Stearman
v. Centex Homes (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 611, 92 Cal.Rptr.2d 761
[No.
G019311. Fourth Dist., Div. Three. Jan 31, 2000.]
JEFFREY
N. STEARMAN et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. CENTEX HOMES, Defendant and Appellant.
(Superior
Court of Orange County, No. 717653, Byron K. McMillan, Judge. fn.
* )
(Opinion
by Rylaarsdam, J., with Crosby, Acting P. J., and Bedsworth, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Rodarti,
Feld & Gelfer, Richard G. Feld and Scott H. Gelfer for Plaintiffs and Appellants. [78 Cal.App.4th
613]
Epsten
& Grinnell, Douglas W. Grinnell and Luis E. Ventura for Consumer Attorneys of California as Amicus Curiae on
behalf of Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Morgenstein
& Jubelirer, Jean L. Bertrand and Natasha L. Golding for Defendant and Appellant.
Paul
B. Campos for Home Ownership Advancement Foundation as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Appellant.
Gordon
& Rees, Douglas B. Harvey, Robert V. Dugoni and David Collins for Building Industry Legal Defense Foundation
as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Appellant.
OPINION
RYLAARSDAM,
J.—
Defendant
Centex Homes appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs Jeffrey N. and Linda Stearman in a strict liability
action arising out of defendant's defective construction of the foundation of plaintiffs' tract home, resulting
in severe slab movement and deformation. The defects caused extensive cracks throughout the interior and
exterior surfaces of the home.
The
issue is not whether a defendant builder of mass-produced housing may be held strictly liable for construction
defects. The affirmative answer to that question is firmly established in California cases beginning 30 years
ago with Kriegler v. Eichler Homes, Inc. (1969)
269 Cal.App.2d 224 [74
Cal.Rptr. 749]. (See, inter alia, Fleck v. Bollinger Home Corp. (1997)
54 Cal.App.4th 926 [63
Cal.Rptr.2d 407]; Alcal Roofing & Insulation v. Superior Court (1992)
8 Cal.App.4th 1121 [10
Cal.Rptr.2d 844]; Becker v. McMillin Construction Co. (1991)
226 Cal.App.3d 1493 [277
Cal.Rptr. 491]; Orndorff v. Christiana Community Builders (1990)
217 Cal.App.3d 683 [266
Cal.Rptr. 193]; GEM Developers v. Hallcraft Homes of San Diego, Inc. (1989)
213 Cal.App.3d 419 [261
Cal.Rptr. 626]; Gentry Construction Co. v. Superior Court (1989)
212 Cal.App.3d 177 [260
Cal.Rptr. 421]; Oliver v. Superior Court (1989)
211 Cal.App.3d 86 [259
Cal.Rptr. 160]; Huang v. Garner (1984)
157 Cal.App.3d 404 [203
Cal.Rptr. 800]; Del Mar Beach Club Owners Assn. v. Imperial Contracting Co. (1981)
123 Cal.App.3d 898 [176
Cal.Rptr. 886, 25 A.L.R.4th 336]; Raven's Cove Townhomes, Inc. v. Knuppe Development Co. (1981)
114 Cal.App.3d 783 [171
Cal.Rptr. 334]; Stuart v. Crestview Mut. Water Co. (1973)
34 Cal.App.3d 802 [110
Cal.Rptr. 543]; and Avner v. Longridge Estates (1969)
272 Cal.App.2d 607 [77
Cal.Rptr. 633].)
[1a]
Rather, the question is whether a plaintiff can recover under strict liability when a defect in one component
part of a house causes injury to other component parts of the house, but not to persons or property apart from
[78 Cal.App.4th 614] the structure. Defendant asserts such damage constitutes nothing more than "injury
to the product itself," a loss for which strict liability compensation is barred by the economic loss rule of
Seely v. White Motor Co. (1965)
63 Cal.2d 9 [45
Cal.Rptr. 17, 403 P.2d 145]. It argues damage to a defective product itself is simply the product's failure to
function properly, for which the only remedy lies in a warranty action through which the disappointed buyer can
seek to recoup the benefit of its bargain.
Defendant
contends the precise issue here has not been directly decided in California, but to the extent Seely and
other appellate courts of this state have touched upon it, they have reached the wrong conclusion, or are poorly
reasoned, inapt and nonbinding. We are invited to depart from our own long-standing judicial tradition and, in
its place, adopt "the strong majority rule" of other jurisdictions which, according to defendant, have
interpreted Seely correctly and would prohibit strict liability recovery under the facts of this case.
Plaintiffs,
on the other hand, assert our own courts have considered the economic loss rule in construction and
nonconstruction cases alike, and have uniformly allowed recovery of strict liability damages where, as here, a
defect has caused physical damage to the property. They further note a number of other states have applied
strict liability to mass-produced housing defects, and thus California is not the "odd-ball" defendant purports
it to be. (Plaintiffs have also filed a cross-appeal to which we will turn after concluding our discussion of
the appeal.)
Amici
curiae expand upon the positions of both parties. From divergent viewpoints, they trace the development of the
strict liability doctrine in this state and others, offering sharply conflicting analyses of a dizzying array of
authorities (several hundred of them). In the end, after having laboriously trudged our way through the
labyrinth, we do not find this to be a particularly complex or close case.
Defendant's
premise that the economic loss rule bars strict liability recovery for physical damage to plaintiffs' home is
unsupported and indeed contradicted by Seely and other California decisions. (See International
Knights of Wine, Inc. v. Ball Corp. (1980)
110 Cal.App.3d 1001 [168
Cal.Rptr. 301] and Gherna v. Ford Motor Co. (1966)
246 Cal.App.2d 639 [55
Cal.Rptr. 94].) Moreover, we are not convinced "the strong majority" of other jurisdictions would, as defendant
claims, find plaintiffs confined to a warranty recovery. Indeed, defendant and its amici curiae could cite no more
than six out-of-state decisions dealing with analogous facts. Our own research confirms the paucity of cases.
[78 Cal.App.4th 615]
But
it really doesn't matter: The answer lies within our state. California authorities read together represent a
considerable body of law, expressly or by implication rejecting defendant's assertion that owners whose
residences are constructed on defective lots and foundations may not recover in strict liability for resulting
physical injury to their homes. We step in line with this law in holding the damage plaintiffs sustained to
their home is physical injury falling outside the parameters of economic loss and is thus compensable under
strict liability in tort.
Facts
Defendant
is a mass producer of homes in Southern California. In February 1990, plaintiffs bought a Centex tract house in
San Clemente. Problems with the property began to appear shortly after plaintiffs moved in and continued over
the next few years. In 1993, plaintiffs sued the builder, stating only one cause of action, for strict liability
in tort. They alleged defendant constructed the home on inadequately compacted soil, causing slab movement and
deformation which, in turn, damaged the structure and yard improvements, diminished the property's value, and
required plaintiffs to incur expenses for remedial measures, including employing various professionals to assess
the situation and make recommendations.
At
trial, plaintiffs and their experts testified to postconstruction movement and continuing deformation of the
slab foundation which resulted in, inter alia: a significant separation between the ceiling and wall joints over
the entire length of the house; cracks in the drywall throughout virtually every room; separation and cracks in
tile counters in the bathrooms and kitchen; and cracks in the exterior stucco. Each of these problems worsened
over time. Plaintiffs' engineering experts opined the slab foundation would have to be replaced. Plaintiffs'
cost estimator testified that replacing the slab would require emptying out the house, disconnecting utility
lines, removing appliances, ripping out floors, removing windows and doors, and jacking up the structure. After
replacement of the slab, the house would be lowered onto it and virtually rebuilt. Including moving and
alternate housing costs for the four months it would take to complete the repairs, the total cost would exceed
$260,000.
There
is no issue regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the defective construction or resultant
damage to the home. However, defendant contended throughout the proceedings that the economic loss rule barred
plaintiffs from recovering under strict liability when only damages "to the product itself" were claimed. The
court rejected this assertion at every juncture, denying defendant's motions for nonsuit and directed verdict
and [78 Cal.App.4th 616] refusing defendant's proposed special instruction which stated, "Plaintiffs are
not permitted to recover damages under a strict liability cause of action for purely economic loss or for mere
damage to the product itself. [¶] If the only evidence of damages presented by plaintiff[s] establishes purely
economic injury or damage to the product itself resulting in the reduction in fair market value of plaintiffs'
residence, then you may not award damages to plaintiffs."
The
jury returned a special verdict finding plaintiffs' house was defectively constructed, causing plaintiffs
damages of $135,000. Defendant then renewed its challenge, reprising the same theme in motions for judgment
notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial, both of which the trial court denied.
Discussion
Defendant's
Appeal
In
Seely v. White Motor Co., supra,
63 Cal.2d 9,
widely recognized as the progenitor of the economic loss rule, the court held a commercial trucker who purchased a
defective truck was entitled to breach of express warranty damages for lost profits from his heavy-duty hauling
business and for money paid on the purchase price, but could not recover these economic losses under strict product
liability. (Id. at pp. 13-17.) Tracing the development of warranty and strict liability law, the
Seely court observed "warranty 'grew as a branch of the law of commercial transactions and was primarily
aimed at controlling the commercial aspects of these transactions.' [Citations.]" (Id. at p. 16.) It
concluded warranty rules "function well in a commercial setting." (Ibid.) Warranty adequately protected the
Seely plaintiff, a trucker who "could have shopped around until he found the truck that would fulfill his
business needs," and "could be fairly charged with the risk that the product would not match his economic
expectations, unless the manufacturer agreed that it would." (Id. at p. 19, italics added.)
On
the other hand, the Seely court reasoned, strict liability for purely economic losses would unjustifiably
expose the manufacturer "for damages of unknown and unlimited scope." (Seely v. White Motor Co., supra,
"63 Cal.2d at p. 17.) Explaining, it observed commercial enterprises have widely varying needs which are
ordinarily communicated to the dealer, not the manufacturer, who would be liable even though it never agreed the
product would perform as a particular purchaser needed it to perform. (Id. at pp. 16-17.) In
Seely, for instance, the truck proved unsatisfactory for the plaintiff's heavy-duty hauling business, but
performed well for the subsequent [78 Cal.App.4th 617] purchaser, who, after the dealer made only minor
alterations to the truck, drove it 82,000 miles for a less demanding enterprise. (Id. at pp. 16-17.) For
this reason and others which we need not reiterate, the court found, "Without an agreement, defined by practice
or otherwise, defendant should not be liable for these commercial losses." (Id. at p. 17, italics
added.)
The
Seely court did not end its discussion there, however. It added a final paragraph regarding the
plaintiff's contention the trial court erred in denying strict liability recovery for physical damage to the
truck itself. Significantly, the court agreed with the plaintiff's argument that "even though the law of
warranty governs the economic relations between the parties, the doctrine of strict liability in tort
should be extended to govern physical injury to plaintiff's property, as well as personal injury."
(Seely v. White Motor Co., supra, "63 Cal.2d at p. 19, italics added.) The court found "[p]hysical injury
to property is so akin to personal injury that there is no reason to distinguish them. [Citations.]"
(Ibid.) The plaintiff was barred from recovering strict liability damages for physical injury to the
truck not by the economic loss rule, but only because he failed to prove causation. (Ibid.)
Definition
and Application of the Economic Loss Rule
The
Seely court, drawing a distinction between "tort recovery for physical injuries and warranty recovery for
economic loss" (Seely v. White Motor Co., supra, "63 Cal.2d at p. 18), defines the difference primarily
by implication. As we have noted, the decision contains dicta that, had plaintiff proved the truck itself was
damaged by the defective condition (the truck tended to "gallop"), he could have recovered strict liability
damages. (Id. at p. 19.)
Other
courts in our jurisdiction have articulated the rule more definitively. For instance, Huang v. Garner,
supra,
157 Cal.App.3d 404 instructs,
"[E]conomic loss [is] 'marked by the loss of the benefit of the bargain for the goods purchased, lost profits, and
replacement costs for ineffective goods. Physical damage to property and personal injury, however, are not
considered to be "economic loss." ' ..." (Id. at p. 420, citation omitted, italics added.) In
Huang, it was "undisputed ... that the court properly drew the line between economic and physical damages,
determining the cost to repair structural and other alleged defects which had not actually caused physical
damage to be economic damage." (Ibid., italics added.)
With
regard to defects, the Huang plaintiffs presented evidence "that the plans and specifications for the
building were defective in several ways, including insufficient fire retardation walls, insufficient shear walls
and inadequate structure .... Additional evidence indicated that deviation [78 Cal.App.4th 618] from the
building plans during construction also contributed to faulty construction." (Huang v. Garner, supra, 157
Cal.App.3d at p. 411.) The plaintiffs sought recovery "for physical damages to their property including
damages to the structure caused by deflected and cracked beams and dry rot damages to the balcony area. [They]
also sought recovery of economic losses including the cost to repair firewalls, shear walls, fire stops, and
other alleged defects in the structure which had not caused actual physical damages at the time of trial."
(Id. at pp. 419-420, italics added.) The Huang court noted, "Apparently it was agreed by the
parties that damages such as the cost to repair allegedly insufficient shear walls, insufficient fire
retardation, and defects in the structure which did not cause actual physical damage were in fact economic
damages." (Id. at p. 420.)
Huang
's definition and application of the economic loss rule, albeit in the context of a negligence theory, demonstrates
defendant is just plain wrong in contending the physical damage to plaintiffs' real property caused by defective
construction of the foundation is only "an injury to the product itself," and thus barred by the economic loss rule
of Seely. Huang does not stand alone. As we will discuss, other cases compel the conclusion that
under California law, the physical damages to plaintiffs' property are entirely distinct from economic losses and
are thus recoverable in strict liability.
In
Gherna v. Ford Motor Co., supra,
246 Cal.App.2d 639,
the product was an automobile in which defective design or manufacture (relating to wiring or placement of the
transmission dipstick next to the exhaust manifold) caused a fire, destroying the vehicle. The court did not
suggest the product had injured only itself, thus rendering the loss purely economic. Rather, it found the law
"settled that the doctrine of strict liability applies to physical harm to person or property." (Id.
at p. 649, italics added.)
Anthony
v. Kelsey-Hayes Co. (1972)
25 Cal.App.3d 442 [102
Cal.Rptr. 113] expands the analysis. The Anthony plaintiffs did not seek damages arising out of any personal
injury to themselves or any physical damage to their vehicles attributable to the wheels they contended were
defective. (Id. at p. 445.) Rather, they sought recovery for "(1) general depreciation in the value of the
vehicles," which the court categorized as "loss of bargain," "(2) cost of inspections, repairs, and replacements"
of the wheels themselves, and "(3) loss of use prior to and during inspections and repairs." (Id. at p.
446.) Any issue as to the second item was moot because the plaintiffs had accepted new wheels from the vehicle
manufacturer. (Ibid.) In regard to the third claim, the Anthony court observed, "Loss of use is an
item of incidental damage. It appears appropriate, therefore, to characterize it according to the nature of the
damage of which it is an incident. Unless incidental to physical [78 Cal.App.4th 619] property
damage, it would appear that it may be properly classified as a type of economic loss." (Ibid., italics
added.) Harkening to Seely's call, it concluded neither depreciation ("definitely a complaint that the
trucks with defective wheels were not of the quality bargained for"), nor loss of use could be recovered under
strict liability because the plaintiffs did not claim either item was caused by physical property damage.
(Id. at p. 447.) Finally, the court distinguished the plaintiffs' case from Gherna and Kriegler v.
Eichler Homes, Inc., supra,
269 Cal.App.2d 224,
where strict liability recovery was available because "there was ponderable physical property damage to the
property sold and purchased." (Anthony v. Kelsey-Hayes Co., supra, 25 Cal.App.3d at p. 448, italics
added.)
Sacramento
Regional Transit Dist. v. Grumman Flxible (1984)
158 Cal.App.3d 289 [204
Cal.Rptr. 736] (Grumman) sheds additional light on the subject. The plaintiff purchased 103 busses, with the
manufacturer's standard written warranty. (Id. at p. 292.) "[P]laintiff discovered a broken fuel tank
support during routine maintenance on one of the busses .... Further inspection of all the busses ... revealed that
at least 26 ... had the same or similar damage, i.e., cracked fuel tank supports. As a result of further inspection
plaintiff determined that all the busses it purchased from defendant would likely suffer the same type of damage
unless certain remedial repairs were undertaken." (Ibid.) In addition, the plaintiff found "structural
defects in the undercarriage battery frame area of certain other busses [previously] purchased from defendant ...."
(Id. at p. 292, fn. 2.) The plaintiff sought strict liability damages based on these latent defects
(Id. at p. 292.)
The
Grumman court began its analysis stating, "[Strict l]iability is imposed not only where the defective
product causes personal injury, but also where the defective product causes physical damage to property.
[Citations.] The damaged property may consist of the product itself. [Citing Seely,
International Knights of Wine, Inc. v. Ball Corp. (1980)
110 Cal.App.3d 1001,
1005 [168 Cal.Rptr. 301] (IKW) and Gherna v. Ford Motor Co., supra, "246 Cal.App.2d at p. 649.]"
(Grumman, supra, 158 Cal.App.3d at p. 293, italics added.) It further noted, however, "where damage consists
solely of 'economic losses,' recovery on a theory of products liability is precluded. [Citations.]" (Ibid.)
The
Grumman court observed, "[T]he line between physical injury to property and economic loss reflects the
line of demarcation between tort theory and contract theory." (Grumman, supra, 158 Cal.App.3d at
p. 294.) Noting the plaintiff did not claim any physical injury to the busses "apart from the manifestation of
the defect itself" (ibid.), it found the expenses the [78 Cal.App.4th 620] plaintiff had incurred
and would incur for repair of the defects was not recoverable in strict liability, which "presupposes (1) a
defect and (2) further damage to plaintiff's property caused by the defect." (Ibid., original
italics.) For lack of the requisite damage to the property apart from the defect, the court concluded the
plaintiff's repair costs were "purely economic damages." (Ibid.)
Responding
to the plaintiff's reliance on Gherna, supra,
246 Cal.App.2d 639,
and IKW, supra,
110 Cal.App.3d 1001,
the court distinguished both cases. The Gherna plaintiff had avoided a nonsuit by presenting sufficient
evidence "that defective wiring or a design defect consisting of the [improper juxtaposition of component
engine/transmission parts] caused a fire which damaged plaintiff's automobile." (Grumman,
supra, 158 Cal.App.3d at p. 296, italics added.) The Grumman court impliedly agreed with the
Gherna court's conclusion "that products liability affords a remedy to one whose property has been
physically injured and ... the remedy is available where the property injured is the defective product."
(Ibid.) Moreover, IKW was distinguishable because the plaintiff there alleged " ' "that due to
defective caps or defective application of caps the wine became unusable and economic loss was incurred." ' ..."
(Grumman, supra, 158 Cal.App.3d at p. 297, citation omitted.) The Grumman court added, "To the extent
that IKW may stand for the proposition that a merchant may sue in products liability for physical injury to
its property where that injury consists of nothing more than the product defect upon which liability is
founded, we decline to follow it." (Ibid., italics added.)
The
case of San Francisco Unified School Dist. v. W.R. Grace & Co. (1995)
37 Cal.App.4th 1318 [44
Cal.Rptr.2d 305] (Grace) presented the issue in the hybrid context of a statute of limitations question
regarding the plaintiffs' ability to state a claim arising from the presence of asbestos materials used in
construction of the school building. Noting the limitations period did not begin to run until damage occurred, the
court considered "what constitutes the element of damage for purposes of strict liability and negligence."
(Id. at p. 1327.) It stated, "Until physical injury occurs—until damage rises above the level of mere
economic loss—a plaintiff cannot state a cause of action for strict liability or negligence." (Ibid., fn.
omitted.)
[2]
Alluding to the rule enunciated in Seely, the Grace court defined economic loss as: "[T]he
diminution in value of the product because it is inferior in quality and does not work for the general purposes
for which it was manufactured and sold.... ' "[It] generally means pecuniary damage that occurs through loss of
value or use of the goods sold or the cost of repair together with consequential lost profits when there has
been no claim of [78 Cal.App.4th 621] personal injury or damage to other property." ' ..." (Grace,
supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 1327, fn. 5, italics and citations omitted.) It explained that under
Seely, "the reduction of fair market value of buildings found to contain asbestos building materials may
constitute an economic loss that cannot be recovered in tort in a strict liability or negligence action. Under
the Seely analysis, no physical harm to persons or property has yet occurred—only [unrecoverable]
economic losses." (Ibid.)
Summarizing
asbestos-in-building cases from all over the country, the Grace court noted the issue presented itself in
two distinct situations: Cases involving the mere presence of asbestos in the buildings and those in
which asbestos contamination had occurred. (Grace, supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1328-1329.) It noted in
the latter category, "jurisdictions that adopt Seely's physical injury/economic loss distinction
routinely find that asbestos contamination constitutes the physical injury element of strict liability or
negligence causes of action .... The injury for which asbestos plaintiffs are being recompensed has been found
to be the contamination of their buildings, not the mere presence of asbestos." (Ibid.) It concluded, "In
order to be consistent with the principles of Seely, it appears that until contamination occurs, the only
damages that arise are economic losses that do not constitute physical injury to property recoverable in strict
liability .... Physical injury resulting from asbestos contamination, not the mere presence of asbestos, must
have occurred before a cause of action for strict liability ... can accrue ...." (Id. at p. 1330.)
Although
there is a generous supply of other authorities illustrating the difference between physical damage and economic
loss, a brief notation regarding one more recent decision should be sufficient to hammer the point home.
Casey v. Overhead Door Corp. (1999)
74 Cal.App.4th 112 [74
Cal.App.4th 1231g, 87 Cal.Rptr.2d 603] involved, inter alia, defectively constructed windows in a residential
tract. The plaintiffs argued the trial court had improperly precluded their cost estimator expert from testifying
to certain damages. The Casey court noted the ruling had correctly barred testimony regarding "economic
losses," i.e., the removal and replacement of the windows, but it had not prevented the plaintiffs from eliciting
testimony "regarding damages which were not 'economic losses,' " i. e., the physical damage caused by the
defective windows "to the drywall and framing," and the resultant "insect infestation and damage to personal
property." (Casey v. Overhead Door Corp., supra, 74 Cal.App.4th at p. 123.) For some unknown reason, the
plaintiffs had simply stipulated "that the cost estimator would not testify that repair would include new drywall,
new framing and removal of the insects." (Id. at p. 124.) The reviewing court found the appellants bound by
the admission "they had no evidence to support a claim for any measure of damages other than economic loss."
(Ibid.) [78 Cal.App.4th 622]
[1b]
Against the background of these decisions, it becomes abundantly clear the case before us does not, in the
strict sense, present an issue of first impression. Courts of this state have fully examined the economic loss
rule, drawn the line of demarcation between such loss and physical injury to property, including to the
defective product itself, and allowed recovery of strict liability damages in the latter instance. Of course, as
defendant accurately notes, some cases have apparently assumed physical damages were recoverable. (See,
for instance, Kriegler v. Eichler Homes, Inc., supra,
269 Cal.App.2d 224 [California's
cornerstone strict liability construction case permitting recovery of strict liability damages where defectively
fabricated radiant heat tubes installed in substandard concrete slab of plaintiff's residence caused failure of the
heating system, emergency and permanent repairs, removal of storage and furniture and the need for plaintiff and
his family to find temporary replacement shelter]; Avner v. Longridge Estates, supra,
272 Cal.App.2d 607 [no
physical injury, but strict liability recovery permissible where portion of rear slope of plaintiffs' tract lot
failed twice, lot pad upon which home was built settled due to improper soil compaction and inadequate drainage,
and only apparent injury was to the property]; Stuart v. Crestview Mut. Water Co., supra,
34 Cal.App.3d 802 [plaintiffs
could maintain strict liability action and recover for loss of home and orchard destroyed in fire as a result of a
developer's failure to design and install a system which could deliver an adequate supply and flow of water].) But
the fact that these and like cases have not directly discussed the economic loss/physical injury to property
dichotomy does not lessen the import of the cases which have. Indeed, the assumption that physical damages to the
property are recoverable tends to reinforce, rather than undermine, our conclusion regarding the state of the law
in California.
We
will not belabor the obvious by engaging in the intellectual nit-picking defendant presses upon us. Moreover, it
would it serve no purpose to examine the decisions of other jurisdictions or plumb the niceties of the
Restatement Fourth of Torts, Products Liability, section 21, or its predecessor. Here, there is no dispute the
defectively constructed foundation resulted in slab movement and deformation causing physical damage to
plaintiffs' property, i.e., cracks all over the residence. In light of the these facts, the authorities we have
discussed, and the Supreme Court's repeated citing of Kriegler (see, e.g., Peterson v. Superior
Court (1995)
10 Cal.4th 1185,
1200 [43 Cal.Rptr.2d 836, 899 P.2d 905]; Becker v. IRM Corp. (1985)
38 Cal.3d 454,
460 [213 Cal.Rptr. 213, 698 P.2d 116, 48 A.L.R.4th 601], overruled in part by Peterson v. Superior Court,
supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 1210; Price v. Shell Oil Co. (1970)
2 Cal.3d 245,
251 [85 Cal.Rptr. 178, 466 P.2d 722]), without so much as a hint of the disapproval defendant insists is warranted,
we have no difficulty at all finding plaintiffs suffered physical injury to their [78 Cal.App.4th 623]
property. In so concluding, we reject defendant's strained argument that for purposes of product liability law, a
home is the equivalent of, for instance, a toaster which, when it catches fire due to faulty wiring, can be said to
have injured only itself. The analogy just doesn't fit: When a defective foundation results in cracked walls,
ceilings and countertops throughout the home, recovery of strict liability damages is not barred by the economic
loss rule.
Plaintiffs'
Cross-appeal
Plaintiffs
contend the trial court erred in denying them recovery of the costs and fees they incurred in employing
"geotechnical and structural experts to obtain and analyze soils samples and perform the necessary design
calculations" to enable plaintiffs to determine "an appropriate repair methodology to correct the defect." They
argue, "These 'investigative' costs were completely distinct from the 'litigation' costs due these experts," and
were properly recoverable as part of the cost of repair. Because the cross-appeal presents a pure question of
law, we conduct a de novo review. (Stratton v. First Nat. Life Ins. Co. (1989)
210 Cal.App.3d 1071,
1083 [258 Cal.Rptr. 721].)
During
the trial, Glenn Tofani, plaintiffs' soils expert, distinguishing between litigation and investigative costs,
testified his firm billed plaintiffs $35,000 for the investigative work performed by it and its subcontractors.
Florian Barth, a concrete and structural expert for plaintiffs, testified to between $2,500 and $3,500 in
investigative billings and, like Tofani, separated that amount from costs relating to the litigation. Defendant
did not cross-examine the experts or otherwise try to contradict the evidence.
Plaintiffs
initially proposed a modified BAJI No. 14.20 instruction for including investigative costs as part of the cost
of repair. However, the parties subsequently agreed to let the court decide whether these costs were
recoverable. After the jury rendered its verdict, plaintiffs filed a memorandum of costs seeking to recover the
investigative fees as costs to the prevailing party. However, on the court's instruction, they later filed a
motion to recover the fees as cost of repairs damages. Plaintiffs challenge the trial court's denial of that
motion.
Expert
Fees as Costs
Expenses
relating to expert witness fees can arise in two contexts. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 1033.5,
subdivision (a)(8), the prevailing party may recover as costs "[f]ees of expert witnesses ordered by the court."
(All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless [78 Cal.App.4th 624]
otherwise stated.) The court here did not order plaintiffs' experts to testify, thus expert fees were not
recoverable by plaintiffs as costs unless expressly authorized by law elsewhere. (§ 1033.5, subd. (b)(1).) Inter
alia, section 998 gives the court discretion to order a defendant to pay "a reasonable sum to cover costs of the
services of [the plaintiff's] expert witnesses" if the defendant rejects the plaintiff's statutory offer to
compromise and fails to obtain a more favorable judgment at trial. (§ 998, subd. (d).)
Plaintiffs
perforce contend the fees and costs they seek are not expert fees under sections 998 and 1033.5. The
argument is necessary because, prior to trial, plaintiffs served a section 998 offer to compromise their claims
against defendant in exchange for $225,000. Defendant rejected the offer, and the jury awarded plaintiffs
$90,000 less than the statutory offer. Thus, under section 998, defendant obtained "a more favorable judgment"
than the statutory offer, depriving the trial court of discretion to order defendant to pay plaintiffs' expert
fees.
Expert
Fees as Damages
[3]
Having eliminated any potential consideration of the expert witness fees as costs, plaintiffs contend they are
entitled to recover the fees as damages. Citing Raven's Cove Townhomes, Inc. v. Knuppe Development Co.,
supra,
114 Cal.App.3d 783,
they argue, and for purposes of the cross-appeal defendant concedes, the cost of repair is the proper measure of
damages in a construction defect case. (Id. at p. 802.) Civil Code section 3333 provides, "For the breach of
an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this
code, is the amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have
been anticipated or not." As the Raven's Cove court concluded, since tort damages are intended to make the
injured plaintiff whole, "the proper measure of damages [in a construction defect case] is the cost of remedying
the defects ... together with the value of the lost use (if any) during the period of injury." (Raven's Cove
Townhomes, Inc. v. Knuppe Development Co., supra, 114 Cal.App.3d at p. 802.)
Regan
Roofing Co. v. Superior Court (1994)
21 Cal.App.4th 1685 [27
Cal.Rptr.2d 62] is informative. There, the issue arose in the context of a good faith settlement motion involving
the nonsettling defendants' objection to allocation of $250,000 for expert investigation fees. (Id. at p.
1694.) The court correctly reasoned, "It would be proper to view this $250,000 expert expense as damages due for a
portion of the cost of repair, which is an appropriate measure of damages in cases based on damage to real
property. [Citations.]" (Id. at p. 1709.) Defendant asks us to disregard Regan Roofing [78
Cal.App.4th 625] because it involved a settlement, not a trial. We find no meaningful distinction.
The
record is clear the court denied plaintiffs' motion, not because it doubted the credibility of the expert
witnesses, but because it believed the law did not allow it to require defendant to pay the expert fees,
even if they were incurred solely in relation to the costs of repair. The court was wrong. Plaintiffs were
entitled to be made whole.
Defendant
protests that all litigation expenses are at least arguably caused by the wrong out of which the lawsuit arises,
and yet the Legislature has determined expert expenses are recoverable, if at all, as costs, not as damages. In
support of their argument, they cite Ripley v. Pappadopoulos (1994)
23 Cal.App.4th 1616 [28
Cal.Rptr.2d 878], which states, "[C]ompensation of an expert is, in the first instance, the responsibility of the
party who hires the expert." (Id. at p. 1624.) Ripley is inapt: It considers the issue of costs under
sections 1032 and 1033.5, not damages under Civil Code section 3333.
Because
the uncontradicted testimony established plaintiffs were billed $37,500 by professionals who investigated the
problems in order to formulate an appropriate repair plan, it would serve no purpose to remand the issue for
further consideration. Sections 43 and 906 give an appellate court power to modify a judgment and direct the
trial court to enter the proper judgment. That authority will be exercised when, as here, the record shows the
parties' rights can be determined fully on appeal. (See 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (4th ed. 1997) Appeal, § 744,
p. 773 and cases cited therein.)
Disposition
The
order denying plaintiffs' motion to recover expert fees as damages is reversed. The judgment in favor of
plaintiffs is modified to include an additional $37,500 representing those damages. As so modified, the judgment
is affirmed. Plaintiffs shall recover their costs on appeal.
Crosby,
Acting P. J., and Bedsworth, J., concurred.
FN *. Retired
judge of the Orange Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
California Constitution.
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