Kizor v. Redig CA1/3 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 2/29/16 Kizor v. Redig CA1/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    ALAN KIZOR et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,
    A143793
    v.
    MIRANDA REDIG, Individually and as                                       (Contra Costa County
    Trustee, etc.,                                                           Super. Ct. No. MSC09-01689)
    Defendant and Respondent.
    Plaintiffs Alan and Juanita Kizor appeal from a judgment entered in favor of
    defendant Miranda Redig1 on their complaint for fraud and breach of contract arising out
    of the Kizors’ purchase in 2002 of a home, owned by defendant Miranda Redig and her
    now deceased husband, John Redig. The court overruled Redig’s demurrer to the fraud
    causes of action based on the running of the applicable three-year statute of limitations,
    and we conclude that there was no error in the bifurcated trial in which a jury found those
    claims barred. However, we do find error in the court’s ruling that the Kizors’ breach of
    contract claim is necessarily barred by the applicable four-year statute of limitations.
    Therefore, we affirm the judgment as to the fraud claims but must reverse and remand as
    to the breach of contract claim.
    1
    Miranda Redig appears individually and as trustee for the John F. Redig and Miranda H.
    Redig revocable trust.
    1
    Factual and Procedural History
    On June 11, 2009, the Kizors filed a complaint against Redig alleging causes of
    action for, among other things, breach of contract, failure to disclose, misrepresentation
    and fraud. The Kizors’ second amended complaint alleges that the Redigs knew, at the
    time of the sale, that the house suffered from systemic water intrusion issues and that
    those water intrusion issues were not adequately repaired prior to the sale. The complaint
    alleges that the Redigs failed to disclose, suppressed and concealed the defects from the
    Kizors with the intent to defraud and deceive and induce the Kizors to purchase the
    property, and that the failure to disclose these known, material facts also constituted a
    breach of the purchase contract. Finally, the complaint alleges that “[t]he facts leading
    [the Kizors] to discover the fraud and deceit of the defendants . . . were not discovered by
    the [the Kizors] until on or about May 2007 at the earliest.”
    Redig demurred to the amended complaint on the ground that the Kizors’ claims
    are barred by the statute of limitations. The court held that the Kizors’ had sufficiently
    alleged delayed discovery of the fraud claims, but that the breach of contract claims were
    untimely and it, therefore, sustained without leave to amend the demurrer to that cause of
    action.
    At Redig’s request, the statute of limitations defense to the fraud claims was
    bifurcated and tried first to the jury. The following evidence was presented at trial:
    On August 1, 2002, the Kizors entered into a contract with the Redigs to purchase
    the Redigs’ home for $2.775 million, contingent on inspections of the property. The
    Kizors withdrew their offer to purchase after an inspection raised several concerns
    relating to the roof.
    Shortly thereafter, Mr. Redig sent an email to Alan Kizor responding to the
    roofing inspector’s concerns. In his email, Mr. Redig stated that there were many details
    relating to the design and construction of the roof that the inspector was not aware of
    when making his “preliminary assessment” and that he wanted to help the Kizors
    determine that the house does have “a well[-]constructed and performing roof . . . .”
    Mr. Redig explained that the builder had specifically selected the grade for the low slope
    2
    areas to “absolutely ensure proper drainage” and that underneath was a waterproof
    membrane designed to shed water to the gutter system. Mr. Redig also explained that the
    gutters had been designed and installed such that if any water were to get behind a gutter,
    “that water would simply shed out under the gutter and away from the house.” Mr. Redig
    wanted the Kizors to know that they “took no shortcuts” building their home and that the
    low slope areas had received the “special attention” required.
    Mr. Kizor also received an email from the roofing supplier regarding the roofing
    materials used in the construction of the house. In his email, the roofing supplier
    explained the steps taken in the design and installation of the roof to “address . . . water
    penetration concerns” and “safeguard the roof against failure.”He explained that the care
    taken resulted in a “structurally sound and fully functional roofing system” that
    “withstood the test of time.”
    After receiving these emails, the Kizors had the roof inspected a second time. This
    time, the inspector reported that if the roof had been constructed and installed in the
    manner “the builder” and “the metal roof representative” had asserted, then the roof
    would have a reasonably long service life.
    Thereafter, the Kizors made a second offer to purchase the home for $2.675
    million, which the Redigs accepted. In connection with the sale, the Kizors received a
    transfer disclosure statement in which the Redigs indicated that they were not “aware of
    any significant defects [or] malfunctions in . . . [the] roof [or] windows.” Escrow closed
    on October 1, 2002 and the Kizors moved into the home shortly thereafter.
    In spring 2005,2 the Kizors first noticed signs of water intrusion at a dining room
    window. When they obtained an estimate of the repair cost, in October 2005 according to
    the trial testimony, the contractor informed them that the house might suffer from a
    systemic water intrusion problem. Between February and June 2006, the Kizors hired
    2
    The amended complaint alleges that these leaks were first observed in March 2005 but
    the testimony at trial was they were first noticed some time in the spring of that year.
    3
    several water intrusion experts to perform destructive testing on their home. The testing
    confirmed a systemic water intrusion problem.
    In August 2006, the Kizors filed suit against the architect, the general contractor
    who built the house, and the roofing materials supplier. The complaint alleged negligence
    against the architect and contractor and negligent misrepresentation/ concealment against
    the contractor and the roofing material supplier. This action was dismissed, and the
    dismissal ultimately affirmed by this court, on the ground that only the Redigs, as original
    owners of the home, were entitled to assert those claims, and that any claim of the Kizors,
    who purchased the home from the Redigs, was against the Redigs. (Kizor v. BRU
    Architects (Jun. 8, 2011, A125423) [nonpub. opn.].) (Kizor I).)
    During trial on the limitations issue in this case, Mrs. Kizor testified that during
    discovery in Kizor I, in May 2007, she and her husband first learned from documents
    produced in discovery that the Redigs had been aware of the undisclosed defects when
    they sold the house to the Kizors. The trial court permitted Mrs. Kizor to testify that it
    was only after receiving those documents that her “understanding of what the Redigs
    knew about the condition of the house before the close of escrow changed.” However,
    over the Kizors’ objection the court excluded all testimony regarding the content of the
    documents and the documents were not admitted into evidence.3 The court explained that
    the only relevant information in the first phase of the trial was what the Kizors knew at
    3
    The documents, which were marked as exhibits before trial, include among others:
    (1) A letter from John and Miranda Redig to Capital Glass dated November 1, 2000, in
    which the Redigs stated that “[m]any of the windows that [Capital Glass] installed leak
    water into [their] home” and that they had been told by their general contractor that the
    leaks were the result of “faulty installation of the windows.” (2) A letter from John Redig
    to the roofing supplier dated March 30, 2001, complaining of ongoing roof-related leaks,
    that “the leaks in [the Redigs’] roof remain unresolved,” and that Mr. Redig “would like
    to hear [Wong’s] understanding of where this issue (the leaks) stands.” (3) A contract
    dated December 26, 2001 between John and Miranda Redig and the general contractor
    for repairs needed to ready the house for sale that states, “[a]ll leaks to all building
    structures must be fixed”; “[f]looring damaged by leaks must be repaired to new
    condition”; and “repair/repaint damaged drywall due to leak in hall . . . .”
    4
    various times prior to filing the lawsuit. What the Redigs knew at the time of the sale was
    irrelevant to the statute of limitations issue.
    The jury was instructed that “[t]he statute of limitations commences to run on a
    claim for fraud or failure to disclose conditions of property when a person knows of facts
    constituting fraud or failure to disclose, or when that person has knowledge of
    information that a reasonably prudent person, using reasonable diligence, could have
    suspected/discovered the facts indicating the fraud or failure to disclose.” The jury was
    further instructed that Redig “contends Alan and Juanita Kizors’ lawsuit was not filed
    within the time set by law. To succeed on this defense, Mrs. Redig must prove that the
    Kizors’ claimed harm occurred before . . . June 11, 2006. If Miranda Redig proves that
    Alan and Juanita Kizors’ claimed harm occurred before June 11, 2006, the Kizors’
    lawsuit was still filed on time if the Kizors prove that before that date they did not
    discover facts indicating the Redigs failed to disclose important information regarding
    defects in the house and with reasonable diligence could not have discovered those facts.”
    In closing argument, Redigs’ attorney detailed the construction repairs and testing
    the Kizors performed before June 2006 and argued that from a comparison of what the
    Kizors learned between 2003 and June of 2006 with the information they received at the
    time of the purchase, “it’s clear that a reasonable person would have suspected at that
    time that what they were told at the time that they purchased the property possibly wasn’t
    complete or that maybe some information was withheld, maybe conditions were
    misrepresented to them, and that they might have a potential claim for fraud or for failure
    to disclose.” The Kizors’ attorney argued that “[b]efore June 11, 2006, the Kizors had no
    facts showing what the Kizors knew about [the] defects in the house. They certainly had
    information that the house had defects, but they didn’t have information that the [Redigs]
    knew about those defects before the close of escrow.” Counsel argued, “The information
    contained in [the 2007] document production alerted the Kizors to the fact that the Redigs
    did know something about the defective construction during and after construction of the
    home. . . . [¶] This information also told them for the first time that the transfer disclosure
    statement was a false representation of the Redigs’ awareness of significant defects and
    5
    malfunctions.” Finally, counsel argued that the Kizors acted diligently in filing a lawsuit
    against the contractor as soon as the defects were discovered, but that “from the
    information the Kizors had, there’s no reason for them to conclude that the Redigs were
    any other than themselves: victims of a poorly constructed house.”
    The jury returned its verdict finding in favor of Redig on the statute of limitations
    defense and the court entered judgment in her favor. The Kizors timely filed a notice of
    appeal.
    Discussion
    1.     The Fraud Claims
    The parties agree that Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision (d)
    imposes a three years statute of limitations on plaintiffs’ fraud claims. As indicated
    above, the court effectively instructed the jury the fraud claims were barred by the statute
    if the Kizors knew of or at least should have suspected their claims against the Redigs
    before June 11, 2006—three years before they filed their complaint.
    Statutes of limitation “ ‘prescribe the periods beyond which’ a plaintiff may not
    bring a cause of action.” (Norgart v. Upjohn Co. (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 383
    , 395.) A plaintiff
    must file suit within the applicable limitations period after accrual of the cause of action.
    (Id. at p. 397.) “The general rule for defining the accrual of a cause of action sets the date
    as the time ‘when, under the substantive law, the wrongful act is done,’ or the wrongful
    result occurs, and the consequent ‘liability arises.’ ” (Ibid.) An important exception to the
    general rule for defining the accrual of a cause of action is the discovery rule. The
    discovery rule “postpones accrual of a cause of action until the plaintiff discovers, or has
    reason to discover, the cause of action.” (Ibid.) A plaintiff discovers a cause of action
    when he at least suspects a factual basis, as opposed to a legal theory, for its elements.
    (Ibid.) “Under the discovery rule, the statute of limitations begins to run when the
    plaintiff suspects or should suspect that her injury was caused by wrongdoing, that
    someone has done something wrong to her. . . . [T]he limitations period begins once the
    plaintiff ‘ “has notice or information or circumstances to put a reasonable person on
    6
    inquiry” ’ (Gutierrez, v. Mofid (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 892
    , 896-897.) The plaintiff need not
    know “ ‘specific “facts” necessary to establish’ the cause of action; rather, he may seek to
    learn such facts through the ‘process contemplated by pretrial discovery’; but, within the
    applicable limitations period, he must indeed seek to learn the facts necessary to bring the
    cause of action in the first place—he ‘cannot wait for’ them ‘to find’ him and ‘sit on’ his
    ‘rights’; he ‘must go find’ them himself if he can and ‘file suit’ if he does.” (Norgart v.
    Upjohn 
    Co., supra
    , 21 Cal.4th at p. 398.) Thus, the discovery rule establishes two
    alternate tests for the date of accrual of a cause of action: “(1) a subjective test requiring
    actual suspicion by the plaintiff that the injury was caused by wrongdoing; or (2) an
    objective test based on when a reasonable person would have suspected that an injury
    was caused by wrongdoing. [Citation.] The first to occur under these two tests begins the
    limitations period.” (Kitzig v. Nordquist (2000) 
    81 Cal. App. 4th 1384
    , 1391.)
    The Kizors do not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence that was admitted to
    support the jury’s finding that the facts they had learned by June 2006 should have
    caused them to suspect that the Redigs had misstated or withheld pertinent information
    concerning the condition of the property at the time of the sale. They contend, however,
    that the trial court erred in ruling that the information discovered by the Kizors in 2007
    through discovery in Kizor I was not relevant to the statute of limitations issue and
    excluding this evidence in the first stage of the trial. There was no error in the court’s
    evidentiary ruling.
    The Kizors argue that evidence of the contents of the documents produced in
    discovery in 2007 should have been admitted because it tended “to ‘prove facts showing
    the time and surrounding circumstances of the discovery’ and, most importantly here,
    ‘what the discovery was.’ ” (Quoting Hobart v. Hobart (1945) 
    26 Cal. 2d 412
    , 437.) The
    Kizors were permitted to testify that they received documents during discovery in their
    lawsuit against the contractor that alerted them to the possibility that the Redigs’ had
    concealed known information at the time of the sale. Redig did not challenge the Kizors’
    assertion that they did not actually suspect the Redigs of fraud until 2007, but she
    contended that prior to June 11, 2006, they were nonetheless aware of sufficient facts
    7
    concerning the condition of the property that they should reasonably have investigated
    the possibility that the Redigs—like those the Kizors accused in their prior action—had
    withheld information from them. Although the documents that the Kizors obtained in
    discovery in the prior action unquestionably contain powerful evidence that the Redigs
    were aware of relevant facts that the Kizors claim not to have known (see fn. 2, ante), the
    trial court correctly determined that what information the Redigs knew at the time of the
    sale, as reflected in the 2007 documents, is not relevant to the date of accrual of the fraud
    claims. Although those documents undoubtedly were relevant and admissible to prove the
    merits of the Kizors’ fraud claims, the only facts relevant to the limitations issue were
    those bearing on what the Kizors knew as of June 2006. Facts that they learned
    subsequently have no tendency to prove what they knew or should have known in June
    2006.
    The delayed discovery rule “delays accrual [of a cause of action] until the plaintiff
    has, or should have, inquiry notice of the cause of action. . . . [P]laintiffs are charged with
    presumptive knowledge of an injury if they have ‘ “ ‘information of circumstances to put
    [them] on inquiry’ ” ’ or if they have ‘ “ ‘the opportunity to obtain knowledge from
    sources open to [their] investigation.’ ” ’ [Citation.] In other words, plaintiffs are required
    to conduct a reasonable investigation after becoming aware of an injury, and are charged
    with knowledge of the information that would have been revealed by such an
    investigation.” (Fox v. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 797
    , 807-808,
    fn. omitted.)
    The Kizors also argue that the evidence was relevant to establish that even if they
    were on notice of the construction defects before June 2006, a reasonably diligent
    investigation, which they argue they conducted, would not have disclosed evidence of the
    fraud until May 2007. The discovery rule does not extend the statute of limitations,
    however, until an investigation produces evidence of a claim. The statute of limitations
    starts to run when a reasonable person would be suspicious that they were harmed by
    someone’s wrongdoing. The jury concluded that by June 2006, a reasonable person
    would have suspected that the Redigs misstated or concealed pertinent facts concerning
    8
    the condition of the property. The evidence that the Kizors were told in about October
    2005 that there appeared to be systemic water intrusion in the house, which was
    confirmed by experts they retained between February and June 2006, was sufficient to
    support that finding. That the Kizors filed their action alleging others of making these
    misrepresentations only two months beyond June 2006 also provides support for the
    jury’s finding.
    2.     Equitable Estoppel
    In briefs filed prior to and during trial, the Kizors argued that defendant should be
    equitably stopped from asserting the statute of limitations defense because she
    continually attempted to conceal evidence, even after they filed the present action. The
    court initially indicated that it did not think equitable estoppel applied but would reserve
    decision until after trial. Although the judgment entered does not expressly address
    equitable estoppel, as the Kizors concede, the judgment implicitly rejects their estoppel
    argument. The Kizors argue that “the record contains more than enough evidence to
    support the Kizors’ estoppel argument and to demonstrate that the doctrine applies, and
    the court needed to independently consider the evidence. Combined, this evidence tends
    to prove that Redig did, in fact, continually hide the ball and should, therefore, not be
    allowed to benefit by invoking the statute of limitations.” (Italics omitted.)
    Under California law, the doctrine of equitable estoppel can serve as a defense to
    an untimely action where the conduct of the alleged tortfeasor has induced another into
    forbearing suit within the applicable limitations period. (Battuello v. Battuello (1998) 
    64 Cal. App. 4th 842
    , 847-848.) When a defendant’s conduct has deliberately induced the
    plaintiff to delay filing suit, the defendant will be estopped from availing himself of this
    delay as a defense. (Lantzy v. Centex Homes (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 363
    , 383-384.)
    The Kizors, however, rely only on evidence of Redig’s initial alleged fraud and
    her failure to subsequently reveal her alleged fraud sooner. They do not cite any conduct
    by Redig that demonstrates an intent or attempt to induce them into “forbearing suit
    9
    within the applicable limitations period.” Accordingly, the court properly rejected the
    Kizors’ equitable estoppel argument.
    3.      The Breach of Contract Claim
    Although the trial court overruled Redig’s demurrer contending that the Kizors’
    fraud claims were barred by the three year statute of limitations applicable to those
    claims, it sustained the demurrer to the breach of contract claim, governed by a four year
    statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proc., § 337). Therefore, although the jury found that by
    June 2006 the Kizors had sufficient knowledge of the facts to commence the running of
    the applicable limitations period, the jury was not asked to determine, and did not
    determine, whether the same was true as of June 11, 2005. Although, as the trial court
    noted, the Kizors unquestionably observed window leakage in the spring of 2005, in
    overruling the demurrer to the fraud claims the court held that that leakage did not
    necessarily put them on notice that the Redigs may have concealed a systemic water
    intrusion defect in the home. The trial court offered no explanation why the Kizors’
    awareness of the window leakage in the spring of 2005 triggered the statute for the
    breach of contract claim but not for the fraud claim, and we can discern none. The facts
    that the Kizors learned between October 2005 and June 2006 may have been sufficient to
    prove that the limitations period began to run by June 2006, but those facts do not
    necessarily show that the plaintiffs knew sufficient facts to commence the statute in June
    2005.
    The Kizors’ complaint alleges that the terms of the purchase agreement between
    the Kizors and the Redigs required that the Redigs to “disclose all known material facts”
    about the house at the time of the sale and that the Redigs breached this contractual
    obligation by “fail[ing] to disclose and conceal[ing] facts and circumstances that would
    have suggested the potential for latent design and construction defects existing in the
    residence.” The complaint alleges further that the Kizors had no reason to suspect that the
    Redigs knew of defects in the house at the time of the sale, until May 2007, when
    Miranda Redig first produced documents as part of discovery in Kizor I.
    10
    The standard of review for an order sustaining a demurrer is de novo. (Guardian
    North Bay, Inc. v. Superior Court (2001) 
    94 Cal. App. 4th 963
    , 971.) “ ‘A demurrer based
    on a statute of limitations will not lie where the action may be, but is not necessarily,
    barred. [Citation.] In order for the bar of the statute of limitations to be raised by
    demurrer, the defect must clearly and affirmatively appear on the face of the complaint; it
    is not enough that the complaint shows that the action may be barred.’ ” (Id. at pp. 971-
    972.)
    The delayed discovery rule typically does not apply to breach of contract actions,
    which ordinarily accrue at the time of breach. (3 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008)
    Actions, § 520, pp. 664-665, § 529, pp. 678-680.) However, the delayed discovery rule
    “may be applied to breaches which can be, and are, committed in secret and, moreover,
    where the harm flowing from those breaches will not be reasonably discoverable by
    plaintiffs until a future time.” (April Enterprises, Inc. v. KTTV (1983) 
    147 Cal. App. 3d 805
    , 832 [the discovery rule is applicable to breach of contract actions involving fraud or
    misrepresentation].)
    Here, the allegations of the complaint establish that in March 2005 the Kizors
    “noticed small unexplained water stains at the sill of a dining room window and a small
    area of minor discoloration on a wall adjacent to that window.” “About this time,” while
    planning an addition to the home, the Kizors “mentioned the minor water stains at the
    window sill” to their architect. The architect recommended a general contractor “take a
    look at the minor water staining on the dining room window sill.” As the trial court
    recognized in overruling the demurrer to the fraud claims, knowledge of those facts was
    not necessarily sufficient to establish that plaintiffs should have suspected the
    concealment of information suggesting a systemic water intrusion defect to the entire
    structure. According to the evidence that was produced at trial, it was not until October
    2005 that the contractor’s “water intrusion specialist” investigated the leak and the Kizors
    first learned the residence “likely suffered from systemic problems.” Since the Kizors
    filed their complaint in June 2009, within four years of October 2005, the breach of
    contract claim may have been timely while the fraud claims were not.
    11
    This conclusion yields the unfortunate consequence that although there was no
    error in the trial producing the finding that the Kizors’ fraud claims are barred by the
    three-year statute of limitations, trial is necessary to determine whether the breach of
    contract claim is similarly barred by the four-year statute. Under the circumstances we
    have no choice but to reverse the judgment and remand the matter for further proceedings
    on the Kizors’ cause of action for breach of contract.
    Disposition
    The judgment is affirmed as to all causes of action except the cause of action for
    breach of contract, as to which the judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded for
    further proceedings with respect to that cause of action. The parties shall bear their
    respective costs on appeal.
    _________________________
    Pollak, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    McGuiness, P. J.
    _________________________
    Jenkins, J.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A143793

Filed Date: 2/29/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021