Opinion
Thе primary issues arising out of this complex action involving a commercial lease concern whether the appointment of a receiver for a lessee no longer in possession constitutes a material breach justifying termination of the lease and forfeiture of a sublessee’s leasehold interests.
Background and Procedural Sequence
The genesis of this litigation concerns several parcels of real property situated in Sunnyvale, California. Plaintiff Superior Motels, Inc. (Superior) constructed a 100-unit hotel and an adjoining restaurant and cocktail lounge on one of the parcels in 1960. The other parcel remained unimproved. Superior thereafter operated the complex, which was commonly known as the Lamplighter Lodge.
In December of 1967, Superior sold the property and improvements to Lamplighter Properties, which immediately leased them back to Superior.
2
The term of the lease was 20 years, although Superior was granted the privilege to extend it for up to 20 additional years. Superior obligated itself
One of the lease’s provisions read as follows: “Either (a) the appointment of a receiver to take possession of all or substantially all of the assets of lessee, or (b) a general assignment by lessee for the benefit of creditors, or (c) any action taken or suffered by lessee under any insolvency or bankruptcy act shall constitute a breaсh of this lease by lessee.”
Superior continued operating the complex until 1969. On April 26th of that year, Superior executed an agreement whereby it assigned its interest in the lease to Royal Executive Inns of America, Inc. (REI), a Nevada corporation. Superior received 125,000 shares of REI capital stock and a cash sum to be determined according to a specified formula. The agreement included these provisions:
“7. In the event of any breach or default by REI of any terms or provisions to be performed by the Lessee under its lease with Lamplighter Properties, which it has assumed, Superior will promptly notify REI if and after it has received notice from Lamplighter Properties, and, thereafter, REI shall have fifteen (15) days to correct the deficiencies referred to in Lamplighter’s notice. Should REI fail to do so, in addition to the remedies provided by law, Superior shall have the remedies provided in provision 8 following.
“8. In the event of notice by the Lessor to the Lessee of default or breach of the lease agreement, Superior shall have the same rights of enforcement upon breach or default after the expiration of fifteen (15) days notice as it would have if it were the Lessor, including without limitation the right to cure the default, and the right of re-entry, without Court proceedings at the expiration of sixty (60) days after notice of default.”
REI was one of a number of business entities apparently controlled by REI’s chairman, Walter Wencke. Between 1969 and 1974 there followed a bewildering procession of corporate acquisitions, name changes, and restructurings, the specifics of which need not be detailed here. During this period one of REPs reincarnations, The Rinn Corporation, sublet the motel and restaurant to a wholly owned subsidiary named Rinn Motor Hotels, Inc. (Rinn Motor), which in turn subleased the motel to Rinns Sunnyvale Motor Hotel (Rinns Sunnyvale), a joint venture comprised of Rinn Motor and Walter and Dorothy Pabst. 4 The two subleases and the joint venture agreement were all executed on October 1, 1972. In May of 1974, The Rinn Corporation was renamed Sun Fruit, Ltd. (Sun Fruit), which like, REI, was incorporated in Nevada.
Following execution of the subleases and the joint venture agreement, Mr. Pabst began managing the motel on behalf of Rinns Sunnyvale. The monthly rent payments required by the 1967 master lease between Lamplighter and Superior were forwarded from Rinns Sunnyvale to Rinn Motor and then to Lamplighter.
Unbeknownst to all, Wencke was systematically looting the companies under his control. When matters began to deteriorate, and after Sun Fruit’s remaining directors (i.e., Wencke and Richard Mets) were at an impasse, Wencke applied to a Nevada state court and was appointed Sun Fruit’s receiver. 5 The order to this effect was filed August 7, 1975.
When the president of Real Estate Equities, Inc., the general partner of Lamplighter (see fn. 2,
ante,
p. 1041), learned of this development he urged Superior’s president to invoke the anti-receivership provision оf the lease. In a letter dated August 22, 1975, Superior advised Sun Fruit that Lamplighter
After 60 days had elapsed, Superior attempted to exercise its right of reentry but was rebuffed by Pabst and the president of Rinn Motor. The position of the joint venturers was that they had acquired possession by a sublease, which did not require written consent. Moreover, because “Lamplighter Properties has been accepting the rent for nearly three years,” Rinns Sunnyvale perceived no “violation of any agreements.”
Superior then served a three-day notice to quit possession on November 18th. Cited in the notice as reasons for this action were Sun Fruit’s receivership and the fact that Sun Fruit “claims that it has sublet the above premises to Walter Pabst and/or Rinn Motor .... That is why this notice is directed to all such entities [sic].” Superior advised that it “hereby declares to elect [to treat] the lease under whiсh you hold possession ... as forfeited.”
Receiving no satisfaction, Superior commenced this action by filing a “Complaint To Appoint Receiver, For Unlawful Detainer, To Regain Possession Of Leasehold And For Declaratory Relief’ six days later. Named as defendants were Sun Fruit, Rinn Motor, Walter Pabst, and Rinns Sunnyvale. In addition to declaratory relief regarding the validity of the “transfers” of the lease, and the appointment of a receiver, Superior prayed for “a decree of specific performance of plaintiff’s right of entry . . . and/or for restitution of said premises and that a writ of possession and any and all other applicable writs issue to aid plaintiff in regaining possession of said premises.”
On February 9, 1976, Sun Fruit’s default was entered by the clerk of the trial court. On October 1st of that year, the trial court conducted a brief hearing on Superior’s request to enter a default judgment against Sun Fruit. Sun Fruit did not appear at the hearing, at the conclusion of which judgment was ordered entered as prayed. The judgment filed that same day
On December 2-3, 1976, a nonjury trial was conductеd on Superior’s complaint against Rinn Motor, Rinns Sunnyvale, and Pabst, the remaining defendants (who will be hereafter collectively referred to as such). The trial court received evidence in the form of exhibits and testimony from Wencke, Pabst, and the respective presidents of Superior and Real Estate Equities, Inc. Defendants’ general position, as stated in extensive trial briefs, was that forfeiture of their leasehold interests would be inequitable in light of the fact that the only breach of the lease had been committed by Sun Fruit, and that determining their right to possession was not foreclosed by the default judgment against Sun Fruit.
On March 1, 1977, the trial court filed its memorandum of decision announcing the intention to award judgment for Superior. The court and parties were in the course of preparing findings of fact and conclusions of law when they became aware that on March 3d the United States District Court for the Southern District of California had appointed an equity receiver to administer the affairs of Wencke’s corporate empire. Sun Fruit, Rinn Motor, and Rinns Sunnyvale were among the entities entrusted to the receiver’s stewardship. 6 The district court’s order included a stay of “any proceeding against the entities in receivership” for the duration of the receivership “[ejxcept by leave of this Court.”
In April and May of that year the district court made separate orders confirming that the stay applied to Superior’s action in state court, and denying Superior’s application for relief from the stay. On May 24, 1977, Wencke’s authority to act as receiver was terminated by the Nevada court which had appointed him.
In December of that year, the district court made an order denying another application by Superior for relief from the stay and leave to proceed against “the entities in receivership.” On Superior’s appeal from this order, the Ninth Circuit concluded that the district court did not abuse its
Once the matter was returned to the district court, a federal magistrate acting as a special master conducted an extensive evidentiary hearing on Superior’s renewed application for relief from the stay. In October of 1982 the special master filed “Findings Of Fact And Conclusions Of Law And Recommendation” which were adopted by the district court the following month. Superior was thereby granted leave to continue its efforts to obtain possession of the property at the same time that the receiver was moving to have the default judgment against Sun Fruit set aside. 7
The following events occurred in 1983 when proceedings were resumed in the trial court:
On January 14th, the trial court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law in which it found that neither Rinn Motor nor Rinns Sunnyvale had “any right or claim to possession of any portion of the premises other than under and through Sun Fruit.” Although the court’s characterization of Rinns Sunnyvale as a “sub-sublessee” constituted an implicit rejection of Superior’s argument that Rinns Sunnyvale had obtained possession through an invalid assignment, it nevertheless found that the establishment of thе Nevada receivership for Sun Fruit “constituted a material breach by Sun Fruit of its obligations assumed by it upon the transfer to it of Superior’s leasehold interest, and entitled Superior to exercise, after the requisite notices on failure of termination of the receivership, its reserved right of reentry as against Sun Fruit and all persons or entities claiming under or through Sun Fruit.” On the basis of these and other findings, the court concluded that Superior was “entitled to immediate possession under its right of re-entry as of . . . the date of the filing of the complaint in the within action, to[]wit, November 24, 1975,” an accounting, and “to recover from defendants and each of them the amount of the net profits which otherwise would have accrued to and belong to . . . Superior.”
In early April Superior noticed a “Motion for Review and Approval of Accounting.” In their written oppositions defendants objected to the necessity and propriety of a hearing devoted to accounting issues. Defendants urged (among other things) that (1) Superior “has suffered no damage as a result of the alleged breach of the anti-receivership clause,” as evidenced by the findings of the federal magistrate adopted by the district court, and (2) Superior was erroneously awarded net profits for the period between trial and the date on which actual possession was surrendered.
On June 24th the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on Superior’s motion and defendants’ objections. After receiving lengthy briefs from the parties with respect to the accounting issues, the trial court on November 3d entered its final judgment to the effect that Superior was entitled to recover “after tax net operating profits” from Rinn Motor and Rinns Sunnyvale in the amount of $886,666, together with prejudgment interest of $189,005. The corresponding amounts assessed against Pabst were $149,161 and $29,483. These sums covered the period from November 24, 1975, to June 1, 1983. The court further concluded that “Plaintiff shall recover from defendants ... all after tax net operating profits received by each said defendant from the subject motel/restaurant premises from and after June 1, 1983, and continuing to the date on which possession of said premises is in fact delivered to plaintiff, together with interest thereon at thе rate of 10
In November and December, defendants filed separate motions for new trial and petitions for relief from the forfeiture ordered in the judgment. Covering a number of common and repetitive grounds, these motions and petitions presaged many of the contentions now raised on these appeals. The general themes were twofold.
First, defendants argued that the default judgment obtained by Superior against Sun Fruit was void. They reasoned that an adjudication of Sun Fruit’s rights was a prerequisite which had to be adjudicated before their sublessee rights could be forfeited. No valid service having been effected on Sun Fruit, the Nevada receiver (i.e., Wencke) was an indispensable party whose absence was fatal to all subsequent proceedings.
Second, defendants attacked the forfeiture on the ground that Superior had suffered no damage by reason of the breach of the anti-receivership provision between Superior and Sun Fruit, as evidenced by findings by the federal magistrate and the district court to this effect. The breach, which defendants saw as rectified when the Nevada receivership was terminated in 1977, was thus “merely technical or trivial in nature” and “certainly was not the type of breach that would support a forfeiture.”
After receiving written opposition by Superior, the trial court on December 15th conducted a hearing at which it heard argument from the parties concerning the motions and petitions. The following day the court denied the motions and petitions in an order which did not elucidate the basis for its rulings.
Timely notices of appeal were filed by Rinn Motor and Rinns Sunnyvale from the judgment and the order denying their respective petitions for relief from forfeiture. Pabst also appealed from the judgment.
9
Review
I
Defendants are clearly aggrieved by the default judgment entered against Sun Fruit for it constitutes the foundation of the subsequent judgment entered against them. They did not, however, appeal from this judgment, which became final. In recognition of these facts, they have mounted a collateral attack upon the default judgment. According to defendants, because service was made upon Sun Fruit’s president Richard Mets and not upon Wencke in his capacity as the receiver appointed by the Nevada court, that service was defective according to Nevada law and the default judgment is consequently void.
Defendants are entitled to press this challenge, based as it is upon a perceived jurisdictional infirmity making the judgment void on its face. (8 Witkin, op. cit. supra, Attack on Judgment in Trial Court, §§ 6 [pp. 410-411], 12-13 [pp. 414-417].) They do not, however, appreciate the very stringent rules governing such a claim.
“The validity of the judgment on its face may be determined only by a consideration of the matters constituting part of the judgment roll.”
(Johnson
v.
Hayes Cal Builder, Inc.
(1963)
Defendants’ contention founders because it is not based upon the judgment roll as so defined. They rely instead on Wencke’s order of
II, III 10
IV
At the time Superior advised defendants that it was electing to terminate the latter’s possessory rights, it cited as its reasons the failure to provide an accounting, the supposedly unauthorized assignments) from Sun Fruit, and the fact of Sun Fruit’s receivership. The accounting matter was apparently resolved between the parties prior to trial. As previously mentioned, the trial court tacitly determined that defendants had obtained possession via permissible subleases, a determination not now challenged by any of the parties. This left only the receivership, which the court found “constituted a material breach by Sun Fruit of its obligations assumed by it upon the transfer to it of Superior’s leasehold interest, and entitled Superior to exercise ... its reserved right of re-entry as against Sun Fruit and all pеrsons or entities claiming under or through Sun Fruit.” Defendants now attack this finding as factually and legally incorrect. (Portions of defendants’ arguments impheating the forfeiture aspect of the finding will be addressed in the next section of this opinion.)
The law sensibly recognizes that although every instance of noncompliance with a contract’s terms constitutes a breach, not every breach justifies treating the contract as terminated. (See 4 Corbin on Contracts (1951) § 943, pp. 806-807; Farnsworth, Contracts (1982) §§ 8.15-8.16, pp. 607-613; Murray on Contracts (2d rev. ed. 1974) § 167, pp. 322-327; 11 Williston on Contracts (3d ed. 1968) § 1292, pp. 8-9.) Following the lead of the Restatements of Contracts, California courts allow termination only if the breach can be classified as “material,” “substantial,” or “total.” (See
Coughlin
v.
Blair
(1953)
Cardozo had occasion to examine the distinction between material and inconsequential breaches in his landmark decision regarding substantial performance of a construction contract. “The courts never say that one who makes a contract fills the measure of his duty by less than full performance. They do say, however, that an omission, both trivial and innocent, will sometimes be atoned for by allowance of the resulting damage, and will not always be the breach of a condition to be followed by a forfeiture.”
(Jacob & Young
v.
Kent
(1921)
California too accepts that “[w]hether a breach is so material as to constitute cause for the injured party to terminate a contract is ordinarily a
With these principles as our background, we turn to defendants’ specific arguments.
(B)
A lease provision against the bankruptcy, insolvency, or receivership of a lessee protects important interests of the lessor. The appointment of a receiver often entails drastic disruptive consequences to existing business relationships. (See
Hoover
v.
Galbraith
(1972)
Defendants contend in effect that the sole purpose of the anti-receivership provision of the lease was to assure the payment pf rent to Lamplighter, “not to confer a benefit on Superior.” Superior responds that the objects of the provision, when read in conjunction with the 1969 assignment granting Superior a right of reentry, covered not only payment of rent
The extrinsic evidence admitted by the court was testimony by William Henderson, Superior’s president. He testified that he negotiated the provisions of the 1969 agreement with an officer of REI. With reference to paragraphs 7 and 8 of the 1969 agreement (quoted ante, p. 1042), Henderson testified: “The reason these clauses are in herе is because Lamplighter Properties, the lessor, were [s/c] still holding us accountable for all of the things contained in the lease, whatever they might be, and this was to try to protect ourselves because we wouldn’t have the control and custody of the operation.” Although “the primary concern of the whole thing is the rent,” Henderson (who together with his wife owns all of Superior’s stock) was also concerned for the value of the REI shares Superior would receive. The REI official told Henderson that the REI stock “had certain values, . . . that it would be restricted for a couple of years[, and t]hat after a couple of years it would be free trading stock.” “[I]f anything happened, I would be able to come back in my original position to protect my own interests and to fulfill my obligations if I had any, to Lamplighter Properties. ... I had to insert that to protect myself and come back in position.”
The 1967 lease between Lamplighter and Superior was attached as “Exhibit 1” to the 1969 agreement between Superior and REI. Both documents are therefore to be construed as a single contract.
(Merkeley
v.
Fisk
(1919)
Following its assignment of the lease to REI, Superior remained secondarily liable to Lamplighter in the event its assignee or any sublessees failed to perform any of the obligations of the transferred lease. It thus had a contingent liability to Lamplighter should rent not be paid. (See
Kendall
v.
Ernest Pestaña, Inc.
(1985)
It should also be remembered that Superior’s assignment of its leasehold interest to REI was not made gratuitously, but as part of a compensated exchange. The compensation Superior received was 125,000 shares of REI stock, stated in the 1969 agreement to have been acquired “for investment purposes.” Although the record does not establish the precise worth of the shares, it may safely be assumed that it was considerable. Wencke testified at the trial that the shares were “now . . . worthless pieces of paper.” He explained that “The creditors’ claims vastly exceed the assets of the corporation, so there will be no assets left for shareholders of the corporation.” Henderson largely corroborated Wencke’s appraisal when he testified that
The consequences of Sun Fruit being placed in the care of a receiver were manifold and manifest. Superior lost the presumed fiscal presence of its assignee, the party to whom Lamplighter was looking for payment of rent. Superior was therefore facing the prospect of resuming actual responsibility for such payments unless and until Sun Fruit emerged from the receivership. More importantly, the valuable consideration received for transfer of its leasehold assignment had become worthless, thus depriving Superior of the benefit of its bargain with REI.
13
(See fn. 14,
post.)
Both of the eventualities feared by Superior which had led to its insistence on an explicit right of reentry had come to pass. The trial court’s finding that the receivership was a material breach justifying Superior’s exercise of its right of reentry comports with our construction of the contract and is supported by substantial evidence. It is therefore to be sustained. (See
Glendale City Employees’ Assn., Inc.
v.
City of Glendale, supra,
(C)
Defendants attempt to impeach the trial court’s finding of material breach with the findings and conclusions made by the special master and
The matter of the change in receivers is quickly answered. Defendants’ argument, that “the condition complained of, the Nevada receivership of Sun Fruit, had not existed for a period” of more than five years at the time the final judgment was entered, seems to imply that a receiver appointed by a federal court in California is somehow less objectionable than one appointed by a state court in Nevada. Certainly the plain language of the lease provision furnishes no basis for such a distinction. Defendants hint at no evidence suggesting that the termination of the Nevada receivership in the wake of the federal receiver being appointed entailed any reduction of Superior’s responsibility as Sun Fruit’s rent guarantor, or that it restored the value of the REI shares taken by Superior in exchange for surrendering its leasehold interest. If anything, the appointment of the federal receiver was even more damaging to Superior because of the accompanying stay which put a halt to Superior’s nearly completed effort to obtain a judicial resolution of its claimed entitlement to the property. Furthermore, the fact that the federal receiver had been appointed on the application of the Securities and Exchange Commission stands as evidence that Sun Fruit’s difficulties were almost certainly not of a minor or transitory nature, a proposition made abundantly plain by subsequent events.
The trial court took judicial notice of the special master’s findings and conclusions made in connection with Superior’s application that it be exempted from the stay and allowed to conclude this action against defendants. Addressing the question of whether the status quo should be preserved, the master noted that “Prior to the creation of the Nevada receivership, the terms of the master lease . . . was [sic] adhered to strictly by . . . REI and its issue,” and that “the provisions of the master lease concerning the payment of rents and monies to Lamplighter Properties have been scrupulously complied with.”
With respect to this action, the master stated: “Superior’s injury, if any, may be characterized as a deferral or an opportunity to regain a now profitable property interest, that it had previously disposed of, by taking advantage of Walter Wencke’s chicanery. If the stay remains in effect, then Superior Motels will simply continue to receive the benefit of its original
Turning to the “litigation between Superior Motеls and Sun Fruit[,] Ltd. that is pending and presently stayed,” the master characterized it as involving “purely legal issues.” The master then recited some of the outstanding issues pertaining to the federal receiver’s nascent action to set aside the default judgment entered against Sun Fruit (see fn. 7 and accompanying text, ante, p. 1046), and concluded: “This court is unable to predict with certainty how the California State Courts will ultimately decide these issues, but decide them they must.”
We cannot accede to defendants’ argument that the master’s findings and conclusions amount to a conclusive determination that Superior suffered no damage, a determination to which the trial court was required to accord full faith and credit and which Superior is prevented by principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel from contesting. “Full faith and credit must be given to a final order or judgment of a federal court. [Citations.] Such an order or judgment has the same [res judicata or collateral estoppel] effect in the courts of this state as it would have in a federal court.”
(Levy
v.
Cohen
(1977)
It must be remembered that the only issue before the special master (who is obviously the dominant actor even though his actions required ratification by the district court) was whether to lift the stay. His discussion of the parties’ respective positions was germane to ascertaining the status quo and to determining whether it would permit resumption of the state court litigation. The master was not, however, required to adjudicate the merits of that controversy, nor did he purport to do so. He made no express reference to the issues of the materiality of any breach or damages caused thereby. In a rather oblique fashion he did make certain observations which could be construed as relating to these issues, but these comments were in the nature of asides. The sole question before him, and the sole matter he determined, was Superior’s application to be relieved from the stay. If, as defendants argue, the master was deciding the ultimate question of
In light of these circumstances, the master’s findings cannot be given the preclusive effect defendants wish. The master’s observations concerning issues not necessary for decision of the matter before him may have been conducive to his reasoning, but they were in essence incidental, collateral, and immaterial for that decision. They were, in short, dicta. According to federal law, they therefore do not support either collateral estoppel
(Minnis
v.
United States Dept. of Agriculture
(9th Cir. 1984)
V
We now turn to the question of the forfeiture of defendants’ leasehold interests declared by the trial court. Defendants’ contentions on this issue fall into two general categories—those rеlating to the proper construction of the anti-receivership provision of the lease and those affecting the denial of the motion(s) for relief from the forfeiture. Our discussion will follow this division.
(A)
Citing the familiar principles that forfeitures are abhorred and that contracts will be strictly construed to avoid them (see Civ. Code, § 1442;
O’Morrow
v.
Borad
(1946)
Civil Code section 711 provides: “Conditions restraining alienation, when repugnant to the interest created, are void.” This statute does not prohibit all restraints on alienation, only those which are unreasonable, i.e., not necessary to protect a security or prevent it from being impaired.
(See Kendall
v.
Ernest Pestana, Inc., supra,
The contention defendants now make was never raised by them in the trial court. No evidence was introduced relative to the necessity of the provision to protect either Lamplighter’s or Superior’s security interests.
14
No finding on that issue was made by the trial court. In these circumstances
Defendants’ contention that the provision should be construed as applicable to tenants in actual possession of leased property is based upon
Flagg
v.
Andrew Williams Stores, Inc.
(1954)
When the Flagg plaintiffs were assigned this lease in 1947, they executed a written agreement with the lessor which deleted this provision and substituted the following: “Lessees shall not assign this lease, nor any right hereunder, nor sublet the premises, nor any part thereof, without the prior written consent of lessor. No consent to any assignment of this lease, or any subletting of said premises shall constitute a waiver or discharge of the provisions of this paragraph, except as to the specific instance covered thereby; nor shall this lease nor any interest therein be assignable by action of law including bankruptcy, both involuntary and voluntary, and no Trustee, Sheriff, Creditors or purchaser at any judicial sale, or any officer of any court or receiver except if appointed as herein specifically provided shall acquire any right under this lease or to the possession or use of the premises or any part thereof without the prior written consent of lessor. Any violation of this term of this paragraph shall at the option of lessor be deemed a breach of this lease.”
More than four years later, the assignor was adjudicated bankrupt. The lessor then sought to terminate the Flaggs’ lease, whereupon the Flaggs brought an action for declaratory and injunctive relief. According to the Flagg opinion:
“The trial court concluded that none of the defendants had a right to terminate the lease by reason of said adjudication of bankruptcy and thatthe lease has not been terminated but continues in full force and effect. We think these conclusions of the trial court entirely correct.
“When interpreting a forfeiture clause we start with the rule announced in section 1442 of the Civil Code: ‘A condition involving a forfeiture must be strictly construed against the party for whose benefit it is created.’ Of two or more possible constructions, ‘the construction which avoids a forfeiture should be favored.’ [Citation.] A forfeiture in a lease ‘is not favored. It is enforced only where there is such a breach shown as it was the clear and manifest intention of the parties to provide for.’ [Citation.] There is persuasive authority to the effect that a clause which forfeits or authorizes the lessor to forfeit the lessee’s interest upon bankruptcy of the lessee should, unless its language plainly otherwise requires, be interpreted as referring to the bankruptcy of the tenant in possession; i.e., the bankruptcy of the original lessee if there has been no assignment of his interest in the leasse, or, if there has been an assignment, the bankruptcy of the assignee. [Citations.]
“Accordingly, when on December 2, 1947, MacArthur Properties, Inc., as lessor, approved the assignment to plaintiffs and joined with plaintiffs in deleting the text of paragraph XVI, substituting therefor a provision which for the first time forbade voluntary assignment or subletting without prior written consent of the lessor, coupled with a radical revision of the original involuntary transfer forfeiture clause, the parties to that agreement could, at most, have contemplated transfers (voluntary or involuntary) by the new lessees (plaintiffs herein) and their successors and assigns. It is not conceivable that they had in mind future transfers (voluntary or involuntary) by the original lessees.
“. . . We are not concerned with the ‘liability,’ if any, of the original lessees for default in payment of rent or other violation by plaintiffs of the obligations the latter have assumed under the lease. We are concerned with the consequences, if any, to plaintiffs of an adjudication in bankruptcy suffered by the original lessees, or by at least one of them, long after their divestiture of all their right, title and interest in the lease and long after the revision, by the lessor and the assignees, of the forfeiture clause itself. As we have seen, there are, under the circumstances of this case, no untoward consequences to plaintiffs flowing from the bankruptcy adjudication of the original lessees or of any of them.” (Flagg v. Andrew Williams Stores, Inc., supra,127 Cal.App.2d 165 at pp. 174-177.)
Although the situation in
Flagg
appears to be resonate with similarities, crucial differences preponderate. Here, the forfeiture provision, which
We have no dispute with Flagg in the situation the court there confronted. The preceding paragraph, however, demonstrates that a series of fundamentally differing circumstances compels us to concur with the trial court that Flagg is distinguishable.
(B)
Defendants Rinn Motor and Rinns Sunnyvale alone are entitled to contend that the trial court “failed to exercise and abused its discretion in denying [their] petition [] for relief from forfeiture.” (See fn. 9, ante, p. 1048.) This contention cannot prevail.
The petition for relief had a dual statutory basis. The first was Civil Code section 3275, which provides: “Whenever, by the terms of an obligation, a party thereto incurs a forfeiture, or a loss in the nature of a forfeiture, by reason of his failure to comply with its provisions, he may be relieved therefrom, upon making full compensation to the other party, except in case of a grossly negligent, willful, or fraudulent breach of duty.”
The second was Code of Civil Procedure section 1179. It reads in pertinent part: “The Court may relieve a tenant against a forfeiture of a lease, and restore him to his former estate, in case of hardship, where application fоr such relief is made within thirty days after the forfeiture is declared by the judgment of the Court,. . . The application may be made by a tenant or sub-tenant, or a mortgagee of the term, or any person interested in the
We address certain preliminary points before reaching the merits. Superior argues that the petition was properly denied, and may be affirmed here, by reason of untimeliness and inadequate pleading. Superior claims that the petition was untimely because it was not made within 30 days of the default judgment against Sun Fruit as required by Code of Civil Procedure section 1179, and because there was no pleading and proof justifying application of Civil Code section 3275. We find neither claim a fatal disqualification.
It is true that the forfeiture of Sun Fruit’s estate declared in the default judgment would terminate by operation of law the derivative interests of Sun Fruit’s sublessees. (See
Schafer
v.
Wholesale Frozen Foods, Inc.
(1966)
Superior’s second argument is equally unavailing. It is true that Civil Code section 3275 was not specifically invoked in defendants’ answers, but they did pray for “such other relief as the Court deems appropriate.”
Both of the statutes vest near plenary discretion in the trial court. With respect to an application for relief made pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1179, the court in
Matthews
v.
Digges
(1920)
To be rejected at the outset is defendants’ claim that the trial court failed to exercise its discretion. Defendants point to nothing in the record which substantiates that assertion, which is rebutted by the trial court’s marked liberality in permitting defendants to present extensive written and oral argument on the question.
Turning to the merits, it may be conceded that defendants could have and did present an alluring argument for relief. As they see it, the only express obligations imposed on them were the payment of rent and such gross income percentage amounts as might become due. There is no question that these obligations were, as the special master noted, complied with scrupulously. Defendants have simply abided by the terms of all applicable agreements without giving the least cause for dissatisfaction to either Superior or Lamplighter. At no time have either Rinn Motor or Rinns Sunnyvale been
Yet innocence is not the exclusive province of defendants. Superior appears to have been perfectly content to allow defendants to remain in possession had its investment in Sun Fruit not been endangered. Confronted with clear evidence that the consideration which had prompted it to part with possession of the property had been almost totally obliterated, Superi- or invoked the protection of a contractual provision intended for this very eventuality. Its conduct was commercially reasonable and contractually justifiable.
Without question, it is troubling to see a business operation terminated through no fault of the operators. Yet vicarious responsibility manifested in such a form inheres in the situation of possession based upon derivative title. “A sublessee is bound by the terms and conditions of the original lease; its rights are dependent upon and subject to the sublessor’s rights. . . . [RJights under the sublease stand or fall with those of the sublessor . . . .”
(Fifth & Broadway Partnership
v.
Kimny, Inc.
(1980)
Had the trial court decided to relieve defendants from the forfeiture, that ruling could not be reversed as an abuse of discretion. Is the converse true? Much of the equities may favor defendants, yet this is not the only concern. Ousting defendants may work a hardship on them, but Superior has been disadvantaged by the virtual destruction of the security it took in exchange for surrendering the premises to Sun Fruit. Defendants have never offered to compensate Superior for the value of its REI shares in order that they could remain in possession. (See Civ. Code, § 3275;
Lincoln
v.
Narom Development Co.
(1970)
VI
With respect to the monetary awards made by the trial court, the parties’ positions are predictable. Defendants contend that they go too far; Superior argues on its cross-appeal that they do not go far enough. An appreciation of the nature of unlawful detainer is necessary before attempting a resolution of these issues.
Unlawful detainer is a statutory remedy whose primary feature is its expedited procedure for the recovery of possession of real property wrongfully withheld or “detained.” (See
Knowles
v.
Robinson
(1963)
Defendants first complain that the awards were neither sought by Superior in its complaint nor supported by evidence introduced at trial. This contention has elements that are replicative of defendants’ previously expressed arguments that Superior suffered no damage and was improperly granted a forfeiture. We discern no reason in this context to depart from our contrary conclusions on these points. (See parts IV and V, ante, pp. 1050-1066.) Divested of these elements, the pleading aspect of defendants’ contention is without merit.
The trial court treated the question of profits as having been put in issue by Superior’s causes of action for specific performance and declaratory relief. Although this is an extremely generous reading of the complaint,
16
the court’s interpretation is not insupportable. The court was in any event within its power at the conclusion of the contested trial to award a species of relief not expressly included in the complaint, Superior’s request in its prayer for “such other and further relief as the court deems just” being sufficient for this purpose. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 580,;
Singleton
v.
Perry
(1955)
Defendants’ contention displays a sublime disregard for reality. At the time it drafted and filed its complaint, Superior was obviously and reasonably anticipating that the unlawful detainer proceeding would
In its amended statement of decision the trial court identified the basis for its award: “Under equitable principles, plaintiff is entitled to the after tax net operating profits received by . . . defendants in possession of the subject premises from November 24, 1975 to the date possession ... is in fact delivered to plaintiff as compensation for the loss incurred because of the failure to receive possession of said premises.” Defendants rather perfunctorily assert in effect that the court erred in calling equity into play.
17
This is untenable. The court had the undoubted power to take note of such considerations. “Equitable principles apply particularly where a forfeiture is sought in an action for unlawful detainer.”
(Roth
v.
Morton's Chefs Services, Inc.
(1985)
This court recently had occasion to state: “A trial court’s equity powers are formidable . . . but must be exercised pursuant to the principle that equity follows the law.”
(Johnson
v.
Tago, Inc., supra,
The measure of damages to which a landlord is entitled for an unlawful detainer is the reasonable rental value of the property. (See
Stockton Morris Plan Co.
v.
Carpenter, supra,
No evidence was introduced concerning the reasonable rental value of the property. Upon declaring the forfeiture of defendants’ leasehold interests, the trial court appears to have thereafter proceeded on the premise that all “rents, issues and profits” were the measure of the property’s reasonable rental value. This was error.
In
People
v.
Gustafson
(1942)
Superior stoutly maintains that the judgment it holds is not for unlawful detainer but for restitution incident to specific performance of its contractual right of reentry. At this point Superior may well wish that this were so. The incontestable reality is otherwise. The caption of Superior’s complaint identified it as being “for unlawful detainer.” After reciting pertinent factual circumstances Superior alleged that “the foregoing constitutes unlawful detainer within the terms and meaning of . . . Code of Civil Procedure Section 1161.” Attached as an exhibit to Superior’s complaint was the “Three Day Notice To Quit” sent to Sun Fruit. The text of that notice expressly stated that the notice was “[pjursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 1161.”
“[F]or many years the California courts have adhered to the principle that the unlawful detainer statute is strictly construed and that relief not authorized by that statute may not be given due to the summary nature of the proceedings.”
(Castle Park No. 5
v.
Katherine
(1979)
That the circumstances of this case are highly unusual, if not unique, may be conceded. It is true that defendants had notice that their leasehold interests were imperiled once the trial court filed its memorandum of decision on March 1, 1977. The federal receiver was appointed a mere two days later. This severely restricted defendants’ freedom of maneuver: operation of the premises was a valuable asset entrusted to the receiver, whose subsequent actions demonstrate to a near-certainty that he would not consent to its being relinquished. Defendants were in effect compelled to remain in possession. Nevertheless, defendants continued to pay rent. The long freeze imposed by the district court obviously entailed a complete nullification of the summary advantages of the unlawful detainer remedy. No action, however, was taken by Superior to modify its litigation strategy accordingly. Superior’s complaint was never amended, nor was it superseded by a supplementary pleading. There is no evidence that Superior commenced another action, whether for mesne profits, constructive trust, or otherwise, to obtain restitution of the funds defendants had collected while still in possession. In short, Superior sought unlawful detainer and nothing but unlawful detainer. Superior’s response to the prolonged delay was to cover its inertia by formulating a position totally at odds with the goals and purposes of unlawful detainer. Superior was more than happy to claim the benefits of that statutory remedy, yet it now attempts to avoid its corresponding limitations. Superior’s rights are delimited by the detainer it sought and obtained.
For the reasons previously discussed, the trial court correctly concluded that Superior was entitled to regain possession of the property. Superior was also entitled to receive a reasonable rental value for the property during the period that its right to possession was denied. It was not entitled to automatic awards of the “rents, issues and profits” collected by
With respect to the matter of prejudgment interest, the trial court’s award had a dual basis. The court concluded that Superior “is entitled to prejudgment interest in this action as a matter of right” pursuant to Civil Code section 3287, subdivision (a), and that “[alternatively, a discretionary award ... is appropriate” according to subdivision (b) of that statute.
19
Defendants contend that neither of these purported grounds supports the award. As regards subdivision (a), defendants are correct. “This section does not authorize prejudgment interest as a matter of law where the amount of damages depends upon a judicial
Also meritorious is defendants’ argument that the trial court erred by ordering them to pay “future damages” beyond the date of the judgment until such time as they return possession of the premises to Superior. Such recovery is not permitted in unlawful detainer.
(Cavanaugh
v.
High
(1960)
A final contention by defendants concerns a computational error in fixing the awards. In light of our decision to reverse and remand the portions of the judgments affecting the awards, this contention becomes moot. The same is true for Superior’s cross-appeal.
Those portions of the judgment providing that plaintiff Superior shall recover from defendants Rinn Motor, Rinns Sunnyvale, and Walter Pabst “after tax net operating profits received by said defendants from the subject premises from November 24, 1975 to June 1, 1983, . . . and continuing to the date on which possession of said premises is in fact delivered to plaintiff, together with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from the dates received by said defendants until said sums are paid to plaintiff” are reversed. The cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to determine the reasonable rental value of the premises for that period. The
Channell, J., and Sabraw, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 25, 1987, and the petition of plaintiff and appellant for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 20, 1988.
Notes
It fairly appears that as part of the sale price Superior received promissory notes aggregating $588,000, which it then pledged to Lamplighter to secure Superior’s performance of the lease. As a result of these transactions Superior became a limited partner in Lamplighter. Real Estate Equities, Inc. is Lamplighter’s general partner.
The assignment provisions of the lease read: “Lessee shall not assign this lease but may sub-let the said premises, or any part thereof, without the writtten consent of the lessor [Lamplighter] first had and obtained. Any sub-lease shall be upon the same terms and conditions contained herein, and the rent payable to the lessor shall be determined as set forth herein-above, i.e. to the extent that the gross income which would have been received by the lessee, had the premises not been sub-leased, exceeds $400,000.00 per calendar year, the total annual rent payable to lessor shall be increased by eight (8%) per cent of said excess.
“This privilege of sub-letting extends only to the premises on which improvements currently exist, and lessee may not sub-let the unimproved property immediately adjacent to the Lamplighter Lodge without first obtaining the written consent of lessor.
“Any assignment or sub-letting of the adjacent land without such consent shall be void, and shall, at the option of the lessor, terminate this lease. This lease shall not, nor shall any interest therein, be assignable as to the interest of lessee, by operation of law, without the written consent of lessor.”
According to the terms of the joint venture agreement, the Pabsts agreed to contribute $50,000 in consideration for “20% of the entire joint venture interest.”
Wencke subsequently became the subject of extensive proceedings in the federal courts, one of which drily noted with the benefit of hindsight: “Because Nevada does not require a disinterested receiver, Wencke became the receiver.”
(Securities & Exch. Com'n.
v.
Wencke
(9th Cir. 1978)
The receiver had in fact been acting in a temporary capacity since January 20, 1977.
In November 1977 the receiver was authorized to commence an action on behalf of Sun Fruit for the purpose of vacating the default judgment entered against Sun Fruit. The receiver filed a complaint seeking this relief later that month, but the receiver took no further steps (such as effecting service on Superior) in the belief that such was contrary to the district court’s stay. In accordance with the special master’s recommendation, the district court’s order expressly authorized the receiver to “continue” this litigation. A “First Amended Complaint For Vacation Of Void Judgment And Injunctive Relief’ was filed by the receiver on November 19, 1982.
Defendants then filed motions fоr new trial based on grounds similar to those made once a final judgment was eventually entered and which will be summarized at a later point in the text. After these motions were denied, defendants filed notices purporting to appeal from the interlocutory judgment. Due to the lack of an appealable final judgment (see
Lacey
v.
Bertone
(1949)
Pabst labors under the profound misapprehension that he has also appealed from the order denying his petition for relief from forfeiture. He has not. The only notice of appeal from the trial court’s order denying defendants’ petitions was filed by Rinn Motor and Rinns Sunnyvale “by and through their Federal Equity Receiver, R. N. Gould.” The notice, although it does recite that “defendant Walter Pabst also joins in this appeal,” is signed by a member of the law firm acting as “Attorneys for R. N. Gould.” Rule 1(a) of the California Rules of Court states with absolute clarity that a notice of appeal “shall be signed by the appellant or by his attorney.” Pabst has at all times been represented by separate counsel, and there is nothing whatsoever in the record indicating that his codefendants’ attorneys were authorized to file a notice of appeal on his behalf. The notice is therefore wholly ineffectual as the required means of commencing a valid appeal.
(Isom
v.
Slaughter
(1962)
See footnote 1, ante, page 1032.
It is clear that by force of this provision Superior could be held responsible for the actions and breaches committed by a tenant whose title derived in any fashion from Superior. This potential liability to Lamplighter would itself be more than sufficient to give Superior standing to press this litigation.
Defendants correctly point out the unlikelihood that the trial court’s finding was based upon this reasoning because Superior did not raise it at trial. Our response to defendants’ criticism against accepting Superior’s position is twofold. First, Superior’s argument on appeal utilizes uncontradicted evidence introduced at the trial. Second, the argument is not inconsistent with the trial court’s finding, which did not identify a particular consequence of the receivership as the material breach. “The rule that the appellate court is interested in the decision rather than the reasons of the lower court necessarily means that the doctrine of theory of trial will often be disregarded in order to
affirm,
not reverse, the judgment.” (9 Witkin,
op. cit supra,
Appeal, § 322, p. 333, original italics.) Application of this principle to acceptance of Superior’s argument in support of the judgment is sanctioned by the established practice of this and other courts. (See
Pasadena Medi-Center Associates
v.
Superior Court
(1973)
With its acquisition of a large block of REI stock, Superior exchanged the role of lessee for that of investor. Over and abovе its concern that REI not default on rent payments to Lamplighter, Superior would have an investor’s abiding concern in REI’s general financial stability and well-being. Any of the acts specified in the anti-receivership provision would be symptomatic of severe distress falling just short of total collapse and would thus signify a clear and present jeopardy of Superior’s investment. The presence of the provision in the original lease undoubtedly reflected Lamplighter’s similar concern to protect the security pledged by Superior. (See fn. 2, ante, p. 1041.)
Code of Civil Procedure section 1174, subdivision (b) provides: “The jury or the court, if the proceedings be tried without a jury, shall also assess the damages occasioned to the plaintiff by any forcible entry, or by any forcible or unlawful detainer, alleged in the complaint and proved on the trial, and find the amount of any rent due, if the alleged detainer be after
From our reading of the complaint, there is no mention of profits in the specific performance, unlawful detainer, or declaratory relief causes of action pleaded by Superior. The only express references to the issue are in the сause of action for the appointment of a receiver to take possession of the property “and collect the rents, issues and profits thereof’ and in the prayer for this form of relief (which was denied by the trial court before the trial).
Most of defendants’ claim is devoted to arguing that the equities favored them and that right to possession should not have been forfeited. This claim was dealt with in part V, ante.
In
Harris
v.
Bissell, supra,
Civil Code section 3287 provides in pertinent part: “(a) Every person who is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to recover which is vested in him upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon from that day, except during such time as the debtor is prevented by law, or by the act of the creditor from paying the debt. This section is applicable to recovery of damages and interest from any such debtor,. . .
“(b) Every person who is entitled under any judgment to receive damages based upon a cause of action in contract where the claim was unliquidated, may also recover interest thereon from a date prior to the entry of judgment as the court may, in its discretion, fix, but in no event earlier than the date the action was filed.”
