Opinion
INTRODUCTION
A jury found that defendant CB&I Constructors, Inc. (defendant), negligently sparked a brush fire that caused significant damage to a ranch (the property) owned by plaintiff Martin Kelly (plaintiff). Because plaintiff had a personal reason to restore the property, the jury awarded plaintiff substantially more in damages to restore the property than the property was worth immediately before the fire. The trial court also instructed the jury that *447 plaintiff could recover damages for annoyance and discomfort and the jury awarded such damages, although plaintiff did not reside on the property at the time of the fire. The trial court doubled the amount awarded by the jury for tree damage pursuant to Civil Code section 3346, and awarded plaintiff attorney fees pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.9, which permits such awards in cases of trespass on property “under cultivation” or “intended or used for the raising of livestock.”
We hold as follows: (1) defendant forfeited any error in the jury verdict form; (2) the jury’s award of restoration damages in excess of the property’s value was supported by substantial evidence and was not excessive as a matter of law; (3) the undisputed evidence established that plaintiff did not reside on the property at the time of the trespass, and his storage of personal property there was not the type of “occupancy” that would justify his recovery of annoyance and discomfort damages; (4) tree damage caused by a negligently spread fire is wrongful injury to trees caused by a trespass subject to mandatory doubling pursuant to Civil Code section 3346, notwithstanding the general provision governing fire damage in Health and Safety Code section 13007; and (5) substantial evidence supported the trial court’s finding that plaintiff intended to use the property for raising livestock, entitling plaintiff to an award of attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.9.
BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background 1
1. The Property
The property at issue in this case is a 34-acre ranch located in oak woodland in Green Valley, California, in the hills of northern Los Angeles County between Santa Clarita and Lancaster. The property had three houses, referred to respectively as the upper ranch, middle ranch, and lower ranch. Each house had its own pasture. Other improvements included a vintage wooden bam, a garage, a kennel, chicken coops, tack buildings, stud bams, hay bams, and various utility buildings. The property had 150 to 200 oak trees and a running stream.
Plaintiff purchased the property in 1972. He moved into the upper ranch house with his family and lived there for 23 years. He sometimes rented out *448 the middle and lower ranches, and used the rental income to keep current on the mortgage. He moved away from the property in 1994 or 1995, after he retired and his son joined the Army. Plaintiff always planned to return to the ranch, however, and maintained the ranch as his permanent residence address.
After he moved out, plaintiff rented out all three houses, and the houses were occupied by various tenants from 1995 to the date of the fire in 2002. Plaintiff did not rent out the entire property, however. He continued to store tools, equipment and firewood in storage buildings on the property.
At trial, plaintiff testified that he intended to move back to the property “as soon as possible” with his fiancée and his adult son. Plaintiff and his fiancée intended to marry and move to the property once plaintiff’s fiancée had moved her business from Oxnard to Santa Clarita. Plaintiff’s son, a veteran, was disabled. At the property, plaintiff could care for his son, but they could still live in separate houses and maintain some independence and privacy. Plaintiff had not returned to the property, however, because his fiancée required daily medical treatment at a hospital in Woodland Hills, which was far from the property.
2. The Fire
In June 2002, defendant was erecting a municipal water tank approximately 15 miles from the property. Sparks ignited a large brush fire known as the Copper Canyon fire. The fire spread over 20,000 acres, including the property.
The fire burned the brush on the hillsides surrounding the property and destroyed many trees, including a number of oak trees. The fire completely destroyed the vintage wooden bam and damaged several other structures. The roof and comer of the middle ranch house also sustained fire damage.
3. The Mudslides
Between 1972 and 2002, plaintiff “never had any erosion whatsoever” on his property. After the fire, heavy rains resulted in mudslides that caused extensive damage to the property. For example, the mudslides essentially destroyed the lower ranch house, and gouged a gully more than 200 feet long, 15 feet wide and 12 feet deep across one of the pastures. The fire was a substantial factor in causing the mudslide damage because fire had destroyed the vegetation on the hills above the property.
4. The Damage
Plaintiff was a real estate broker before he retired. Plaintiff testified that his property was worth $1.6 million to $1.8 million at the time of the fire. *449 Plaintiff testified that the property had no market value whatsoever in its current condition because of the repairs that were required and the danger of future mudslides.
Plaintiff’s expert witness testified that the property was worth $1.8 million at the time of the fire. 2 She testified that the value of the property after the 2005 mudslide was very little or nothing because there was continuous debris flow, and one could not determine whether the flood control channels would be adequate or predict the final costs of restoring the property.
Plaintiff’s expert estimated the total cost of restoration of the stmctures and land would be approximately $2.8 million. This amount included, inter alia, $437,000 to rebuild the vintage bam; $590,375 to build an erosion and flood control system; $477,641 to restore the stream to its former course; and $423,168 to remove the silt and sand from the pastures and cover the pastures with a mulching mixture.
Plaintiff’s expert arborist appraised 91 trees on the property as of a time prior to their damage or destruction by the fire or subsequent mudslides, and valued them at $411,800. In addition, he valued 12 trees that had been washed away by the mudslides at $132,734, for a total of $544,534.
B. Procedural Background
In June 2003, plaintiff sued defendant and others for negligence and trespass. The trial court bifurcated the trial into liability and damages phases. In the liability phase, the jury rendered special verdicts finding that (1) defendant was negligent; (2) defendant’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing the Copper Canyon fire; (3) defendant was 90 percent at fault, and another defendant was 10 percent at fault; (4) defendant caused a fire to enter plaintiff’s property; (5) defendant was reckless; but (6) defendant did not act with malice.
As to the damages phase, the trial court instructed the jury, “If plaintiff has a genuine desire to repair the property for personal reasons, and if the costs of repair are reasonable given the damage to the property and the value after repair, then the costs of repair may be awarded even if they exceed the property’s loss of value.” The jury special verdict form asked the jury to determine if plaintiff had “a genuine desire to rebuild and repair his property for personal reasons” and, if so, “the present costs of rebuilding and repairing [plaintiff’s] real property.” The jury found that plaintiff had a genuine desire to rebuild for personal reasons, and determined plaintiff’s damages as follows: (1) $2,629,810 for the present costs of rebuilding and repairing the *450 property, not including the value of trees; (2) $375,000 in tree damage; (3) $99,000 in past lost rental income; and (4) $543,000 for discomfort, annoyance, inconvenience or mental anguish. The jury thus determined plaintiff’s total damages to be $3,646,810.
After trial, plaintiff moved pursuant to Civil Code section 3346 for an award of double the tree damages and for attorney fees pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.9. As relevant here, the trial court granted both motions. The trial court awarded plaintiff $756,900 in attorney fees; costs of $22,771.81; and expert witness fees of $73,832.81. After adjusting the jury’s damage award for defendant’s comparative fault, the trial court entered judgment in the total amount of $4,721,014.12.
Defendant moved for a new trial, arguing that the damages were excessive as a matter of law. Defendant also moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, arguing that (1) plaintiff was not entitled to recover annoyance and discomfort damages because he did not occupy the property at the time of the fire, and (2) Civil Code section 3346 did not apply to fire damage, so that plaintiff was not entitled to an award of double the tree damages. The trial court denied both motions. Defendant timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
A. Award of Restoration Costs
1. General Damages Principles
A plaintiff injured by tortious misconduct is entitled to recover damages in an “amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have been anticipated or not.” (Civ. Code, § 3333.) (2) For tortious injury to real property, the general rule is that the plaintiff may recover the lesser of (1) the diminution in the property’s fair market value, as measured immediately before and immediately after the damage; or the cost to repair the damage and restore the property to its pretrespass condition, plus the value of any lost use. The practical effect of this rule is to limit damages to property to the fair market value of the property prior to the damage.
(Safeco Ins. Co. v. J & D Painting
(1993)
Notwithstanding this general limitation, if a plaintiff has a personal reason to restore the property to its former condition, he or she may recover the
*451
restoration costs even if such costs exceed the diminution in value. This rule is sometimes referred to as the “ ‘personal reason’ exception.”
(Orndorff v. Christiana Community Builders
(1990)
2. The Jury Verdict Form
In response to an inquiry from this court, defendant contended for the first time that the trial court erred by submitting to the jury a special verdict form that contained no place for the jury to make a specific determination that the restoration costs were reasonable. By not objecting to the special verdict form in the trial court or raising any omission in the special verdict form as an issue on appeal in its opening brief, defendant forfeited any claim of error regarding the verdict form, and therefore we do not reach the issue of whether the verdict form resulted in any prejudicial error.
(Thompson Pacific Construction, Inc.
v.
City of Sunnyvale
(2007)
3. The Jury’s Award of Restoration Costs
Defendant argues that, because the jury’s damage award so vastly exceeded the value of the property, the award was excessive as a matter of law. We disagree.
We review the issues of law raised by defendant’s contentions de novo, and we review for substantial evidence the jury’s findings of fact. (See
Daro v. Superior Court
(2007)
Defendant asserts, in essence, that the restoration costs were unreasonable in this case because, when stated as a percentage of the property’s value, they far exceeded any other award approved by a court in California. In particular, defendant points out that the restoration costs awarded in this case exceeded the value of the property by 67 percent, whereas the court in
Heninger, supra,
Although such comparisons might sometimes be useful (see, e.g.,
Bihun
v.
AT&T Information Systems, Inc.
(1993)
The jury found that the personal reason exception applied, and defendant does not challenge that finding on appeal. Accordingly, plaintiff was entitled to recover restoration costs in excess of the property’s diminution in value, if those costs were reasonable under the circumstances. Defendant challenged the damage award by questioning specific items of restoration work that, it contended, represent a “windfall,” putting the property in better condition than it was prior to the fire.
As noted, we view the evidence most favorably to the verdict.
(Westphal v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., supra,
Plaintiff testified that he intended to move back to the property with his fiancée and disabled son as soon as practicable, and that the restoration work was necessary to make that possible. There was thus substantial evidence that plaintiff intended to restore the property for use as his primary residence. Defendant does not specifically challenge the costs of restoring the houses.
There was substantial evidence that the damage to the property from the fire and mudslides was extensive, and that it rendered the property unsuitable for plaintiff’s purposes. With respect to restoration costs questioned by defendant, there was evidence of the following: $590,000 for a new drainage system, which was necessary to protect against flooding that might result from the damage caused by the fire and changes to the topography due to subsequent fire-related erosion; $477,641 to fill in a streambed created by a past mudslide that had essentially destroyed the lower pasture; and $423,168 to remove dirt from and add new topsoil to pastures to restore the pastures to a condition suitable for horse grazing. These restoration costs were reasonably related to restoring the property to a condition similar to its condition when plaintiff previously lived there—that is, safe, habitable by plaintiff and his family, and suitable for use as a horse ranch. Moreover, there was substantial evidence that plaintiff had no meaningful alternative to restoration, as the property was unmarketable due to the damage caused by defendant. Accordingly, there was substantial evidence that a reasonable person in plaintiff’s circumstances was justified in incurring the costs to restore the property, notwithstanding that the restoration costs substantially exceeded the property’s value before the fire. (Cf.
Heninger, supra,
Defendant argues that it presented evidence of less costly methods of restoration. In reaching its verdict, however, the jury implicitly rejected that evidence and defendant’s arguments in that regard. Defendant’s contentions on appeal essentially ask this court to reweigh that evidence and reconsider those arguments. That is not our function. Rather, we determine whether, after resolving all conflicts and drawing all inferences most favorably to the prevailing party, there is substantial evidence to support the jury’s verdict.
(Scott v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
(1995)
We conclude that there was substantial evidence that a person in plaintiff’s position reasonably could choose to restore the property to its prefire condition and that the damages awarded by the jury reasonably were necessary for such restoration. Accordingly, the damage award was not unreasonable or excessive as a matter of law.
B. Damages for Annoyance and Discomfort
1. Additional Background
Prior to the damage trial, defendant moved in limine to exclude evidence that plaintiff suffered annoyance and discomfort damage on the ground that plaintiff did not occupy the property at the time the damage occurred. The trial court denied the motion. Defendant thereafter requested that the jury be instructed that to recover such damages, plaintiff had to be an occupant of the property. The trial court denied defendant’s request. The trial court’s instruction to the jury with respect to annoyance and discomfort damages made no reference to the requirement that plaintiff occupy the property to recover such damages. 3 Defendant asserts that the instruction constituted prejudicial error.
The facts relevant to whether plaintiff is entitled to damages for annoyance and discomfort are undisputed. Whether the uncontradicted facts permit plaintiff to recover such damages is a question of law that we review de novo.
(Souza
v.
Westlands Water Dist.
(2006)
*456 2. No Right to Recover Damages for Annoyance and Discomfort
In
Kornoff v. Kingsburg Cotton Oil Co.
(1955)
The parties thus seem to agree that plaintiff is entitled to annoyance and discomfort damages only if he was an “occupant” of the property, and that “occupancy” necessarily entails some physical presence on the property. We agree with both propositions. The issue is thus whether plaintiff “occupied” the property by storing some personal property for purposes of recovering annoyance and discomfort damages. We conclude that he did not.
We do not question that a nonresident property owner may suffer mental or emotional distress from damage to his or her property. But annoyance and discomfort damages are distinct from general damages for mental and emotional distress. Annoyance and discomfort damages are intended to compensate a plaintiff for the loss of his or her peaceful occupation and enjoyment of the property. As the court explained in
Webster
v.
Boone
(Colo.Ct.App. 1999)
This view is consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in
Kornoff, supra,
Limiting annoyance and discomfort damages to the immediate and personal possessor of property is consistent with the authorities. In
Komoff,
for example, the California Supreme Court relied on the Restatement Second of Torts, section 929.
(Kornoff, supra,
California cases upholding an award of annoyance and discomfort damages have involved a plaintiff who was in immediate possession of the property as a resident or commercial tenant.
(Acadia, California, Ltd.
v.
Herbert
(1960)
Appellate courts in other jurisdictions also have permitted the recovery of annoyance and discomfort damages. All of the cases of which we are aware involved a plaintiff who was in immediate personal possession of the property. (See, e.g.,
Felton Oil Co., L.L.C. v. Gee
(2004)
Although the storage of personal property entails some use of the premises and implies that plaintiff retained some possessory interest, the foregoing discussion demonstrates that the nature of the injury compensated by annoyance and discomfort damages involves some personal effect that arises from the plaintiff’s personal, physical presence on the premises. Furthermore, the notion that storage of personal property on the premises constitutes “occupancy” is not consistent with the general understanding of that term. The term “occupant” has “historically been used in legal writing to denote ‘one who takes possession of property.’ ” (Garner, A Dict, of Modem Legal Usage (2d ed. 1995) p. 612, col. 1.) Black’s Law Dictionary defines an occupant as “[o]ne who has possessory rights in . . . certain property or premises.” (Black’s Law Dict. (9th ed. 2009) p. 1184, col. 1.) In common parlance, to “occupy” means, as relevant here, “to reside in as an owner or tenant.” (Webster’s 3d New Internat. Dict. (2002) p. 1561, col. 1.)
Accordingly, we hold that a nonresident property owner who merely stores personal property on the premises is not entitled to recover annoyance and discomfort damages from a trespass. Plaintiff was adequately compensated for damage to the property’s habitability by the jury’s award of $99,000 for lost rental income. The trial court thus erred in awarding annoyance and discomfort damages to plaintiff in this case.
C. Tree Damage Multiplier Pursuant to Civil Code Section 3346
The jury awarded plaintiff $375,000 for damage to trees on the property. The trial court doubled that award pursuant to Civil Code section 3346, subdivision (a) (section 3346). Defendant argues that the trial court erred in doubling the tree damage pursuant to section 3346 because, as the Court of Appeal held in
Gould
v.
Madonna
(1970)
We review issues of statutory interpretation de novo.
(Barner v. Leeds
(2000)
At the outset, we note that it is now established that the spread of a negligently set fire to the land of another constitutes a trespass. (See
Elton
v.
Anheuser-Busch Beverage Group, Inc.
(1996)
Employing the settled rules of statutory interpretation, we examine the language of the two statutes at issue.
(City of Santa Monica v. Gonzalez
(2008)
Based on their plain language, these statutes are easily harmonized. Under section 13007, a tortfeasor generally is liable to the owner of property for damage caused by a negligently set fire. “[T]he statute places no restrictions on the type of property damage that is compensable.”
(McKay
v.
State of California
(1992)
We question the reasoning in
Gould, supra,
The court reasoned that, until 1931, Civil Code section 3346, subdivision (a) and former Political Code section 3344 both provided that a person who negligently allowed a fire to extend beyond his own land was liable in treble damages to the injured party.
(Gould, supra,
In 1957, the Legislature enacted section 3346, providing for damage multipliers for wrongful injuries to trees on the land of another.
(Gould, supra,
The court in
Gould, supra,
The fundamental problem with the decision in
Gould, supra,
The plain language of section 3346 is not ambiguous. The statute authorizes an award of double damages “[f]or wrongful injuries to . . . trees . . . upon the land of another, . . . where the trespass was casual or involuntary . . . .” (§ 3346, subd. (a).) Under any reasonable interpretation, fire damage constitutes an “injur[y]” to a tree. There is no dispute that the fire was a trespass (see
Elton, supra,
50 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1305-1307), or that the trespass in this case was “casual or involuntary” within the meaning of section 3346.
5
When there is no ambiguity or absurdity on the face of the statute, we may not manufacture one by resort to the legislative history. (See
People
v.
Hagedorn
(2005)
D. Attorney Fees Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 1021.9
Defendant argues the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff attorney fees pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.9 (section 1021.9). That section provides, “In any action to recover damages to personal or real property resulting from trespassing on lands either under cultivation or intended or used for the raising of livestock, the prevailing plaintiff shall be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees in addition to other costs, and in addition to any liability for damages imposed by law.”
“Interpretation of a statute and its application to a given situation are matters of law to be determined by the court.”
(Haworth
v.
Lira
(1991) 232
*464
Cal.App.3d 1362, 1367 [
In
Haworth, supra,
The court held that the plaintiffs were entitled to their attorney fees under section 1021.9.
(Haworth, supra,
232 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1371-1372.) The plain language of the statute, the court reasoned, “does not indicate that the attorney fee right only inures to persons who are engaged in the commercial livestock industry.”
(Id.
at p. 1371.) Plaintiffs who use property to raise livestock for personal use also may recover attorney fees under the statute. The court noted that the plaintiffs “were experienced in horse husbandry”; plaintiffs had “purchased a mare in foal who gave birth ... to a foal”; plaintiffs “intended to sell the colt after birth”; the horse “was bred to be a thoroughbred jumper”; “plaintiffs raised goats, geese, ducks, chickens, and dogs on the property”; “one of plaintiffs’ goats gave birth to three kids . . and “a new goat was being used for breeding purposes on the property.”
(Id.
at pp. 1366-1367; cf.
Quarterman v. Kefauver
(1997)
“Livestock” is defined as “animals of any kind kept or raised for use or pleasure.” (Webster’s 3d New Internat. Dict.,
supra,
p. 1324, col. 3; see Black’s Law Dict.,
supra,
p. 1018, col. 2 [“Domestic animals and fowls that (1) are kept for profit or pleasure, (2) can normally be confined within boundaries without seriously impairing their utility, and (3) do not normally intrude on others’ land in such a way as to harm the land or growing crops.”].) A California statute defines “livestock” as “any cattle, sheep, swine, goat, or horse, mule, or other equine.” (Civ. Code, § 3080, subd. (a); see
Jakubaitis
v.
Fischer
(1995)
The evidence in this case established that the property was a rural horse property zoned for agricultural use.
7
In the past, the property had been used to breed a variety of animals, including birds, dogs and horses, and for a period plaintiff raised hogs and chickens on the property. The property had substantial facilities for horses, including stud bams and tack buildings. The property was advertised to tenants as being acceptable for “livestock-type purposes,” and most of the tenants had maintained horses or other animals while residing on the property. The structures, location, zoning and past use of the property all support the inference that the property was intended for raising livestock.
8
There was thus substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that plaintiff intended to use the property for livestock purposes. Moreover, the trial court’s judgment is presumed to be correct on appeal, and all intendments and presumptions are indulged in favor of its correctness.
(In re Marriage of Arceneaux
(1990)
Defendant contends that the property was not under cultivation or being used for raising livestock at the time of the fire, and that evidence showing past use of the property does not satisfy the requirements of section 1021.9. But there is no requirement in the statute that the property be used at the time of the wrong for raising livestock—the statute provides that the property may be “intended” for such use. That plaintiff used the property for livestock purposes in the past was probative of plaintiff’s intended use.
*466 Defendant further asserts that “boarding” horses is not the same as “raising” livestock. But there was substantial evidence that livestock— including birds, dogs and horses—had been bred on the property in the past, and the nature of the property and its improvements made the property suitable for such uses in the future. Accordingly, we need not reach the issue of when “boarding” becomes “raising” (see fh. 8, post), because there was substantial evidence in this case that defendant intended to “raise” livestock on the property. The trial court was justified in awarding attorney fees.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed insofar as it awarded plaintiff $543,000 in damages for annoyance and discomfort. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed. No costs are awarded.
Turner, P. J., and Armstrong, J., concurred.
Notes
We set forth the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, resolving all conflicts and drawing all inferences in favor of that verdict, and deferring to all implicit credibility determinations of the trier of fact. (See
Palm Medical Group, Inc. v. State Comp. Ins. Fund
(2008)
Defendant’s expert testified that the property was worth $710,000 before the fire.
The trial court instructed the jury, in relevant part: “[Plaintiff] may also recover damages that would reasonably compensate him for the discomfort, annoyance, inconvenience and mental anguish proximately caused by the Defendant’s act of trespass. A prior jury has already found that the Defendant’s conduct was an act of trespass, [f] The amount of damages to be awarded for discomfort, annoyance, inconvenience and mental anguish, is left to the sound judgment and discretion of the jury based upon the evidence.”
To the extent
Gould, supra,
“The phrase ‘casual or involuntary’ comes directly from the tree trespass statute in New York’s Field Code of 1848. In the mid-nineteenth century, ‘casual’ meant ‘casualty.’ [Citations.] Casualty, in turn, meant ‘accident or negligence’ and contrasted with ‘designedly and under a claim of right.’ [Citation.]”
(Matanuska Elec. Ass’n, Inc. v. Weissler
(Alaska 1986)
Defendant does not argue that giving section 3346 a literal reading would result in absurd consequences, so as to indicate a “latent ambiguity” in the statutory language. (See
In re Michele D.
(2002)
Pursuant to the applicable zoning provision, property zoned for agricultural use may be used, inter alia, for “[t]he raising of horses and other equine, cattle, sheep, goats, alpacas, and llamas, including the breeding and training of such animals.” (L.A. County Code, § 22.24.070, subd. B.) This provision suggests “raising” is a broad term that includes “breeding” and “training” but does not exclude maintaining or boarding.
Because of the past uses of the property, the livestock-related structures present on the property and plaintiffs intended use of the property, we need not determine at what point the possession of animals in a rural setting qualifies as “raising” livestock.
