Opinion
Plaintiffs Gerald Geernaert and his wife Pamela Geernaert brought this action for damages against two defendants who formerly owned their residence, alleging fraudulent misrepresentation and concealment regarding significant structural and foundation problems with the property. The trial court dismissed the case after determining, on a demurrer, that defendants owed no duty to plaintiffs which would subject them to liability.
We will conclude that the lower court’s ruling is inconsistent with the Restatement Second of Torts section 533 and subsequent California cases that have followed it, and will therefore reverse the judgment.
Background
This appeal, from a judgment of the superior court after it sustained defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend, presents us with a pure question of law.
(Mirlcin
v.
Wasserman
(1993)
Plaintiffs are the owners of a single-family home in Walnut Creek. Defendant Robert J. Mitchell owned the property from May 1978 until October 1982, when he sold it to defendant Mildo Construction, Inc. (Mildo) of whom Milton Perlow and George Furtado were owners and directors. 1 In November 1983, Mildo/Perlow sold the house to defendant Cynthia Payne. Plaintiffs purchased the home from Payne, who is not a party to this appeal, in July 1984.
Plaintiffs allege that when Mitchell sold the house in 1982 he falsely and fraudulently represented to prospective purchasers that (a) the foundation was supported by jacks, which was normal for the area, (b) there were no foundation problems, (c) the residence was sound, and (d) all modifications were done to code. In fact Mitchell, who had substantial expertise and background in construction, had experienced soil subsidence problems and had installed perimeter piers and metal jacks to prevent further settlement (which was not a normal method of supporting foundations in the area). Mitchell also knew that his modifications were not performed to code and that the residence was not “sound.”
It is further alleged that Mitchell made the foregoing misrepresentations of fact to and concealed the true facts from Mildo/Perlow when he sold the house to them with the intent of inducing them to purchase it; that Mitchell intended or had reason to expect that the misrepresentations and half-truths would be repeated to subsequent purchasers of the residence who would rely on them; and that they were in fact passed on from Mildo/Perlow to Payne and from Payne to plaintiffs in order to induce them to buy the house.
As an alternate theory of recovery, plaintiffs allege that Mitchell did disclose the foundation problems to Mildo/Perlow, who then concealed the true facts and made the aforesaid misrepresentations to Payne with the intent of inducing her to buy the house; that Mildo/Perlow intended or had reason to expect that these misrepresentations and/or concealments would be passed on by Payne to subsequent purchasers such as plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs did in fact rely on the repetition of the false statements and concealments to their detriment. 2
Mitchell and Mildo/Perlow each filed general demurrers to the complaint. The trial court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend on the ground that these defendants made no statements to nor withheld information from plaintiffs; that any statements or concealments were not relied on by plaintiffs; and that plaintiffs were not a class of persons that the demurring defendants intended to deceive.
I
It has traditionally been the law in this state that to be liable for actionable fraud the defendant must intend his representation (or concealment) be relied upon by a particular person or persons. (5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts, § 707, p. 807.) However, it is also recognized that the defendant will not escape liability if he makes a misrepresentation to one person
intending
that it be repeated and acted upon by the plaintiff. (See
Simone
v.
McKee
(1956)
In this case the trial court’s ruling appears to be based on
Cohen
v.
Citizens Nat. Trust etc. Bank
(1956)
Some 20 years after
Cohen,
section 533 of the Restatement Second of Torts (section 533) was published by the American Law Institute (ALI). It states, “The maker of a fraudulent misrepresentation is subject to liability for pecuniary loss to another who acts in justifiable reliance upon it if the misrepresentation,
although not made directly to the other, is made to a third person and the maker intends or has reason to expect that its terms will be repeated or its substance communicated to the other,
and that it will influence
Clearly
Cohen
would not have been decided the same way under section 533. Although he could not have
intended
unknown third parties to rely on his fraudulent concealment, a jury might conclude that Acker had
reason to expect
that the person on whom he perpetrated the fraud would resell the illegal apartments to the buyer who would then discover their existence. A duty to plaintiffs could therefore attach even though Acker did not know of their existence at the time he sold the building. (See
Crystal Pier Amusement Co.
v.
Cannan
(1933)
The rule stated in section 533 has been accepted by
post-Cohen
California cases involving indirect deception. In
Varwig
v.
Anderson-Behel Porsche/
Audi,
Inc.
(1977)
Liability under section 533 was further extended by this division in
Barnhouse
v.
City of Pinole
(1982)
While we believe the result in Barnhouse is sound, its uncritical equation of “foreseeability” with “reason to expect” as that term is used in section 533, is unfortunate. In its comments under the more general section 531, the ALI carefully distinguishes the concept of foreseeability with “reason to expect,” making clear that the latter term bears more similarity to actual intent to cause third party reliance than it does to “foreseeability.” “Virtually any misrepresentation is capable of being transmitted or repeated to third persons, and if sufficiently convincing may create an obvious risk that they may act in reliance upon it. . . . This risk is not enough for the liability covered in this Section. The maker of the misrepresentation must have information that would lead a reasonable man to conclude that there is an especial likelihood that it will reach those persons and will influence their conduct.” (Rest.2d Torts, supra, §531, com. d, at p. 68, italics added.) This is in accord with the holdings of other state and federal courts, which “have not gone so far as to extend protection to a plaintiff whose reliance on a fraudulent statement was merely within the foresight of reasonable people . . . .” (2 Harper et al., The Law of Torts (2d ed. 1986) § 7.2, p. 387, fn. omitted.)
In
Barnhouse
and
Varwig
the defendants were commercial sellers whose knowledge that the recipient of their deception would pass it on to subpurchasers was fairly apparent. In private real estate transactions “reason to expect” becomes more difficult to establish. As the ALI comment points out, “[t]here must be something in the situation
known to the maker
[of the misrepresentation] that would lead a reasonable man to govern his conduct on the assumption that this [transmission to a third party] will occur.”
In the present context, whether a seller of real property had “reason to expect” transmission to the plaintiff depends upon (1) the extent of the seller’s knowledge of resale to a particular person or class of persons and (2) the likelihood that the particular misrepresentation (or concealment) would be passed on to them. A seller’s liability under this standard becomes more problematic and difficult to establish with each intervening resale and with each passing year between the occurrence of the original fraud and the lawsuit. Consistent with the rule requiring specificity in pleading fraud
(Committee on Children’s Television, Inc.
v.
General Foods Corp.
(1983)
In the complaint at bar, plaintiffs have stated facts that would support causes of action for fraud and concealment under section 533. It is alleged that each defendant either misrepresented or failed to disclose known material facts regarding soil subsidence and structural problems with the house when selling it to his purchaser, and that each defendant either intended or expected that the misrepresentations would be repeated and/or the nondisclosures be transmitted to plaintiffs. Mildo/Perlow, a corporation which quickly turned around and sold the house presumably for commercial gain, had special reason to expect the fraud to be transmitted to someone like plaintiffs, who purchased it less than a year after its sale to Payne. Although Mitchell was two sales removed from plaintiffs, it is alleged that he used his construction expertise to take extraordinary measures to conceal the true condition of the property and therefore knew there was a strong likelihood that the deception would be passed on to a subsequent buyer.
It should be emphasized that this case reaches us after the sustaining of a demurrer. Plaintiffs must still convince a trier of fact that each defendant not
We also do not mean to imply that a seller’s liability for indirect fraud may not be resolved by demurrer or summary judgment. Those who are without guilty knowledge or who had no reason to expect reliance by the plaintiffs will still be entitled to expeditious relief upon a proper showing.
II
Mitchell challenges the misrepresentation cause of action against him on a separate ground. He asserts that while the complaint alleges that Mitchell uttered several specific false statements and half-truths about the property to Mildo/Perlow, it is not alleged that Payne repeated the same statements to them, but only that she “denied knowledge” of structural problems.
Mitchell is incorrect. Plaintiffs affirmatively allege that Mitchell’s misrepresentations to Mildo/Perlow, were repeated by Payne to plaintiffs. Although later in the complaint plaintiffs are less than clear about what Payne actually misrepresented to them, at best this created an uncertainty or ambiguity in the pleadings, reachable only by special demurrer. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.10, subd. (f); 5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Pleading, § 924, p. 361.) Since Mitchell failed to specially demur to the complaint, this alleged defect is not cognizable on appeal.
The judgments appealed from are reversed with directions to the trial court to enter a new order overruling the demurrers.
Kline, P. J., and Phelan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 2, 1995, and respondents’ petitions for review by the Supreme Court were denied April 13, 1995.
Notes
Furtado did not appear, but was dismissed after the filing of a stipulation that he was sued in the same capacity as Perlow. Mildo, a now dissolved corporation, Furtado and Perlow are collectively referred herein to as Mildo/Perlow.
Plaintiffs explain that Mitchell, in deposition testimony, had contradicted what Mildo/ Perlow had told them and stated that in fact he had disclosed “everything he knew” about soil and foundation problems to Mildo/Perlow. Thus, “[plaintiffs are uncertain as to whom to believe on this issue . . . and make [these] further allegations against [Mildo/Perlow] under the assumption that Robert J. Mitchell’s testimony will be found credible.”
Defendants cite BAJI No. 12.50 (1989 rev.) as supportive of their position. The instruction states, in relevant part: “The [representation] [promise] must have been made with the intent to induce some particular person or persons to act in reliance upon it and the party making the [representation] [promise] is liable only to these persons to whom the [representation] [promise] was made with such intent. If others become aware of the [representation] [promise] and act upon it, there is no liability even though the party who made the [representation] [promise] should reasonably have foreseen such a possibility.
“A [representation] [promise] does not have to be made directly to the person who is intended to act upon it, but may be made to a third person with the intention that it shall be communicated to the person who is intended to act upon it." (Italics added, some original brackets omitted.)
To the extent that the BAJI instruction tells the jury that one must intend for his fraud to be transmitted to third persons to incur liability to them, it is out of step with section 533 and current California law. As indicated, if the defendant “has reason to expect” that his material misstatements or nondisclosures would be passed on to and relied upon by the plaintiffs, he is liable to them.
