ENA North Beach, Inc. v. 524 Union Street ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 12/12/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    ENA NORTH BEACH, INC., et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,
    A152431
    v.
    524 UNION STREET et al.,                            (San Francisco County
    Super. Ct. No. CGC-15-547922)
    Defendants and Appellants.
    ENA NORTH BEACH, INC., et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,              A152937
    v.
    (San Francisco County
    524 UNION STREET et al.,                            Super. Ct. No. CGC-15-547922)
    Defendants and Appellants.
    After leasing premises owned by 524 Union Street for purposes of opening a
    restaurant, respondent ENA North Beach was unable to open because the San Francisco
    Planning Department determined that an existing conditional use authorization for the
    property was no longer effective and a new one could not be granted. ENA North Beach
    filed suit against the lessors, claiming false representations and failure to disclose
    material facts regarding the problems with the conditional use authorization. A jury
    found in favor of ENA North Beach and awarded compensatory and punitive damages.
    This appeal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s verdict. ENA
    North Beach’s cross-appeal challenges the trial court’s decision to reduce the amount of
    the punitive damages award against 524 Union Street. We conclude that the jury’s
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is
    certified for publication with the exception of parts I., A., B., C., D., and III.
    1
    verdict on liability, including liability for punitive damages, is supported by substantial
    evidence. Although we conclude the trial court employed an improper procedural
    mechanism in reducing the amount of the punitive damages award, we affirm the
    judgment for the reasons explained herein.
    BACKGROUND
    Natasha Hong, the president of ENA North Beach, sought to open a restaurant
    with a license to serve beer and wine in a building owned by 524 Union Street (524
    Union), a space which had housed restaurants for many years. 524 Union is a general
    partnership, of which Beverly Smucha is the managing partner and her son, Barak
    Smucha, a partner.1 Beverly estimated she had owned the property for 35 or 40 years.
    Prior tenants had operated under a conditional use authorization2 for a “full-service
    restaurant and bar” obtained in 1998. Under the San Francisco Planning Code (Planning
    Code), a new full-service restaurant could be operated in this space only if there had not
    been a gap in operations of such a restaurant for more than three years, as the conditional
    use authorization would lapse if the approved use was discontinued for more than three
    years. (S.F. Planning Code, § 178, subd. (d).)3 The continued validity of the existing
    conditional use authorization was critical to Hong’s ability to open her restaurant because
    an ordinance adopted in 2012 prohibited approval of a new conditional use authorization
    1
    For convenience and clarity, this opinion will refer to Beverly Smucha and Barak
    Smucha by first name, no disrespect is intended. Unless otherwise indicated, arguments
    and positions attributed to Smucha are also those of 524 Union.
    2
    As the terminology used in the testimony and documentary evidence varies, we
    note at the outset that this opinion will use the terms “conditional use authorization” and
    “conditional use permit” interchangeably.
    3
    This section provides: “Abandonment. A permitted conditional use that is
    discontinued for a period of three years, or otherwise abandoned, shall not be restored,
    except upon approval of a new conditional use application pursuant to the provisions of
    Article 3 of this Code. For purposes of this Subsection, the period of nonuse for a
    permitted conditional use to be deemed discontinued in the North Beach [and] Castro
    Street Neighborhood Commercial Districts, and the Jackson Square Special Use District
    shall be eighteen (18) months[.]” (S.F. Planning Code, § 178, subd. (d).)
    2
    for a full-service restaurant in this location. (S.F. Planning Code, § 780.3, subd. (c)(1)
    [North Beach Special Use District].)
    The meaning of the term “full-service restaurant” was a matter of some dispute at
    trial. According to the San Francisco Planning Department (Department) planner who
    testified at trial, under the applicable definitions in the Planning Code, a “restaurant” or
    “full-service restaurant” had to have “a majority of food service” but could also serve
    alcohol, while a “limited restaurant” would have no alcohol service.4 She testified,
    however, that the San Francisco Zoning Administrator interpreted the definitions as
    requiring that a full-service restaurant have a liquor license, so that a restaurant that did
    not serve alcohol would be a “limited restaurant.” Beverly maintained that a full-service
    restaurant was allowed to serve alcohol but not required to do so, and differed from a
    limited restaurant in that full service meant a sit-down restaurant while a limited
    restaurant was “more like a takeout place.”
    4
    The San Francisco Planning Code (Planning Code) no longer uses the term full-
    service restaurant but rather contains definitions for “restaurant” and “restaurant,
    limited.” (S.F. Planning Code, § 102.) A “restaurant” is defined a “[a] Retail Sales and
    Service use that serves prepared, ready-to-eat cooked foods to customers for consumption
    on the premises and which has seating,” and which “may provide on-site beer, wine,
    and/or liquor sales for drinking on the premises” if at least 51 percent of its gross receipts
    are from food prepared and sold on premises. (Ibid.) “Restaurant, limited” is defined as
    “[a] Retail Sales and Service Use that serves ready-to-eat foods and/or drinks to
    customers for consumption on or off the premises, that may or may not have seating” and
    “shall not provide on-site beer and/or wine sales for consumption on the premises, but
    may sell beer and/or wine for consumption off the premises . . . .” (Ibid.) Examples of
    limited restaurants are “sandwich shops, coffee houses, pizzerias, ice cream shops,
    bakeries, delicatessens, and confectioneries . . . .” (Ibid.)
    As described in the findings supporting the 1998 conditional use authorization, the
    then-existing provisions of the Planning Code defined “full-service restaurant” without
    reference to alcohol (“a retail eating or drinking use which serves food to customers
    primarily for consumption on the premises,” “is not specifically designed to attract and
    accommodate high customer volumes or turnover,” “has seating and serves prepared,
    ready-to-eat cooked foods for consumption on the premises,” and where “[g]uests
    typically order and receive food and beverages while seated at tables on the premises and
    pay for service after the meal is consumed”) and separately defined “bar” (“a retail use
    which provides on-site alcoholic beverage sales for drinking on the premises”).
    3
    Prior to ENA North Beach, a restaurant called Le Bordeaux had operated at 524
    Union for part of 2011. Although Le Bordeaux had closed less than three years before
    ENA North Beach’s tenancy, the Department concluded the conditional use authorization
    had lapsed for two reasons. One was that there had been a long gap between Le
    Bordeaux and the previous restaurant, The Field, which had a lease running through
    August 2008, but in fact left the premises in 2004. The second was that although Le
    Bordeaux had been approved as a full-service restaurant, the Department took the view
    that it did not operate as such because, while it had applied for a liquor permit from the
    state Department of Alcohol and Beverage Control (DABC), it had not actually received
    the permit before it ceased operating. As explained by the attorney Hong later hired to
    help her negotiate the permit issues, because the Department considered running a bar
    part of the approved use under the 1998 conditional use authorization, that authorization
    would lapse if there was a three-year period in which a bar was not run.
    As will be explained, Hong initially obtained approval for her restaurant from the
    Department but that approval was subsequently rescinded after the gap in operations
    between The Field and Le Bordeaux was brought to the attention of the Department and
    the Department learned that Le Bordeaux had been operating without a liquor license.
    Unable to obtain approval to open the restaurant, ENA North Beach sued 524 Union and
    Beverly, alleging that Beverly falsely told Hong there had been full-service restaurants in
    the space “continuously,” failed to disclose the more than three-year gap, and falsely
    represented that Le Bordeaux had an alcohol license.5 Beverly maintained that she made
    all necessary disclosures regarding the history of the leased premises and that the
    Department interpreted the Planning Code incorrectly, an error Beverly could not have
    anticipated.
    Hong testified that when she first visited the property in June 2014, Barak told her
    Le Bordeaux had a beer and wine license. She testified that Beverly told her there had
    5
    524 Union filed a cross-complaint against ENA North Beach, Hong, and Arnold
    Bunyaviroch that is not at issue on this appeal.
    4
    always been a liquor license at the property, which had always been used as a full-service
    restaurant; never said Le Bordeaux did not receive a license to serve alcohol but rather
    said it obtained the license; never said the space had been abandoned or “discontinued”
    for three years, and never discussed the need for a conditional use permit. Before signing
    the lease, Hong went to the Department, asked the clerk whether there would be any
    problem opening a full-service restaurant at 524 Union and was told “no” and
    “everything is fine.”
    In mid-July 2014, Hong asked Beverly to delay the lease start date from August 1
    until September 1, as she was looking for a wine and beer license broker to help her
    obtain a type 41 alcohol license and was not sure how long processing would take.
    Beverly agreed to the change in start date but said she could not delay signing the lease.
    Her email to Hong stated, “You should be able to get a type 41 liq. license (beer and
    wine) without a broker for a full-service restaurant. You will not be able to move
    forward with licensing without a fully executed lease.” Because she was very busy,
    Hong hired the broker who had helped her when she opened her existing restaurant.
    Hong signed the lease sometime on August 14, 2014. That afternoon, the broker
    emailed her, “[u]nfortunately, you are not allowed to obtain Liquor license, at all,”
    attaching an email from the Department stating that, according to the zoning
    administrator, “the site will not be able to accommodate a new liquor license.” Hong
    testified that this was a big deal because a restaurant cannot make a profit without selling
    alcohol. She contacted Beverly, who replied that evening, saying all of the prior tenants
    had had type 47 (hard liquor) licenses and the French restaurant was “approved for beer
    & wine.” Beverly sent Hong a list of prior tenants from June 22, 1934, to October 7,
    1999, describing all but one (in 1936) as “Bar & Restaurant,” as well as some documents
    related to permits obtained by the tenants. Beverly told Hong she had delayed executing
    the lease and depositing Hong’s check “because of your phone call,” and suggested Hong
    take a few days to decide whether the space was right for her. Beverly subsequently
    signed the lease on August 17, 2014.
    5
    The lease states that “[t]he premises are to be used for the operation of a
    Restaurant, to serve food to the public as a Full Service Restaurant and alcoholic
    beverages of beer and wine. Lessee covenants and agrees with Lessor, as a condition of
    this lease, that the purpose of or use of the premises will not be changed or altered by
    Lessee without the prior written consent of Lessor. Lessee shall use said premises
    continuously and constantly during the term hereof for the purpose of conducting the
    above mentioned business.”
    On September 2, Department planner Marcelle Boudreaux signed a “Zoning
    Affidavit” to be submitted to the DABC for ENA North Beach, indicating the existing
    conditional use permit could be used and attaching the 1998 conditional use
    authorization.6 Hong understood this form to be saying the previous tenant’s conditional
    use permit remained valid, which was consistent with her understanding from her visit to
    the Department.
    Around December 2014, Hong obtained the DABC beer and wine license.
    Renovations of the premises continued, with the aim of opening the restaurant around
    March 2015.
    On January 20, 2015, planner Carly Grob emailed Hong that the Department
    “cannot approve the Dept. of Public Health or [DABC] referral for [ENA North Beach].
    Planning Code section 780.3 states that a restaurant may be permitted as a conditional use
    if it does not occupy a vacant space last occupied by a permitted conditional use that has
    been abandoned or discontinued for 3 years. Because the former tenant, Le Bordeaux,
    never received a DABC license to serve alcohol, they were operating as a limited
    restaurant instead of a restaurant. Therefore, the restaurant use was abandoned more than
    3 years ago, and cannot be reinstated at this location.”7
    6
    On the affidavit form, in a box for “date you filed application for C.U.P.,” a
    handwritten note says, “N/A—can use existing conditional use Motion No. 14759/case
    98.84.”
    7
    The issues with the conditional use permit were brought to the Department’s
    attention by Marsha Garland, a permit expediter who had been involved in getting the
    6
    Hong emailed Beverly about the specified ordinance. Beverly responded, “[t]his
    came into effect because there were restaurants going into spaces that were previously
    other uses. [¶] [524 Union] has always been a restaurant bar; it’s a 100 yr old space.
    This is not a new use but the same use for decades, and one of the oldest if not the oldest
    restaurant spaces in North Beach. [¶] Also they know Le Bordeaux has not been out of
    there for 3 years. They are just trying to come up with something else. Makes no sense.
    It will work out, just need to get to the right person. These planners need to be fired.” A
    few days later Beverly told Hong, “The planner’s opinion that Le Bordeaux became a
    limited restaurant because of the processing of his beer and wine license was delayed is
    incorrect.”8
    Hong hired attorney David Silverman to help her with the conditional use permit
    issues. On February 8, 2015, when Hong forwarded to Beverly an email from her
    attorney’s office indicating that in order to fight the abandonment issue they would need
    “the use/lease/occupancy history of the building laid out, and all the efforts to try to find
    a tenant over the last several years that hopefully would toll the ticking of the
    abandonment clock,” Beverly replied, “Doesn’t sound like this attorney is up to speed
    with the laws. We will try to come up with some names.”
    In a March 12, 2015 email, Beverly told Hong that the premises had never been
    used as a limited restaurant but “always and only” full service, the insurance on the
    premises was for a full-service restaurant, “which is more expensive and difficult to get,”
    conditional use approval for The Field in 1998. Garland testified that she told the owner
    of Le Bordeaux he needed a conditional use permit, told Beverly this, and during the time
    Le Bordeaux was operating, notified the Department that a conditional use permit was
    needed. Garland told the Department it had made a mistake with Le Bordeaux because
    the long prior vacancy meant a new conditional use permit was needed; she felt allowing
    it to open was unfair to others who were unable to get alcohol licenses.
    8
    In this email, Beverly suggested that Hong point out to the Department that “the
    amendments adding a limited restaurant” would not apply to Le Bordeaux because they
    did not go into effect until May 2012 and Le Bordeaux was approved as a full-service
    restaurant in 2011, and in any event the definition of “restaurant” did not require having a
    liquor license.
    7
    and the previous tenant’s insurance was for a full-service restaurant with a beer and wine
    license.
    Silverman testified that Beverly told him The Field left in 2008 and gave him a
    copy of its lease, which stated a termination date of August 31, 2008. On this basis,
    Silverman argued to the zoning administrator that the gap between The Field and
    Le Bordeaux was less than three years. The zoning administrator found The Field’s lease
    insufficient to demonstrate that it remained in operation until its termination date because
    the DABC website indicated The Field’s licenses were cancelled in August 2004.
    Beverly told Silverman she thought the administrator was mistaken.9 Based on Beverly’s
    representations, Silverman prepared a declaration that she executed on March 16, 2015,
    stating that “the space has been used as a full-service restaurant and bar continuously
    after we obtained the conditional use authorization in 1998 except for periods of turnover
    between tenants, when we advertised for full-service restaurant tenants,” and that “The
    Field Restaurant and bar was the Lessee under a Lease Agreement that was in effect from
    August 26, 1998 until August 31, 2008.” The zoning administrator again found this was
    “not enough to substantiate that the conditional use was not abandoned.”
    Silverman testified that when he tried to get documentation from Beverly to refute
    the gap in operations between The Field and Le Bordeaux, she responded with statements
    about Le Bordeaux’s liquor license application and arguments that the Department’s
    determination was wrong.10 At this point, Silverman was “starting to think that [the
    zoning administrator] might have a point because I’m not getting any evidence to the
    contrary.”
    9
    When Silverman’s paralegal investigated, the information was no longer
    available on the DABC website.
    10
    Among his attempts to provide the zoning administrator with facts to support
    the argument that there was a continuous use of the space, Silverman tried to show that
    the owner advertised for a tenant for the same purpose during times no restaurant was
    operating, but Beverly provided only two years of advertisements, which left a five-year
    gap.
    8
    In an April 2015 email correspondence, the zoning administrator informed
    Silverman that “any approval of Le Bordeaux in 2011 was in error” because the previous
    restaurant use had been abandoned after The Field discontinued operation in 2004.
    Silverman’s requests for additional documentation from Beverly met with arguments that
    the department was acting improperly. The zoning administrator denied Hong’s request
    for a hearing, and Silverman told Beverly they had reached a dead end.
    Hong testified that she had believed everything Beverly told her about the use of
    the premises and realized Beverly “was lying to me from the beginning” only after her
    attorneys told her there was nothing more to be done and she would not be able to open
    the restaurant. She gave notice of termination of the lease on April 24, 2015. Asked why
    he believed, as stated in the termination letter, that Beverly “failed to disclose to [Hong]
    the existence of the abandonment of the conditional use for the premises,” Silverman
    testified, “[b]ecause she had been telling me the opposite . . . [t]hat the restaurant had
    operated continuously . . . [a]s a full-service restaurant and bar.” He testified, “the
    situation was actually worse than I wrote in this letter. I wrote that, ‘You failed to
    disclose to our client existence of the abandonment.’ [¶] Actually, she lied to our client
    about it because she told her over and over again that there had been continuous
    operation. And she told me that, and she told the zoning administrator that.”
    Planner Carly Grob testified that it initially appeared Hong’s restaurant could be
    approved with the existing approval for restaurant use, but it was later discovered that
    Le Bordeaux had been operating as a limited restaurant, without liquor service, and the
    zoning administrator interpreted the Planning Code as requiring a restaurant to have an
    alcohol license. When Grob asked Beverly for documentation relating to use of the
    property, Beverly responded with complaints about the permit expediter who had
    complained about the conditional use issue (see fn. 7, ante, at p 6.) and assertions that
    Le Bordeaux had gone through a “very thorough” planning and zoning process to receive
    approval. Beverly never said there was a vacancy at the property. Grob testified that the
    Department had not revoked the September 2, 2014 zoning affidavit indicating Hong did
    9
    not need a new conditional use permit, but had “acknowledged” that position was
    incorrect and so advised the DABC.
    Sylvain Castet, the owner of Le Bordeaux, testified that when he rented the
    premises intending to open a French restaurant serving beer and wine, Beverly did not
    tell him about a prior vacancy of more than three years or possible need for a new
    conditional use approval. After he signed the lease, neighbors told him the property had
    been vacant for 10 years. When he asked Beverly about this, she responded, “[n]o, it
    hasn’t been vacant for 10 years” and advised him not to listen to the neighbors; she never
    told him there was had been a vacancy of more than three years.11
    Optimist Prime, a company owned by James Bryant Bourque, his mother and his
    stepfather, signed a lease for the 524 Union premises on October 8, 2015, with the
    intention of opening a restaurant. For tax reasons, a contingency was being able to open
    by the end of 2015, and Beverly assured them she would make sure they got timely
    approvals to be able to meet the deadline. From his conversations with Beverly, Bourque
    understood they would need to go through the conditional use process but this would not
    stop them from opening the restaurant; Beverly did not disclose that zoning for this
    purpose had been lost entirely, did not mention a problem with a prior tenant or with
    ENA North Beach, and told him the owner of Le Bordeaux had received a liquor license
    but had to leave the country due to a visa issue before he was able to start using it.
    Beverly said the space had always been used as a restaurant and both she and the lease
    itself said it could only be used as a full-service restaurant. His understanding from
    Beverly was that the premises had been vacant because they were being selective about
    who to lease to, not because they were having trouble getting tenants.
    Beverly provided Bourque with a written disclosure statement that stated the
    premises had “always” been used as a restaurant and had last been leased by ENA North
    Beach, which “did not get open”; that Beverly had been told it was “scheduled to open,
    11
    Beverly claimed to have clarified that it was vacant for over three years but was
    not able to identify where she had said this.
    10
    with all approvals including the issuance of their beer & wine license,” until expediter
    Marsha Garland, who represented competing interests, complained to the Department;
    and that ENA North Beach, “already in violation of her lease was unable to navigate the
    permitting process with their attorney and was adverse to the potential of a Conditional
    Use process, opting instead not to pursue the issue formally.” The disclosure described
    Le Bordeaux as a full-service restaurant “specializing in Bordeaux regional wines,” and
    stated that it “received the required approvals and permits from the city prior to opening”
    but processing of its beer and wine license was “delayed because of corporate issues” and
    “they got approved for issuance, however just prior, they had to close due to immigration
    visa issues.” According to the disclosure, Garland and the Department had an issue with
    Le Bordeaux having been approved to open without going through the conditional use
    process, and the Department changed its interpretation of the definitions of types of
    restaurants and acted “as if Le Bordeaux had never opened and withdraw [sic] ENA’s
    approval.” The disclosure referred to the “discrepancy with the last tenant” and stated
    that the premises had “never been a dormant space.”12
    Bourque first learned there might be a problem from the owner of the restaurant
    next door. Although the Department initially said it looked like there should not be a
    problem opening “some kind of food service,” an attorney alerted Bourque to the zoning
    issues, further inquiries at the Department revealed that The Field sold its liquor license
    to another enterprise in 2004, and Bourque learned they would be able to open only with
    a special exemption from the supervisor of the district, who was a proponent of the
    special use district trying to limit restaurants in North Beach.
    12
    Bourque’s understanding from the disclosure was that the liquor license for
    Le Bordeaux had been issued and ENA North Beach terminated its lease because of
    disagreements over “tenant improvements, and decorations, paint and that kind of thing”
    and “for whatever reason, they couldn’t get their permitting . . . .” He understood the
    reference to “dormant space” as saying there had been continuous operation of a full-
    service restaurant with no lapse, and Beverly never discussed a period of dormancy
    following The Field or a gap of three years or more between The Field and Le Bordeaux.
    11
    Bourque testified that Beverly told his mother about the present lawsuit about four
    days after the lease was signed but said it would not impact Optimist Prime; they came to
    realize the suit was linked with the zoning issues and gave notice of termination of the
    lease on October 31, 2015. Bourque denied Beverly’s claims that they terminated the
    lease because she would not approve unpermitted work they wanted to do on the
    premises and that they damaged the premises.
    Grob testified that it seemed the landlord was continuing to market the space as a
    restaurant because she continued to get calls from prospective tenants seeking to open a
    restaurant there; she would tell them that they could not do so, in accordance with the
    Department’s “practice and opinion” that the space cannot be used as a full-service
    restaurant and bar.
    Beverly testified that when Hong first contacted her about the premises, she did
    not believe a conditional use permit would be needed because the previous tenant had
    been approved without a new one, there was still a conditional use permit recorded
    against the property, and her understanding was that the permit would have to go before
    the San Francisco Planning Commission to be revoked. The 1998 conditional use
    authorization included the statement that a “full-service restaurant and bar previously
    existed at the Project Site, but has been closed for over three years. Per Planning Code
    Section 178(d), conditional use authorization would not be required had the business
    been closed for less than three years.” Asked about her awareness of this point in 1998,
    Beverly testified that she did not know whether the new authorization was required
    because of “the three years or it was a different kind of business or a different kind of
    liquor license.”
    Beverly acknowledged there was “at least” a three-year gap between The Field
    and Le Bordeaux, as The Field vacated before the end of its lease. She testified that
    “[p]robably all of North Beach” knew about The Field vacancy. Asked why she did not
    disclose it, Beverly said, “[t]here was nothing to disclose” and “we disclosed everything.”
    She denied having suggested to Grob that the vacancy period was less than three years
    and testified that she did not correct the misunderstanding reflected in an email
    12
    suggesting she had done so13 because she was “trying to figure out what was going on
    because they had approved Le Bordeaux and they approved Hong,” and she was shocked
    that the city was “going back to a previous tenant” after having approved Le Bordeaux.
    She denied knowing that a three-year gap in use would jeopardize the conditional use
    permit or representing to other people that the property did not have a vacancy of at least
    three years.14
    Asked about the statement in her declaration that the space had been used
    “continuously” as a full-service restaurant and bar since the conditional use authorization
    in 1998, she testified that her understanding of “continuously” was “repeatedly,” the
    statement was true “except for the time when it was vacant,” and the use of the space was
    never changed. Beverly believed a conditional use authorization would not lapse if the
    owner did not intend to abandon the use, a view she believed to be supported by a 2004
    letter of determination by a previous zoning administrator which she described as
    concluding there was no abandonment of a conditional use permit where “the owner’s
    intention is to find a replacement tenant for the same use.”15 She testified that her
    13
    Grob’s email to Beverly stated, “From our earlier discussions, I believe that the
    period of vacancy between Le Bordeaux and the preceding restaurant was less than three
    years and no CU is required, but I simply do not have documentation to prove it. Any
    documentation you may have would be very helpful.”
    14
    In her deposition, asked whether she had any reason to think a 2009 article was
    incorrect in stating that the space had been vacant “for years,” Beverly initially claimed
    she did not understand the question, then questioned what the author knew about the
    situation and said she had “no idea,” then, after acknowledging she was sure it was
    vacant in 2009, said, “everybody has their own conception of years. . . . Some people
    think six months are years. Some people think ten years are two years . . . .”
    15
    The 2004 case involved a restaurant called Basta Pasta that closed in 2001.
    Based on the facts that the restaurant furnishings and equipment had been kept in place
    and the business and property had been marketed as a unit, the zoning administrator
    determined that there had been a “generally consistent effort to operate the subject
    property as a restaurant” and the use had not been abandoned for purposes of the
    conditional use authorization. The determination letter noted the “difficult economic
    conditions following the collapse of the dot com industry, and the ensuing loss of
    numerous restaurants throughout the city,” and stated that “[t]o consider a use abandoned
    13
    declaration was meant to prove there was no three-year abandonment, and denied that it
    was misleading to say The Field was the lessee under an agreement that was “in effect”
    until August 31, 2008, when The Field had left before the end of the lease term.
    Asked about the email in which she told Hong that Le Bordeaux had been
    “approved for a type 41 liquor license,” Beverly testified that she meant the owner was
    “approved with the city as a full-service restaurant to operate with a Type 41 liquor
    license,” but acknowledged that the city does not issue liquor licenses and that the owner
    closed the restaurant “prior to the final issuance and approval” of a liquor license.
    Beverly denied having a disclosure problem with Optimist Prime; denied that the
    written disclosure statement failed to disclose that ENA was not able to use the 1998
    conditional use authorization or get a new one; denied that saying the premises had
    “never been a dormant space” was intended to communicate that there were no vacancy
    issues; and claimed to have discussed the issues about The Field with the lessees when
    they first looked at the space. Beverly testified that Optimist Prime left because she
    would not approve plans for unpermitted alterations of the space; asked whether the real
    reason was that the lessees discovered they would not be able to open a full-service
    restaurant and bar because of the issues Hong had, Beverly responded, “that’s what they
    said. However, we were very suspicious that maybe we were set up in them coming in at
    some point.”
    Barak testified that when he first showed Hong the space, she knew about
    Le Bordeaux and asked “how he survived being a French restaurant without the liquor
    license,” and that he discussed with Hong the problem of The Field having left before the
    end of its lease and told her, as he tells everyone, there had been a three- or four-year
    vacancy before Le Bordeaux. He testified that Castet knew about the “three- to four-
    year” vacancy prior to Le Bordeaux and denied that the contrary was indicated by an
    email in which Castet said he needed to know the departure date of the last tenant
    because it was unable to be leased in light of consistent efforts to rent the space, would
    damage the city’s ability to recover from economically troubled times.”
    14
    because the Department needed to know if it was less than three years so he could be
    allowed “a ‘continuation of existing use.’ ”
    Barak testified that when he first showed the space to Bourque, he gave his
    “usual” disclosure speech, so “they knew going in that there were unresolved zoning
    issues,” but they “weren’t really that interested” and said they had a contact at a lobbyist
    firm. He told Bourque that the Department was misreading a law and there was more to
    be done to deal with the issue. He denied having been told Bourque had a definite
    timeline for opening his restaurant and claimed they would not have leased to him if he
    had, denied that Bourque was told a beer and wine license had been issued to
    Le Bordeaux, and stated that Bourque wanted to do extensive unpermitted work on the
    space. Barak testified he still believed there will be a restaurant with a liquor license in
    the space, as neighboring properties with long vacancies had gotten licenses in same time
    period.16
    The jury returned verdicts in favor of ENA North Beach on the claims for
    intentional misrepresentation, concealment, and breach of the implied covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing, and found damages of $91,692.50, and clear and convincing
    evidence that Beverly acted with malice, oppression or fraud. The jury found in favor of
    16
    Commercial Real Estate Broker Steve Zimmerman, testifying for Beverly,
    opined that Hong did not satisfy “the standard due diligence usually implemented by a
    buyer in a project such as this” and that Hong’s signing the lease on the day she had been
    told there would be no liquor license available “doesn’t seem like a very sound decision.”
    He testified that the Zoning administrator’s statement should have been a red flag that
    investigation was needed; he would have recommended a client obtain counsel from a
    permit attorney or DABC attorney; Hong should have hired her land use attorney before
    she signed the lease rather than afterward; and it was not reasonable for her to rely on the
    statements of her landlord or broker. Given that there was an existing conditional use
    permit that had not been removed and a preexisting tenant who was allowed to open
    without a new conditional use permit, he did not think the landlord had an obligation to
    disclose more than these facts, because it would be logical for the owner to think the
    conditional use permit would still be valid. He acknowledged that his analysis assumed
    there was no fraud or deceit by the landlord toward the tenant, but testified that such
    fraud or deceit would not change the requirement for the prospective tenant to do due
    diligence.
    15
    Beverly on Ena North Beach’s claim for breach of contract. The jury subsequently
    awarded punitive damages against 524 Union in the amount of $916,925 and against
    Beverly personally in the amount of $91,692.50. After the court entered judgment on the
    jury’s verdict, Beverly filed motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV)
    and for a new trial. The trial court denied the new trial motion, granted the motion for
    JNOV in order to reduce the award of punitive damages against 524 Union to $131,500,
    and denied the motion in all other respects. The court granted ENA North Beach’s
    motion for attorney fees in the amount of $401,584 ($385,874 for fees accrued up to
    entry of judgment and $15,710 for fees accrued after entry of judgment), and
    subsequently granted a supplemental motion for attorney fees in the amount of $75,537.
    The final judgment was filed on August 28, 2017. This appeal and cross-appeal
    followed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    Beverly challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s verdict. In
    resolving this issue, “[a]ll conflicts in the evidence are resolved in favor of the prevailing
    party, and all reasonable inferences are drawn in a manner that upholds the verdict.
    (Greathouse v. Amcord, Inc. (1995) 
    35 Cal. App. 4th 831
    , 836–837, citing Crawford v.
    Southern Pacific Co. (1935) 
    3 Cal. 2d 427
    , 429.)” (Holmes v. Lerner (1999) 
    74 Cal. App. 4th 442
    , 445.) “All issues of credibility are likewise within the province of the
    trier of fact.” (Nestle v. City of Santa Monica (1972) 
    6 Cal. 3d 920
    , 925.)
    A.
    The theory of Hong’s case was that she was fraudulently induced to enter the lease
    agreement. “ ‘The necessary elements of fraud are: (1) misrepresentation (false
    representation, concealment, or nondisclosure); (2) knowledge of falsity (scienter); (3)
    intent to defraud (i.e., to induce reliance); (4) justifiable reliance; and (5) resulting
    damage.’ ” (Molko v. Holy Spirit Assn. (1988) 
    46 Cal. 3d 1092
    , 1108; see Seeger v. Odell
    (1941) 
    18 Cal. 2d 409
    , 414; § 1709.)” (Alliance Mortgage Co. v. Rothwell (1995) 
    10 Cal. 4th 1226
    , 1239 (Alliance Mortgage).)
    16
    Beverly contends there was no substantial evidence to support the jury’s verdict
    for intentional misrepresentation in that there was no evidence of any misrepresentation
    made before the lease was signed. According to Beverly, Hong’s attorney argued in
    closing that evidence of statements made after the lease was signed allowed an inference
    that similar statements were made and relied upon prior to signing, an argument Beverly
    maintains improperly called for speculation absent evidence of any such statements
    having been made. (California Shopper, Inc. v. Royal Globe Ins. Co. (1985) 
    175 Cal. App. 3d 1
    , 45 [finding of fact must be based on evidence, not speculation].)
    Beverly’s characterization of this portion of the argument is not accurate. Counsel
    argued that Hong testified to statements she relied upon in signing the lease, and that
    evidence of statements made after the lease was signed was relevant in addition to
    Hong’s testimony because it showed “how [Beverly] is talking. It’s consistent that, if
    you make misrepresentations before the lease is signed, you continue to make those same
    misrepresentations after the lease is signed.”17 Counsel did not argue that because there
    17
    Counsel argued: “Some of the statements you’ve seen on the board this
    afternoon, many of these statements happened after the lease was signed. And you may
    be asking yourself, wait a second. How could [Hong] be relying on statements made
    after the lease was signed when we’re alleging she was induced to sign the lease by way
    of these false statements? Right? [¶] Hong testified credibly that she did rely on false
    statements, orally, and she testified credibly that [Beverly] said the property was used
    continuously. This is beyond the e-mails you looked at. This is what she testified to
    hearing before, before she signs the lease. [¶] Beverly said the property was used
    continuously without interruption. Hong testified that Beverly said the property could be
    used as a full-service restaurant serving alcohol. No problem. Somewhat reminiscent of
    what Barak said. He says to the tenants, ‘You can get a conditional use permit, not
    problem.’ [¶] Hong said Beverly advertised— the advertisement on Craigslist said it
    could be used as a full-service restaurant serving alcohol and that Beverly discussed Le
    Bordeaux and represented that Le Bordeaux had an alcohol license. These are all the
    things [Hong] says was said to her before the lease was signed. . . . The point of the later
    e-mails is just to show that this is how Beverly is talking. It’s consistent that, if you make
    misrepresentations before the lease is signed, you continue to make those same
    misrepresentations after the lease is signed. And because we don’t have perfect evidence
    of what happened before the lease is singed, we use the gestalt, the whole body of
    evidence together, to allow us to reasonably infer what happened here. [¶] And even
    Beverly . . . admits that, prior to signing the lease, Hong asked extensively about the
    17
    was evidence of false statements made after the lease was signed the jury could conclude
    such statements were also made before the signing.
    Hong testified that when she first visited the property, Barak told her that
    Le Bordeaux was a “bar,” “they must have had a lot of beer piping going upstairs” and
    “they had a beer and wine license.”18 She testified that Beverly told her the property had
    always been a full-service restaurant and there had always been a liquor license at the
    property; never said Le Bordeaux did not receive a license to serve alcohol but rather said
    it obtained the license; and never said the space had been abandoned or “discontinued”
    for three years.
    Beverly points out that Hong first met Beverly after the lease was signed and
    Hong acknowledged on cross-examination that she asked Beverly about the restaurant
    prior to Le Bordeaux only after Hong signed the lease. Beverly points to this
    acknowledgment in arguing that Hong was “unable to identify a single
    misrepresentation” made to her prior to signing the lease, noting that when specifically
    asked what “lie” Beverly told her, Hong responded that when she asked about the
    restaurant before Le Bordeaux, Beverly said, “Oh, it’s very complicated. I don’t want to
    go there.”
    Immediately after acknowledging that this conversation occurred after the lease
    was signed, however, Hong testified, “But she didn’t mention anything about prior
    tenant.” Beverly’s attorney pressed, “you didn’t ask her, did you?” and Hong replied,
    “Yeah, because I trust her word, ‘[t]here’s always been full-service restaurant with a beer
    and wine license.’ Why would I question her—question her period? Because landlord
    told me it’s always been a full-service restaurant. I trusted her. I believed her because, if
    I were the landlord, I would not lie. I would not, not tell the truth.” Hong expressly
    history of the building” and Beverly said, “There was nothing to disclose. We disclosed
    everything.”
    18
    Beverly notes Hong’s testimony that when Barak showed her the property, they
    “didn’t really discuss a lot of things,” but she ignores what Hong testified they did
    discuss during this visit.
    18
    testified that at the time she signed the lease she believed it could be used as a full-service
    restaurant because “[Beverly] told me that it’s always been a full-service restaurant, and I
    believed it.” Hong also testified that when she signed the lease, Beverly told her “there
    was an existing beer and wine license.” When asked on cross-examination to
    acknowledge, in accordance with a provision in the lease agreement, that Beverly “didn’t
    make any warranties or representations about the fitness of the premises for the use that
    you wanted,” Hong responded, “She did. She told me that it was a full-service restaurant
    and is selling liquor license—I mean alcohol type 47 and a beer and wine license.” 19
    Hong’s testimony was substantial evidence supporting the jury’s verdict.
    Additional support was provided by evidence of email correspondence around the time
    Hong entered the lease. As previously indicated, on the day Hong signed the lease, the
    broker she had hired informed her that she would not be able to “obtain Liquor license, at
    all” and sent her the Department’s email stating that, according to the zoning
    administrator, “the site will not be able to accommodate a new liquor license.” Upset,
    because a restaurant cannot make a profit without selling alcohol, according to Hong’s
    testimony, she forwarded the email to Beverly, who replied at 10:40 p.m., saying she was
    sending separate emails with “records of usage as a Bar & Restaurant,” and that “[a]ll of
    them had a type 47 hard liq. License” and the French restaurant was “approved for beer
    & wine.”20 Beverly included a two-page list of building permit records for the premises,
    19
    Beverly maintains that the sole “relevant communication” from her to Hong
    prior to the lease signing was an email stating, “You should be able to get a type 41 liq.
    License (beer and wine) without a broker for a full service restaurant.” Beverly
    maintains this was a statement of opinion rather than an actionable misrepresentation.
    (Tarmann v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. (1991) 
    2 Cal. App. 4th 153
    , 158
    [“ ‘[P]redictions as to future events, or statements as to future action by some third party,
    are deemed opinions, and not actionable fraud.’ ”].) This is not one of the specific
    statements Hong relies upon as supporting the verdict. It is worth noting, however, that
    in the context of this case it could reasonably be seen as further evidence that Beverly
    was attempting to obfuscate issues she knew existed with regard to the conditional use
    permit.
    20
    Beverly testified that she was not sent the emails between the broker and Hong
    and first saw them during production of documents in the litigation. She testified that
    19
    indicating owners and usage by all but one as “Bar & Restaurant,” beginning with June
    22, 1934, and ending with an October 7, 1999, record for The Field. This list did not
    include subsequent records for the Field in 2003 and Le Bordeaux in 2011 that were
    included in the version of the list Beverly produced in discovery, and Hong argued at trial
    that the omission of page 3 from the document Beverly sent Hong was an attempt to hide
    the period of inactivity between The Field (1999) and Le Bordeaux (2011). Beverly
    denied this and testified the omission was unintentional,21 but the jury was entitled to
    draw the inference against Beverly if it did not find her credible.
    Beverly argues there was no evidence Hong saw this email before signing the
    lease on August 14, 2014. But this ignores the context. Beverly’s 10:40 p.m. email went
    on to say, “I have delayed executed [sic] the Lease yet or deposited your check because
    of your phone call. The space may not be right for you. [¶] Please take a few days to
    think about it. I will get your check back to you right away. I will wait to hear from
    you.” This email may or may not have induced Hong’s initial signing, but it definitely
    preceded actual execution of the lease, which did not occur until Beverly signed it on
    August 17, 2014. The email offered Hong an out, telling her the lease was not yet
    effective, and thus could be viewed as inducement for Hong to proceed with the lease
    after she expressed concerns.
    Beverly also argues that the representation that Le Bordeaux was “approved for
    beer & wine” was true. This may be technically correct: The license had been approved
    but not issued. Hong testified that she understood the email as assuring her Le Bordeaux
    Hong called her on August 14 about having reservations about the lease but did not
    mention the Department saying she would not get a license, only that Hong said she had
    “contacted some nonprofit organization and they had submitted it and then she got this
    email saying that it would be tough in North Beach.”
    21
    Beverly testified that there were two versions of this document because she
    added Le Bordeaux and its approval to update the summary, and the omission of the third
    page from the email to Hong was not intentional. She denied failing to send it because
    the entries on page three would have suggested there was no activity at the property
    between 2003 and 2011.
    20
    had a liquor license, that the documents attached to the email were supposed to show
    “that previous restaurant, except Le Bordeaux, they all had Type 47 liquor license” and
    “also according to her, Le Bordeaux has Type 41 beer and wine license.” Since the
    critical question was whether the restaurant in fact had a liquor license, the representation
    was at best misleading, implying that the restaurant actually had a license despite not
    expressly saying so, and the jury could reasonably accept Hong’s understanding.22
    Beverly further contends the evidence does not support a finding of justifiable
    reliance. “A plaintiff establishes reliance ‘when the misrepresentation or nondisclosure
    was an immediate cause of the plaintiff’s conduct which altered his or her legal relations,
    and when without such misrepresentation or nondisclosure he or she would not, in all
    reasonable probability, have entered into the contract or other transaction. [Citations.]’
    (Alliance 
    Mortgage, supra
    , 10 Cal.4th at p. 1239; see CACI No. 1907 (2013 ed.)
    [reliance shown if misrepresentation, concealment or false promise ‘substantially
    influenced’ plaintiff and he or she ‘would probably not have’ acted absent it].” (Hoffman
    v. 162 North Wolfe LLC (2014) 
    228 Cal. App. 4th 1178
    , 1193 (Hoffman).)
    “After establishing actual reliance, the plaintiff must show that the reliance was
    reasonable by showing that (1) the matter was material in the sense that a reasonable
    person would find it important in determining how he or she would act (Charpentier v.
    Los Angeles Rams Football Co. (1999) 
    75 Cal. App. 4th 301
    , 313); and (2) it was
    22
    Beverly suggests that the absence of misrepresentations before the lease was
    signed is demonstrated by correspondence from Hong’s attorney to the Department in
    March 2015 that made “clear that Hong’s reliance was ‘based entirely’ on the Planning
    Department’s statements and written approvals.” Silverman’s letter to the Department
    argued that both Hong and Beverly would be irrevocably harmed by revocation of the
    conditional use approval and requested a public hearing if the Department was not going
    to honor the prior approval and DABC license Hong had obtained. Hong was attempting,
    at that point, to resolve the problem by convincing the Department to change its position,
    a solution that would have been to Beverly’s benefit as well as Hong’s. Beverly does not
    explain how Silverman’s statement in this context, or an email to similar effect,
    amounted to a binding declaration that no misrepresentations had been made by Beverly
    prior to execution of the lease.
    21
    reasonable for the plaintiff to have relied on the misrepresentation. (Blankenheim v. E. F.
    Hutton & Co. (1990) 
    217 Cal. App. 3d 1463
    , 1475; see CACI No. 1908 (2013 ed.).)”
    
    (Hoffman, supra
    , 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 1193.). “ ‘Negligence on the part of the plaintiff
    in failing to discover the falsity of a statement is no defense when the misrepresentation
    was intentional rather than negligent.’ ” (Alliance 
    Mortgage, supra
    , 10 Cal.4th at
    pp. 1239–1240, quoting Seeger v. 
    Odell, supra
    , 18 Cal.2d at p. 414 (Seeger).) But “a
    plaintiff’s particular knowledge and experience should be considered in determining
    whether the reliance upon the misrepresentation or nondisclosure was justified.
    ([Alliance Mortgage,] at p. 1240, ; see CACI No. 1908 (2013 ed.).) ‘If the conduct of the
    plaintiff in the light of his own intelligence and information was manifestly unreasonable
    . . . he will be denied a recovery.’ ” (Hoffman, at p. 1194, quoting Seeger, at p. 414.)
    Beverly argues that Hong already owned a restaurant and was familiar with “the
    required approvals”; that she was expressly informed by her broker that the Department
    would not approve an alcohol license for the new restaurant yet did nothing to investigate
    further, despite Beverly urging her to take a few days to think about whether the space
    was right for her; and that the lease contained disclaimers stating that “the property was
    being provided ‘as is,’ without any representations, and recognizing that approvals might
    not be obtained.”23
    23
    Beverly points to the following provisions of the lease:
    Paragraph 3A provides, “Lessee acknowledges that no warranties or
    representations have been made by Lessor or its agent regarding the fitness or suitability
    of the premises for the conduct of Lessee’s business, and Lessee has made its own
    independent investigation to determine the fitness and suitability of the premises for its
    use.”
    Paragraph 4B provides, “In consideration of Lessee’s intended tenant
    improvements which includes restoration and renovation of the premises . . . Lessor
    agrees that the Base Rent shall be abated during the first three (3) months of the term of
    the Lease; only if required to obtain necessary permits and licenses from State and City
    Agencies, and as consideration for time needed during the build-out and construction
    time, and to obtain final approval for a Beer and Wine On Sale License” from DABC.
    This paragraph provides for an additional abatement period at the sole discretion of the
    lessor if after the first three months “the issue of a ‘On Sale Beer and Wine Liquor
    22
    Such disclaimers in a contract “do not operate to insulate defrauding parties from
    liability.” (Orozco v. WPV San Jose, LLC (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 375, 393; McClain v.
    Octagon Plaza, LLC (2008) 
    159 Cal. App. 4th 784
    , 794–795 (McClain).) “It is well-
    established in California that a party to a contract is precluded under section 1668 from
    contracting away his or her liability for fraud or deceit based on intentional
    misrepresentation.” (Manderville v. PCG&S Group, Inc. (2007) 
    146 Cal. App. 4th 1486
    ,
    License’ has not been approved and has been delayed due to State and City Agencies, or
    the buildout process has been delayed due to State and City Agencies. . . .”
    Paragraph 5A provides for return of the remaining balance of the lessee’s security
    deposit if the lessee is “unable to obtain approval of issuance of a ‘On Sale Beer and
    Wine’ Liquor License to the Premises” from the DABC after good faith efforts to do so
    and “has elected to terminate the Lease and vacate the premises accordingly.”
    Paragraph 15A provides, “Lessee accepts the premises ‘AS IS’ and “Where is’
    with any and all faults, in their present condition, including, but not limited to physical
    conditions of the premises; and zoning, planning, conditional uses, or other regulatory
    conditions that may effect the use of the Premises in any way; and any conditions within
    the neighborhood in which the Premises are located. Lessee acknowledge and confirm
    that they have inspected and researched the Premises, and any potential issues or
    conditions, or had reasonable opportunity to do so, and have no claim whatsoever against
    Lessor or their representative for any claim related to the condition of the Premises, or
    their suitability for Lessee purposes. Lessee expressly acknowledges that they have not
    relied upon representations as to the conditions of the Premises.”
    Paragraph 27 provides, “It is expressly agreed between Lessor and Lessee that
    there is no verbal understanding or agreement which in any way changes the terms,
    covenants and condition herein set forth, and that no modification of this lease and no
    waiver of any of its terms and conditions shall be effective unless made in writing and
    duly executed by the authorized officers of the necessary parties or party or directly by
    Lessor and Lessee.”
    Paragraph 28 provides, “Lessee acknowledges that they have received no
    representations or advice from Lessor or their representatives, and by execution below,
    each of the parties hereby acknowledges that all parties had reasonable opportunity to
    review this agreement with Legal Counsel, and or other advisors . . . Lessee is solely
    responsible and using due diligence in acceptance of all terms and conditions of the
    Lease.”
    23
    1500 (Manderville).)24 A party may claim fraud in the inducement of a contract
    containing a provision disclaiming any fraudulent misrepresentations and introduce parol
    evidence to show such fraud.” (Hinesley v. Oakshare Town Center (2005) 
    135 Cal. App. 4th 289
    , 301 (Hinesley).) Disclaimers in a lease may put a lessee “on notice to
    ask further questions,” however, and they are a factor to consider in determining whether
    reliance on the lessor’s representations was reasonable. (Id. at p. 302.)
    Hinesley involved a lease for commercial space in a shopping center: The lessee
    alleged that the lessor’s agent falsely represented that certain major stores would be
    opening in nearby spaces by a specified date, and that it relied upon these representations
    in entering its lease. 
    (Hinesley, supra
    , 135 Cal.App.4th at p. 292.) The contract stated,
    “Lessee does not rely on the fact nor does Lessor represent that any specific Lessee of
    [sic] type or number of Lessees shall during the term of this Lease occupy any space in
    the Shopping Center.” (Id. at p 297, italics omitted.) The lessee did not question the
    agent about his representations or inform him that these particular tenants were of critical
    importance to him, did not inform the attorney who reviewed the contract of the
    representations regarding these tenants and did not propose any revision to the other-
    tenants clause despite proposing a number of other modifications to the lease. (Id. at
    pp. 302–303.) The court concluded: “In the complete absence of any actions taken to
    question, clarify, or confirm the contractual status of the three cotenants, to notify his
    attorney of the representations or to modify paragraph 25.33, Hinesley could not
    justifiably rely on his understanding of the representations and gestures made by
    Petrovich.” (Id. at p. 303.)
    Beverly asserts that Hong’s reliance was even less justifiable because, in addition
    to the disclaimers in the lease, Hong’s broker informed her that the Department would
    24
    Civil Code section 1688 provides, “ ‘all contracts which have for their object,
    directly or indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his own fraud, or willful
    injury to the person or property of another, or violation of law, whether willful or
    negligent, are against the policy of the law.’ ” 
    (Manderville, supra
    , 106 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1500.)
    24
    not allow her to sell alcohol. According to Hong’s testimony, prior to the email from the
    broker she had been told by the Department that there would be no problem opening a
    full-service restaurant in these premises, and Beverly had told her there had always been
    full-service restaurant with a liquor license in this space. Upon receiving the broker’s
    email, Hong turned to Beverly, who provided what Hong took to be reassurance that this
    new information was not correct. Hong testified that she understood Beverly’s email as
    providing evidence that the property had been used with a liquor license since 1934, and
    that Beverly was explaining the history to her “[b]ecause she knew that—without the
    alcohol license, she knew that I’m not going to really—actually devoted to signing the
    lease.” Hong did not see a need to inquire further of her broker because the “landlord
    seems like she knows everything is right” and was providing Hong with “all the evidence
    that it has been always a full-service restaurant and a bar.” Hong also testified that the
    broker told her she would not be able to get a new liquor license but since Beverly told
    her Le Bordeaux had a liquor license, she understood that she would be transferring it, as
    she had done when she opened her first restaurant, and not seeking a new one.25
    Beverly had owned the property for 35 or 40 years and presented herself as
    intimately informed of its history. This was not the case for Hong’s broker. Whether it
    was reasonable for Hong to rely upon the reassurance Beverly provided was a factual
    question for the jury. Beverly argues it was unreasonable for Hong to assume, based on
    Beverly’s representations, that the Department would grant what it told the broker it
    would not grant—but the Department did initially approve Hong’s restaurant based on
    the then-existing conditional use permit. It was only after the Department was alerted to
    25
    Beverly’s assertion that “there is no evidence in the record of any discussion of
    ‘transferring’ a license” ignores this testimony from Hong. Beverly correctly points out
    that the zoning affidavit suggests Hong applied for a new license, as it indicates that the
    “type of license applied for” was “41” and makes no reference to any transfer.
    Questioned about this at trial, Hong described her understanding that although every
    application was a “brand-new application,” she was “reregistering” an existing license
    rather than applying for a “new license.” It was for the jury to evaluate Hong’s
    credibility on this point.
    25
    the historical vacancy between The Field and Le Bordeaux and discovered Le Bordeaux
    was operating without a liquor license that it reversed its position. This underlying
    information was known to Beverly all along, but not to Hong. Unlike the lessee in
    Hinesley, who failed to act in a manner indicating he cared about the allegedly
    misrepresented information, Hong made clear to Beverly that her ability to open a full-
    service restaurant with a wine and beer license was critical—as was evident since the
    lease was expressly limited to such operation.
    We agree with Hong that the present case is more like 
    McClain, supra
    , 
    159 Cal. App. 4th 784
    . In that case, the financial obligations of a shopping center lessee were
    tied to the size of the leased space, which was specifically stated during lease
    negotiations. The lease provided that the size of the space stated therein was an
    approximation the parties agreed was reasonable and payments were not subject to
    revision if the size in fact differed, as well as that the lessee had had an adequate
    opportunity to examine the space. Prior to entering the lease, the lessee attempted to
    confirm the size of the space and the lessors resisted, claiming to be offended by the
    inquiries and knowledgeable about all details, and insisting the lessee could rely upon
    their representations. (Id. at p. 794.) The lessors knew, or had reason to know, that the
    space was actually smaller, and the lessee’s financial obligations therefore
    disproportionate. McClain held the lease’s disclaimers did not insulate the lessors from
    liability or preclude the lessee from establishing justifiable reliance. (Id. at pp. 795–798.)
    Here, as in McClain, whether Hong was justified in relying upon Beverly’s
    representations was a question of fact for the jury, and substantial evidence supported its
    findings. While Beverly did not expressly attempt to prevent Hong from further
    investigating the history of the premises as the lessors in McClain did with the lessee’s
    efforts to confirm size, she presented herself as fully knowledgeable—indeed, more
    knowledgeable than the Department—on the subject, and her representations could
    reasonably be seen as efforts to induce Hong to proceed with the lease despite her voiced
    concerns. We are not persuaded by Beverly’s attempt to distinguish McClain on the
    basis that the challenged representations were not about physical structure or the
    26
    likelihood of obtaining zoning approval but rather “several steps removed from that,
    requiring assumptions and speculation about how the city will interpret its zoning laws in
    the future.” Beverly misrepresented facts that not only could result in the Department’s
    refusal to allow Hong to utilize the existing conditional use permit but likely would have
    that result unless the Department was unaware of or chose to ignore them. This presented
    a risk to Hong that was tangible and material, threatening her ability to fulfill the very
    purpose of the lease. That the misrepresentations in the present case involve a risk rather
    than a certainty of injury does not undermine its similarities to McClain—
    misrepresentations by lessors presenting themselves as highly knowledgeable about the
    facts, and efforts (albeit to differing extents) to dissuade the lessees from questioning
    their representations.
    “It is well established in California that in an action for fraud or deceit, negligence
    on the part of the plaintiff in failing to discover the falsity of the defendant’s statement is
    no defense when the misrepresentation was intentional. (Alliance Mortgage Co. v.
    
    Rothwell, supra
    , 10 Cal.4th at pp. 1239–1240; 
    Seeger[, supra
    ,] 18 Cal.2d [at p. 414; see
    also 5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. 
    Law, supra
    , Torts, § 812, p. 1173.)” 
    (Manderville, supra
    , 146 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1502–1503.) “ ‘The fact that an investigation would have
    revealed the falsity of the misrepresentation will not alone bar [the plaintiff’s] recovery
    [citations], and it is well established that he is not held to constructive notice of a public
    record which would reveal the true facts. [Citations].’ ” (Id. at p. 1503, quoting Seeger,
    at pp. 414–415.) Here, in light of the confusion in the Department and the September
    2014 approval of Hong’s use of the existing conditional use permit, it is not even clear
    that further investigation at the time would have revealed the falsity of Beverly’s
    representations.26
    26
    Beverly’s reliance upon the “as is” clause is also unpersuasive. “ ‘[U]nder
    particular circumstances, the use of an “as is” provision seems to convey the implication
    that the property is in some way defective and that the buyer must take it at his own risk.
    [Citations.] . . . [G]enerally speaking, such a provision means that the buyer takes the
    property in the condition visible to or observable by him.” 
    (Hinesley, supra
    , 135
    Cal.App.4th at p. 301, quoting Lingsch v. Savage (1963) 
    213 Cal. App. 2d 729
    , 742.)
    27
    “ ‘Except in the rare case where the undisputed facts leave no room for a
    reasonable difference of opinion, the question of whether a plaintiff’s reliance is
    reasonable is a question of fact.’ ” (Alliance 
    Mortgage, supra
    , 10 Cal.4th at p. 1239,
    quoting Blankenheim v. E.F. Hutton & 
    Co., supra
    , 217 Cal.App. 3d at p. 1475; Orozco v.
    WPV San Jose, 
    LLC, supra
    , 36 Cal.App.5th at p. 391.) This is not that rare case. The
    jury’s verdict is supported by substantial evidence.
    B.
    “ ‘Concealment is a term of art which includes mere nondisclosure when a party
    has a duty to disclose. [Citations.] . . . [¶] In general, a seller of real property has a duty
    to disclose: “where the seller knows of facts materially affecting the value or desirability
    of the property which are known or accessible only to him and also knows that such facts
    are not known to, or within the reach of the diligent attention and observation of the
    buyer, the seller is under a duty to disclose them to the buyer. . . .” [Citation.]’ (Reed v.
    King [(1983)] 145 Cal.App.3d [261,] 265 [residential real estate transactions], original
    italics, fn. omitted.)” (Stevenson v. Baum (1998) 
    65 Cal. App. 4th 159
    , 165.)
    The theory of Hong’s cause of action for fraudulent concealment was that she was
    induced to sign the lease by Beverly’s failure to disclose the gap in time between The
    Field and Le Bordeaux. As Hong points out, there was evidence that Beverly did not tell
    Hong about the length of the vacancy or its implications for the conditional use permit
    before the lease was executed, and that she attempted to obfuscate the issue by leaving
    off a page of the summary of permits for the property she sent to Hong. Beverly
    contends the jury’s verdict on this claim was not supported by substantial evidence for a
    number of reasons.
    The first of these, that the disclaimers in the lease agreement put Hong on notice,
    we reject for the reasons discussed in connection with the cause of action for intentional
    “The ‘as is’ clause would be effective as to such observable conditions, but ineffective as
    to conditions that were not.“ (Hinesely, at p. 301.) The critical facts here were not
    “observable” in any meaningful sense.
    28
    misrepresentation: The disclaimers did not insulate Beverly from liability and there was
    evidence from which the jury could reasonably conclude that Hong justifiably relied upon
    Beverly’s representations, which failed to disclose the historical vacancy and its
    implications for the conditional use permit. Beverly’s second argument, that she
    affirmatively told Hong she would not discuss the information Hong claims was
    fraudulently omitted, begs the question. Beverly argues that her refusal to discuss the
    subject should have put Hong on notice that Hong would have to find the information
    herself. But Hong had no reason to know what there was about the prior tenant that
    Beverly did not want to discuss and therefore no way to know what she should be
    investigating. There was evidence that Beverly knew about the vacancy, knew it was at
    least potentially problematic with respect to the conditional use permit and therefore
    knew that in refusing to discuss it she was depriving Hong of an opportunity to consider
    the associated risk; her refusal, especially in light of the evidence that she had not
    disclosed the vacancy to the owner of Le Bordeaux, did not disclose it to Hong initially
    or even after problems arose and Hong and her attorney were trying to solve them, was
    itself evidence of concealment.
    Beverly next asserts that there was no evidence she knew the Department would
    take “its unreasonable position concerning what is a ‘full-service restaurant’ or reverse its
    long-standing position (expressed in the Basta Pasta determination) regarding
    discontinuance of use.” They do not expand upon this assertion; the argument they offer
    on this point is that there was no evidence they knew the omitted information was
    material to Hong’s decision to sign the lease. Acknowledging that there was evidence
    Beverly knew in 1998 that The Field was required to obtain a new conditional use
    approval only because it had been more than three years since the prior restaurant at the
    property ceased operations, Beverly maintains that since no new conditional use approval
    was required when Le Bordeaux opened, Beverly’s knowledge of the significance of the
    three-year gap in 1998 was insufficient to support the inference that she believed this was
    still important in 2014. Beverly further asserts it is illogical to assume she knew the
    historical gap was material because the Department’s characterization of Le Bordeaux as
    29
    a limited restaurant on the basis of it not serving alcohol was inconsistent with the
    language of the Planning Code, and Grob testified that Hong’s restaurant would have
    been approved if Le Bordeaux had not been a “limited” restaurant.
    Grob’s testimony was somewhat qualified: Asked whether there would have been
    a problem with the gap between The Field and Le Bordeaux if the latter had gotten an
    alcohol license, the planner replied, “Not that I recall. We had determined that there was
    no evidence that a gap had existed or there was little evidence to a gap that we could
    point to, so we had to reverse our position when we determined that Le Bordeaux had not
    received an alcohol license.” Grob did not testify that a gap between the prior
    restaurants’ tenancies was unimportant; she testified that, to her recollection, the
    Department did not have evidence of such a gap.
    Email correspondence between the zoning administrator and Hong’s attorney,
    however, makes clear that the Department did have such evidence and considered it
    important. In March 2015, the zoning administrator informed Silverman: “We have not
    been able to confirm that the use was not abandoned between The Field and
    Le Bordeaux. It appears that more than three years passed between these two uses, which
    calls into question the validity of our approval for Le Bordeaux. The zoning
    administrator subsequently told Silverman he would not accept The Field’s lease as
    evidence that it operated until the lease termination date of August 31, 2008, because
    DABC records stated its licenses were cancelled in August 2004. Silverman testified,
    and emails confirm, that he attempted to get information from Beverly to refute this gap
    but she did not provide it. This is certainly evidence supporting an inference that, despite
    Grob’s testimony, the more than three-year gap was a factor in the Department’s reversal
    of its approval for Hong’s restaurant.
    Even if the Department’s position that Le Bordeaux was a limited restaurant was
    incorrect under the terms of the Planning Code, Le Bordeaux did not open within three
    years of The Field’s departure. Thus, regardless of whether Beverly could have
    anticipated the Department’s position regarding the Le Bordeaux’s liquor license, she had
    reason to be aware of the potential for problems with Hong’s approval because she was
    30
    aware that the approval of Le Bordeaux was inconsistent with the existing conditional use
    permit. Not only was this apparent from the terms of the 1998 approval, which Beverly
    was involved in obtaining, but it was brought to her attention by Permit Expediter Marsha
    Garland during the tenancy of Le Bordeaux. The record refutes Beverly’s suggestion that
    it would be illogical to assume she knew the vacancy was important.
    Nor does the fact that Le Bordeaux was able to open despite the more than three-
    year vacancy necessarily undermine the evidence that Beverly knew the gap could
    jeopardize Hong’s restaurant. As it turned out, the Department only later learned that
    The Field did not stay in business until the end of its lease in 2008 (which would have left
    less than three years vacancy before Le Bordeaux) but rather left in 2004—in other
    words, that its approval of Le Bordeaux was erroneous. As we have said, there was
    ample evidence that Beverly repeatedly failed to mention the vacancy and actively
    attempted to hide it, not only with Hong but previously, with Le Bordeaux, and
    subsequently, with Optimist Prime. Beverly did not tell Castet there had been a long
    vacancy, and when Castet asked her about the 10-year vacancy he had been told of by a
    neighbor, rather than responding with information about its actual length, Beverly said it
    had not been 10 years and advised Castet not to listen to the neighbors. Even after the
    problems in the present case, she did not tell Bourque about the vacancy issue or explain
    what problems Hong had had in “navigating the permit process,” and the written
    disclosure left the reasons for Hong’s difficulties vague.27 As Hong maintain, the very
    fact that Beverly appeared to go out of her way to avoid discussion of what was
    27
    Hong notes Barak’s response, when asked by a juror whether they would have
    informed the Department of the problem if the Department had concluded there was no
    vacancy issue after The Field because it believed The Field occupied the space until the
    end of its lease: “I don’t know that we would have stepped up and said, ‘Hey, you made
    a mistake.’ ” While testimony could be taken as indicating at least a willingness to
    benefit from the Department’s error, this is not the only interpretation; the witness
    explained that it was not the Smuchas’ responsibility to be “watchdogs” over the city’s
    process and they would have thought the decision was purposeful, based on the
    circumstances of the particular case.
    31
    obviously a significant issue at all stages of her dealings with all of these tenants is itself
    a reasonable basis for inferring that she understood its significance.
    As to the Basta Pasta letter of determination (see fn.15, ante, at p. 13), the jury
    was of course aware that Beverly claimed to have believed the Department would
    maintain the view that a conditional use approval for a restaurant is not abandoned if the
    owner continuously markets the subject premises for that use but is unable to find a
    tenant. But the jury was not required to find Beverly could reasonably rely on the
    application of this policy to the 524 Union property so as to excuse failing to alert a
    prospective tenant to the conditional use issue. The vacancy in the present case was
    considerably longer, and did not occur in an economic period similar to the market
    collapse that influenced the Basta Pasta determination. And Silverman testified that
    changes to the city’s zoning rules and policies are common, especially when a new
    zoning administrator takes office.
    Beverly argues that the vacancy between The Field and Le Bordeaux was not a
    secret: According to Garland, it was well known around the neighborhood, and Castet
    was told by a neighbor that there had been a 10-year vacancy. Beverly maintains that
    Hong never tried to investigate the history of occupancy of the premises before signing
    the lease and easily could have learned about the vacancy by asking neighboring
    businesses. Beverly provides no authority, however, for the proposition that Hong was
    required to ask around the neighborhood to determine whether Ena North Beach, Inc. was
    telling her the truth about the property. As earlier described, there was evidence that
    Beverly told Hong, before the lease was executed, that the property had been used
    continuously as a bar and restaurant with a liquor license, told her that Le Bordeaux had a
    liquor license, and did not tell her about the vacancy. There was nothing to suggest to
    Hong that there was a reason to make inquiries in the neighborhood about the historical
    usage of the property; she believed Beverly had given her that information.28
    28
    Beverly challenges the argument made by Hong’s trial counsel that Beverly
    prevented Hong from speaking with Garland by refusing to forward Garland’s contact
    information to Hong, thereby preventing Hong from discovering the true facts. In fact,
    32
    Finally, we cannot accept Beverly’s argument that Hong’s reliance on the omitted
    information was unjustified as a matter of law. Beverly’s position is that Hong’s reliance
    cannot be justified in light of the combination of factors discussed above—the disclaimer
    provisions in the lease, Beverly’s refusal to discuss The Field, the claimed absence of
    evidence that Beverly was aware of the importance of information about the vacancy, the
    neighbors’ awareness of the vacancy—and the warning from Hong’s broker. For the
    reasons discussed in connection with intentional misrepresentation, justifiable reliance
    was a factual question for the jury and there is sufficient evidence to support its verdict.
    C.
    Beverly contends there was no substantial evidence to support the jury’s finding of
    a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing because the cause of action was
    based on Beverly allegedly interfering with Hong’s right to terminate the lease early by
    misrepresenting the history of the space, and there was no evidence of misrepresentations
    during the three-month early termination period (September 1 to December 1, 2014).
    They point out that although the trial court, in denying the motion for JNOV the verdict
    on this cause of action, stated there was substantial evidence that Beverly’s breaches
    continued after the parties signed the lease, which gave Hong three months after
    execution to terminate, the evidence the court cited was of statements made after the
    early termination period ended.
    “Every contract contains an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    providing that no party to the contract will do anything that would deprive another party
    of the benefits of the contract. (Wilson v. 21st Century Ins. Co. (2007) 
    42 Cal. 4th 713
    ,
    720; Kransco v. American Empire Surplus Lines Ins. Co. (2000) 
    23 Cal. 4th 390
    , 400.)
    The implied covenant protects the reasonable expectations of the contracting parties
    based on their mutual promises. (Carma Developers (Cal.), Inc. v. Marathon
    Garland testified that she did not try to contact Hong because she was focused on
    informing the Department of its mistake and the need for a conditional use permit. That
    this one aspect of Hong’s concealment argument was not supported does not undermine
    the jury’s determination.
    33
    Development California, Inc. (1992) 
    2 Cal. 4th 342
    , 373–374; Careau & Co. v. Security
    Pacific Business Credit, Inc. (1990) 
    222 Cal. App. 3d 1371
    , 1395.) The scope of conduct
    prohibited by the implied covenant depends on the purposes and express terms of the
    contract. (Carma Developers, . . . at p. 373.)” (Digerati Holdings, LLC v. Young Money
    Entertainment, LLC (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 873
    , 885.)
    The jury instructions directed that in order to prove breach of the covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing, ENA North Beach had to establish (1) that it entered into a contract
    with 524 Union and/or Smucha; (2) that ENA North Beach did substantially all of the
    significant things the contract required it to do; (3) that 524 Union and/or Smucha
    “unfairly interfered with ENA North Beach’s right to receive the benefits of the
    contract”; and (4) that ENA North Beach was harmed by 524 Union’s and/or Smucha’s
    conduct. Hong’s counsel argued that Beverly interfered with ENA North Beach’s right to
    receive benefits “by continuing to make misstatements after the lease was signed,
    continuing to tell [Hong] things that were not true, and Silverman things that were not
    true, and the city. Interfered with Hong’s ability to execute on the contract because one
    of the things the contract allowed for was an early-out clause. Right? If Hong found out
    early enough about these misstatements, she could have gotten out . . . . And had
    [Beverly] not continued to make misstatements early on, then there would be no
    interference with the opt-out clause” and Hong could have avoided the majority of her
    damages.
    Beverly argues there is no evidence of misrepresentations in the period between
    September 1, 2014, when the lease became effective, and December 1, 2014, when the
    early termination period ended. Just after the lease was executed, however, on August
    18, 2014, Beverly emailed Hong, “Since this is a continuation of a long time restaurant
    with beer and wine only, there shouldn’t be any need to go to neighborhood groups.”
    This statement was a continuation of the prior assertions that Le Bordeaux had obtained a
    liquor license. And Beverly’s failure to disclose the vacancy between The Field and Le
    Bordeaux obviously continued throughout the early termination period.
    34
    Arguing that concealment of a material fact is a sufficient basis for finding breach
    of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, Hong cites two cases arising in the context
    of insurance bad faith. (Shade Foods, Inc. v. Innovative Products Sales & Marketing,
    Inc. (2000) 
    78 Cal. App. 4th 847
    , 906 [insurer’s concealment of intention to limit coverage
    as one basis for inference supporting jury verdict that insurer breached covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing]; Notrica v. State Comp. Ins. Fund (1999) 
    70 Cal. App. 4th 911
    , 948
    [evidence of concealment of material information from prospective insureds sufficient
    basis for findings of breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing and of fraud
    supporting punitive damages award].) Beverly argues these cases do not support the
    “broad assertions” for which they are cited, and “[t]here simply is no general principle
    that any failure to disclose a material fact is a breach of a contract’s implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing.”
    While insurance contracts are in some respects subject to different analysis than
    contracts in general due to their particular nature (Cates Construction, Inc. v. Talbot
    Partners (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 28
    , 46, 52 [“insurance policy cases represent ‘ “a major
    departure from traditional principles of contract law” ’ ”; tort recovery appropriate in
    insurance setting “because such contracts are characterized by elements of adhesion and
    unequal bargaining power, public interest and fiduciary responsibility”]), and appellants
    may be right that “any” failure to disclose a material fact does not necessarily constitute a
    breach of the implied covenant, it does not follow that failure to disclose material
    information can never support finding such a breach outside the insurance context. Here,
    where the entire and sole purpose of the contract was operation of a full-service
    restaurant able to serve wine and beer, it seems obvious that failure to disclose facts that
    could result in complete inability to achieve that purpose would serve to “deprive” the
    other party of the benefits of the contract. (Id. at p. 53)29 Just as failure to disclose
    29
    Citing Arntz Contracting Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. (1996) 
    47 Cal. App. 4th 464
    , 476, Beverly argues the verdict cannot be supported on the basis of
    evidence of concealment because this theory was not presented to the jury, and claims of
    sufficiency of the evidence must be analyzed based on the theories of liability presented
    35
    material information prior to execution of the lease could induce Hong to enter it, failure
    to disclose that information during the early termination period could induce her not to
    exercise that right under the agreement.
    Hong also argues the jury’s verdict is supported by the ample evidence of
    misrepresentations following the end of the early termination period, during the time after
    the Department informed Hong it would not approve her restaurant, when Hong and her
    attorney were trying to convince the Department to reverse its decision.30 This evidence
    supports the verdict, Hong maintains, because even after the early termination period
    ended, Hong had a right of rescission under Civil Code section 1689, subdivision (b)(3),
    in the jury instructions. As indicated above, the jury instructions directed that Hong had
    to prove Beverly “unfairly interfered with ENA North Beach’s right to receive the
    benefits of the contract.” It was counsel’s argument that focused on the theory that this
    element was shown by misrepresentations interfering with the right to early termination.
    Arntz, like other cases standing for the same proposition (e.g., Bullock v. Philip Morris
    USA, Inc. (2008) 
    159 Cal. App. 4th 655
    , 674–675; Faigin v. Signature Group Holdings,
    Inc. (2012) 
    211 Cal. App. 4th 726
    , 737) was concerned with parties attempting to obtain
    reversal of a jury verdict based on rule of law that had not been presented to the jury, not,
    as here, a different factual predicate for the legal theory upon which the jury was
    instructed.
    30
    These include, for example, Beverly telling Hong’s attorney that The Field left
    at the end of its lease in 2008, that she thought the zoning administrator was mistaken in
    stating that The Field’s liquor license was cancelled in 2004, and signing the declaration
    stating—misleadingly, under the circumstances—that the premises had been used
    “continuously” as a full-service restaurant and bar since the conditional use authorization
    was obtained in 1998, and that The Field was the lessee under a lease agreement “that
    was in effect from August 26, 1998, to August 31, 1998.” A January 2015 email from
    planner Grub to Beverly suggests that Beverly told Grub the vacancy after The Field was
    not more than three years: “From our earlier discussions, I believe that the period of
    vacancy between Le Bordeaux and the preceding restaurant was less than three years and
    no CU is required, but I simply do not have documentation to prove it. Any
    documentation you may have would be very helpful.” In March 2015, Beverly continued
    to tell Hong there had “always” been a liquor license and a full-service restaurant on the
    premises without mention of the vacancy issue. Beverly also told Hong’s attorney that a
    full-service restaurant had operated there continuously. Beverly told Hong’s attorney that
    since obtaining the conditional use permit in 1998, the premises had been consistently
    occupied by The Field and Le Bordeaux, except for “a short time when there was catering
    in there for film productions.”
    36
    which provides that a contract may be rescinded where “ ‘the consent [to the contract] of
    the party rescinding . . . was given by mistake[ ] or obtained through . . . fraud[ ] or undue
    influence[ ] exercised by . . . the party as to whom he rescinds.’ ” (Wong v. Stoler (2015)
    
    237 Cal. App. 4th 1375
    , 1385.) Hong argues that Beverly’s “continuing lies to maintain
    and cover up” the initial fraud in the inducement kept Hong from terminating the contract
    sooner and thereby incurring fewer damages.
    Beverly challenges this theory both because it was not presented to the jury and
    because the cases Hong relies upon concern rescission as a remedy for fraud or other
    issues bearing on inducement of a party’s entry into a contract, not subsequent breaches
    of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. We find it unnecessary to determine the
    merits of this argument. Even if it would not be a proper basis for affirming the jury’s
    verdict, and even if that verdict were not sustainable on the basis of Beverly’s continuing
    failure to disclose material information during the first three months of the lease,
    reversing the judgment on the cause of action for breach of the covenant of good faith
    and fair dealing would not result in any benefit to Beverly in light of our affirmance on
    the causes of action intentional misrepresentation and concealment.
    D.
    Beverly contends there was no substantial evidence to support the award of
    punitive damages. Aside from the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the
    underlying verdicts, which we have rejected, Beverly argues there was no substantial
    evidence of the net worth of either 524 Union or Beverly personally.31
    “Where the defendant’s oppression, fraud or malice has been proven by clear and
    convincing evidence, California law permits the recovery of punitive damages ‘for the
    31
    Beverly asserts that because there was no substantial evidence to support the
    verdicts, “[a] fortiori there was no substantial evidence (much less clear and convincing
    evidence) to support the finding of malice, oppression, or fraud.” She presents no
    argument that even if the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict for purposes of
    liability and compensatory damages, it was insufficient to meet the higher threshold
    required for punitive damages. Accordingly, such argument has been forfeited and we
    need not address the sufficiency of the evidence to support this finding.
    37
    sake of example and by way of punishing the defendant.’ (Civ. Code, § 3294, subd. (a).)
    As we explained in Neal v. Farmers Ins. Exchange [(1978)] 
    21 Cal. 3d 910
    , 928, and
    Adams v. Murakami [(1991)] 54 Cal.3d [105,] 110–112, the defendant’s financial
    condition is an essential factor in fixing an amount that is sufficient to serve these goals
    without exceeding the necessary level of punishment. ‘[O]bviously, the function of
    deterrence . . . will not be served if the wealth of the defendant allows him to absorb the
    award with little or no discomfort.’ (Neal, . . . at p. 928.) ‘[P]unitive damage awards
    should not be a routine cost of doing business that an industry can simply pass on to its
    customers through price increases, while continuing the conduct the law proscribes.’
    (Lane v. Hughes Aircraft Co. (2000) 
    22 Cal. 4th 405
    , 427 (conc. opn. of Brown, J.).) On
    the other hand, ‘the purpose of punitive damages is not served by financially destroying a
    defendant.’ (Adams, . . . at p. 112.)” (Simon v. San Paolo U.S. Holding Co., Inc. (2005)
    
    35 Cal. 4th 1159
    , 1184–1185 (Simon).)
    It is the plaintiff’s burden to introduce evidence of financial condition. (Adams v.
    
    Murakami, supra
    , 54 Cal.3d at p. 109.) “An award of punitive damages cannot be
    sustained on appeal unless the trial record contains meaningful evidence of the
    defendant’s financial condition” (ibid.); it cannot be based on speculation. (Id. at p. 114.)
    Beverly’s argument is that punitive damages award is not supported because the only
    evidence of the net worth of 524 Union or Beverly herself was Beverly’s testimony,
    which she expressly stated was a “guess.”
    Asked to estimate the value of 524 Union, Beverly testified, “right now there’s a
    long-term vacancy, and there’s some serious deferred maintenance because of the
    vacancy. So I would be guessing, you know. Usually the value of the property is based
    on the income, and the income is really low. So I don’t know, maybe . . . it’s a guess.
    Maybe 3.5.” She then acknowledged that she was a real estate broker and it was her
    business to know the value of properties, and that determination of the value of a
    commercial property is “really intensive, looking at the comps, looking at the whole
    thing.” She disagreed with Hong’s counsel’s suggestion that the value of comparable
    properties would be around 6.5 million. Asked for an estimate of her net worth, she
    38
    noted that there was a mortgage of about $700,000 and a lien of about 19,000 to 20,000
    on the 524 Union Street property, and a mortgage on her personal residence, which she
    had purchased in the 1980s for $90,000, as well as taxes and insurance, and that she
    received social security and worked on commissions, the latter of which had been
    difficult because of physical issues with her knees. Asked for her “best estimate,” she
    said she would have to “sit there and calculate it out.” Given a calculator, Beverly
    testified, “probably about, on paper, maybe 2.5” million. Her calculations did not include
    the $91,000 damages she owed Hong, and she did not know what she owed in legal fees
    since the last billing. Beverly testified that the bulk of the income from 524 Union came
    from The Field, which had now become difficult to rent; she was trying to obtain
    “landmarking” for the restaurant space and building, which would supersede the
    Department and the San Francisco Planning Commission, but that would take a long time
    and entail “very, very expensive” legal fees. In response to a juror’s question, she
    testified that the Union Street property was about 9,500 square feet and her home was
    about 2,100 square feet.
    Beverly cites Roddenberry v. Roddenberry (1996) 
    44 Cal. App. 4th 634
    , 651, for
    the statement that “[o]pinion testimony which is conjectural or speculative ‘cannot rise to
    the dignity of substantial evidence.’ (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Zuckerman (1987)
    
    189 Cal. App. 3d 1113
    , 1135.)” Of course. But Roddenberry, which involved expert
    opinion regarding postdivorce profits that a former spouse claimed she was due pursuant
    to a property settlement, is of little use in determining whether Beverly’s testimony
    regarding her own net worth and the value of property owned by the partnership of which
    she was managing partner constituted substantial evidence of her financial condition.
    The value of property may be shown by the opinion of the owner. (Evid. Code, § 813,
    subd. (a)(2); Sacramento & San Joaquin Drainage Dist. (1970) 
    13 Cal. App. 3d 58
    , 64.)
    The question is whether the owner’s characterization of her opinion as a “guess,” in the
    circumstances here, means it was too speculative to be considered substantial evidence.
    The trial court, in denying Beverly’s motion for JNOV the verdict with respect to
    punitive damages, “accept[ed] [Beverly’s] testimony that the 524 Union property’s
    39
    market value is $3.5 million and that it is encumbered by $870,000 in secured loans,
    leaving 2.63 million.” Though stated to be a “guess,” Beverly’s testimony as to the value
    of the property at 524 Union was not wild speculation. As a real estate broker, long-time
    owner of 524 Union and commercial landlord, Beverly was familiar with the value of this
    real estate, as well as its encumbrances, which she was able to specify. Her testimony
    was substantial evidence of 524 Union’s financial condition.
    Beverly’s testimony was also substantial evidence of her own net worth. Again,
    while she qualified her testimony by couching it in terms such as “probably” and
    “maybe,” it is clear she was not making wild guesses. She understood the components of
    her net worth—her equity in her home and in 524 Union, her income from social security
    and real estate commissions, her mortgage and other debt—and was given an opportunity
    to calculate the estimate she gave at trial. This was substantial evidence of her financial
    condition.
    II.
    Hong’s cross-appeal challenges the trial court’s reduction of the punitive damages
    award against 524 Union. Hong contends the trial court erred in reducing the award by
    means of the JNOV process, as the exclusive procedure for such a reduction is the
    remittitur process set forth in Code of Civil Procedure Code section 662.5.32 Under this
    process, where a new trial limited to damages would be proper, the trial court may “issue
    a conditional order granting the new trial unless the party in whose favor the verdict has
    been rendered consents to the reduction of so much thereof as the court in its independent
    judgment determines from the evidence to be fair and reasonable.”33
    32
    Further statutory references will be to the Code of Civil Procedure unless
    otherwise specified.
    33
    A new trial may be granted on grounds of excessive damages only if “after
    weighing the evidence the court is convinced from the entire record, including reasonable
    inferences therefrom, that the court or jury clearly should have reached a different verdict
    or decision.” (§ 657.) “When a new trial is granted, on all or part of the issues, the court
    shall specify the ground or grounds upon which it is granted and the court's reason or
    reasons for granting the new trial upon each ground stated.” (Ibid.) An order granting a
    40
    Where the evidence supports a plaintiff’s entitlement to punitive damages but the
    amount of the award is challenged as unreasonably high, the court cannot reduce the
    amount of damages on a motion for JNOV. (Teitel v. First Los Angeles Bank (1991) 
    231 Cal. App. 3d 1593
    , 1604–1605 (Teitel); § 657.) “The trial court’s discretion in granting a
    motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is severely limited. ‘ “The trial judge's
    power to grant a [JNOV] is identical to his power to grant a directed verdict [citations].
    The trial judge cannot reweigh the evidence [citation], or judge the credibility of
    witnesses. [Citation.] If the evidence is conflicting or if several reasonable inferences
    may be drawn, the motion for [JNOV] should be denied. [Citations.] ‘A motion for
    [JNOV] of a jury may properly be granted only if it appears from the evidence, viewed in
    the light most favorable to the party securing the verdict, that there is no substantial
    evidence to support the verdict. If there is any substantial evidence, or reasonable
    inferences to be drawn therefrom, in support of the verdict, the motion should be denied.’
    [Citation.]” ’ (Clemmer v. Hartford Insurance Co. (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 865
    , 877–878,
    quoting Hauter v. Zogarts (1975) 
    14 Cal. 3d 104
    , 110–111.)” (Teitel, at p. 1602.)
    Here, the trial court found that the evidence supported awards of punitive damages
    against both Beverly and 524 Union, but that the amount awarded against 524 Union was
    excessive. As Teitel explained, “[t]he Legislature has provided an exclusive remedy for a
    trial court to employ where some damages are properly awarded, but the amount is
    excessive. That is through a remittitur pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 662.5.
    Were we to accept [the] position that the trial judge is empowered to select an appropriate
    level of punitive damages and compel its determination by a [JNOV], we would find little
    or no purpose for the remittitur statute. We do not believe the Legislature intended such
    new trial “must state the ground or grounds relied upon by the court, and may contain the
    specification of reasons.” (Ibid.) On appeal, an order granting a new trial on the ground
    of excessive damages shall not be affirmed “unless such ground is stated in the order
    granting the motion” and “it shall be conclusively presumed that said order as to such
    ground was made only for the reasons specified in said order or said specification of
    reasons, and such order shall be reversed as to such ground only if there is no substantial
    basis in the record for any of such reasons.” (Ibid.)
    41
    a result. Rather, the legislative system as enacted makes it plain that damages, except
    those which may be determined as a matter of law, are to be fixed by the trier of fact and,
    if erroneous in amount, subject to the reduction or new trial procedure specified in . . .
    section 662.5, subdivision (b).”34 
    (Teitel, supra
    , 231 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1604–1605, fn.
    omitted.) Further, a trial court granting (or conditionally granting) a new trial motion is
    required to specify the grounds upon which it is granted and the reasons supporting the
    decision (§ 657), a requirement that “ ‘serves the dual purposes of “encouraging careful
    deliberation by the trial court before ruling on a motion for new trial, and of making a
    record sufficiently precise to permit meaningful appellate review.” [Citations.]’ . . .
    [Citation.]” (Teitel, at p. 1605.) “This purpose would be undermined if the trial court
    could simply reduce punitive damages from one amount to another through a motion for
    [JNOV].” (Ibid.)
    Beverly argues that Hong forfeited this challenge to the trial court reducing
    punitive damages via [JNOV] by failing to raise the point in the trial court, where the
    problem could easily have been corrected. (Keener v. Jeld-Wen, Inc. (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 247
    , 264 [failure to object to jury polling procedure; Nickerson v. Stonebridge Life Ins.
    Co. (2016) 
    63 Cal. 4th 363
    (Nickerson) [consent to or acquiescence in procedure for
    presentation to jury of evidence bearing on punitive damages].) This point has some
    merit. The motion for JNOV asserted that the punitive damages awards should be
    stricken because they were not supported by the evidence, presenting a legal issue
    appropriate for disposition on a motion for JNOV; there was no request for a reduction in
    the amount of punitive damages.35 At the hearing following the court’s issuance of its
    34
    The statutory provision discussed in Teitel as subdivision (b) of Code of Civil
    Procedure section 662.5, subdivision (b), is now subdivision (a)(2) of the statute. (Stats.
    2011, ch. 409, § 2.)
    35
    In opposition, Hong argued the court was required to deny the motion because
    substantial evidence supported the jury’s findings, citing Teitel as “holding ‘[t]he trial
    erred in granting the [JNOV] in light of this evidence [i.e., evidence supporting
    entitlement to punitive damages]’ and ‘in employing the device of a [JNOV] to reduce
    the amount of punitive damages[.]’ ” Hong thus opposed the motion for JNOV and
    42
    tentative decision reducing the amount of the punitive damages award against 524 Union,
    Hong objected to the court’s reduction, but not by raising any issue as to the court acting
    in the context of a [JNOV]; Hong simply argued the merits, stating that the jury’s award
    was within constitutional limits. Clearly, as the court was hearing argument on both the
    motion for JNOV and the new trial motion, it could easily have rectified the problem if it
    had been brought to the court’s attention.
    As the appropriate procedure for reducing a punitive damages award is solely a
    question of law, we have discretion to reach it despite Hong’s failure to object. (See
    Waller v. Truck Ins. Exchange, Inc. (1995) 
    11 Cal. 4th 1
    , 24.) We do so in order to
    reiterate what Teitel made clear: The procedural mechanism by which a trial court may
    reduce an award of damages it deems properly awarded but excessive in amount is
    through a remittitur pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 662.5. 
    (Teitel, supra
    ,
    231 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1604–1605.)
    One exception to the exclusivity of this remedy may exist where the trial court
    concludes the evidence supports an award of punitive damages but finds the amount
    awarded exceeds constitutional bounds (State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co v. Campbell
    (2003) 
    538 U.S. 408
    , 418; BMW of North America v. Gore (1996) 
    517 U.S. 559
    , 574–
    575; 
    Simon, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th at pp. 1171–1172) and reduces that amount to the
    constitutional maximum. Gober v. Ralph’s Grocery Co. (2006) 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 204
    ,
    211, 214 (Gober), held that an appellate court can determine the constitutional maximum
    for a punitive damages award on appeal from the denial of a JNOV because the
    constitutional maximum is a legal question.36 The trial court had denied the defendant’s
    additionally indicated (albeit by citing Teitel rather than by argument) the court could not
    reduce the amount of the award, which Smucha and 524 Union had not asked the court to
    do.
    36
    The defendant in Gober challenged a punitive damages award as excessive in
    motions for JNOV and new trial; the trial court denied the former motion and issued a
    conditional order granting the new trial motion unless the plaintiffs agreed to accept
    punitive damages of 15 times their compensatory damages—a significant reduction from
    the jury’s verdict but more than what the defendant sought as representing the
    43
    request for a [JNOV] setting punitive damages at the constitutional maximum. (Id. at
    p. 210.) Rejecting the plaintiffs’ argument that the trial court could not have granted the
    requested [JNOV], Gober noted that Teitel did not involve a constitutional challenge to
    the amount of the award and, in holding that punitive damages could not be reduced on a
    motion for [JNOV], excluded damages “which may be determined as a matter of law.”
    (Gober, at p. 212.) While Gober was concerned with the appellate court’s authority to
    reduce the award, its reasoning fully supports the trial court having authority to take the
    same action when it determines a jury’s award is constitutionally excessive.
    But that does not appear to be what happened here. The trial court did not indicate
    that the reduced amount of punitive damages it ordered was the constitutional maximum;
    to the contrary, it stated, “Given the above reduction, the ratios of punitive to
    compensatory damages are well within ‘due process’ limits. (State Farm Mut. Auto Ins.
    Co v. 
    Campbell[, supra
    ,] 538 U.S. [at p.] 410.)”37 Beverly is incorrect in citing Gober as
    authority for the proposition that “a court can review the legality of a punitive damage
    award on JNOV” as an alternative to utilizing the remittitur procedure. Gober permits
    constitutional maximum. 
    (Gober, supra
    , 137 Cal.App.4th at pp. 209, 210.) The
    defendant could not appeal from the new trial order because it was not aggrieved, as the
    trial court granted relief, albeit less than that requested. (Id. at p. 211.) The defendant
    thus sought review of the constitutionality of the award by appealing the denial of the
    motion for JNOV.
    37
    One of the trial court’s citations suggests it viewed the reduced award as the
    constitutional maximum: The court’s first citation after the quoted statement reducing
    the award was 
    “Nickerson[, supra
    ,] 63 Cal.4th [at p.] 375 (‘appropriate order is for an
    absolute reduction,’ not remittitur).” As more fully explained in 
    Simon, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th
    at pages 1187–1188, which Nickerson cites, reduction rather than remittitur is the
    appropriate order when the court finds a punitive damages award constitutionally
    excessive and reduces it to the constitutional maximum. Had Nickerson been the only
    citation in the trial court’s order, it would have been clear that the court was following
    this procedure. But the trial court also cited two cases in which punitive damages awards
    found excessive for nonconstitutional reasons and the remedy employed was remittitur.
    (Michelson v. Hamada (1994) 
    29 Cal. App. 4th 1566
    , 1596 [award so disproportionate to
    net worth as to raise presumption it was product of passion or prejudice]; Storage
    Services v. Oosterbaan (1989) 
    214 Cal. App. 3d 498
    , 514 [same].)
    44
    reduction of a punitive damage award to the constitutional maximum on a motion for
    JNOV; it in no way suggests a trial court can reduce such an award to an amount it deems
    appropriate short of that constitutional maximum.
    Here, except for determining and imposing the constitutional maximum, the trial
    court’s authority to reduce the punitive damages award was through its discretion on the
    motion for a new trial. But in that context, its choices were to grant a new trial pursuant
    to section 657, subdivision (5) or to issue a conditional order granting the new trial unless
    524 Union consented to the reduced amount the court found “fair and reasonable.”
    (§ 662.5, subd. (a)(2).) Neither section 657 nor section 662.5 give the trial court
    authority to reduce the amount of a punitive damages award through exercise of its
    independent judgment without using the remittitur procedure.
    Generally, the remedy for the court’s error in granting the motion for JNOV in
    order to reduce the punitive damages award against 524 Union would be for us to reverse
    its order and reinstate the original judgment on the jury’s verdict. We cannot do so,
    however, because—contrary to Hong’s argument—the jury’s award of $916,925 was not
    supported by substantial evidence. The ratio of punitive damages to compensatory
    damages in the jury’s verdict was 10:1—at or above the threshold at which an award is
    “suspect” and “absent special justification . . . cannot survive appellate scrutiny under the
    due process clause.” (
    Simon, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th at p. 1182.) Putting aside the question
    whether the conduct in this case was sufficiently “extreme” or “egregious” (ibid.) to
    justify an award in this amount, the jury’s award could not be sustained on the evidence
    of 524 Union’s financial condition. The property at 524 Union Street was the only asset
    of the partnership, and the only evidence on the issue—Beverly’s testimony—put its
    market value of at $3.5 million, reduced to $2.63 due to an encumbrance of $870,000 in
    secured loans. As the trial court noted, there may be valid reason to suspect a 9,500
    building in North Beach is worth more than $3.5 million—but no evidence was presented
    on this point. The punitive damages award thus amounted to approximately 35 percent of
    the property’s net value as shown by the evidence. Although “case law has not
    established any specific numerical percentage of net worth as constituting the upper
    45
    permissible limit for the amount of a punitive damages award” (Vallbona v.
    Springer (1996) 
    43 Cal. App. 4th 1525
    , 1539 [upholding award amounting to 23 percent of
    net worth]), “[p]unitive damages constitute a windfall” and “[s]uch awards generally are
    not allowed to exceed 10 percent of the net worth of the defendant.” (Michelson v.
    
    Hamada, supra
    , 29 Cal.App.4th at p. 1596 [award of 28 percent of net worth too high].)
    The purpose of punitive damages “is to deter, not to destroy.” (Adams v.
    
    Murakami, supra
    , 54 Cal.3d at p. 112.) The evidence suggests the only way 524 Union
    could satisfy a judgment for $916,925 in punitive damages (which, of course, would be in
    addition to the compensatory damages of $91,692 and attorney fees of $477,121 ordered
    by the trial court), would be to sell the building. As the trial court also noted, the
    evidence demonstrated that the restaurant space would be difficult to rent due to the
    zoning issues. While there was evidence that there were one or two office tenants and a
    coffee kiosk in the building, there was no evidence as to the income 524 Union derived
    from the leases of these spaces. Hong’s assertions that Beverly could rent the restaurant
    space for another purpose now, and will be able to rent it for $8,000 to $9,000 a month
    “when it obtains landmark status,” are speculation, not evidence; they ignore the
    impracticalities and costs of renting an outfitted restaurant space for other purposes, and
    the uncertainty as to whether and when landmark status might be achieved.
    Unlike the cases Hong relies upon, which upheld punitive damages awards
    supported by evidence of ability to pay despite negative net worth or awards at relative
    high percentages of net worth (Bankhead v. ArvinMeritor, Inc. (2012) 
    205 Cal. App. 4th 68
    , 75, 83 [despite company’s reported negative net worth of $1.023 billion, evidence of
    cashflow profit of $211 million for the year, reported net profit of $12 million, CEO paid
    $7.6 million, $343 in cash, and ability to borrow $245; award of $4.5 million upheld];
    Zaxis Wireless Communications, Inc. v. Motor Sound Corp. (2001) 
    89 Cal. App. 4th 577
    ,
    [despite negative net worth, company had average annual revenue of more than $250
    million, net profit of about $7.5 million and credit line of $50 million, with $5.3 million
    unexpended; award of $300,000 upheld]); Devlin v. Kearny Mesa AMC/Jeep/Renault,
    Inc. (1984) 
    155 Cal. App. 3d 381
    , 391 [no evidence award representing 17.5 percent of
    46
    annualized net worth would “unduly interfere with or hamper [defendant’s] future
    operations”; $80,000 award upheld]), the present record contains no evidence to support
    finding 524 Union had the ability to pay the punitive damages award without being
    effectively “destroyed.”
    As we cannot reinstate the original judgment on the jury’s verdict, correction of
    the trial court’s error would normally require us to remand for the trial court to reconsider
    the motions for JNOV and for a new trial. But this course of action has been rendered
    unnecessary. At oral argument, Hong’s counsel effectively stipulated that if this court
    finds the amount of the jury’s award unsupported and accepts the amount to which the
    trial court reduced the award, Hong will accept that result. Counsel made clear his
    client’s paramount desire to avoid further litigation in this matter. In these
    circumstances, the result of a remand is a foregone conclusion. The trial court has
    already determined the amount of punitive damages it found fair and reasonable, and
    Hong has represented she would accept this amount rather than pursuing a new trial. In
    the interest of efficiency and judicial economy, we will avoid unnecessary further
    proceedings and simply affirm the judgment.
    III.
    The parties each seek attorney fees on appeal in the event their position prevails,
    although only Hong offers argument and authorities in support of the request. The lease
    provides for the prevailing party to recover attorneys’ fees “in the event any action should
    be brought by either party to this lease against the other in connection with this lease.”
    This provision “encompasses all claims, whether in contract, tort or otherwise” (Maynard
    v. BTI Group, Inc. (2013) 
    216 Cal. App. 4th 984
    , 993), and includes attorney fees on
    appeal. (Center for Biological Diversity v. County of San Bernardino (2010) 
    185 Cal. App. 4th 866
    , 901; Starpoint Properties, LLC v. Namvar (2011) 
    201 Cal. App. 4th 1101
    , 1111.)
    As the prevailing parties on the appeal, ENA North Beach, Hong and Bunyaviroch
    are entitled to an award of attorney fees, in an amount to be determined by the trial court.
    47
    (Center for Biological Diversity v. County of San 
    Bernardino, supra
    , 185 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 901.)
    The cross-appeal is less clear: We have rejected Hong’s contention that the jury’s
    award of punitive damages should be reinstated, but also rejected Beverly’s argument
    that the trial court could properly reduce the amount of the award through a JNOV. In
    light of the parties’ shared responsibility for the procedural error, and our rejection of
    Hong’s contention that the amount of the jury’s award was supported by substantial
    evidence, we conclude there is no prevailing party entitled to attorney fees on the cross-
    appeal.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed with respect to the award of punitive damages against
    524 Union Street, and the original judgment on the jury’s verdict is reinstated. In all
    other respects, the judgment is affirmed. The matter is remanded to the trial court for
    reconsideration of the motions for JNOV and for a new trial with respect to the amount of
    the punitive damage award against 524 Union Street.
    ENA North Beach, Hong, and Bunyaviroch shall recover costs of appeal,
    including attorney fees, in amounts to be determined by the trial court.
    On the cross-appeal, each party shall bear its own costs and attorney fees.
    48
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Richman, J.
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    Ena North Beach, Inc., et al. v. 524 Union Street et al. (A152431, A152937)
    49
    Trial Court:                                    San Francisco County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                                    Hon. Richard B. Ulmer, Jr.
    Attorneys for Plaintiffs and Appellants:        Wood Robbins
    B. Douglas Robbins
    Leyla M. Pasic
    Kelley A. Harvilla
    Attorneys for Defendants and Appellants:        Kerr & Wagstaffe
    Wagstaffe, Von Loewenfeldt, Busch &
    Radwick
    James M. Wagstaffe
    Michael Von Loewenfeldt
    Draper Law Firm
    Ann McFarland Draper
    50