PanIQ Group LLC v. Rivera Family Restaurant LLC CA4/1 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 11/18/20 PanIQ Group LLC v. Rivera Family Restaurant LLC CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    PANIQ GROUP LLC et al.,                                              D076141
    Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and
    Appellants,
    (Super. Ct. No. 37-2015-
    v.                                                          00041289-CU-FR-CTL)
    RIVERA FAMILY RESTAURANT,
    LLC,
    Defendant, Cross-complainant
    and Respondent;
    CAPITAL REAL ESTATE VENTURES,
    INC.,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Ronald F. Frazier, Judge. Affirmed.
    Cabanday Law Group and Orlando F. Cabanday for Plaintiffs, Cross-
    defendants and Appellants Paniq Group LLC and Cris Parker.
    Higgs Fletcher & Mack, John Morris, Rachel Moffitt Garrard; Connolly
    Law Office and Christopher J. Connolly for Defendant, Cross-complainant
    and Respondent Rivera Family Restaurant, LLC, and Capital Real Estate
    Ventures, Inc., Defendant and Respondent.
    I
    INTRODUCTION
    In this commercial landlord-tenant dispute, plaintiff and cross-
    defendant PanIQ Group, LLC (PanIQ) and cross-defendant Cris Parker
    appeal a judgment entered in favor of defendant and cross-complainant
    Rivera Family Restaurant, LLC (Rivera) and defendant Capital Real Estate
    Ventures, Inc. (Capital).
    PanIQ, as lessee, entered a five-year commercial lease with Rivera, as
    lessor, for a basement space in a building in downtown San Diego. Capital
    served as Rivera’s real estate broker in the transaction and Parker
    guaranteed PanIQ’s performance under the lease. Approximately five
    months into the lease, PanIQ terminated the lease. Thereafter, it filed
    causes of action against Rivera and Capital for breach of the lease, fraud, and
    negligent misrepresentation, and Rivera filed a cross-complaint against
    PanIQ and Parker for breach of the lease and breach of the guaranty. After a
    bench trial, the trial court found in favor of Rivera and Capital and against
    PanIQ and Parker on all causes of action.
    PanIQ and Parker urge us to reverse the judgment as to PanIQ’s fraud
    causes of action and Rivera’s cross-complaint. They assert the trial court
    erroneously excluded evidence showing that Rivera was not the true owner of
    the leased premises. Further, they claim the court erred in finding the lease
    was an enforceable contract for purposes of Rivera’s cross-complaint.
    2
    We conclude there is no merit to the contentions raised by PanIQ and
    Parker. Therefore, we affirm the judgment.
    II
    BACKGROUND
    A
    PanIQ is a subsidiary of a company that owns and operates escape
    rooms. An escape room is a form of entertainment in which participants are
    put into a themed room (e.g., an insane asylum) and try to solve a series of
    puzzles within an allotted time to exit (or “escape”) the room. In early 2015,
    PanIQ began preparations to open an escape room location in San Diego.
    PanIQ scouted multiple sites for its escape room location and selected a
    2,400-square foot space available for lease in the basement of the Woolworth
    Building in downtown San Diego. Rivera, the lessor of the basement space,
    was in escrow to buy the Woolworth Building from its then-owner, Scott
    Williams, as trustee of the Williams Revocable Family Trust (Williams). On
    May 29, 2015, PanIQ and Rivera entered a five-year commercial lease for the
    basement space, effective June 1, 2015.
    B
    PanIQ took possession of the leased space on June 1, 2015, and began
    to make tenant improvements including the construction of partition walls
    for the escape rooms. The lease required PanIQ to materially comply with
    applicable building codes, laws, regulations, and ordinances when making its
    tenant improvements. Further, it required PanIQ to furnish to Rivera, upon
    request, all permits, documents, and information evidencing PanIQ’s
    compliance with the applicable building codes, laws, regulations, and
    ordinances.
    3
    On June 11, 2015, Williams—the seller of the Woolworth Building—
    visited the building, identified himself to PanIQ’s on-site general contractor
    as the building owner, and asked that PanIQ halt its tenant improvements
    and vacate the premises. In subsequent communications, Williams told
    PanIQ that Rivera would become the building owner in one week (after the
    close of escrow) and it would be “best for all concerned” if there were no
    further tenant improvements until then. PanIQ stopped work on its tenant
    improvements and vacated the premises.
    Soon after, representatives from PanIQ and Capital, Rivera’s broker,
    met to discuss PanIQ’s ouster from the premises. During and after the
    meeting, PanIQ expressed concerns the ouster would delay its construction
    plans and the opening of its escape rooms. Capital, on behalf of Rivera,
    offered to rescind the lease and refund PanIQ’s deposit and prepaid rent.
    PanIQ declined the offer. After some negotiation, the parties agreed Rivera
    would provide PanIQ a rent reduction as compensation for the ouster.
    Escrow for the Woolworth Building closed and PanIQ regained
    possession of the leased space on June 19, 2015, eight days after it was
    ousted. PanIQ opened for business in the leased space in July 2015.
    C
    PanIQ operated its escape room location in the Woolworth Building and
    made monthly rent payments through November 2015. In early November
    2015, Randy Rivera (Randy), the manager of Rivera, met with
    representatives from PanIQ to discuss lease-related matters and certain
    complaints PanIQ had about the leased space. Among other issues, they
    discussed a potential reconfiguration of the leased space, the construction of
    code-compliant improvements and a restroom in the basement, the presence
    of homeless persons near the building, and a leak on or near the premises.
    4
    According to Randy, he exited the meeting believing the parties “were moving
    forward” on addressing PanIQ’s concerns and a possible renegotiation of the
    lease.1
    Approximately a week after the November meeting, a building
    inspector from the City of San Diego (City) visited the Woolworth Building to
    inspect a tenant improvement for an upstairs tenant. During his visit, he
    noticed PanIQ’s tenant improvements in the basement and determined they
    required permits. The inspector posted an on-site correction notice indicating
    that the City’s records showed there were no building permits for PanIQ’s
    tenant improvements, demanding that all necessary permits be obtained, and
    warning that noncompliance would result in removal of the tenant
    improvements.
    Rivera forwarded a copy of the correction notice to PanIQ’s founder,
    requested that PanIQ furnish permits for the tenant improvements, and
    warned that the City would not allow operation of an unpermitted business.
    After some discussion, Rivera sent a proposal to PanIQ to renegotiate the
    lease and address the permitting issues. Under Rivera’s proposal, Rivera
    would assume responsibility for paying for, permitting, and building code-
    compliant tenant improvements in the basement if, in return, PanIQ would
    agree to a reconfiguration of the leased space and an extension of the lease
    from five years to 10 years.
    On November 24, 2015, PanIQ rejected Rivera’s offer, informed Rivera
    that Rivera was in material breach of the lease due to its alleged “failure to
    comply with its obligations,” and terminated the lease. PanIQ thereafter
    vacated the premises and stopped making its monthly rental payments.
    1     A lease provision required Rivera to install a restroom in the basement.
    5
    D
    On December 11, 2015, PanIQ filed a complaint against Rivera alleging
    causes of action for fraud and breach of the lease. It alleged Rivera made
    misrepresentations to PanIQ prior to the signing of the lease, including that
    Rivera was the owner of the leased space and that it intended to satisfy its
    lease obligations. According to PanIQ, Rivera was not the true owner of the
    leased space; rather, it used the lease with PanIQ to secure the financing
    necessary to buy the Woolworth Building from Williams. PanIQ also alleged
    Rivera breached the lease by not constructing a restroom in the leased space,
    failing to maintain the property, and shutting off PanIQ’s electricity.
    Rivera cross-complained against PanIQ for breach of the lease. It
    alleged PanIQ breached the lease by constructing unpermitted tenant
    improvements in violation of the City’s building code, stopping its rent
    payments after November 2015, and abandoning the leased space. Rivera
    also cross-complained against Parker, one of PanIQ’s members who had
    executed a guaranty pledging PanIQ’s performance under the lease.
    In August 2017, PanIQ filed a separate complaint against Capital
    alleging causes of action for fraud and negligent misrepresentation. It
    alleged Capital misrepresented that Rivera was the owner of the property at
    the time the lease was executed and, furthermore, that Rivera intended to
    satisfy its lease obligations. The trial court consolidated the two cases in
    September 2017.
    The consolidated action proceeded to a bench trial after which the court
    found in favor of Rivera and Capital and against PanIQ and Parker on all
    causes of action. With respect to PanIQ’s fraud causes of action, the court
    found PanIQ failed to establish a false representation regarding the
    ownership of the Woolworth Building. The court found Rivera and Capital
    6
    “were upfront early in the negotiations for the [l]ease that [Rivera] was in an
    open transaction to buy the Woolworth Building” and “no one from Rivera …
    or Capital … represented the transaction had closed.” Further, the court
    found PanIQ failed to establish any causal link between any alleged
    misrepresentations and any claimed damages.
    The court found in favor of Rivera and Capital on PanIQ’s breach of
    lease cause of action on grounds that PanIQ did not establish its own
    performance under the lease. The court determined that PanIQ materially
    breached the lease on the date it took possession of the leased premises by
    constructing unpermitted tenant improvements in violation of the City’s
    building code. As an alternative basis for denying recovery, the court found
    PanIQ failed to establish that Rivera materially breached any provision of
    the lease or the existence of a causal link between any alleged breach and
    PanIQ’s claimed damages.
    As for Rivera’s cross-complaint, the court found PanIQ materially
    breached the lease and Parker was jointly and severally liable under the
    guaranty. The court rejected a contention raised by PanIQ that the lease was
    void due to Rivera and Capital’s alleged misrepresentations concerning
    Rivera’s ownership of the Woolworth Building. It found PanIQ failed to
    establish any misrepresentations and, to the extent any misrepresentations
    occurred, PanIQ ratified the lease by rejecting Rivera’s offer to rescind the
    lease in June 2015. Further, the court found PanIQ materially breached the
    lease by: (1) constructing unpermitted tenant improvements; (2) violating
    applicable building code requirements; and (3) failing to pay rent after
    November 2015.
    The court denied recovery to PanIQ and awarded Rivera $251,084 in
    lost rent and $8,800 in out-of-pocket expenses.
    7
    III
    DISCUSSION
    A
    Fraud
    PanIQ contends we should reverse the judgment as to PanIQ’s fraud
    causes of action due to an alleged evidentiary error. As we will explain,
    PanIQ’s assertion of an evidentiary error is based on a mischaracterization of
    the record. Because the record demonstrates the trial court did not in fact
    rule in the manner PanIQ claims, PanIQ has failed to establish that the
    judgment must be reversed as to the fraud causes of action.
    Prior to trial, Rivera filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence that it
    was not the owner of the leased premises. Rivera argued such evidence
    would violate the conclusive presumption codified in Evidence Code section
    624, which provides that “[a] tenant is not permitted to deny the title of his
    landlord at the time of the commencement of the relation.” Alternatively,
    Rivera claimed the evidence would be irrelevant, unduly prejudicial, and
    unduly time-consuming because Rivera had equitable title to the leased
    premises when the parties executed the lease. (See Ocean Avenue LLC v.
    County of Los Angeles (2014) 
    227 Cal.App.4th 344
    , 352.)
    At the hearing on Rivera’s motion in limine, the trial court ruled as
    follows: “I’m inclined to grant [the motion]. [¶] ... [¶] ... I think we need to
    get into the evidence.” The court continued: “I’m just saying I don’t want to
    decide it as a motion in limine. [¶] ... [¶] [I]n other words, you make your
    argument[s], you guys make your argument[s], and I’ll determine it …. [¶] ...
    [¶] It’s granted. I’m not [going to] make a finding. I’m just saying you guys
    argue and I’ll make a ruling. [¶] I’m not saying you can’t make your
    argument. I’m saying I’m not making a pretrial motion [sic] on this issue.
    8
    I’m not deciding this as a matter of law right now. I want to hear the
    evidence and the arguments and then I’ll make a ruling.”
    Based on the foregoing, PanIQ contends the trial court granted Rivera’s
    motion in limine and precluded PanIQ from introducing evidence that Rivera
    was not the owner of the leased premises. PanIQ asserts the court erred in
    doing so because the conclusive presumption codified in Evidence Code
    section 624 is subject to an exception when a lessor commits fraud to induce a
    lessee to enter a lease. (See Sands v. Eagle Oil & Refining Co. (1948) 
    83 Cal.App.2d 312
    , 321–322.) PanIQ claims it suffered prejudice from the
    alleged evidentiary error because it was effectively precluded from
    establishing its causes of action for fraud.
    Capital, in an argument joined by Rivera, argues PanIQ distorts the
    appellate record. It asserts the court did not in fact grant the motion in
    limine or preclude PanIQ from introducing evidence of the alleged fraud.
    Further, it claims the court permitted both sides’ witnesses to testify
    extensively about alleged representations Rivera and Capital made to PanIQ
    regarding its ownership of the Woolworth Building and, based on all the
    evidence presented, rendered a factual finding that no misrepresentations
    were made. We agree with Capital and Rivera.
    The ruling on Rivera’s motion in limine was not the model of clarity.
    As noted, the court indicated it would “grant” the motion, which, standing
    alone, would suggest the court would exclude evidence pertaining to Rivera’s
    ownership of the Woolworth Building. But a review of the ruling in context
    makes it readily apparent the court denied the motion in substance. The
    court opined it needed “to get into the evidence” and both sides would be
    permitted to make arguments regarding Rivera’s ownership of the premises.
    Further, the court opined it would not make a pretrial finding on the issue of
    9
    ownership or decide the matter through an in limine ruling. When read in
    context, it is clear the court simply misspoke when it stated it would “grant”
    Rivera’s motion in limine.
    To the extent there was any ambiguity in the in limine ruling, that
    ambiguity was resolved at trial when the court freely permitted the parties to
    introduce evidence pertaining to the alleged fraud. As Capital correctly
    notes, the court allowed witnesses for both sides to testify at length regarding
    Rivera and Capital’s alleged representations to PanIQ about Rivera’s
    ownership of the Woolworth Building, the pending sale of the Woolworth
    Building from Williams to Rivera, and the timing and terms of escrow.
    To take one example (of several dozen), a witness who set up PanIQ’s
    business operation in San Diego testified that representatives from Rivera
    and Capital told him Rivera was “in the process of acquiring the property
    from someone,” but “would be the real owner by the time [the parties] signed
    the lease agreement.” He testified PanIQ “would not have signed the lease” if
    it knew Rivera was “not the owner of the property on the day PanIQ signed
    the lease ….”
    By contrast, an employee of Capital testified he disclosed to PanIQ, just
    before the parties signed the lease, that the property was still in escrow and
    that he made no representations to PanIQ about who owned title to the
    property. Another employee of Capital testified he told PanIQ “it was in
    escrow” and denied telling PanIQ that Rivera was the owner of the property.
    Additionally, Randy testified that Rivera had paid a nonrefundable deposit
    on the Woolworth Building and removed contingencies on the property, thus
    allowing Rivera to seek tenants for the basement space even though escrow
    had not yet closed.
    10
    As these illustrative examples demonstrate, the trial court did not
    prohibit the parties from introducing evidence pertaining to Rivera’s alleged
    ownership of the Woolworth Property, nor did it preclude PanIQ from
    presenting evidence to support its allegations of fraud. Rather, the court
    admitted extensive evidence on these topics and, based on all the evidence
    before it, rendered factual determinations that Rivera and Capital “were
    upfront early in the negotiations for the [l]ease that [Rivera] was in an open
    transaction to buy the Woolworth Building” and “no one from Rivera … or
    Capital … represented the transaction had closed.”2
    Because the trial court did not exclude evidence concerning Rivera’s
    ownership of the Woolworth Building, we conclude PanIQ and Parker have
    not established a reversible evidentiary error.
    B
    Breach of the Lease and Breach of the Guaranty
    Next, PanIQ and Parker contend we should reverse the judgment as to
    Rivera’s cross-complaint for breach of the lease and breach of the guaranty.
    They contend the lease was a “nullity” due to the allegedly fraudulent
    representations Rivera and Capital made to PanIQ regarding Rivera’s
    ownership of the leased premises. Although PanIQ declined Capital’s offer to
    rescind the lease (opting instead to accept a rent reduction), PanIQ contends
    it never ratified the lease—and could not have ratified the lease—because the
    lease was void at its inception. We are not persuaded by these arguments.
    As Rivera and Capital correctly note, the trial court rendered factual
    findings that “Pan[IQ] … failed to show a false representation was made with
    2     The trial court sustained a handful of objections to questions regarding
    whether Rivera had “legal” (as opposed to “equitable”) title when the parties
    signed the lease, reasoning that such questioning called for legal conclusions.
    PanIQ has not challenged these rulings on appeal.
    11
    respect to the ownership of the Woolworth Building,” “no one from Rivera …
    or Capital … represented the transaction had closed,” PanIQ “was made
    aware of the facts[] which it claims were misrepresentations made by
    [Rivera],” and “[t]here were no material misrepresentations of fact concerning
    [Rivera]’s ability to [l]ease the [p]remises at issue ….” PanIQ and Parker
    have not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting these
    determinations. Given these unchallenged findings, PanIQ and Parker have
    failed to establish that Rivera and Capital engaged in fraud.
    Even if we were to accept the premise of PanIQ and Parker’s
    argument—that Rivera and Capital committed fraud—the asserted fraud
    would, at most, render the lease voidable, not void. “California law
    distinguishes between fraud in the ‘execution’ or ‘inception’ of a contract and
    fraud in the ‘inducement’ of a contract. In brief, in the former case ‘ “the
    fraud goes to the inception or execution of the agreement, so that the
    promisor is deceived as to the nature of his act, and actually does not know
    what he is signing, or does not intend to enter into a contract at all, mutual
    assent is lacking, and [the contract] is void. In such a case it may be
    disregarded without the necessity of rescission.” ’ ” (Rosenthal v. Great
    Western Financial Securities Corp. (1996) 
    14 Cal.4th 394
    , 415 (Rosenthal).)
    “Fraud in the inducement, by contrast, occurs when ‘ “the promisor
    knows what he is signing but his consent is induced by fraud, mutual assent
    is present and a contract is formed, which, by reason of the fraud, is voidable.
    In order to escape from its obligations the aggrieved party must rescind ....” ’ ”
    (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 415.) “Despite its defects, a voidable
    transaction, unlike a void one, is subject to ratification by the parties.”
    (Safarian v. Govgassian (2020) 
    47 Cal.App.5th 1053
    , 1067 (Safarian); see
    Mendoza v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2016) 
    6 Cal.App.5th 802
    , 810 [“[A]
    12
    voidable contract or assignment is one that the parties to it may ratify and
    thereby give it legal force and effect....”].)
    It is uncontested that PanIQ freely and intentionally executed the
    lease. Further, PanIQ was aware of the material terms of the lease—i.e.,
    that it was a five-year commercial lease for basement space in the Woolworth
    Building. Given these uncontested facts, we have no trouble concluding that
    mutual assent existed and the alleged misrepresentations, at most,
    constituted fraud in the inducement. (Orozco v. WPV San Jose, LLC (2019)
    
    36 Cal.App.5th 375
    , 402–403 [“ ‘ “ ‘[W]here the promisor knows what he is
    signing but his consent is induced by fraud, mutual assent is present and a
    contract is formed, which, by reason of the fraud, is voidable.’ ” ’ ”].)
    Therefore, the alleged fraud would merely render the lease voidable, subject
    to ratification by the parties. (Safarian, supra, 47 Cal.App.5th at p. 1067.)
    The trial court found PanIQ ratified the lease, a finding that is amply
    supported by substantial evidence in the record. PanIQ’s witnesses testified
    they learned Rivera did not own title to the Woolworth Building on June 11,
    2015, when Williams appeared on-site and requested that PanIQ halt its
    tenant improvements and vacate the premises. Witnesses for both sides
    testified that Capital, on behalf of Rivera, thereafter offered to rescind the
    lease and refund PanIQ’s deposit and prepaid rent. But PanIQ—with full
    knowledge that escrow had not closed—declined the offer. Instead, it elected
    to accept a rent reduction, retook possession of the leased premises, and
    accepted the benefits of the lease for another five months. Thus, even if
    Rivera and Capital committed fraud in the inducement, substantial evidence
    supported the trial court’s determination that PanIQ ratified the lease.
    13
    Based on the foregoing, we conclude PanIQ and Parker have not
    established that the lease was void or otherwise without legal effect.3
    Therefore, they have not demonstrated reversible error as to the portion of
    the judgment concerning Rivera’s cross-complaint.
    IV
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Rivera and Capital are entitled to their
    costs on appeal.
    McCONNELL, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BENKE, J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    3     Because the trial court did not err in finding the written lease valid, we
    do not address the parties’ arguments regarding whether Rivera and PanIQ
    entered an oral or implied lease and, if so, whether the Statute of Frauds
    barred enforcement of the oral or implied lease.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D076141

Filed Date: 11/18/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/18/2020