Rivertree v. Reed Leasing Corp. CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 2015
DocketC072338
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rivertree v. Reed Leasing Corp. CA3 (Rivertree v. Reed Leasing Corp. 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
Rivertree v. Reed Leasing Corp. CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/15/15 Rivertree v. Reed Leasing Corp. CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (San Joaquin) ---- C072338 RIVERTREE et al., (Super. Ct. No. Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and 39200800184356CUORSTK) Respondents,

v.

REED LEASING GROUP, LLC, et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants.

Plaintiffs Brent and Gerald Barton and defendants Wendell, Jeff, and Greg Reed, through their respective business entities, entered into an option agreement granting the Bartons the option to purchase a parcel of land upon specified terms and conditions. A dispute arose between the parties and the Bartons filed suit, asserting breach of the option agreement. The Reeds filed a cross-complaint for ejectment and unjust enrichment. The trial court found in the Bartons’ favor on their complaint and also granted their motion for summary judgment on the cross-complaint. The Reeds appeal, arguing (1) judgment should not have been entered against various Reed entities, (2) the court erred in finding there were no modifications to the option agreement, (3) the court erred in finding that a

1 breach of the option agreement took place in September 2006, (4) the Bartons repudiated the option agreement, and (5) the court erred in denying the Reeds’ request for a continuance. We shall affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The Parties. The Bartons are walnut farmers whose partnership, plaintiff Rivertree, was a signatory to the option agreement here in dispute. Rivertree assigned its interest in the option agreement to plaintiff Barton Family Limited Partnership (Barton Family Partnership). Arrayed against the Bartons and their business entities are the Reeds and multiple entities controlled by them, including Reed Leasing Group, LLC (Reed Leasing), which granted the option, Basic Resources, Inc. (Basic Resources), and Aggregates, Inc. (Aggregates), a corporation owned by Basic Resources. Aggregates at one time owned property adjacent to the property subject to the option agreement, but in 2005 it transferred its interest in the property to Reed Family Vineyards, LLC. The planned use of the adjacent property is a factor in the current dispute. The Subject Property. In 1999 the Bartons learned one of their neighbors, Ward Rumble, wanted to sell his 81.5-acre parcel (the Rumble property), which bordered on the Bartons’ two walnut ranches. The Bartons made an offer to Rumble, but Rumble instead contracted to sell the property to defendant Aggregates, which wanted to mine it for sand and gravel. After learning of their unsuccessful bid, Gerald and Brent Barton approached Wendell Reed to discuss an arrangement by which Reed would mine the property and, following the cessation of mining and restoration to farmland, the Bartons would farm the property. Wendell Reed suggested an option agreement giving the Bartons the right to purchase the property after Reed had extracted the available sand and gravel. The Option Agreement. The Bartons and the Reeds agreed to an option, under which Basic Resources, or one of its subsidiaries, would mine the Rumble property and

2 then restore it “using best approved methods of restoration.” After the restoration the Bartons would have the option to purchase the property for $7,050 per acre. On November 8, 1999, Aggregates and Rivertree entered into an option and sale of real property agreement (the 1999 option agreement). In consideration of the option to purchase the Rumble property, Rivertree paid $100. Rivertree also agreed to help Aggregates obtain a mining permit. Aggregates agreed to restore the land to suitable farming condition after the mining process. Rivertree had one year from the end of mining and restoration, estimated at 11 years, in which to exercise the option. The 1999 option agreement stated that any amendments must be in writing and signed by all parties. Aggregates never acquired title to the Rumble property. Instead, another Reed entity, Reed Leasing, acquired the property from Ward Rumble. Rivertree and Reed Leasing executed a new option agreement on March 2, 2000 (the option agreement). The terms of this option agreement mirrored those of the 1999 option agreement; Reed Leasing simply replaced Aggregates as the contracting party. In February 2006 Rivertree assigned its rights under the option agreement to Barton Family Partnership. The Mining Process. Shortly after acquiring the Rumble property, defendants began to mine the sand and gravel. The mining process proceeded much more quickly than anticipated, and it became apparent that mining would be completed by the end of 2005. Lot Line Adjustment. By September 2005 Jeff Reed had taken over management of Basic Resources from his father, Wendell Reed. Jeff Reed was also a director of Aggregates and a manager of both Reed Leasing and Reed Family Vineyards. Jeff and Wendell Reed met with Gerald and Brent Barton to discuss the option agreement in September 2005. During the meeting, Jeff Reed told the Bartons that defendants had carved out, by lot line adjustment, two acres from the southeast corner of the Rumble property.

3 Jeff Reed planned to combine the two acres taken from the Rumble property with a portion of a neighboring parcel on which the Reeds had a right of first refusal (the Christensen parcel) to create a five-acre homesite parcel. Title to the Christensen parcel, over which ran an access easement serving the Rumble property, was held by Aggregates. In 2005 title was transferred to Reed Family Vineyards. Rivertree had not agreed to the lot line adjustment. The removal of the two-acre parcel had an impact on the Rumble property. The existing easement over the Christensen parcel would run directly through the five-acre homesite parcel, which would create problems for the movement of farm equipment to the Rumble property. The Bartons raised these concerns in a meeting between the parties. Though the Bartons were surprised that the Reeds had transferred the two acres from the Rumble property without their consent, they did not object and, in an effort to cooperate, proposed a solution to the easement problem. The Bartons proposed eliminating the existing easement near the southern boundary of the Christensen parcel and creating a new easement at the north boundary of the property. They also suggested the Reeds draw up a new legal description and that the parties amend the option agreement once the description was prepared. However, no written amendment to the option agreement was ever executed or drafted. The Barley Crop. During the same meeting, the Bartons expressed a desire to plant a new barley crop on the property to determine the effect of the mining and reclamation on the soil. After mining, methane pockets can build up in the soil and a test crop, such as barley, allows a farmer to pinpoint the location and ascertain the severity of such deposits. The Bartons planned to exercise the option agreement after the harvest of the barley crop, unless there were significant methane problems revealed by the barley crop. Initially, both parties believed the option agreement needed to be exercised within six months after the Reeds’ completion of the restoration process, so the Bartons

4 requested, and Jeff Reed granted, an extension of time to exercise the option agreement in order to allow the barley crop to grow. However, the parties later determined the option agreement required exercise within one year of completion of the restoration and no extension was necessary.

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