Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of defendant and respondent, Dame Construction Company (Dame), after the court granted its motion for summary judgment. The sole issue in this appeal is whether a plaintiff who was the real party in interest at the time the action is commenced loses her standing as the real party in interest entitled to recover for injury to real property because of the subsequent sale of the property. We find that the real party in interest is the one injured by the defendant’s defective construction and that plaintiff did not lose her right to recover for damages by the subsequent sale of the property.
Facts
The plaintiff and appellant, Koral Vaughn, had brought an action alleging strict liability, breach of warranty and negligence seeking damages for defective construction of her condominium. Dame answered the complaint and thereafter filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that a little less than a year after plaintiff filed suit she sold her property and therefore no longer has standing to sue. 1 In its ruling granting the motion for summary judgment, the court stated: “Plaintiff has no standing to bring the action she did, since she no longer owns the property. She could have brought an action for loss of profits on resale based upon Defendant’s poor construction of the premises, but that is not what she plead [sic].” Judgment was entered accordingly and this appeal was filed.
Discussion
This case presents a pure question of law, to wit, whether a real party in interest somehow loses standing to sue for damages suffered as a result of defective construction by the subsequent sale of the defective premises. It is undisputed that at the time the action was commenced, plaintiff was the owner of the property and did in fact suffer damages as a result of the defective construction. 2 Notwithstanding *147 these undisputed facts, defendant contends that she no longer can recover for her damages because she no longer owns the property. Defendant has not provided any authority which expressly supports this proposition and we are unable to find any such authority.
Defendant relies on
Del Mar Beach Club Owners Assn.
v.
Imperial Contracting Co.
(1981)
Having no case which directly supports its view, defendant also attempts to create an argument from two generally recognized propositions, neither of which, taken alone or together, aids us in answering the issue at hand. First, defendant relies on the general rule that the person possessing the right to sue is the real party in interest. The person possessing the right to sue is determined by reference to substantive law and as defendant notes, under applicable substantive law, the person having the right to sue for injury to property ordinarily is the owner of the property. From this defendant concludes that plaintiff—no longer the owner—can no longer recover for her damages caused by the defective construction.
However, what defendant apparently fails to understand is that the real party in interest is the party who has title to the cause of action, i.e., the one who has the right to maintain the cause of action.
(Powers
v.
Ashton
(1975)
While defendant apparently does not dispute that the plaintiff was the real party in interest at the time the action was filed, defendant contends that the sale of the property automatically transfers the right to recover for the injury which undeniably occurred to plaintiff. In that regard, we note that throughout its brief, defendant attempts to argue that while plaintiff might have been able to continue to seek for recovery for other damages, had they been pleaded, she cannot recover for “injury to the property.” Defendant apparently assumes the injury to property is or should be considered analogous to covenants which run with the land. Again, however, defendant cites no authority for the rather novel theory.
The
cause of action
for damages as a result of injury to property, which was fully vested in plaintiff at the time of the injury, is personal property— not real property. (Civ. Code, § 953: “A thing in.action is a right to recover money or other personal property by a judicial proceeding”; see also Civ. Code, § 14, subd. 3; Code Civ. Proc., § 17, subd. 3.) The right to recover damages for injury to property, being personal property, may be assigned or transferred. (Civ. Code, § 954: “A thing in action, arising out of the violation of a right of property . . . may be transferred by the owner”;
Auslen
v.
Thompson
(1940)
Defendant also contends that the purpose of the requirement that all actions be brought in the name of the real party in interest supports the entry of judgment in its favor. We disagree. The primary purpose underlying the requirement that an action be brought in the name of the real party in interest is to protect a defendant from a multiplicity of suits and the further annoyance and vexation at the hands of other claimants
to the same demand. (Powers
v.
Ashton, supra,
As the person who sustained the damage, the cause of action was vested in plaintiff and she is therefore the real party in interest entitled to maintain the present action. The subsequent sale of the real property did not automatically assign or transfer her cause of action. Accordingly, the court erred in granting summary judgment.
*150 Disposition
The judgment is reversed. Appellant shall recover costs on appeal. Timlin, J., and McDaniel, J., * concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 25, 1990.
Notes
Defendant also moved for summary adjudication on the issue of whether plaintiff has standing to sue for damages to the common areas. This was granted as well. On appeal, plaintiff expressly states that she does not contest this ruling. Accordingly, we do not address it.
Plaintiff submitted no evidence in opposition to the motion for summary judgment. In the memorandum of points and authorities filed in opposition to the motion, former counsel for *147 plaintiff represented that plaintiff had sold the property for approximately $30,000 less than what she originally paid and had made full disclosure of the defective construction to the purchasers. He also represented that while plaintiff owned the property she was required to move to a different residence and was unable to rent the condominium at various times and therefore had to pay to maintain the property even though she was unable to live there. On appeal successor counsel now contends that these representations by former counsel constituted “evidence” and that because defendant did not object to the “evidence” as required by Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (b), the court was allowed to consider it. Not so. Defendant had no obligation to object either in writing or orally until actual evidence was submitted. The failure to object does not convert statements of counsel into evidence. Notwithstanding the failure of plaintiff to submit evidence regarding the nature of her damages, she pled damage as a result of defective construction in her complaint and as defendant did not dispute the existence of damage in its motion for summary judgment, that fact is undisputed.
In response to a request for additional briefing on the issue of whether a sale of the real property automatically transfers the cause of action, defendant contended that it did and relies on
Credit Managers Assn.
v.
National Independent Business Alliance
(1984)
Moreover, even if we were to assume the cause of action was transferred, defendant would not be entitled to summary judgment. Code of Civil Procedure section 385 specifically provides that, in that instance, the action does not abate and may be continued in the name of the original party or in the name of the transferee.
Defendant’s reliance on
Kriegler
v.
Eichler Homes, Inc.
(1969)
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council
