This appeal arises out of a slander of title action initiated by plaintiffs in June 1983. Plaintiffs prevailed at a jury trial, but this court reversed and remanded for a new trial on defendant’s statute of limitations defense because the trial court had failed to instruct the jury that the knowledge of plaintiffs’ attоrney was imputed to plaintiffs. After remittitur, defendant obtained summary judgment on the slander of title cause of action on the basis of the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs challenge this summary judgment. We conclude that the doctrine of equitable tolling applies and therefore reverse the judgment.
Discussion
The background of this long-running dispute is set forth in
Stalberg
v.
Western Title Ins. Co.
(1991)
A. Accrual
“[T]he limitations period begins [to run] when the plaintiff suspects, or should suspect, that [it] has been wronged.”
(Jolly
v.
Eli Lilly & Co.
(1988)
The undisputed facts support defendant’s claim that in 1979 plaintiffs were aware of facts sufficient to cause them to suspect that defendant had slandered their title. Plaintiffs are downstream property owners. Defendant is their title insurer. Between 1963 and 1974, defendant drafted and
In February 1979 plaintiffs’ attorney became aware that defendant had recorded the upstream property owners’ deeds containing the fictitious easement. In May 1979, plaintiffs’ attorney learned that, although defendant was the title insurer for the upstream property owners, defendant had not insured “any of [thе upstream property owners] as having an easement over the plaintiffs’ lands.” In November 1979, plaintiffs’ attorney discovered that the description of the fictitious easement in the upstream property owners’ deeds had probably been drafted by defendant. Plaintiffs were not ultimately required to pay any legal fees for their attorney’s services prior to January 1981. They paid for half of their attorney fees incurred after that date.
The undisputed facts establish that plaintiffs’ attorney was aware, in 1979, that (1) the 60-foot wide easement over plaintiffs’ land was fictitious, (2) defendant had recorded the fictitious easement, and (3) although defendant had insured the upstream property owners’ title, it had
not
insured the 60-foot wide easement. Since plaintiffs’ attorney ought to have, “in good faith and the exercise of ordinary care and diligence,” communicated this information to plaintiffs, plaintiffs must be charged with knowledge of these facts. (Civ. Code, § 2332;
Lazzarevich
v.
Lazzarevich
(1952)
The fact that plaintiffs did not actually pay for litigation costs incurred prior to 1981 does not mean that they did not incur or suspect that they would incur pecuniary costs as a result of defendant’s slander of their title.
B. Equitable Estoppel
Plaintiffs assert that defendant should be equitably estopped from asserting the bar of the statute of limitations because of defendant’s “misrepresentations” and “non-disclosures” of pertinent facts to plaintiffs. If, by misrepresenting or concealing the facts, a defendant induces a plaintiff to delay filing an action, the defendant will be estopped from taking advаntage of his wrongful conduct.
(Pashley
v.
Pacific Elec. Ry. Co.
(1944)
Plaintiffs claim that they relied to their detriment upon numerous misrepresentations by defendant. We conclude that none of these alleged misrepresentations could have induced plaintiffs to delay filing their slander of title cause of action. In both 1971 and 1978, dеfendant told plaintiffs that there were no easements recorded over their property in favor of the upstream property owners. Plaintiffs could not have relied upon these statements to their detriment because, even in 1971, plaintiffs were already aware of recorded deeds containing the fictitious easement. Defendant also told plaintiffs, in 1978, that plaintiffs’ attorney’s “continued representation of you shall in no way prejudice any rights or claims you may have against this company pursuant to the terms of our title policy.” In December 1981, defendant wrоte to plaintiffs and offered the following explanation for its conduct. “We assumed no responsibility for the [fictitious] easement deed . . . and specifically denied the issuance of any title insurance [to the upstream property owners] as to said easement. We had no duty to inform you of such deed, especially since it would not be in your respective chains of title.”
Defendant’s representations were confined to its obligations as plaintiffs’ title insurer. If this were an action based on defendant’s breach of a duty
C. Equitable Tolling
Plaintiffs ask us to apply the doctrine of equitable tolling to relieve them from the bar of the statute of limitations. “[T]he equitable tolling doctrine fosters the policy of the law of this state which favors avoiding forfeitures and allowing good faith litigants their day in court.”
(Addison
v.
State of California
(1978)
The record before us supports the application of the doctrine of equitable tolling.
1
When plaintiffs first discovered the existence of the fictitious easement, they were unawаre of the role defendant had played in creating the easement. Plaintiffs pursued the legal remedy which most
Since plaintiffs selected the legal remedy “designed to lessen the extent of [their] injuriеs,” gave timely notice to defendant and acted reasonably and in good faith in pursuing first the quiet title action and then this action, equity favors tolling the limitations period unless prejudice to defendant will result therefrom.
(Addison
v.
State of California, supra,
The policy behind the statute of limitations does not outweigh the injustice which would result from plaintiffs’ loss of their cause of action. “[T]he primary purpose of statutes of limitation is to prevent the assertion of stale claims by plаintiffs who have failed to file their action until
Since the record reflects that plaintiffs are entitled to the benefits of the doctrine of equitable tolling and defendant is not prejudiced thereby, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to defendant on its statute of limitations defense.
Conclusion
The judgment is reversed. Plaintiffs shall recover their appellate costs.
Premo, Acting P. J., and Wunderlich, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 13, 1994, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 15, 1994.
Notes
In their appellate briefing on this issue, both pаrties focus their arguments on the California Supreme Court’s decision in
Lambert
v.
Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.
(1991)
Lambert has no bearing on the application of the doctrine of equitable tolling to the case before us. The seminal California Supreme Court case on the doctrine of equitable tolling is Addison, not Lambert. Lambert is a novel extension of the equitable tolling doctrine to a situation where the action involved a continuing duty. Because this case does not involve a continuing duty, Lambert is inapplicable. We therefore analyze the equitable tolling issue in accordance with the California Supreme Court’s explication of that doctrine in Addison.
At oral argument, defendant suggested that it would suffer prejudice because the individual who signed defendant’s written 1978 and 1981 representations to plaintiffs regarding defendant’s obligations to plaintiffs as their title insurer is now dead. Since these representations are not material to the application of the doctrine of equitable tolling to this case, defendant’s assertion of prejudice has no substance.
Defendant also claims that the doctrine of equitable tolling cannot be applied because plaintiffs failed to make a timely assertion that the statute of limitations should bе equitably tolled. We disagree. The facts necessary to such an assertion were alleged in the complaint, and plaintiffs’ response to defendant’s motion for summary judgment asserted that the doctrine of equitable tolling should be applied.
The cause of action accrued sometime in 1979 between February and November. The three-year limitations period therefore expired sometime in 1982.
