TownCenter Plaza v. Hems CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 9, 2013
DocketD060560
StatusUnpublished

This text of TownCenter Plaza v. Hems CA4/1 (TownCenter Plaza v. Hems CA4/1) 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
TownCenter Plaza v. Hems CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 7/9/13 TownCenter Plaza v. Hems CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

TOWNCENTER PLAZA, LLC, D060560, D061581

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2009-00101364- CU-BC-CTL) KENTON HEMS, as Successor Co-Trustee, etc., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

CONSOLIDATED APPEALS from a judgment and an order of the Superior

Court of San Diego County, Timothy B. Taylor, Judge. Affirmed.

Pistone & Wolder, Thomas A. Pistone and Eric J. Medel for Plaintiff and

Appellant.

Higgs, Fletcher & Mack and Mark K. Stender for Defendants and Respondents. Plaintiff, TownCenter Plaza, LLC (TownCenter), appeals a summary judgment for

defendants,1 entered after the trial court determined TownCenter cannot prove the breach

and causation elements of its breach of contract claim against defendants for not

disclosing a geothermal lease on unimproved property it sold TownCenter, because

before the purchase TownCenter had notice of the lease through the preliminary title

report and publicly recorded documents. (Civ. Code,2 §§ 19, 1213.) TownCenter

contends the judgment is improper because defendants did not meet their initial burden of

producing evidence showing entitlement to judgment as a matter of law, and thus the

burden of production never shifted to TownCenter, and alternatively, TownCenter's

evidence raised triable issues of material fact. We conclude the court correctly

determined the causation issue, and thus we affirm the judgment.

TownCenter also appeals a postjudgment order awarding defendants costs and

contractual attorney fees. Because we affirm the judgment we also affirm the order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1983 defendants or their predecessors in interest purchased 131.7 acres of raw

land in the Calexico, California, area. The property was subject to a geothermal lease by

1 Defendants are Kenton Hems, as successor trustee of the Richard Ellis Trust UDT 8/22/76; Johnny Sonza; Michelle Sonza; Nicola Curtis; Emil Michael Hashem III, as trustee of The Michael Hashem 1999 Trust U/D/T dated 4/14/99; William J. Polkinhorn and Rae Lynn Polkinhorn, as trustees of The Polkinhorn Family Living Trust U/D/T dated 9/10/91; Emil Michael Hashem III, as trustee of The Emil Michael Hashem II 1998 Trust U/D/T dated 9/25/98; and Gary Robinson, as successor to Daniel O. Robinson.

2 Further statutory references are also to the Civil Code. 2 Standard Oil Company of California (Standard Oil), recorded in 1970. The lease

provided it was to remain in force for a "primary term" of 10 years, "and thereafter so

long as lease products, or any one or more of them, is produced from, or Lessee is

engaged in drilling, extraction, processing or reworking operations on said land."

In March 1979 an amendment to the geothermal lease was recorded, which

designated Chevron U.S.A. Inc. (Chevron) as Standard Oil's successor in interest. The

amendment extended the primary term of the lease by five years and did not affect the

potential of an extended term. In July 1979 a document entitled "Unit Agreement[:]

Heber Geothermal Unit" (unit agreement, some capitalization omitted) was recorded.

The unit agreement was among Chevron and property owners who held "interests in

Geothermal Resources in the area of the Heber Geothermal Anomaly," including

defendants, and its purpose was "to prevent the waste of natural resources, promote

conservation and maximize the total ultimate recovery of geothermal resources from

lands subject to this Agreement with minimum disturbance of surface land use through

prudent development of the resources." The unit agreement states "such prudent

development can be best effected through the unitization and cooperative development of

the lands subject to this Agreement."

In the mid-2000's, defendants listed their property for sale. On January 18, 2006,

TownCenter's principal, Kevin G. Smith, made an offer on a California Association of

Realtors form to purchase the property for $5.736 million. Defendants made a

counteroffer for $6.311 million, and on January 20, 2006, Smith signed an acceptance.

3 Defendants, however, did not fully execute the counteroffer until late February 20,

2006.3

Under paragraph 6(B) of the purchase agreement, defendants were required,

within the period set forth in paragraph 18, to "make available to Buyer for inspection

and review, all current leases, rental agreements, service contracts and other related

agreements, licenses, and permits pertaining to the operation or use of the Property."

Under paragraph 14(C) of the purchase agreement, defendants were also required, within

the period set forth in paragraph 18(A), to "disclose to Buyer all matters known to

[defendants] affecting title, whether of record or not." The applicable period in paragraph

18 was seven days.

Paragraph 10(D) of the purchase agreement states: "NOTE TO BUYER: You are

strongly advised to conduct investigations of the entire Property in order to determine its

present condition since Seller may not be aware of all defects affecting the Property or

other factors that you consider important." (Boldface type omitted.)

Paragraph 12 of the purchase agreement provides:

"B. Buyer shall complete Buyer-Investigations and, as specified in paragraph 18, remove the contingency or cancel this Agreement. Buyer shall give Seller, at no cost, complete copies of all Buyer investigation reports obtained by Buyer. Seller shall make Property available for all Buyer investigations. . . . [¶] BUYER IS STRONGLY ADVISED TO INVESTIGATE THE CONDITION AND SUITABILITY OF ALL ASPECTS OF THE PROPERTY AND ALL MATTERS AFFECTING THE VALUE OR DESIRABILITY OF THE PROPERTY, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE ITEMS SPECIFIED BELOW. IF BUYER

3 We refer to the contract documents together as the purchase agreement. 4 DOES NOT EXERCISE THESE RIGHTS, BUYER IS ACTING AGAINST THE ADVICE OF BROKERS. BUYER UNDERSTANDS THAT ALTHOUGH CONDITIONS ARE OFTEN DIFFICULT TO LOCATE AND DISCOVER, ALL REAL PROPERTY CONTAINS CONDITIONS THAT ARE NOT READILY APPARENT AND THAT MAY AFFECT THE VALUE OF DESIRABILITY OF THE PROPERTY."

Paragraph 14(B) of the purchase agreement states, "Title is taken in its present

condition subject to all encumbrances, easements, covenants, conditions, restrictions,

rights and other matters, whether of record or not, as of the date of Acceptance except: (i)

monetary liens of record unless Buyer is assuming those obligations or taking the

Property subject to those obligations; and (ii) those matters which Seller has agreed to

remove in writing."

Under paragraph 18(B) of the purchase agreement, Smith had 45 days from the

date of acceptance "to complete all Buyer investigations; approve all disclosures, reports

and other applicable information, which Buyer receives from Seller; and approve all

matters affecting the Property." Similarly, paragraph 30 of the purchase agreement,

which consists of handwritten conditions, gave Smith 45 days to conduct "[d]ue

diligence." Paragraph 30 also provides, "Sellers to deliver all documents, reports & maps

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