Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 2022
DocketD079305
StatusPublished

This text of Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises (Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises) 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
Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 7/14/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

PETROLINK, INC., D079305

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. CIVVS1200383)

LANTEL ENTERPRISES,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, John M. Pacheco, Judge. Affirmed. Bleau Fox, Martin R. Fox, Megan A. Childress and Elizabeth M. Martin for Plaintiff and Appellant. Fullerton, Lemann, Schaefer & Dominick, Wilfrid C. Lemann and David P. Colella for Defendant and Respondent.

I. INTRODUCTION Plaintiff and appellant Petrolink, Inc. (Petrolink) returns to this court after two previous appeals, one from an original judgment, as discussed in Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises (2018) 21 Cal.App.5th 375 (Petrolink I), and the second from an amended judgment entered after remand in Petrolink I, as discussed and affirmed in Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises (Mar. 18, 2021, D076583) [nonpub. opn.] (Petrolink II). Petrolink filed an action against defendant Lantel Enterprises (Lantel), seeking specific performance of a lease agreement that gave Petrolink the option to purchase a commercial property owned by Lantel at fair market value; Lantel cross-complained against Petrolink, contending that Petrolink was refusing to purchase the property for its fair market value. The parties disagreed as to the valuation of the property and were effectively seeking a judicial determination as to the fair market value of the property so that they could complete the transaction. After years of litigation in the trial court, an appeal, a partial reversal of the judgment, remand, and further litigation, the trial court ultimately concluded that the fair market value of the property was $889,854. The court then calculated a net purchase price of $948,404 by subtracting from the fair market value a credit to Petrolink for the rents that it had paid from the date the purchase should have been completed, and adding a credit to Lantel for the loss of use of the sale proceeds. In its amended judgment, the court ordered the parties to complete the transaction; Petrolink was to deposit $948,404 in escrow and Lantel was to deliver title to the property “by grant deed free and clear of all encumbrances.” Petrolink filed an appeal from the amended judgment, arguing that it was entitled to certain additional financial reductions and offsets to the purchase price. We rejected Petrolink’s contentions and affirmed the amended judgment in Petrolink II. Eleven days after this court issued our opinion in Petrolink II and four days after Petrolink deposited the purchase funds in escrow, the State of California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) filed an eminent domain

2 action pertaining to the property at issue in this litigation. The filing of the Caltrans action prevented Lantel from being able to convey unencumbered title, as required by the amended judgment. After Caltrans filed the eminent domain action, Petrolink refused to close escrow on the property, stating that it would do so only if Lantel deposited unencumbered title to the property in escrow. Lantel filed a motion titled, “Notice of Motion and Motion for Order Compelling Performance Under Amended Judgment; Request for Sanctions” (some capitalization omitted). After a hearing, the trial court granted the motion, stating that it would “enforce the amended judgment.” The court’s order compels Petrolink to complete the purchase transaction by taking title to the property despite the encumbrance on title resulting from the Caltrans eminent domain action, thus effectively excusing Lantel from its obligation under the amended judgment to deliver title “free and clear of all encumbrances.” Petrolink appeals from the trial court’s order enforcing the amended judgment, arguing that the Caltrans action encumbers title to the property as a matter of law, and that the court’s order requiring Petrolink to complete the purchase of the property is erroneous because, in requiring the sale to be completed despite the encumbered title, the court improperly modified the judgment in a manner that materially alters the substantial rights of the parties. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering Petrolink to accept title encumbered by the Caltrans eminent domain action. The filing of the eminent domain action rendered it impossible for Lantel to convey unencumbered title as contemplated by the terms of the amended judgment, through no fault of either party. Faced with this scenario, the trial

3 court weighed the equities and concluded that it would be more equitable for Petrolink to bear any burden of the encumbrance created by the filing of the Caltrans action. We therefore affirm the trial court’s postjudgment order compelling Petrolink to complete the purchase transaction. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1 The dispute between Petrolink and Lantel, which has been pending in the courts since 2012, arose from a lease agreement pursuant to which Petrolink leased a commercial property owned by Lantel. Petrolink was in possession of the property prior to this dispute and has been in possession of the property throughout the pendency of the litigation. In addition to providing the terms by which the property would be leased, the lease agreement included a provision that gave Petrolink the option to purchase the property at fair market value. Pursuant to the terms of that provision, in 2011 Petrolink notified Lantel of its desire to exercise the purchase option. However, the parties could not reach agreement as to the fair market value of the property. Petrolink sued Lantel and Lantel cross-complained. Each party claimed that the other had refused to complete the sale and purchase transaction and sought to compel the other to perform under the contract. The primary issue in dispute at the trial was the fair market value of the property at the time Petrolink exercised its purchase option. The trial court ultimately determined that the fair market value of the property as of August

1 The factual and procedural background that we provide in this section is taken from our prior opinions in Petrolink I, supra, 21 Cal.App.5th 375 and Petrolink II, supra, D076583, with the exception of our recitation of the proceedings that occurred subsequent to our issuance of the opinion in Petrolink II. 4 25, 2011—the date of Petrolink’s letter notifying Lantel of its desire to exercise the purchase option in the lease agreement—was $889,854. Petrolink had requested that the trial court grant Petrolink an offset against the $889,854 purchase price for the amount of rents that it had continued to pay to Lantel after it exercised the purchase option and during the pendency of the litigation. The trial court denied Petrolink’s request for an offset and ordered Lantel to sell the property to Petrolink for $889,854. Petrolink appealed from the judgment. In our opinion in Petrolink I, supra, 21 Cal.App.5th at page 379, we concluded that Petrolink was entitled to an offset against the purchase price for the rents that it had paid throughout the pendency of the litigation. We determined that, to the extent the trial court had denied Petrolink an offset for these rents, the court had “failed to account for the delayed performance of the contract for purchase and sale” by “fail[ing] to place the parties in the positions in which they would have been at the time the sale and purchase contract should have been performed.” (Ibid.) We therefore directed the trial court “to determine the reasonable date on which the contract for purchase and sale should have been performed, and . . . to consider what financial adjustments must be made in order to relate the parties’ performance back to the date that the contract should have been performed.” (Id. at p.

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Petrolink, Inc. v. Lantel Enterprises, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrolink-inc-v-lantel-enterprises-calctapp-2022.