Opinion
Small-business owner Jong Seau Chhour appeals the dismissal of his inverse condemnation action after the superior court sustained a demurrer without leave to amend. He claims he was entitled to seek compensation for loss of business goodwill and for damage to other business property. We reverse in part and otherwise affirm.
I
The first amended complaint alleged plaintiff was the owner of CBS Seafood Restaurant. He leased space in the Valley View Shopping Center, located in Buena Park, from Pine Realty, Inc. He had improved the premises, installed fixtures and equipment, and purchased inventory and. supplies. His business was established and had repeat patronage.
The shopping center lease provided in article 15, “Eminent Domain,” that it would terminate if the property was taken by eminent domain, which included a voluntary sale by the landlord under the threat of condemnation. The lease stated, “all damages awarded or other sums or awards paid on account of any condemnation or taking under the power of eminent domain of the Demised Premises . . . shall belong to and be the sole property of Landlord, whether such damages or other sums are awarded as compensation for loss or diminution in value of the leasehold, or for the fee of the Demised Premises, or otherwise; and in no event shall Tenant have any claim whatsoever against Landlord for loss or diminution in value of the leasehold or for the value of any unexpired term of [the] lease, Tenant hereby expressly waiving any such right or claim; provided, however, Tenant shall be entitled to any award or portion thereof made for or on account of any loss or cost to which Tenant might be put in removing Tenant’s merchandise, fixtures, equipment or furnishings and/or for any loss or damage to the same.”
Article 7 of the lease required the written consent of the landlord to make structural changes, alterations or additions, and provided that “except for *277 movable trade fixtures, equipment and furnishings,” the improvements became the sole property of the landlord.
Pine advised plaintiff in May 1992 that it was terminating the lease pursuant to article 15. Not long after, defendant Community Redevelopment Agency of Buena Park notified plaintiff it had acquired the shopping center and that plaintiff could either vacate or execute a new month to month lease agreement. Plaintiff was told he would receive relocation benefits under Government Code section 7260 et seq. when it came time to move. Plaintiff signed the lease “in order to continue doing business as long as possible and to mitigate [his] damages.”
Defendant notified plaintiff in October 1992 that the lease would terminate January 8, 1993. Plaintiff has left the building.
The agency has refused to initiate eminent domain proceedings against plaintiff. It has offered to pay for some items, but plaintiff alleges he sustained injury to his business from the date defendant acquired the shopping center and has not received any compensation for most of the losses caused by the forced move. He seeks compensation for “improvements, fixtures and equipment, inventory, merchandise, and furnishings,” in addition to compensation for loss of business goodwill.
The superior court sustained the redevelopment agency’s demurrer to the first amended complaint, and Chhour appeals. 1
II
Plaintiff first complains that he was entitled to seek compensation for the loss of business goodwill. Defendant concedes its acquisition of the property was the substantial equivalent of condemnation of plaintiff’s business (see, e.g.,
Lanning
v.
City of Monterey
(1986)
Previously, courts had established “that ‘that form of property known as business or the goodwill of a business’
[Oakland
v.
Pacific Coast Lumber etc. Co.
(1915)
This judicial stinginess was displaced by the passage of Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.510. A remedial statute, the Legislature enacted section 1263.510 in 1975 as part of a comprehensive revision of eminent domain law. The section was added “in response to widespread criticism of the injustice wrought by the Legislature’s historic refusal to compensate condemnees whose ongoing businesses were diminished in value by a forced relocation.”
(People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller
(1984)
Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.510, subdivision (b) defines “goodwill” as “the benefits that accrue to a business as a result of its location,
*279
reputation for dependability, skill or quality, and any other circumstances resulting in probable retention of old or acquisition of new patronage.” The statute provides “monetary compensation for the kind of losses which typically occur when an ongoing small business is forced to move and give up the benefits of its former location.”
(People
ex rel.
Dept. of Transportation
v.
Muller, supra,
Plaintiff acknowledges that Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.510 does not directly control here. Legislative comments introducing the Eminent Domain Law state that “The provisions of the Eminent Domain Law are intended to supply rules only for eminent domain proceedings. The law of inverse condemnation is left for determination by judicial development.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 19 West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1982 ed.) § 1230.020, p. 395.) Similarly, the chapter dealing with compensation is prefaced with the following: “Likewise, this chapter in no way limits compensation that may be required by [the just compensation clause of the California Constitution, article I, section 19]. On the other hand, the ‘just compensation’ clause does not limit the compensation required by this chapter. This chapter is intended to provide rules of compensation for eminent domain proceedings; the law of inverse condemnation is left for determination by judicial development.” (Cal. Law Rev. Com. com., 19A West’s Ann. Code Civ. Proc. (1982 ed.) § 1263.010, p. 6.) According to the legislative commission minutes, the new law “is drafted with the intent to provide rules for eminent domain and that the title is neutral with respect to the applicability of any of its provisions to inverse condemnation actions.” (Italics added.)
“Neutral” does not mean antagonistic. Defendant has provided no rationale for a rule that would treat an indirect condemnee differently from a direct one where compensation for goodwill is concerned. In both instances the government has forced a business to relocate and has caused it to suffer some loss that will not be compensated under the relocation provisions of the Government Code. The only distinction is that the inverse condemnee has been forced to initiate a legal proceeding to recover the compensation. There is nothing in the eminent domain law suggesting the courts should not follow the Legislature’s lead when it comes to awarding just compensation, even if the compensation is not constitutionally mandated.
As plaintiff notes, the judiciary and the Legislature frequently cross-pollinate in this area for a good reason: “[I]t is well established that condemnation and inverse condemnation are merely different forms of the
*280
same limitation on governmental power.
(City of Oakland
v.
Oakland Raiders
(1982)
For example, in
Highland Realty Co.
v.
City of San Rafael
(1956)
Another example is
Salton Bay Marina, Inc.
v.
Imperial Irrigation Dist.
(1985)
Frustuck
v.
City of Fairfax
(1964)
Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.510 provides that the “owner of a business conducted on the property taken . . . shall be compensated for [the] loss of goodwill. . . .” (Italics added.) Unlike Frustuck, there is no impediment to its importation into the law of inverse condemnation.
At least one treatise tends to support plaintiff: “Loss of business goodwill may now be recoverable in an inverse condemnation action. ([Code Civ. Proc.] § 1263.510;
Hladek
v.
City of Merced
(1977) 69 [Cal.App.3d] 585, 589, [fn. 1] [
Defendant misstates the legislative history in support of its position. For example, it cites a legislative committee memorandum (73-66), and argues, “Concerns about the applicability of Section 1263.510 to inverse condemnation cases were expressed to the Law Revision Commission . . . .” The cited memo does reflect a potential problem area but not the one defendant suggests: “The State Bar Committee is concerned that the rules for compensation in eminent domain proceedings will be applied to inverse condemnation to deny compensation in some instances where it is presently allowed. *282 The committee recommends that an express disclaimer be incorporated in the beginning of the Eminent Domain Law to make clear that its provisions are not applicable in inverse condemnation proceedings.” (Italics added.)
As noted by the legislative committee that drafted the new eminent domain provisions, “relocation assistance provisions relating to business loss are quite limited, and goodwill is compensated only to the extent not covered by the relocation assistance provisions. While the goodwill is not an interest ‘acquired for public use,’ it is a loss sustained because of a taking for public use, [and] hence is properly compensable.”
Although we agree with defendant that the Legislature “did not intend to make [section] 1263.510 applicable to inverse condemnation actions,” neither did it intend to deny an inverse condemnee compensation that any other business owner, whose business is taken for a public purpose, can recover. In light of the Legislature’s express provision for direct condemnees, we conclude, as a matter of judicial development of the law, that goodwill is compensable in an inverse condemnation action to the same extent and with the same limitations on recovery found in Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.510. 3 The complaint properly sought compensation for goodwill; thus, the superior court erred.
III
Plaintiff’s complaint seeks an award for fixtures, improvements, equipment, and inventory. Defendant argues plaintiff is not entitled to compensation because the property was either “personal” or “movable,” or if not, was allocated to the landlord (Pine) under the terms of the lease. Plaintiff concedes under the lease it had no interest in the leasehold, i.e., “bonus value” (bonus value is the present value of the difference between the market rent and contract rent through the remaining lease term; see
New Haven Unified School Dist.
v.
Taco Bell Corp.
(1994)
Code of Civil Procedure section 1263.205 (which defendant concedes applies in inverse condemnation actions) provides for compensation for improvements pertaining to realty. This includes, among other things, machinery, equipment and furniture installed for use on property taken by eminent domain that cannot be removed without a substantial economic loss, or without substantial damage to the property on which it is installed.
*283
Personal property (i.e., removable property) is not compensable however. Presumably, it will, or should be, removed by its owner when the realty is acquired (see
Community Redevelopment Agency
v.
Abrams, supra,
A tenant and landlord may apportion a condemnation award any way they see fit, however, and a tenant may assign his rights in a condemnation award. (See generally, Annot., Validity, Construction, and Effect of Statute or Lease Provision Expressly Governing Rights and Compensation of Lessee Upon Condemnation of Leased Property (1994)
As noted above, article 15 of the lease generally assigned the condemnation award to the landlord, although it is debatable whether the primary concern was the value of the leasehold (which plaintiff makes no claim to): “Except as otherwise herein provided, all damages awarded or other sums or awards paid on account of any condemnation or taking ... of the Demised Premises . . . shall belong to and be the sole property of Landlord, whether such damages or other sums are awarded as compensation for loss or diminution in value of the leasehold, or for the fee of the Demised Premises, or otherwise-, and in no event shall Tenant have any claim whatsoever against Landlord for loss or diminution in value of the leasehold or for the value of any unexpired term of [the] lease, Tenant hereby expressly waiving any such right or claim . . . .” (Italics added.)
“[O]r otherwise” suggests tenant is entitled to nothing; but the last clause belies an absolutist interpretation: “Tenant shall be entitled to any award or portion thereof made for or on account of any loss or cost to which Tenant might be put in removing Tenant’s merchandise, fixtures, equipment or furnishings and/or for any loss or damage to the same.” Thus, plaintiff is clearly entitled to a portion of the award attributable to any loss or damage to his merchandise, fixtures, equipment or furnishings.
Defendant urges that under article 7 of the lease, nothing compensable was left to plaintiff. As noted above, subsection A of article 7 of the lease provided that “Any additions, alterations or changes in or to the Demised Premises shall be at Tenant’s sole cost and expense and, except for movable trade fixtures, equipment and furnishings, shall become at once part of the realty and be the sole property of Landlord.” (Italics added.)
At the risk of balancing too many angels on the head of this pin, we think defendant’s position has some obvious shortcomings. This case arises from a sustained demurrer; we have absolutely no idea what specific items of property plaintiff claims he lost. Although it seems unlikely that plaintiff may have lost compensable inventory because he operated a restaurant, defendant does not, and cannot by our reading of the lease, claim an assignment of compensation for this item. Moreover, with only the complaint and lease to look to, we cannot say that plaintiff may not have lost *285 compensable fixtures or equipment that he owned under the lease. For example, defendant agrees plaintiff owned “movable fixtures, equipment and furnishings.” If removal of these items would cause a substantial economic loss, they were compensable under the eminent domain law and that compensation was excepted from the general assignment to the landlord under subsection E of article 15 of the lease.
In short, we cannot accept at the pleading stage defendant’s contention that the lease provision and the eminent domain law meshed precisely, so that all property excepted to plaintiff under the lease was noncompensable. We agree with plaintiff that characterization of his inventory and other items for purposes of compensation is a mixed question of law and fact that must be decided item by item. The court erred. 5
IV
Plaintiff also argues he was entitled to seek precondemnation damages. Both parties cite
Klopping
v.
City of Whittier
(1972)
Plaintiff has not alleged or identified any specific “additional damages” caused by defendant’s actions. Any “damages for the deleterious impact[] on [plaintiff’s] business” will presumably be determined in conjunction with his claim for lost goodwill. We conclude the demurrer to the second cause of action was properly sustained.
The judgment is reversed in part with directions to overrule the demurrer to the first cause of action in the first amended complaint and is otherwise affirmed.
*286 No costs on appeal are awarded in this interim proceeding, but they may be assessed in favor of the party ultimately prevailing in the discretion of the superior court.
Sills, P. J., and Sonenshine, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 14, 1996. Werdegar, J., and Brown, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
The written dismissal order does not specify the court’s reasons, nor have the parties supplied a reporter’s transcript of any hearing held on the demurrer. We assume from the briefing the court did not rule against plaintiff on the grounds the complaint was uncertain (it probably would have sustained with leave to amend); defendant has not reiterated its claim below that plaintiff failed to separately “allege specific facts concerning a taking or damaging of property,” and that his “allegations [were] nonspecific, vague, ambiguous and conclusory . . . .” (He joined several other plaintiffs below.)
Section 1263.510 provides: “(a) The owner of a business conducted on the property taken, or on the remainder if such property is part of a larger parcel, shall be compensated for loss of goodwill if the owner proves all of the following: [ID (1) The loss is caused by the taking of the property or the injury to the remainder. H] (2) The loss cannot reasonably be prevented by a relocation of the business or by taking steps and adopting procedures that a reasonably prudent person would take and adopt in preserving the goodwill. [IQ (3) Compensation for the loss will not be included in payments under Section 7262 of the Government Code. [] (4) Compensation for the loss will not be duplicated in the compensation otherwise awarded to the owner. HI (b) Within the meaning of this article, ‘goodwill’ consists of the benefits that accrue to a business as a result of its location, reputation for dependability, skill or quality, and any other circumstances resulting in probable retention of old or acquisition of new patronage.”
It is therefore unnecessary to address plaintiff’s equal protection argument. (See
Beaty
v.
Imperial Irrigation Dist.
(1986)
The Supreme Court will apparently decide whether a tenant implicitly waives a claim to any compensation when it agrees the lease will terminate upon condemnation. (City of Vista v. Fielder (Cal.App.) review granted July 27, 1995 (S046856).)
We note that by leaving plaintiff out of the condemnation process, the redevelopment agency assumed the risk that it might be required to pay more than the total value of the property. (New Haven Unified School Dist. v. Taco Bell Corp., supra, 24 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1489-1490 (conc. & dis. opn. of Stein, J.).)
