Shapiro v. Hu

188 Cal. App. 3d 324, 233 Cal. Rptr. 470, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2382
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 1986
DocketA024043
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 188 Cal. App. 3d 324 (Shapiro v. Hu) 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
Shapiro v. Hu, 188 Cal. App. 3d 324, 233 Cal. Rptr. 470, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2382 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

This appeal concerns the sale of an improved parcel of real property “as is.” The purchasers, upon belatedly discovering that the building had serious defects in its basement and foundational walls, sued the vendor for breach of contract, rescission, fraud and misrepresentation. Following a jury verdict for the purchasers on the breach of contract cause of action and subsequent posttrial motions, the trial court issued an order effectively granting judgment for the vendor notwithstanding the verdict. We affirm.

I

Appellant Ivan Lee Shapiro (Lee) is a licensed real estate salesman, and a partner in a real estate brokerage firm located in Concord. For several *327 years prior to the events at issue here, he and appellant Bernard Rawitch had also been in the business of operating a small chain of hot dog restaurants. In 1980, Lee decided to bring his brother Harvey into the hot dog restaurant business with him. Thereafter, Lee began looking for a location to open a new restaurant.

Through the commercial multiple listing service, appellants learned about a building on a commercially zoned lot on Monte Vista Avenue in Vacaville, in the vicinity of a McDonald’s hamburger restaurant and several other fast food franchise outlets. Feeling that such a location would be “perfect” for his planned hot dog restaurant, Lee immediately called Edna Carvin, the real estate broker with the listing on the subject property. Lee told Carvin what he wanted to use the property for. In response to his questions, Carvin told Lee that the property was still available, that there was a Contra Costa County Board of Realtors lock box on it, and that he could “go up and look at it.” Lee “immediately” drove out to look at the property. He was able to obtain access to the building because, as a realtor himself, he had a key to the lock box.

Already sensing that the property’s location was ideal for his planned hot dog restaurant, Lee was even more pleased to note that there was a McDonald’s restaurant right next door, a couple of other fast food restaurants in the vicinity, and a “giant” parking lot in back of the building. Lee went inside and spent between 45 minutes and an hour inspecting the property. Everything he saw was, he felt, “natural” or “ideal” for his planned restaurant. The only negative thing he noticed was in the back of the building, under a flat roof apparently added onto the structure, where some acoustical tiles were hanging down and appeared stained or water damaged. Lee was uninterested in the condition of the building in terms of carpeting and painting, since he intended to replace the flooring and repaint as part of the process of transforming the building into a restaurant. He went down the inside basement stairs, but did not go more than one step into the basement, which was “pitch black.” However, he could see “[djebris of some sort” on the ground. After inspecting the building, Lee walked around the neighborhood and “checked out” the McDonald’s “to see what kind of activity they had.” He was “real excited,” and convinced that “[t]hat was the spot” for his restaurant.

Lee drove back to his office, immediately contacted his brother Harvey and his partner Rawitch, and described the property to them as “perfect to do the hot dog restaurant in.” They discussed how to go about making an offer and what their ownership shares would be. Lee then prepared an offer on the property, which included a provision for a pest control inspection to be paid by the seller. After telephoning Carvin, Lee immediately drove to *328 her office in Danville to present the offer. Within a day or two, Carvin called back to inform Lee that the owner of the property, respondent Tieh Ming Hu, had made a counteroffer. The written counteroffer included a higher downpayment, and added a specific statement that the building was to be sold “as is.” Lee testified that in his experience as a real estate agent, he had thought that an “as is” condition on sale of property was valid only if preceded by a specific statement of what was wrong with the property.

After receiving and reading the counteroffer, Lee asked Carvin about the “as is” provision. According to Lee’s testimony, she told him that Hu did not want to do the termite inspection, and that there was a problem with the flat roof in the back of the building, which had been patched where the tiles were loose. Otherwise, in response to Lee’s question whether there was anything else she or the sellers were aware of that was wrong with the building, she said “Absolutely no.”

Carvin testified that Hu had told her about the leak in the roof, and that she had inspected the property. In the original listing for the subject property, there was a statement that the property had “super potential for [a] restaurant”; however there was also a notice that the structure was to be sold “as is.” Carvin testified that Hu did not tell her about any water problems in the basement; that she “looked in” the basement but did not go in; that she saw no evidence of any problems there; that she did not recall seeing any debris in the basement; that “it was not dark” in the basement but was “light enough” to see; that she did not see anything in the basement that gave her cause to think she ought to make further inquiry into the condition thereof; that Hu told her he wanted to sell the property “as is” because he did not want to make any repairs at the price he was going to list it for; that Hu specifically did not want to make any roof or termite repairs; that she was aware that if a person selling property knew of any problem with it, he or she had to disclose it; and that she would not have accepted the listing if she felt there was any problem with it. In contrast to Lee’s testimony, Carvin stated that she had discussed the fact that the property was being offered for sale “as is” the first time Lee called her up about the listing, and that she had told him at that time that “he should go out and look at it” himself. She also told him in response to his questions about the “as is” condition that Hu did not want to do termite work or pay for roof repairs; that otherwise she did not know of any problems with the property; and that she did not learn of any problems in the basement until later, after the instant dispute arose. Carvin testified that she felt the property had excellent potential for a restaurant because of its location; and that the land was more valuable than the building on it.

After his discussions with Carvin about the “as is” condition on the sale of the property, Lee again discussed the purchase with his brother and *329 Rawitch. According to his testimony, he then called Carvin again and asked her to inquire of her clients specifically if there were any defects in the building. Shortly thereafter, she called him back and told him that there was nothing the sellers were aware of, but that they would not pay for a termite report. Lee testified that he and the other purchasers “felt okay” about not having a termite inspection, because they “were real excited about the property,” which “was just perfect for us and we felt if there was some termite work in it, we could have a handyman repair” it. Thereupon, on or about June 20, 1980, appellants signed and accepted the sellers’ counteroffer and transmitted it back to Carvin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 Cal. App. 3d 324, 233 Cal. Rptr. 470, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shapiro-v-hu-calctapp-1986.