Wong v. Stoler

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 2015
DocketA138270
StatusPublished

This text of Wong v. Stoler (Wong v. Stoler) 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
Wong v. Stoler, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/26/15 Modified and Certified for Pub. 6/23/15 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

WAYSON WONG et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A138270 v. IRA STOLER et al., (San Mateo County Super. Ct. No. CIV498102) Defendants and Appellants.

I. INTRODUCTION Wayson and Susanna Wong bought a hillside home in San Carlos for $2.35 million from Ira and Toby Stoler. Several months after they moved in, the Wongs discovered that they and 12 of their neighbors were connected to a private sewer system and were not directly serviced by the City‟s public system. Believing they had been deceived, they sued the Stolers and the real estate agents who brokered the sale alleging various causes of action, including rescission. After the Wongs settled their dispute with the real estate agents for $200,000, a court trial was held on the rescission claim only. Although the court found that the Stolers, with reckless disregard, made negligent misrepresentations to the Wongs, it declined to effectuate a rescission of the contract. Instead, it ordered the Stolers to be, for a limited time, indemnifiers to the Wongs for sewer maintenance and repair costs exceeding the $200,000 they obtained in their settlement with the agents.

1 On appeal, the Wongs contend that the trial court erred in denying rescission, ordering the alternative relief, and denying them attorney fees. The Stolers contend in a cross-appeal that the trial court erred in denying them attorney fees. We reverse. We conclude that the trial court declined to effectuate a rescission of the contract based on incorrect justifications and that its alternative remedy failed to provide the Wongs with the complete relief to which they were entitled.

II. BACKGROUND A. The Property The home is located on Sudan Lane, a privately maintained road on the west side of San Carlos in the Los Vientos Highlands area. When the developers built the house and 12 others, they installed a private system to carry sewage from these properties to a connecting point with the City‟s public sewer on a downhill street. Some of the homes on the private system are on a nearby street, Best Court. To meet the connecting point, the private system runs approximately 1,000 feet down a steep, unstable hillside through a public open-space and watershed area. At the time the 13 homes were built, the City required the developers to form a homeowners‟ association to maintain, repair, and replace the private sewer lines. No formally incorporated or registered entity was ever formed to provide these functions. References to the system are contained in two recorded documents entitled “Declaration Conditions, Covenants and Restrictions for Sewer Easements,” (CC&Rs) which were recorded against the property in December 1987. The obligations of the subservient downhill properties and the liabilities of the easement holders are included in a “Cross-Easement Agreement” recorded in April 1984, and a first amendment recorded in December 1987. The recorded instruments, however, do not clearly attach the easements to the titles of the 13 properties served by the private system. B. The Purchase and the Improvements The Wongs bought the property from the Stolers in May 2008 for $2.35 million. Before the close of escrow, the Stolers provided the Wongs with a transfer disclosure

2 statement completed in 2002 by the prior owners, an updated 2008 transfer disclosure statement, and a supplemental sellers‟ checklist. These combined documents represented to the Wongs that the property was connected to a public sewer system. And they failed to inform the Wongs about (1) any specifics related to “CC&Rs or other deed restrictions or obligations”; (2) any “Homeowners‟ Association [having] authority over” the property; (3) any “abatement or citations against” the property; (4) any “past or present blockage, backup, overflow or other failure” of the sewer lines or that they had ever been “snaked/rooted”; or (5) “any toxic or hazardous material leakages or spills within a half- mile” of the property. In a roadside conversation, the parties directly discussed that Sudan Lane is a privately maintained road, and in a follow-up email Mr. Wong specifically asked “is there any homeowners‟ association here?” Mr. Stoler replied, “no.” After the close of escrow, the Wongs allowed the Stolers to rent the property back from them for a few months. The Wongs then took possession in July 2008. In mid- September 2008, the City sent a letter to the Stolers about a problem with the private sewer system, and it was forwarded by the postal service to their new address.1 The Stolers returned the letter to the City. They also received an email from a former neighbor about the City‟s letter. Neither of these pieces of correspondence was forwarded to the Wongs. After they moved in, the Wongs commenced an extensive remodeling project. Mr. Wong did some of the initial demolition work himself, but professional demolition began in early October 2008. The Wongs signed a contract with a general contractor in December 2008. The remodeling cost about $300,000, and it included reconfiguring the garage doors and remodeling the kitchen, a bathroom, and a bedroom closet.

1 At about the same time, the Wongs received a letter from the City regarding “Best Court Private Sewer Maintenance,” which was addressed to someone else and concerned a different property. As the letter was not addressed to them and did not appear to concern their property, the Wongs entirely disregarded it.

3 B. Discovery of the Private Sewer System The Wongs first learned of the private sewer system around November 6, 2008, when they received an email from a neighbor discussing it. Unbeknownst to the Wongs, this neighbor had been the coordinator of an informal homeowners‟ association since 2005. By this time, much of the home was down to the studs as a result of the demolition work. The Wongs tried to resolve the problem without involving the Stolers. They and other neighbors met with City and asked it to take possession of the sewer system. In April 2009, the City denied the request and instead proposed that the homeowners enter into a maintenance agreement. The Wongs also worked to no avail to establish a formal structure to oversee the system. When it became increasingly unlikely that their neighbors would come together to form a responsible entity or to enter into a maintenance agreement, the Wongs sought legal counsel. C. Commencement of Litigation and Trial The Wongs sued the Stolers for negligence, negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent concealment, fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and breach of fiduciary duty. They also sought rescission of the purchase agreement. Immediately before trial, the parties argued whether the case should be tried to a jury. The Wongs argued it should, and the Stolers argued it should not.2 The trial court ruled that it would try the case “as a bench trial [on] the rescission claim . . . and then depending upon what I decide on that, then we‟ll see where we are as far as whether or not the remainder of the trial continue[s] on as a court trial or at that time whether we will need to empanel a jury and have a jury decide something.” At the ensuing trial, the evidence showed that the property owners on the private system never agreed to formalize an association, establish an emergency repair fund, or

2 On appeal, the Wongs do not challenge the trial court‟s denial of their request for a jury trial on their claim for rescission.

4 create a long-term reserve for the system‟s eventual replacement. It also showed that two sewage overflows occurred in 2008, and landslides damaged the pipes.

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Bluebook (online)
Wong v. Stoler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wong-v-stoler-calctapp-2015.