Greenwhich S. F. v. Wong (2010), Cal.App.4th
[Nos.
A123670 and A124882.
First
Dist., Div. Two.
Dec.
2, 2010.]
GREENWICH
S.F., LLC, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. DONNA WONG, Defendant and Appellant
(Superior
Court of the City and County of San Francisco County, No. CGC-06-454625, Nancy L. Davis, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Kline, P.J., with Lambden, J., and Richman, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Wendel,
Rosen, Black & Dean, Les A. Hausrath, Thiele R. Dunaway for Appellant.
Law
Office of John Derrick and John Derrick for Respondent. {Slip Opn. Page 2}
OPINION
KLINE,
P.J.-
INTRODUCTION
The
primary questions presented in this case are whether lost profits may be awarded as consequential damages under
Civil Code section 3306 for breach of a real property sale agreement where the buyer intended to renovate and
sell the property at a profit and, if so, whether lost profits were properly awarded here.
fn. 1 We shall conclude
that although lost profits may be available in an appropriate case, lost profits were not properly awarded here,
where the evidence showed the prospect of profits was uncertain, hypothetical and entirely speculative.
Defendant
Donna Wong appeals from a judgment of the San Francisco Superior Court on a jury verdict awarding plaintiff and
respondent Greenwich S.F., LLC (Greenwich S.F.) $600,000 in lost profits, among other damages, on appellant's
breach of a real property sales agreement between appellant and plaintiff Yui Hei Chan, Greenwich S.F.'s
predecessor in interest.
fn. 2 Appellant
contends the trial court applied an erroneous measure of damages by allowing recovery of lost profits as
consequential damages under section 3306. She also contends the court erred (1) in admitting expert testimony as to
the hypothetical value of the property if it had been renovated according to plaintiffs' plans; (2) in allowing the
expert to testify as to new opinions regarding valuation dates to which the expert did not testify during her
deposition; and (3) in instructing the jury that it could award lost profits. If lost profits may be recovered in
an appropriate case, appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to support the award in this case as (4) lost
profits were not proved with reasonable certainty and the prospect of profits after renovation was hypothetical and
speculative, and (5) there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that appellant knew plaintiffs intended
to sell the property for a profit. Appellant also challenges (6) the award of $60,000 damages for sums plaintiffs
had deposited into escrow, and (7) the award of $90,000 damages for funds plaintiffs expended toward the planned
property renovation. Finally, should she prevail on appeal, appellant seeks reversal of the attorney fee award.
FACTS
AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Appellant
and her late husband Dennis Wong (Wong) were married for 44 years. The couple owned many investment properties
together. Wong made decisions regarding the purchase of the properties; however, appellant did the bookkeeping,
collected rents and paid the expenses. Yui Hei Chan was a licensed general contractor and had been involved in
both remodeling and building houses. Chan and Wong had known each other for a long time. Chan called Wong his
"uncle." In 2001, Wong and Chan began doing business together, Wong buying houses and Chan remodeling them.
Specifically, in 2001, Wong and a friend purchased a house on 28th Avenue. Chan remodeled the house, working on
it for four or five months. Wong and Chan signed a contract wherein Chan was responsible for remodel plans,
remodeling the house, and selling it. He made "commissions" from the remodeling, but could not remember how
much. He stated it was "several tens of thousands of dollars." Chan worked with Wong remodeling an apartment
building owned by Wong, repairing the roofs on three structures. He was not paid for that work, but deducted
$18,000 from a $50,000 debt on money he had borrowed {Slip Opn. Page 3} from Wong in 2002. He repaid the balance
of the debt, plus interest to appellant in 2003, after Wong's death.
In
2002, Chan became aware of the subject property, located on Greenwich Street in San Francisco. It was a very
old, damaged, and unoccupied residence. Chan contacted Wong and the two orally agreed that Wong would buy the
property and Chan would remodel or rebuild it. Upon resale, Chan would receive 20 percent of the profit. Wong
purchased the property for $711,000, taking title with appellant as "joint tenants." Chan did not tell appellant
about his 20 percent profit on resale of the property. He did not discuss the property with appellant before
Wong's death. However, Chan testified that appellant was present on one occasion when Wong told Chan that "we
would be making money for sure and you would be making money, so she knew." Appellant told Chan, "He is so old
now. He is still concerning making money for you."
Wong
died suddenly on December 27, 2002, three months after purchasing the Greenwich Street property. During the
three-month period, Chan had been working with an architect, James Li, on a design for the property. However the
plans had not been drawn up before Wong's death. Chan anticipated that after the plans were drawn, it would take
approximately one year after plan approval by the City of San Francisco to complete the building. He had
originally expected under his oral agreement with Wong that it would take more than two years from the date the
property was purchased to complete the project.
About
a month after Wong's death, Chan heard from a realtor that appellant wanted to sell the Greenwich Street
property. Of the properties that appellant was left owning, the Greenwich Street property was the only one (with
the exception of her home) not producing income. The property needed major redevelopment, but appellant had no
experience of the sort that would be required and, so far as her son Dexter Wong knew, she had no plan to
develop it herself. Appellant called Chan a week later asking him to find a buyer. Chan tried, but was unable to
find a buyer, because they thought the price was too high. {Slip Opn. Page 4}
According
to appellant, around this time Chan proposed to her that he would fix up the property for her, then sell it, and
they would split the profit half and half. Chan denied this conversation. However, he told appellant that he had
already spent $10,000 to $20,000 in his time and money on the project based on his oral agreement with Wong.
Chan
testified that, pursuant to his oral agreement with Wong, he was to be paid for his work on the property as a
contractor, plus 20 percent of the profits realized on resale. Asked how much he expected to make "as a
contractor" on the project, he testified that the calculation would be based on the square footage of the
construction and that "[u]sually is $160 to $180 per square foot." That square footage would be "[w]hatever the
City Hall approves in the plans." He reiterated that he could not give a "best estimate" as to his expected
earnings on the agreement with Wong because "[i]t all depends on what size the City approves. If the City
approves 300 square foot, then it would be that, or 3,000 square foot, it would be that, or 4,000 square foot.
Whatever." He also stated, "the bigger the better, but it all depends on the approval from the City." His
agreement with Wong anticipated construction of a new two-unit building on the site. Li eventually drew up plans
for a two-unit structure to replace the existing house. Although Chan did not remember the total square footage
for those plans, he stated he "would approximate it to be 4,000 square foot." Questioned again as to his "best
estimate" of what he expected his 20 percent profit to amount to after renovation and resale of the property,
Chan again said, "It is useless to approximate because it all depends when you sell the structure." Asked to
assume that the construction was completed and sold in the fall of 2004, Chan stated that one year did not
include the time needed for the City to approve plans to get the permit and that he had expected the project to
be completed and ready for resale "more than two years" after purchasing the property--"more or less" sometime
in 2005. Asked to assume the property was ready for resale in the summer of 2005, Chan again could not estimate
what 20 percent of the profits he expected to earn would total. He responded, "[y]ou [would] have to ask Uncle
Wong because he paid for all the expenses, so I would not know." Asked again, he {Slip Opn. Page 5} stated, "I
don't know." Asked whether he expected to earn more than $200,000, he answered that he "did not think of that
question at all."
Chan
decided to try to find others to purchase the property with him. He contacted John Lee, a CPA, and someone with
whom he had bought and sold houses previously. Lee testified that he "did business with Chan for many, many
properties." Chan's role was to perform multiple functions as a finder of the property, as a contractor, and
developer. Chan testified that as of 2003, he had worked on three renovation projects with John Lee for a
percentage of the profits on the renovated properties.
Chan
testified that on the first renovation project he undertook with Lee, he received 10 percent of the profit.
Asked "[h]ow much was that [10] percent? How much did it amount to?" Lee answered, "$160,000. Sorry. No.
$1,600,000."
fn. 3 Chan testified
that he and Lee sold the second project, but did not make any profit. His percentage of the third project with Lee
was also 10 percent, but once again he made nothing. Chan testified that before offering to purchase the Greenwich
Street property he and Lee had a conversation about the possibility of potential renovations, but they did not
discuss much. Chan stated that "[g]enerally we buy a property and then we discuss what to do about it."
Lee
proposed to buy the Greenwich Street property for $760,000. That was the price appellant was hoping to get. Lee
contacted two other investors, Elizabeth Tsai and Eddy Shum, with whom Li and Chan formed a limited liability
company, respondent Greenwich S.F., for the purpose of acquiring, developing, and reselling the property. Chan
held about 10 percent and the other three each held about 30 percent of the company.
fn.
4 In May or June of 2003, Chan told appellant that he had a buyer for the {Slip Opn. Page 6}
property for the $760,000 price. A realtor prepared the purchase agreement and Chan signed it on July 25, 2003. The
buyer in the contract was named as "Yui Hei Chan And Assignees." Chan later executed a complete assignment of all
of his rights and obligations under the contract to Greenwich S.F.
fn. 5
Appellant
signed and dated the contract in her home on July 30, 2003, in the presence of her son Dexter, himself a real
estate broker. The parties had widely varying versions of the events leading to and following appellant's
signing of the purchase and sales agreement. However, on this appeal, we recite the facts in the light most
favorable to the prevailing party, giving that party the benefit of every reasonable inference, and resolving
conflicts in support of the judgment. (Whiteley v. Philip Morris, Inc. (2004)
117 Cal.App.4th 635,
642 & fn. 3; Eisenberg et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Appeals and Writs (The Rutter Group 2010) ¶ 8:74, p.
8-35.)
Chan
took the contract to Lee, who wrote a check for $60,000 so that escrow could be opened. Lee testified he
expected escrow to close within a matter of days. Chan expected escrow to close within about 30 days.
Chan
worked on obtaining the various approvals and permits for the work on redeveloping the property. Lee was not
happy with the two-unit duplex concept that had been worked on thus far. Therefore, the project changed from a
two-unit building to a single family residence and architect Li was engaged to begin redrawing the plans anew.
These plans were revised several times: on March 30, 2004, July 9, 2004, and April 15, 2005. The eventual design
was for a single family residence of approximately 4,000 square feet.
In
September of 2003, appellant told Chan that tax issues had arisen with her husband's estate and would delay
closing of escrow on the property. Chan received a {Slip Opn. Page 7} letter dated March 30, 2004, from an
attorney representing appellant, implying that Chan was cheating appellant and demanding that the escrow be
cancelled. The letter stated that the Greenwich Street property was in probate and that the escrow had to be
cancelled. The letter was headed: "Notice of Rescission of Contract." (The probate had been opened in September
2003, after appellant and Chan signed the contract. Appellant and Dennis Wong had held title in joint tenancy,
so the property should never have been in the probate estate.) Chan spoke with Lee, who urged him to speak with
appellant. Appellant asked Chan to cancel the escrow to allow the probate to proceed and assured him that after
the probate was concluded, she would still sell the property to him. Chan told her that he and his partners were
spending a lot of time and money getting permits and told her of the preparations being made for the
redevelopment of the property. Lee also met with appellant in April 2004, and she agreed to reopen the escrow or
open a new escrow once issues in probate were resolved. Therefore, appellant and Chan signed escrow cancellation
instructions on April 28, 2004. Chan and Lee testified they never agreed to rescind the contract itself and
appellant never suggested they do so.
Thereafter,
appellant assisted Chan in posting notices required by the City to inform neighbors who might have objections to
the project. A number of neighbors raised objections to the project. However, after meeting with Chan and
architect Li about the proposed renovations, the neighbors' objections were withdrawn. A permit was obtained
sometime in 2005, but the permit fee was never paid.
At
some point after the permit was approved in 2005, Chan asked appellant when she would transfer title so that
plaintiffs could proceed. Appellant said the price had gone up, that the property was worth more than $1
million. She wanted $1.1 million for the property. She also maintained, including at trial, that she lacked the
ability to transfer the property because it was in probate.
Plaintiffs
Greenwich S.F. and Chan filed their action for breach of contract on July 28, 2006. The third amended complaint
alleged a cause of action for breach of contract, together with other causes of action. Appellant raised various
affirmative defenses and cross-complained against plaintiffs. {Slip Opn. Page 8}
The
case was tried to a jury in August and September 2008. At trial, plaintiffs presented evidence of their damages
due to appellant's breach of contract.
Lee
testified on direct examination about $71,877.16 in out-of- pocket expenditures that Greenwich S.F. made from
2003 to 2005 as a result of the contract to purchase and develop the property: In 2003, Greenwich S.F. paid Li
$10,000 for design work; paid $2,000 in attorney fees to form the limited liability company; paid an $800
minimum annual tax payment to the state; and paid $2,547.74 to the City and County of San Francisco for planning
and related costs. In 2004, Greenwich S.F. paid Li $26,000 more for his architectural design services on the
project; paid $412.42 to the San Francisco Planning Department; paid $117 for compilation of a list of people in
the neighborhood required to be noticed of the planned construction; and paid $2,500 for a soils report as part
of the permit requirements. In 2005, Greenwich S.F. paid $2,366.72 to the San Francisco Unified School District
as part of the permit process, and $30,000 to a permit facilitator. (Lee testified it was almost impossible to
get a permit approved in San Francisco without a facilitator.) In addition, the court admitted into evidence a
handwritten itemization prepared by Lee. This itemization contained 12 entries, totaling $90,165.30. Most were
referenced by Lee in his testimony. The itemization included a notation of "minimum tax LLC" of $4,800 (rather
than the $800 to which Lee had testified); $2,547.74 to the City of San Francisco and $112.42 to the City
Planning Department (rather than the single payment of $412.42 to which Lee had testified); $170 to the person
compiling the list of neighbors (rather than $117); an additional $112.42 to Li for his revised plan; and $9,556
to Chan for travel costs.
Greenwich
S.F. presented evidence of lost profits through the testimony of real estate appraiser Janette Miller. She had
inspected the property in April of 2008, and had seen the plans and specifications prepared by Li for the
project. Based on her review of a "drive by" or "desktop" appraisal done for appellant before the sale by John
Tom in 2002, that valued the property at $850,000, Miller opined that the value of the property in December 2002
was $878,000. Miller also testified she had appraised the property in April 2008, some months before trial, at
$1,009,000 in its undeveloped state (the "as is" {Slip Opn. Page 9} appraisal). Miller acknowledged that her
April 4, 2008 "as is" appraisal misstated the neighborhood boundaries and that it erred in listing the zoning
compliance as "legal." In fact, the lot was substandard and the property would be a legal nonconforming use. She
maintained it was likely the developer would be able to build a house on the property, but that "there might be
a few more hoops for them to jump through." Miller also opined that if the property could be built according to
the plans and specifications that had been generated by Li and with no changes (the "plans and specs"
appraisal), the value of the property would have been $3,252,000 as of April 4, 2008. Appellant's expert real
estate appraiser Stanley Joel Tish criticized Miller's appraisals (and particularly the "plans and specs"
appraisal) on numerous grounds and concluded that the "plans and specs" appraisal was not in conformity with
minimal appraisal standards of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice and did not constitute a
market value appraisal. Tish also opined that the reports indicated nothing about the financial viability of the
proposed project. He did not opine on the market value of the property.
At
the close of trial, both parties moved for directed verdicts. The trial court ruled Chan had no causes of action
remaining following the assignment of his interest to Greenwich S.F.
The
jury returned its verdict, finding there had been a contract between the parties and that appellant had breached
it.
fn. 6 It made the
following findings as to damages: The difference between the fair market value of the property on the date of the
breach and the contract price was $0. The amount of payments made by plaintiffs toward the purchase was $60,000.
The amount of any reasonable expenses for examining title and preparing documents for sale was $0. The amount of
reasonable expenses in preparing to occupy the property was $0. The amount of reasonable consequential damages for
lost profits was $600,000, and the amount of reasonable consequential damages for expenditures {Slip Opn. Page 10}
incurred by plaintiffs in planning to develop the property was $90,000.
fn. 7 Judgment was
entered on October 6, 2008.
fn. 8 Appellant filed a
timely appeal from the judgment (case No. A123670).
On
January 27, 2009, the court awarded $391,000 in attorney fees to plaintiffs. Appellant timely appealed the
attorney fee award (case No. A124882). We consolidated the two appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Lost Profits Under Section 3306
The
parties agree that the proper measure of damages in this case is that set forth in section 3306, which provides:
"The detriment caused by the breach of an agreement to convey an estate in real property, is deemed to be the
price paid, and the expenses properly incurred in examining the title and preparing the necessary papers, the
difference between the price agreed to be paid and the value of the estate agreed to be conveyed at the time of
the breach, the expenses properly incurred in preparing to enter upon the land, consequential damages
according to proof, and interest." (Italics added.)
The
parties disagree as to whether consequential damages under section 3306 may include lost profits. The issue is
one of law, subject to our de novo review on appeal. (Kajima/Ray Wilson v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan
Transportation Authority {Slip Opn. Page 11} (2000)
23 Cal.4th 305,
315 [measure of damages for promissory estoppel is a question of law]; Glendale Redevelopment Agency v. County
of Los Angeles (2010)
184 Cal.App.4th 1388,
1396 [de novo review of questions of statutory interpretation].) "The rules of damages for a breach of a contract
to sell or buy real property are special and unique. To the extent that the measure of compensatory damages
available to a buyer or seller of real property for a breach of a contract are different from the general measure
of compensatory damages for a breach of contract, the special provisions for damages for a breach of a real
property sales contract prevail." (12 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (3d ed. 2001) § 34:42, p. 34-158, citing
Code Civ. Proc. § 1859; Crag Lumber Co. v. Crofoot (1956)
144 Cal.App.2d 755,
777-780.)
No
California case cited by the parties or found by us directly holds that lost profits are encompassed within the
"consequential damages" recoverable by the parties under section 3306. Various treatises appear to differ on the
question whether lost profits ever may be recovered as consequential damages. (Compare 12 Miller & Starr,
Cal. Real Estate, supra, § 34:45, pp. 34-160 to 34-161 (rel. 9/2008) [indicating lost profits may be
available where the "buyer purchased the property for purposes of resale and the seller was aware of the buyer's
purpose"] with Cal. Real Property Remedies and Damages (Cont. Ed. Bar 2d ed. Aug. 2010 update) § 4.46, p. 321
[lost resale profits not available] and 54 Cal. Jur.3d (2008) Purchaser's Remedies, § 563, p. 744 [lost profits
are "generally not an allowable measure of recovery"]; see also Greenwald & Asimow, Cal. Practice Guide:
Real Property Transactions (The Rutter Group 2009) ¶ 11:192, p. 11-47 [stating both that lost profits are not
recoverable consequential damages under section 3306, and that "[u]nless the buyer purchased the property for
resale and the seller was aware of the buyer's intention to resell the property, lost profits are not deemed a
reasonably foreseeable, natural consequence of the seller's breach of its obligation to convey"].)
fn. 9 {Slip Opn. Page
12}
Historically,
the measure of damages under section 3306 for a seller's breach of a contract to sell real property has been
held not to include lost profits. (E.g., Coger v. Wiltsey (1931) 117 Cal.App. 652, 657-658.) The
appellate court in Coger v. Wiltsey reversed a judgment awarding lost profits for breach of an agreement
to convey real property where the jury was instructed in terms of section 3300, rather than 3306. The appellate
court reasoned that to allow the recovery of lost profits in this context "would open the door to fraud and
collusion. One would merely have to plead and prove a {Slip Opn. Page 13} contract with a third party, and he
thereupon would be entitled to judgment for the difference between the original contract price and the contract
price with the third party. This would be done, as attempted here under the guise of special damages. This would
open up a realm of speculation for the jury. It was probably for this reason that the legislature confined the
damages to the difference between the price agreed upon in the contract and the value of the land at the time of
the breach. . . . [W]here a vendor has breached his contract to convey real property, the vendee cannot recover
damages predicated . . . solely upon profits which he might have made on a resale of said property to a third
party." (Id. at pp. 657-658.)
fn. 10
Section
3306 was amended in 1983 to eliminate a requirement of bad faith and to add consequential damages and interest
to the damages recoverable for a breach of the agreement to convey an estate in real estate. (Stats. 1983, ch.
262, § 1, p. 806.) Stevens Group Fund IV v. Sobrato Development Co. (1991)
1 Cal.App.4th 886,
892 (Stevens Group Fund IV) described the relevant legislative history of that amendment: "The summary of
Assembly Bill No. 1086 explained the amendment as follows: 'Under existing law, the detriment caused by a breach of
an agreement to convey real property is the price paid, expenses incurred, interest, and, in the case of bad faith,
the difference between the agreed price and the value of the property plus expenses incurred in {Slip Opn. Page 14}
preparing to enter upon the land. [¶] This bill would delete the requirement of bad faith for recovery of the
difference between the agreed price and the value of the property plus expenses in preparing to enter upon the
land, and would also permit the recovery of other consequential damages and interest, as specified.'
"The
Assembly Committee on Judiciary explained the inclusion of consequential damages in the proposed statute. 'This
bill would permit the recovery of "consequential damages" for breach of a real property conveyance agreement.
Generally, such damages are those which, in view of all facts known by the parties at the time of the making of
the contract, may reasonably be supposed to have been considered as a likely consequence of a breach in the
ordinary course of events. This provision would conform the measure of damages in real property conveyance
breaches to the general contract measure of damages which is specified in Civil Code 3300: " . . . all the
detriment proximately caused (by the breach), or which, in the ordinary course of things, would be likely to
result therefrom." ' [¶] Thus, section 3306 provides that the measure of damages for plaintiff is the
difference between the contract price and the fair market value of the property at the time of the breach plus
consequential damages." (Stevens Group Fund IV, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 892, italics added.)
As
explained by the Supreme Court in Lewis Jorge Construction Management, Inc. v. Pomona Unified School
Dist. (2004)
34 Cal.4th 960,
968 (Lewis Jorge), a case involving breach of a construction contract and damages under the general contract
measure of damages of section 3300: "Contractual damages are of two types--general damages (sometimes called direct
damages) and special damages (sometimes called consequential damages). (24 Williston on Contracts (4th ed. 2002) §
64.1, pp. 11-12; 3 Dobbs, Law of Remedies (2d ed.1993) § 12.2(3), pp. 39-42; see, e.g., Erlich v. Menezes
(1999)
21 Cal.4th 543,
558.)" "Unlike general damages, special damages are those losses that do not arise directly and inevitably from any
similar breach of any similar agreement. Instead, they are secondary or derivative losses arising from
circumstances that are particular to the contract or to the parties. Special damages are recoverable if the special
or particular circumstances from which they arise were actually communicated to or {Slip Opn. Page 15} known by the
breaching party (a subjective test) or were matters of which the breaching party should have been aware at the time
of contracting (an objective test). [Citations.] Special damages 'will not be presumed from the mere breach' but
represent loss that 'occurred by reason of injuries following from' the breach. [Citation.] Special damages are
among the losses that are foreseeable and proximately caused by the breach of a contract. (Civ. Code, § 3300.)"
(Lewis Jorge, at pp. 968-969.) "Lost profits, if recoverable, are more commonly special rather than general
damages [citation], and subject to various limitations. Not only must such damages be pled with particularity
[citation], but they must also be proven to be certain both as to their occurrence and their extent, albeit not
with 'mathematical precision.' [Citations.]" (Id. at p. 975.)
Where
"consequential damages" or special damages are recoverable for breach of contract not involving breach of a real
property purchase agreement, they may include lost profits, where such profits are the natural and direct
consequence of the breach, where the amount of the lost profits can be established with reasonable certainty,
and where the seller knew of the buyer's intent to use the property for profit. (See § 3301.)
Appellant
relies upon three cases decided after the 1983 amendment of the statute to support her contention that lost
profits are never recoverable under section 3306: Stevens Group Fund IV, supra,
1 Cal.App.4th 886;
Reese v. Wong (2001)
93 Cal.App.4th 51;
and Horning v. Shilberg, supra,
130 Cal.App.4th 197.
In
Stevens Group Fund IV, supra,
1 Cal.App.4th 886,
fn. 11 the buyer
contended the trial court had erred both in determining that section 3306 did not authorize the recovery of lost
rents as consequential damages and in denying its request for specific performance. (Stevens Group Fund IV,
supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 888.) The Court of Appeal reversed the trial court's denial of the buyer's request
for specific performance, but rejected the buyer's contention that section 3306 authorized the recovery of lost
rents {Slip Opn. Page 16} and lost profits as consequential damages. (Id. at pp. 889, 892.) The court held
that lost rents received from lease of the property were not properly an item of consequential damages "in this
case" (id. at p. 892), as the buyer's experts had included these rents as part of their capitalized income
and comparable sales approaches to determining fair market value. Hence, to award market value and also rental
profits as consequential damages in the circumstances would have permitted a double recovery. (Id. at pp.
891- 893.)
fn. 12 Similarly, the
court rejected the buyer's claim that it was entitled to either the difference between the contract price
and fair market value or consequential damages as alternative measure of damages, stating, "[t]he language
of the statute is clear. It does not provide for alternative measures of damages." (Stevens Group Fund IV,
supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 893.) Stevens Group Fund IV did not hold that lost profits--from rents or
otherwise--were not recoverable as consequential damages under section 3306 in an appropriate case.
Nor
do we read Reese v. Wong, supra,
93 Cal.App.4th 51, as
holding that lost profits may never be awarded in an appropriate case as consequential damages under section 3306.
In that case, Division One of this court rejected the buyer's claim that the trial court had erred in refusing to
instruct the jury that the measure of damages for breach of a contract to sell commercial real property under
section 3306 was the difference between the contract price and the fair market value of the property at the time
of trial, rather than at the time of breach, as specified in the statute. (Id. at pp. 53-54.) The buyer
had been denied specific performance of the contract and the property had been sold for a price in excess of the
contract by the time of trial. The buyer sought that difference between the contract price and the property value
at the time of trial as his {Slip Opn. Page 17} damages. The appellate court quoted the statute both before and
after its 1983 amendment and observed that "[b]oth versions of section 3306 include the same unambiguous language
regarding the price value differential, and courts have consistently read that language according to its plain
meaning. [Citations.]" (Id. at pp. 55-56, 60.) The court rejected the buyer's contention that following the
amendment to section 3306 to allow recovery of consequential damages, the appreciation in value of the property
from the time of breach to the time of trial constituted consequential damages within the meaning of the statute
and the contemplation of the Legislature. (Id. at pp. 59-61.) The court relied upon the courts' consistent
reading of section 3306 according to its plain language specifying the measure of damages as the difference between
the price to be paid and the value of the property at the time of the breach. It concluded that in eliminating the
bad faith requirement in 1983, the Legislature did not intend to change that measure of damages. (Id. at p.
60.) "[N]othing in the legislative history of the amendment, which was discussed in Stevens Group Fund IV . . .
, supra,
1 Cal.App.4th 886,
suggests that the Legislature intended the radical change in the measure of damages that appellant espouses. On the
matter of including consequential damages, the Stevens court noted a legislative committee report indicating
that the provision would conform the measure of damages to the general contract measure specified in Civil Code
section 3300. (Stevens Group Fund IV, supra, at p. 892.) One treatise writer has suggested that the
amendment means that a buyer's lost profits could be recovered under appropriate circumstances, if the buyer
purchased the property for purposes of resale and the seller was aware of the buyer's purpose. [Citation.] But the
legislative history provides no support for appellant's theory that by expressly permitting the recovery of
consequential damages, the Legislature impliedly intended to establish alternative measures of damages, with the
price/market value differential based in some cases on the time of the breach and in others, on the time of the
trial. 'The language of the statute is clear. It does not provide for alternative measures of damages.' (Stevens
Group Fund IV, supra, at p. 893.)" (Reese v. Wong, supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 60.) The court then
continued: "We observe that appellant's theory of damages is incompatible with the principle that {Slip Opn. Page
18} contract damages are ordinarily limited to those within the contemplation of the parties when they entered into
the contract or to those reasonably foreseeable by them at that time. ' "This limitation on available damages
serves to encourage contractual relations and commercial activity by enabling parties to estimate in advance the
financial risks of their enterprise." [Citation.]' [Citation.] Under appellant's novel theory, contract damages
would be dependent not on the reasonable expectations of the parties at the time of their contracts, but on the
fluctuations in the real estate market, the existence of congestion in the calendars of trial courts, and the
success of the parties in delaying or advancing trial dates, depending on which tactic was to their advantage."
(Id. at pp. 60-61.)
In
rejecting the buyer's "novel theory" of damages, and continuing to read section 3306 as measuring damages for
breach as the difference between the contract price and the market value of the property at the date of the
breach, Reese v. Wong did not reject the legislative history described in Stevens v. Group Fund IV,
supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at page 892, nor the conclusion of Miller and Starr that lost profits may be
available as consequential damages in appropriate cases. Rather, it rejected the contention that damages could
be measured by the appreciation in the property's value after the date of the breach. The court also
concluded that the buyer's theory was incompatible with the requirement that contract damages must depend upon
the reasonable expectations of the parties at the time of entering the contract, not upon market fluctuations
and the vagaries of court calendars. (Reese v. Wong, supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at pp. 60-61.)
In
Horning v. Shilberg, supra,
130 Cal.App.4th 197,
the appellate court affirmed a judgment in favor of defendant seller on the plaintiff buyer's claim for breach of
contract to convey real property. The buyer contended that the court should have awarded him damages in the amount
of lost resale profits based upon the difference between the contract price and the price the seller received when
he sold the property to another party after his breach of the contract. The court held that upon the seller's
breach of the contract, the buyer was entitled to damages specified in section 3306. The measure of the {Slip Opn.
Page 19} buyer's damages "was the difference between the purchase price and the fair market value of the . . .
property on the date of breach (the market-contract differential), plus consequential damages according to proof.
[Citations.]" (Id. at p. 206.) However, the buyer failed to introduce evidence of the market-contract
differential and so the court's finding of zero damages was upheld. (Ibid.) Instead, the buyer claimed he
was entitled to the difference between the contract price and the price the seller received upon his later sale of
the property. (Id. at pp. 206-207.) The court rejected this "alternative measure of damages, relying upon
the holding of Reese v. Wong, supra,
93 Cal.App.4th 51,
61, that the unambiguous language of section 3306 did not authorize damages based on the value of the property at
the time of trial. (Horning v. Shilberg, at p. 207.)
In
Stevens Group Fund IV, supra,
1 Cal.App.4th 886,
Reese v. Wong, supra,
93 Cal.App.4th 51,
and Horning v. Shilberg, supra,
130 Cal.App.4th 197,
the courts rejected the buyers' attempts to formulate alternative measures of damages to that provided by section
3306. In these cases, buyers did not seek the difference between the contract price and the market price on the
date of breach, plus consequential damages. In Stevens Group Fund IV, the buyer sought the contract
price-market value differential plus rental profits that had already been incorporated into the
market value of the property at the date of breach or, in the alternative, only damages measured by the lost
rent that he did not collect in the meantime. In both Reese v. Wong and Horning v. Shilberg, the
buyers sought alternative damages measured by the value of the property not at the date of breach, but at a later
date. Moreover, in none of the foregoing cases does it appear that the buyer demonstrated the existence of the
other requisites for an award of consequential or special damages, i.e., that the seller knew of the buyer's
purpose in purchasing the property and that the anticipated profits were proved with reasonable certainty as to
their occurrence and amount. In sum, none of these three cases holds that lost profits may not be recoverable as
consequential damages in an appropriate case, in addition to the basic measure of damages of the difference between
the contract price and the value of the property at the time of the breach. {Slip Opn. Page 20}
Other
states have recognized lost profits as a component of consequential damages for breach of a contract for sale of
land. (See 25 Williston on Contracts, supra, § 66:81 and text accompanying fn. 41; 11 A.L.R. 3d 719, §§
2, 3[a] [most courts considering the issue have followed the general rule of damages and have allowed lost
profits if foreseeable].) According to Williston, "[g]enerally, when the vendor under a contract for the sale of
real estate wrongfully fails or refuses to convey, the aggrieved purchaser may recover, as general damages for
the breach, the difference between the contract price and the market value of the land [citations], plus
interest on that amount. [Citations.] This measure gives the purchaser the benefit of the bargain if the
property is worth more than the contract price. [Citations.] The aggrieved purchaser may also recover special
or consequential damages that are the natural and proximate result of the vendor's breach, and that may
reasonably be supposed to have been within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made.
[Citations.] . . . [T]he breaching vendor may be held liable for profits lost by the purchaser as a
result of the breach, such as through an anticipated resale of the property [citations], if they were within the
contemplation of the parties at the time of contracting [citations], and they are proven to be more than
speculative, remote, or contingent. [Citations.]" (25 Williston on Contracts, supra, § 66:81, italics
added, fns. omitted.)
The
plain language of section 3306, adding consequential damages to the general damages and other specified damages
recoverable for breach of a contract to convey real property, the legislative history of the 1983 amendment
acknowledging that the addition of consequential damages would conform the measure of damages to the general
contract measure of damages (Stevens Group Fund IV, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 892), and the generally
accepted inclusion of lost profits as a component of consequential or special damages in other breach of
contract contexts and by other states in the context of breach of contracts to convey real property, taken
together, persuade us that lost profits may be awarded as part of consequential damages under section 3306 upon
a proper showing. We turn to the question whether Greenwich S.F. has made such a showing here. {Slip Opn. Page
21}
II.
Lost Profits--Sufficiency of the Evidence
Appellant
contends the evidence was insufficient to support the $600,000 award, as lost profits were not proved with
reasonable certainty, and the prospect of profits after renovation was hypothetical and speculative.
A.
At
the outset, Greenwich S.F. argues that appellant waived her challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence of lost
profits by failing to move for a new trial on the ground that the damages were excessive. We disagree.
"Ordinarily,
errors are not waived on appeal by the failure to make a motion for new trial. [(See Estate of Barber
(1957)
49 Cal.2d 112,
118-119.)] [¶] But there is one significant exception: A claim of excessive or inadequate damages cannot be raised
on appeal unless appellant first urged the error in a timely motion for new trial [(Code Civ. Proc., § 657, subd.
(5))]. The theory is that trial courts are in a better position than appellate courts to resolve disputes over the
proper amount of damages. [(Jamison v. Jamison (2008)
164 Cal.App.4th 714,
719-720; County of Los Angeles v. Southern Calif. Edison Co. (2003)
112 Cal.App.4th 1108,
1121.)]" (Eisenberg et al., Civil Appeals and Writs, supra, ¶ 8:278, p. 8-179, italics omitted.) "A failure
to timely move for a new trial ordinarily precludes a party from complaining on appeal that the damages awarded
were either excessive or inadequate, whether the case was tried by a jury or by the court. [Citation.] The power to
weigh the evidence and resolve issues of credibility is vested in the trial court, not the reviewing court.
(Schroeder v. Auto Driveaway Co. (1974)
11 Cal.3d 908,
919.) Thus, a party who first challenges the damage award on appeal, without a motion for a new trial,
unnecessarily burdens the appellate court with issues that can and should be resolved at the trial level.
(Ibid.) Consequently, if ascertainment of the amount of damages turns on the credibility of witnesses,
conflicting evidence, or other factual questions, the award may not be challenged for inadequacy or excessiveness
for the first time on appeal. (County of Los Angeles v. Southern Cal. Edison. Co.[, supra,]
112 Cal.App.4th 1108,
1121.)" (Jamison v. Jamison, supra,
164 Cal.App.4th 714,
719-720, italics omitted.) {Slip Opn. Page 22}
However,
it is also established that "the failure to move for a new trial does not preclude a party from asserting error
in the trial of damages issues--e.g., erroneous evidentiary rulings, instructional errors, or failure to apply
the proper measure of damages. [Citations.]" (Eisenberg et al., Civil Appeals and Writs, supra, ¶ 8:279,
at p. 8-179.)
We
agree with appellant that the issue here is not a question of excessive damages, but whether the evidence
was sufficient to support the award of lost profits in any amount. Unlike Jamison v. Jamison,
supra,
164 Cal.App.4th 714,
and the other cases relied upon by Greenwich S.F., the question whether substantial evidence supported the award of
lost profits in this case does not turn on the credibility of witnesses or conflicting evidence, or other factual
questions, but rather, whether under the facts viewed in the light most favorable to Greenwich S.F., the award of
any lost profits was unduly speculative and uncertain as a matter of law. We turn to that issue.
B.
As
our Supreme Court has recognized, where recoverable as consequential damages, lost profits are subject to
various limitations. "Not only must such damages be pled with particularity [citation], but they must also be
proven to be certain both as to their occurrence and their extent, albeit not with 'mathematical precision.'
[Citations.]" (Lewis Jorge, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 975.)
We
conclude that the occurrence and extent of the projected lost profits were not proven with the requisite
reasonable certainty in this case. As we have recognized, no published California case of which we are
aware has awarded lost profits to the buyer as consequential damages under section 3306 for the seller's breach
of a real property purchase and sales agreement. Those treatises that suggest lost profits may be awarded in an
appropriate case describe the appropriate circumstance as one in which the "buyer purchased the property for
purposes of resale and the seller was aware of the buyer's purpose." (12 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate,
supra, § 34:45, pp. 34-160 to 34-161 (rel. 9/2008), fn. omitted; Greenwald & Asimow, Cal. Practice
Guide: Real Property Transactions, supra,¶ 11:192, p. 11-47, citing Coger v. Wiltsey, supra, 117
Cal.App. 652 and Horning v. Shilberg, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at p. 207, fn. 8].) Not only must the lost
{Slip Opn. Page 23} profits be "within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made" (25
Williston on Contracts, supra, § 66:81, fn. omitted), but they must be "proven to be more than
speculative, remote, or contingent [citation..]" (Ibid.) None of the treatises on California law indicate
that anticipated profits on a prospective residential redevelopment project such as this are sufficiently
certain to be recovered as consequential damages.
Cases
in related contexts, where lost profits are recoverable as consequential damages, confirm our conclusion that
the evidence here was insufficient to support the award of lost profits. Section 3301 provides that '[n]o
damages can be recovered for a breach of contract which are not clearly ascertainable in both their nature and
origin." "The general rule under this statute is that '. . . where the operation of an unestablished business is
prevented or interrupted, damages for prospective profits that might otherwise have been made from its operation
are not recoverable for the reason that their occurrence is uncertain, contingent and speculative.' (Grupe v.
Glick (1945)
26 Cal.2d 680,
693 [(Grupe)].) However, Grupe . . . also stands for the exception to the rule: '[A]nticipated
profits dependent upon future events are allowed where their nature and occurrence can be shown by evidence of
reasonable reliability.' (Ibid.)" (A & M Produce Co. v. FMC Corp. (1982)
135 Cal.App.3d 473,
493-494.)
In
Grupe¸ the exclusive agent for resale of defective oil refining machines was awarded lost profits he
would have received on resale of the machines. Evidence concerning Grupe's sales expense and profit on sales of
each machine was admissible to show the net profit he would have made on additional sales of the machines.
Combined with evidence that he was negotiating for and had offers for five additional machines at a set price,
the trial court could properly estimate the prospective net profits he lost on the contemplated resale of the
machines. (Grupe, supra, 26 Cal;.2d at pp. 693-694.) Nevertheless, the Supreme Court reversed the lost
profits damage award and remanded with directions to determine the reasonable cost of the service agreed to be
rendered by Grupe on the sale of each machine to reduce the amount recoverable by him. (Id. at p. 694.)
{Slip Opn. Page 24}
In
Lewis Jorge, supra,
34 Cal.4th 960,
the California Supreme Court cited Grupe, supra,
26 Cal.2d 680, as
among those cases where lost profits from collateral transactions were awarded as a measure of general
damages for breach of contract. (Id. at p. 972.) According to the court, "[l]ost profits from collateral
transactions as a measure of general damages for breach of contract typically arise when the contract involves
crops, goods intended for resale, or an agreement creating an exclusive sales agency. [Citations.]" (Id. at
pp. 971-972.) The Lewis Jorge court held that lost profits a contractor may have earned on future projects
it never won because of impaired bonding capacity suffered as a result of the breach of contract by a school
district were not recoverable as general damages. (Id. at pp. 965, 973-975.)
fn. 13
Lewis
Jorge, supra,
34 Cal.4th 960,
also concluded that those lost potential profits were not recoverable as special or consequential damages either.
(Id. at pp. 975-977.) The contractor had sought to prove the extent of its lost future profits on
unidentified construction projects, relying on its profitability during the four years preceding the breach and the
testimony of its expert financial analyst. The financial analyst projected the loss at $95 million in gross revenue
for future contracts that, based on its past history, the contractor would likely have been awarded at profit of
about six percent of revenue, discounted to present value. (Id. at p. 966.) The Supreme Court recognized
that lost profits are "frequently denied as too speculative" in circumstances where a contractor seeks lost profits
it might have earned on unawarded contracts as special damages. (Id. at p. 975.) "These cases bar recovery
of profits lost on future contracts not because the amount of the lost profits is speculative or remote, but
because their occurrence is uncertain. [Citations.] [¶] California, likewise, has not upheld as special damages a
contractor's unearned profits after breach of the construction contract. . . ." (Id. at {Slip Opn. Page 25}
p. 976.) Even in a case where the lost profits claim was for a sum certain and flowing from a particular project
that the contractor would likely have won as low bidder, lost profits were rejected where the evidence was
insufficient to enable the jury to conclude it was reasonably probable that the contractor would have earned a
profit in the claimed amount. (Id. at pp. 976-977, citing S.C. Anderson v. Bank of America
(1994)
24 Cal.App.4th 529,
536-538.) Despite testimony that the contractor's bonding capacity was reduced by its surety after termination of
the contract and expert testimony projecting the amount of those lost profits based on past experience, the Supreme
Court concluded that "the profits Lewis Jorge claimed it would have made on future construction projects were
uncertain and speculative." (Id. at p. 977.)
Lost
profits were similarly found to be uncertain and speculative in Kids' Universe v. In2Labs (2002)
95 Cal.App.4th 870 (Kids'
Universe), in which the court affirmed summary judgment on the ground the plaintiffs could not establish
damages where their Web-based toy store was a new venture and they did not demonstrate that a triable controversy
existed as to a reasonable certainty that the e-business would have made a profit. The plaintiffs presented
evidence that they had five years of experience as toy retailers and their expert witness projected they would have
made a healthy profit by comparing the proposed Web site with the success of another toy company operating on the
internet and similarly positioned to the plaintiffs at the time plaintiffs expected to launch their web site.
(Id. at pp. 876-877.) The appellate court concluded the evidence was insufficient to raise a triable issue
of material fact as to whether plaintiffs would have realized net profits from the operation of their on-line
business. (Id. at pp. 887-888.)
fn. 14 {Slip Opn. Page
26}
In
Parlour Enterprises, Inc. v. Kirin Group, Inc. (2007)
152 Cal.App.4th 281 (Parlour
Enterprises), an action for breach of an agreement to subfranchise Farrell's Ice Cream Parlors, the Court of
Appeal similarly found the evidence speculative and insufficient to show lost profits were reasonably certain to
occur or the extent of any lost profits for three proposed restaurants. (Id. at pp. 288-289.) Specific plans
for opening three of the restaurants had been developed, but they were not established businesses. Expert
projections of lost profits did not support the lost profits award where the projections were not based on actual
operations and the evidence of comparable businesses failed to show the profit and loss experience of these
businesses were sufficiently similar to the subject Farrell's restaurants. (Id. at p. 290.)
The
evidence in this case was insufficient to show that either Chan or Greenwich S.F. were established businesses or
had track records of successfully developing or redeveloping properties. Chan testified to only two projects he
worked on with Wong. On both projects it appears he acted as a contractor, and was paid as such, not as part of
a development "team." He did not testify that either project made a "profit." Greenwich S.F. was a new venture,
created for the purpose of buying the Greenwich Street property. Chan testified that only one of the three
renovation projects he previously had undertaken with Lee had made a profit. He admitted he had no expectations
about the certainty of any profit or the amount of any profit from renovation of the Greenwich Street property,
stating repeatedly that he could not estimate what the {Slip Opn. Page 27} profits would be, and that it would
depend upon what square footage the City of San Francisco would approve. Asked what he expected to earn "as a
contractor" (italics added) on the project, Chan stated, "[w]e based the calculation on the footage. Usually
is $160 to $180 per square foot." He also stated, "the bigger the better, but it all depends on the approval
from the City." He could not provide a "best estimate" of anticipated profits on the property after renovation,
stating, "[i]t is useless to approximate because it all depends when you sell the structure."
Greenwich
S.F. relied upon the existence of detailed and specific architectural plans for the renovation. The plans
themselves underwent several revisions, perhaps most significantly changing in scope from a two-unit building to
a single family residence after the sales agreement was signed. The plans were not completed until nearly two
years after the sales contract was signed. The existence of plans for a development does not supply substantial
evidence that the development is reasonably certain to be built, much less that it is reasonably certain to
produce profits. (See Parlour Enterprises, supra, 152 Cal.App.4th at pp. 288-290; Kids' Universe,
supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at pp. 887-888.)
Miller's
April 2008 "plans and specs" appraisal depended upon the nearly 4,000-square-foot residence being constructed
according to the plans prepared by Li, without any changes. She acknowledged that she was not an expert with
regard to development entitlements, but stated that "when there's a property sitting on a parcel in San
Francisco and someone wants to improve, that they are allowed to improve it. It just might be not to the size
of property that they might originally want." (Italics added.) Her "plans and specs" appraisal necessarily
was built on a hypothetical condition and it did not address the financial viability of the project. Miller
herself acknowledged that the property's substandard lot would mean the developers would have to jump through
"more hoops." Although it appears a permit was obtained in 2005, Lee testified that plaintiffs never paid for
the permit because they never received the property. By the time of trial, the City's building department had
sent the plans back for revision and the permit had expired. {Slip Opn. Page 28} Greenwich S.F. never obtained a
construction loan and no evidence was presented regarding the likelihood of obtaining such or the probable cost
or terms of such a loan.
The
dates of the Miller appraisals also present problems. The "as is" appraisal of the property and the "plans and
specs" appraisal valued the property or proposed development as of April 2008. The passage of time between the
signing of the sales contract in 2003 and the breach of the agreement by appellant, which occurred at the latest
in 2005 when she refused Chan's request to transfer the property, render the valuation of the property in these
appraisals unduly remote and speculative. (Plaintiffs' counsel conceded that the latest breach of contract date
was March 2006.) The April 2008 "plans and specs" appraisal necessarily incorporated into its estimation of
market value, the appreciation in value (of both the land and the hypothetical residence) that had occurred from
the date of the breach to the date of trial. Under Reese v. Wong, supra,
93 Cal.App.4th 51,
that appreciation was not a proper component of the damages because the "contract damages would be dependent not on
the reasonable expectations of the parties at the time of their contracts, but on the fluctuations in the real
estate market, the existence of congestion in the calendars of trial courts, and the success of the parties in
delaying or advancing trial dates, depending on which tactic was to their advantage." (Id. at pp. 60-61.)
Miller's testimony that the prices of real estate in San Francisco and the particular neighborhood had been
increasing over time, focuses on appreciation of property values, rather than estimating the value of the property
at the date of breach. This testimony was insufficient to support an award of lost profits on an unconstructed
residence that possibly would have been sold to an unidentified and hypothetical purchaser more than two years
after the breach of contract.
Furthermore,
as the court here properly instructed the jury, to determine the amount of any lost profits, the jury must
determine the gross amount the plaintiffs would have received had the contract been performed and then subtract
from that amount the costs, including the value of the property, that plaintiffs would have incurred had the
contract been performed. Although the amount of lost profits need not be proved with mathematical precision,
there must be a reasonable basis for computing the loss. {Slip Opn. Page 29}
The
evidence submitted on the cost to construct the proposed residence was sparse, at best. No expert testified
directly as to the cost to construct the proposed residence. The "plans and specs" appraisal prepared by Miller
stated that "[v]alues were established by both the limited available land sales and extrapolation (removing
building values from the total value of similar properties in the area) using local builder estimates as well as
Marshall Swift data." The "plans and specs" appraisal had a 2008 cost of $495 per square foot for 3,907 square
feet of dwelling; $250 per square foot for 570 square feet of garage; and $100,000 for decks, landscape, etc.;
for a total of $2,176,465. This estimated replacement cost new was then "depreciated" by $30,000. Miller
acknowledged that there should not be any depreciation on new construction. However, the computer program
required it and "we can't take it out." Miller testified that the Marshall Swift cost data were usually low and
that despite referring to this source in the appraisal, she did not actually look at the data in connection with
the specific appraisal. Rather, Miller consulted with two local builders and her son, who was in the business of
building bridges and tunnels. Neither of the other two local builders she contacted had looked at the plans for
the residence. Miller herself had never done a cost budget for construction. Miller maintained that errors in
the cost approach data did not harm the ultimate value of the appraisal based on the comparable sales approach.
However, the only evidence presented as to the possible actual cost of construction (aside from the amounts
expended by Greenwich S.F. to plan for development and to obtain necessary permits) was the cost per square foot
estimate contained in the cost approach of the appraisal. Even if the "plans and specs" appraisal were
considered to be a reasonable estimate of what the market value of a residence constructed according to the
plans would be in 2008, the admitted problems with the cost approach would render the amount of lost profits
completely speculative, as those costs of construction and related costs (and the value of the land itself)
would need to be deducted from the market value of the property to arrive at an estimate of the amount of lost
profits.
fn. 15 {Slip Opn. Page
30}
Miller
also admitted that the majority of the "plans and specs" type appraisals she had done over the years were for
lenders. The vast majority had approved plans in place, upon which she based her opinion. She thought she might
have done one or two others, but she could not remember specifically any particular appraisal that she might
have done without approved plans. There was no "approved plan" in place in 2008.
The
lost profits claim was based on the assumption that Greenwich S.F. would have constructed the residence
according to the plans and specifications without changes and that the venture would have been profitable. These
assumptions were inherently uncertain, contingent, unforeseeable and speculative. The proposed real estate
development project here involved numerous variables that made any calculation of lost profits inherently
uncertain.
fn. 16 We conclude the
evidence was insufficient to show lost profits with reasonable certainty.
III.
Award of $60,000 for Escrow Deposit
Appellant
next contends the jury's award of $60,000 as damages for sums plaintiffs had deposited into escrow was
erroneous, as the escrow was cancelled by mutual agreement and there was no evidence that the money was ever in
appellant's possession or control. Evidence was presented that plaintiffs deposited a check written by Lee for
$60,000 into escrow. The instructions cancelling escrow instructed the escrow {Slip Opn. Page 31} company "to
disburse funds held by you in escrow, in the amount of $60,000 . . . to Greenwich SF, LLC." No evidence was
presented as to what happened to the funds following the cancellation of escrow. However, it has never been
suggested that the money was returned to Greenwich S.F. During jury deliberations, the parties stipulated that
"[i]n the event that the jury awards damages under item 9b, the $60,000 [deposited in escrow], it is agreed by
the parties that if payment of the $60,000 is received by plaintiff from the title company which holds the
money, that [appellant] will receive full credit for that payment." Given this stipulation, appellant cannot
show she was prejudiced by the award. If the money is returned to Greenwich S.F., appellant will receive full
credit for the payment. If not, "the price paid"--here plaintiffs' $60,000 deposit--is a proper component of
damages pursuant to section 3306.
Appellant
claims that Greenwich S.F. relinquished its claim for return of its deposit by agreeing in the escrow
cancellation instructions that "Buyer(s) and Seller(s) hereby mutually agree to release one another and First
American Title Company from any and all liability in connection with this escrow." Appellant has waived any such
claim by failing to raise it in the trial court below. (Ochoa v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
(1998)
61 Cal.App.4th 1480,
1488, fn. 3; Eisenberg et al., Civil Appeals and Writs, supra,¶¶ 8-229, 8-231, pp. 8-155, 8-156.) Appellant
argues that the issue is one pertaining only to a question of law on undisputed facts that may be raised for the
first time on appeal. (Eisenberg et al., Civil Appeals and Writs, at ¶ 8:237, p. 8-157.) It appears to us that the
parties' vigorous dispute over the effect of cancelling the escrow make it less than clear that the issue would
entail purely a question of law. Moreover, the issue is one within our discretion, and we are not required to
consider this new theory, even if it raised a pure question of law. (Id. at ¶ 8:240.1, pp. 8-159 to 8-160;
Hussey-Head v. World Savings & Loan Assn. (2003)
111 Cal.App.4th 773,
783, fn.7.)
fn. 17 {Slip Opn. Page
32}
IV.
Award of $90,000 Expended Toward Renovation
Appellant
contends the evidence of amounts expended by Greenwich S.F. toward renovation of the property was insufficient
to support the award of $90,000 damages for sums paid as costs in preparation for renovation of the property.
Here, appellant acknowledges that there was testimony by Lee regarding payments Greenwich S.F. and Chan had
made, along with Lee's handwritten notes regarding costs. Nevertheless, appellant challenges each item
making up the $90,000 award on the grounds that there was no evidence other than Lee's handwritten account
supporting the award or that Lee's testimony was not otherwise supported by cancelled checks or the like. Thus,
appellant's challenge is based on a claim of excessive damages. In this instance, appellant's failure to
move for a new trial on the issue of the sufficiency of damages waives this challenge to the excessiveness of
the $90,000 award for prerenovation costs. (Schroeder v. Auto Driveaway Co., supra,
11 Cal.3d 908,
919; Jamison v. Jamison, supra,
164 Cal.App.4th 714,
719-720.)
Were
we to conclude otherwise, we would find the $90,000 damage award supported by substantial evidence, including
Lee's testimony and his handwritten itemization, described above. The testimony of one witness may provide
substantial evidence. (Eisenberg et al., Civil Appeals and Writs, supra, ¶ 8:52, p. 8-23.) Cancelled
checks or official documentation of the costs incurred are not required to support the jury's award. The absence
of such documentation goes to the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witness. Those
determinations are for the jury.
V.
Attorney Fees
On
appeal from the attorney fee award (case No. A124882), appellant asks that if the judgment is reversed, the
attorney fee award be reversed as well. She has challenged neither the amount nor the legal bases for the fee
award should the judgment be affirmed. We here reverse the award of $600,000 for lost profits. As this
constitutes the bulk of the damages awarded, the trial court should have the opportunity to reconsider its award
of attorney fees. We are not suggesting that the remaining damages awarded to Greenwich {Slip Opn. Page 33} S.F.
would not support the amount of attorney fees awarded, a question we do not address. However, this determination
is for the trial court to make in the first instance.
Greenwich
S.F. seeks its attorney fees on appeal, contending that even were the judgment reversed in part, it was still
the prevailing party for costs and attorney fee purposes if it retained a net monetary recovery. (Code Civ.
Proc., §§ 1032, 1033.5, subd. (a)(10); Civ. Code, § 1717.) On appeal, Greenwich S.F. retained only $150,000 of
its $750,000 jury verdict, 20 percent of that award, not including attorney fees. In the interest of justice, we
conclude that the parties should each bear their own costs and attorney fees in connection with these appeals.
DISPOSITION
The
judgment (case No. A123670) is reversed insofar as it awards lost profit damages to Greenwich S.F. We order the
judgment modified to correct the clerical error so that the judgment reflects that respondent Greenwich S.F. was
the sole plaintiff as of the date the verdicts were rendered and thereafter. In all other respects the judgment
is affirmed. The award of attorney fees (case No. A124882) is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial
court to allow it to redetermine the amount of attorney fees to Greenwich S.F. as the prevailing party below. In
the interest of justice, the parties are to bear their own costs and attorney fees in connection with both these
appeals.
Lambden,
J., and Richman, J., concurred.
FN 1. All
statutory references are to the Civil Code, unless otherwise indicated.
FN 2. Chan
and Greenwich S.F. will be referred to collectively as plaintiffs (but see fn. 5, post, at p. 6). Greenwich
S.F. is the sole respondent on appeal.
FN 3. Chan
was testifying in Cantonese and there were translation issues during the trial. A reasonable inference favorable to
Greenwich S.F. from this testimony is that the first project made a $1.6 million dollar profit and Chan's 10
percent share was $160,000. (It is not reasonable to assume that Chan's 10 percent profit on this first house
renovation project was $1.6 million-requiring a $16 million profit on the renovation project).
FN 4. Lee
testified that as to the Greenwich Street property, in addition to being paid as the contractor for his various
expenses associated with the contracting services he provided, Chan was to be paid 14.5 percent on all the profits,
even though he contributed only 10 percent of the capital. The extra 4.5 percent was for Chan's actions as
developer, contractor, finder and coordinator.
FN 5. At
trial the parties stipulated that the assignment was valid. Therefore Chan individually was no longer a real party
in interest. However, he remained a member of Greenwich S.F. and was referred to as a "plaintiff" throughout the
litigation and verdict.
FN 6. The
jury also found in favor of plaintiffs on claims for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing and
anticipatory breach, as well as in favor of plaintiffs on appellant's affirmative defenses of unilateral mistake,
undue influence, fraud and negligent misrepresentation. It found in favor of plaintiffs on appellant's rescission
cause of action. The jury found in favor of appellant on plaintiffs' claim for unjust enrichment.
FN 7. The
parties agreed that although the special verdicts did not describe the two awards of consequential damages in terms
of lost profits and expenses toward the planned renovation of the property, the $600,000 was for lost profits and
the $90,000 was for funds expended toward the planned renovation of the property. This is consistent with the
jury's labeling these damages as "A" and "C" in the manner suggested by the instructions given by the court.
FN 8. Despite
the parties' stipulation as to the validity of Chan's assignment of the purchase agreement to Greenwich S.F., and
the court's order dismissing Chan as a party, the judgment entered named Chan as a prevailing party along with
Greenwich S.F. This appears to be an obvious clerical error that we may correct here by modifying the judgment.
(City and County of San Francisco v. Sainez (2000)
77 Cal.App.4th 1302,
1308-1309; Hennefer v. Butcher (1986)
182 Cal.App.3d 492,
506.)
FN 9. Miller
and Starr indicate that lost profits are available as consequential damages under certain circumstances, stating,
"[t]he buyer cannot recover damages for the amount of lost profits which would have been realized if the seller had
conveyed the property as required by the contract [citations] unless the buyer purchased the property for
purposes of resale and the seller was aware of the buyer's purpose. [Citations.]" (12 Miller & Starr, Cal.
Real Estate, supra, § 34:45, pp. 34-160 to 34-161 (rel. 9/2008), italics added.)
The
CEB treatise indicates that lost profits are not allowed under the statute. "Under [section] 3306, the buyer is
limited to the difference at the time of the breach regardless of market conditions. [Citations.]" (Cal. Real
Property Remedies and Damages, supra, § 4.46, p. 321.) Citing to Horning v. Shilberg (2005)
130 Cal.App.4th 197,
this treatise describes the case holding as, "lost resale profits not allowed under [section] 3306, and plaintiff's
failure to produce evidence of value of property on date of breach precluded damages under [section] 3306." (Cal.
Real Property Remedies and Damages, § 4.46, p. 321.)
California
Jurisprudence Third, relying upon Horning v. Shilberg, supra,
130 Cal.App.4th 197,
and cases predating the 1983 amendment to section 3306 to add consequential damages, states: "Loss of profits is
generally not an allowable measure of recovery [citation], and a judgment awarding damages for the breach of an
agreement to convey real property based on the profit the purchaser could have made on a resale is not based on an
allowable measure of recovery. [Citations.] Despite a breach of a real estate sales agreement, the statute
governing damages flowing from a breach of such agreement does not authorize an award of damages to a purchaser
based on the resale profits enjoyed by a vendor; under the statute, the measure of damages is the difference
between the purchase price and the fair market value of the property on the date of the breach. [(Horning v.
Shilberg, supra,
130 Cal.App.4th 197.)]"
(54 Cal. Jur.3d, supra, Purchaser's Remedies, § 563, p. 744.)
"The
buyer's lost profits generally are not recoverable consequential damages under [section] 3306 (although
such damages may be recoverable under a fraud cause of action . . .; or as incidental compensation
pursuant to a decree of specific performance . . .). Unless the buyer purchased the property for resale and the
seller was aware of the buyer's intention to resell the property, lost profits are not deemed a reasonably
foreseeable, natural consequence of the seller's breach of its obligation to convey. [Citations.]" (Greenwald
& Asimow, Cal. Practice Guide: Real Property Transactions, supra,¶ 11:192, citing Coger v.
Wiltsey (1931) 117 Cal.App. 652 and Horning v. Shilberg, supra, 130 Cal.App.4th at p. 207, fn. 8.)
FN 10. Although
some courts, including the Supreme Court in Nelson v. Fernando Nelson & Sons (1936)
5 Cal.2d 511 (Nelson),
have affirmed the award of "profits and increased market value" (id. at p. 517) in cases arising under
section 3306 before its amendment, they did not countenance the award of lost profits as consequential or special
damages. Rather, a closer look reveals that these simply affirm the traditional measure of damages under the
statute as " 'the difference between the price agreed to be paid and the value of the estate agreed to be conveyed,
at the time of the breach. . . .' " (Nelson, at p. 518, italics added.) In Nelson, the Supreme
Court held the plaintiff (the buyer's assignee of a contract to sell real property) was entitled to "recover for
profits and increased market value of the lots" where the seller's sale of the lots to a third purchaser for a
profit "was in repudiation of plaintiff's rights after notice thereof . . . ." (Id. at p. 517.) The court
further held that where the "lots had increased in market value from the date of the agreement to the date of
repudiation by defendant," the plaintiff was entitled under section 3306 to recover the increased value of the
lots, as set forth under the statute. (Id. at pp. 517-518, italics added.)
FN 11. The
Court of Appeal reversed the trial court's denial of the buyer's request for specific performance of a real
property sales contract where the seller had been unable to convey clear title due to a lienholder's refusal to
accept prepayment of a loan secured by the property. (Stevens Group Fund IV, supra,
1 Cal.App.4th 886,
889.)
FN 12. The
buyer had also offered as evidence of lost profits the receipt of two offers to purchase the property for more than
the contract price before the sale was to close. (Stevens Group Fund IV, supra, 1 Cal.App.4th at p. 890.)
However, upon the court's tentative ruling that such evidence was inadmissible, the buyer did not seek to
introduce evidence of the two offers at trial. (Ibid.) Clearly, the buyer had waived any right to challenge
the exclusion of this evidence on appeal by failing to pursue it at trial. It does not appear to have been an issue
in the appeal.
FN 13. We
note it is doubtful that lost profits for breach of a real estate sales contract may ever be awarded as general
damages under section 3306, as the plain language of that statute specifies the measure of such damages as "the
difference between the price agreed to be paid and the value of the estate agreed to be conveyed at the time of the
breach." (See Reese v. Wong, supra, 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 61; Horning v. Shilberg, supra, 130
Cal.App.4th at p. 207.)
FN 14. According
to the Court of Appeal in Kids' Universe, supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at pages 887-888: "As substantial as
plaintiffs' evidence sounds on the surface, we conclude it does not suffice to raise a triable issue as to lost
profits. The evidence would not allow a reasonable trier of fact to find with reasonable certainty lost net
profits from the unlaunched Web site by a preponderance of the evidence. [Citations.] This is because the
evidence, while suggesting the Web site would have been viable, is not of a type necessary to demonstrate that a
triable controversy exists as to a reasonable certainty that the unestablished business would have made a
profit. Although plaintiffs had five years' experience as toy retailers, and had operated a Web site since
1995, they had not previously operated their Web site as a profit-producing venture. Plaintiffs' operation
of the Kids' Universe Web site had in the past resulted in negligible revenues and therefore would not support an
inference there were lost prospective profits. In addition, the on-line market for toys was not an
established one. Further, the whole scenario presented by plaintiffs is rife with speculation. . . . Moreover,
plaintiffs presented no evidence to the effect it was reasonably probable the venture would have been profitable,
i.e., gains from on-line sales would have exceeded the costs of operating the Web site business. . . ." The
appellate court concluded that the expert's "comparison of the proposed Web site with eToys's success does not
suffice to raise a triable issue of material facts whether Kids' Universe would have realized net profits
from the operation of its on-line business. Therefore, the trial court properly entered summary judgment in favor
of the defendants."
FN 15. During
closing argument, counsel for Greenwich S.F. argued that based on the "plans and specs" appraisal, the improved
property would be worth $3,352,000. "We estimate that the cost of the construction and the cost of acquisition
to be $176,000. The last word is the difference and damages based on its improved value is $1,492,000."
(Italics added.) Counsel later pointed the jury to the appraisals, stating, "in those appraisals you'll see the
figures that we wish you to use in determining what is the fair market value of this property, and based upon that
to determine the amount of damages you should award."
FN 16. Our
resolution of this issue makes it unnecessary to further address appellant's contention that there was insufficient
evidence that appellant knew of plaintiffs' plans to renovate or develop the property at the time she signed the
contract. Nor need we address appellant's contentions (1) that the court erred in allowing Miller to testify to the
market value of the property in April 2008; (2) that the "plans and specs" appraisal was inadmissible; and (3) that
the court erred when it allowed Miller to testify beyond the scope of opinions set forth in her deposition that the
value of the property since 2002 had increased over time.
FN 17. Greenwich
S.F. contends that appellant's failure to move for a new trial precludes her raising this issue on appeal, as it
goes to the issue of excessive damages. We reject this assertion for the reasons set forth in connection with our
discussion of the lost profits issue. (See ante, pt. II.A,, pp. 21-23.)
|