppose I could come up with some form of hypothetical, ‘Gee, the value of my property decreased because the tree that was planted in front of my bay window by my neighbors destroyed my ocean view and my property, therefore, [its] value was reduced and, okay, I asked them to trim the tree but they wouldn’t, therefore I moved out of my house because the property value was less and my bank wouldn’t refinance.’ It is kind of similar to that. fl[] We are talking about speculation and, by the way, in my hypothetical, property values generally were decreasing anyway and she just has not met her burden to come forward with any specificity which I can hang my hat on to offset the state of the record.” The court granted summary judgment against Ping.

Ping moved for a new trial, having finally secured: (1) an architect’s declaration that the property had substantial structural defects; (2) an appraiser’s declaration that the majority of the decline in the condo’s value was due to these defects and the litigation against the developer; and (3) a declaration from the woman who bought the condo at foreclosure, stating that “unevenness and tilting in the upstairs floor has become so extreme that my entire family has taken to sleeping in the living room, located on the first floor of the unit. We are simply too frightened to sleep upstairs.” The trial court evidently denied the motion for new trial. Ping appealed, but without explanation she dismissed her appeal before oral argument. 1

Remittitur issued, and the Morrisons subsequently filed the present malicious prosecution action against Ping’s attorneys, George C. Rudolph and Haight, Brown & Bonesteel (HB&B). The Morrisons did not sue Ping. Rudolph and HB&B moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. The court held the Morrisons could not meet their burden of showing Ping’s underlying cross-complaint was “so totally and completely without merit that no reasonable attorney would find the claim tenable.” In granting summary judgment, the court also sustained objections by Rudolph and HB&B to a declaration filed by Edmund J. Bradley, the attorney who had opposed Ping’s cross-complaint on behalf of the Morrisons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 Cal. Rptr. 2d 747, 103 Cal. App. 4th 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-rudolph-calctapp-2002.