Opinion
Cathryn Pellandini Valadao appeals from a judgment for specific performance and declaratory relief entered after the trial court granted plaintiff James Pellandini’s motion for summary adjudication.
*1317 The trial court determined that Pellandini’s right of first refusal to purchase property owned by Valadаo and her sister, Suzanne Wooldridge, as tenants in common, was triggered when Wooldridge gave Valadao a deed of her interest in the property in lieu of foreclosure after Wooldridge defaulted on a loan to Valadao secured by her interest.
We shall conclude that the deed in lieu of foreclosure did not trigger Pellandini’s right of first refusal because Wooldridge’s conveyance of her cotenant’s undivided one-half interest in the property as satisfaction of a debt owed her cotenant did not constitute a “bona fide offer for purchase of the property” by a third party as provided in the parties’ agreement.
Accordingly, we shall reverse the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Albert Pellandini, Sr. died in 1990, leaving 582 acres in trust to his grandchildren, consisting of four parcels. Three of the parcels were devised to James Pellandini. Half of parcel 4 was devised to James Pellandini, and the balance to James’s cousins, Suzanne Wooldridge and Cathryn Valadao.
Since Albert Pellandini, Sr.’s, death, the parties and their parents have been involved in a series of court actions. As part of a consolidated settlement agreement, the parties agreed to the creation by partition of a new parcel equivalent to the interests of Wooldridge and Valadao in the fourth parсel. The agreement stated the new parcel would be transferred in “fee simple to Cathryn and Suzanne, or their designee, as tenants in common.”
Pellandini, as trustee, agreed to pay the costs of partitioning parcel 4. In return, he was allowed to farm it during the then-current crop season. The agreement also provided: “The trustee [James Pellandini] will waive his right of first refusal on the property owned by Cathryn and Suzanne as granted in the trust as set forth in Paragraph One above. [<J[] Cathryn and Suzanne will, however, give James Pellandini a right of first refusal to meet any bona fide offer for purchase of the property, [f] The trustee shall cooperate in any efforts made by Cathryn and Suzanne to partition the interest which they hold as tenants in common distributed to them under Paragraph One so that they may each own their respective interests in fee simple.”
The deed to Wooldridge and Valadao as tenants in common was recorded on Marсh 18, 1999. Thereafter, Wooldridge conveyed her interest in parcel 4 to herself and her husband as community property. On April 9, 1999, Wooldridge and her husband signed a promissory note in favor of Valadao in the sum of $163,000. The note was secured by a deed of trust on their interest in parcel 4.
*1318 Wooldridge and her husband were to commence monthly payments of $1,500 on April 9, 1999. In fact, they made only two payments of $2,500 each—one on July 10, 1999, and one on March 10, 2000. On April 19, 2000, the Wooldridges gave Valadao a deed in lieu of foreclosure for parcel 4. The deed was recorded on May 2, 2000.
When Pellandini discovered the transfer from the Wooldridges to Valadao in June 2000, he demanded the opportunity to purchase Suzanne Wooldridge’s interest for the same consideration paid by Valadao. Valadao refused.
Pellandini filed this action in March 2001 demanding specific enforcement of the right of first refusal contained in a clause in the settlement agreement as well as damages for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and conspiracy. He alleged Suzanne Wooldridge and Valadao breached the settlement agreement by conveying Suzanne’s interest in parcel 4 to her cotenant Valadao without first offering him the opportunity to purchase the property for the same consideration paid by Valadao.
Valadao moved for summary judgment or summary adjudication. 1 Pellandini filed a cross motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication. The trial court granted Valadao’s motion as to the conspiracy cause of action, but denied the motion as to all other causes of action.
The trial court denied Pellandini’s motion for summary adjudication as to the breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and conspiracy causes of action, but granted his motion as to the sрecific performance cause of action and the declaratory relief cause of action as it related to the claim for specific performance. The trial court found the breach of contract claim moot in light of the ruling on specific performance.
The trial court reasoned a transfer by deed in lieu of foreclosure would “effectively nullify any right of first refusal.” Accordingly, the trial court found the “deed in lieu of foreclosure [was] a bona fide offer for purchase that triggered [Pellandini’s] right of first refusal.”
Subsequent to the trial court’s order granting summary adjudication, Pellandini and Valadаo stipulated to entry of judgment in favor of Pellandini for specific performance and declaratory relief. Pellandini agreed to dismiss the remaining causes of action without prejudice.
*1319 DISCUSSION
Summary judgment is subject to independent review on appeal. Furthermore, the “ ‘interpretation of a contract is subject to de novo review where the interpretation does not turn on the credibility of extrinsic evidence.’ [Citations.]”
(People ex rel. Lockyer v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
(2003)
The trial court focused on the voluntary nature of the deed given in lieu of foreclosure in deciding the right of first refusal was triggered by the conveyance. In
Campbell
v.
Alger
(1999)
While we agree that a deed in lieu of foreclosure could in some circumstances be used to circumvent a right of first refusal, we conclude the right of first refusal was not triggered in this case because there was no transfer of an interest in the property to a third person.
No published California case has considered whether a sale of property between co-owners triggers a right of first refusal. A handful of cases in other jurisdictions have considered the issue. The weight of authority in these jurisdictions supports our conclusion.
In
Prince v. Elm Investment Co., Inc.
(Utah 1982)
*1320
In
Baker v. McCarthy
(1982)
The court interpreted the reference to the grantors in the plural as contemplating “that an offer to purchase would be made by a third party to the grantors as a whole group. . . . Nowhere in the clause of first refusal does the language ‘the grantors or any of them’ or ‘any individual grantor’ appear. A sale to a third party by all of the grantors was clearly intended, and the plaintiff’s right of refusal was not intended to be used to make the plaintiff a tenant in common with any of the grantors.”
(Baker
v.
McCarthy, supra,
In
Koella v. McHargue
(Tenn.Ct.App. 1998)
In
Byron Material, Inc. v. Ashelford
(1975)
In
Wilson
v.
Grey
(Ky. 1978)
Finally, in
Rogers
v.
Neiman
(1971)
Pellandini has cited the sole case in which a court decided a transfer from one cotenant to another triggered the right of first refusal clause, and that case is distinguishable on its facts. In
Meyer v. Warner
(1968)
*1322 The Arizona case is distinguishable because the sale of the second one-half interest was a sale to a third party, a stranger to the original lease, which contained the right of first refusal.
Two separate rationales emerge from the foregoing cases. A bona fide sale occurs when the entire interest in the property is sold. A bona fide sale occurs when an interest in the property is sold to a third party.
In the present case the agreement referred to both Wooldridge and Valadao in the conjunctive, rather than the disjunctive. Additionally, the property was referred to in the singular, and no mention was made of a sale of either co-owner’s interest in the property, as opposed to the property аs a whole. This wording, together with the phrase “bona fide offer for purchase” indicates the right of first refusal was intended to be triggered by a sale of Wooldridge’s and Valadao’s combined interest to a third party. The agreement could have, but did not state, that the sisters would give Pellandini a right of first refusal to meet any bona fide offer for the purchase of either or both of their interests in the property to a third person or to each other. Similarly, in
Baker
v.
McCarthy, supra,
As in
Byron Material, Inc. v. Ashelford, supra,
We agree with the Utah Supreme Court that unless the agreement provides otherwise, a bona fide sale for purposes of a right of first refusal does not occur unless there is a transfer for value to a third party.
(Prince v. Elm Investment Co., Inc., supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Costs shall be awarded to appellant.
Nicholson, J, and Morrison, J., concurred.
Notes
The Wooldridges filed a petition in bankruptcy on May 14, 2002, thereby staying this action against Suzanne Wooldridge.
