Filed 5/11/15 Riversland Cold Storage v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn. CA5
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
RIVERISLAND COLD STORAGE, INC., et al.,
F068738
Plaintiffs and Appellants,
(Super. Ct. No. 08CECG01416)
v.
FRESNO-MADERA PRODUCTION CREDIT OPINION
ASSOCIATION,
Defendant and Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Jeffrey Y.
Hamilton, Judge.
Wild, Carter & Tipton and Steven E. Paganetti for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Lang, Richert & Patch and Scott J. Ivy for Defendant and Respondent.
-ooOoo-
Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment entered against them after defendant’s motion
for summary judgment was granted. Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged they signed a written
agreement with defendant, but were induced to do so by defendant’s oral
misrepresentations about the terms it contained. The complaint alleged causes of action
including fraud, negligent misrepresentation, rescission, and reformation. Defendant
moved for summary judgment, asserting parol evidence of a prior or contemporaneous
oral agreement is not admissible and plaintiffs could not bring their evidence within the
fraud exception to the parol evidence rule because they could not establish justifiable
reliance on defendant’s alleged misrepresentations. The trial court granted the motion
and entered judgment in defendant’s favor. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
From 2001 through 2007, plaintiffs obtained and renewed operating loans for their
business from defendant; the loans were secured by interests in some of plaintiffs’ real
properties. In their business transactions with defendant, plaintiffs dealt with David
Ylarregui. On January 1, 2007, plaintiffs’ operating loan was in default. Plaintiffs
proposed to sell their cold storage facility to pay off the debt, but advised defendant it
could take two years to sell it. In March 2007, the parties negotiated a forbearance
agreement, by which defendant agreed to forebear from foreclosing on the collateral if
plaintiffs would pledge additional security. Plaintiffs contend Ylarregui agreed to a two-
year extension of time for payment of the loan, and plaintiffs agreed to put up two
ranches as additional security. Defendant prepared the written agreement, which
provided a forbearance period that ended July 1, 2007, and listed eight pieces of real
property, including plaintiffs’ residence and a truck yard, as additional security. On
March 26, 2007, plaintiffs and defendant executed the written forbearance agreement.
Plaintiffs did not read the agreement before signing it, claiming they relied on Ylarregui’s
oral representations, made prior to and at the time of execution, that it contained a two
year forbearance period and listed only the two ranches as additional security.
When they learned the actual terms of the written agreement, plaintiffs sued
defendant, alleging causes of action including fraud, negligent misrepresentation,
rescission, and reformation.1 Defendant moved for summary judgment, asserting
1 We recognize rescission and reformation are remedies rather than actual causes of action.
The portions of the complaint labeled as causes of action for rescission and reformation
incorporate by reference the allegations of fraud and negligent misrepresentation. We refer to
them as causes of action for rescission and reformation as a shorthand means of distinguishing
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plaintiffs were bound by the written contract, and parol evidence of an oral agreement to
different terms was not admissible. The trial court granted summary judgment on that
ground. We reversed, concluding the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule made
admissible evidence of the misrepresentations alleged by plaintiffs. We interpreted the
limitations on the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule, as set out in Bank of
America etc. Assn. v. Pendergrass (1935) 4 Cal.2d 258 (Pendergrass) and its progeny, to
preclude admission of parol evidence of a prior or contemporaneous promise that directly
contradicted the promises made in the written contract, but not to prohibit parol evidence
of a contemporaneous misrepresentation of fact as to the terms contained in the written
agreement. Because plaintiffs asserted Ylarregui misrepresented the terms contained in
the written contract at the time he presented it to them for signing, evidence of those
misrepresentations fell within the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule, and was
admissible to support plaintiffs’ claims.
The California Supreme Court, in Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-
Madera Production Credit Assn. (2013) 55 Cal.4th 1169 (Riverisland), affirmed our
judgment, but did so by overruling Pendergrass. It concluded the limitations
Pendergrass placed on the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule were not supported
by the language of the statute establishing that exception (Code Civ. Proc., § 1856, subds.
(f), (g)) or consistent with prior case law. (Riverisland, at p. 1182.) Further,
“Pendergrass failed to account for the fundamental principle that fraud undermines the
essential validity of the parties’ agreement. When fraud is proven, it cannot be
maintained that the parties freely entered into an agreement reflecting a meeting of the
minds.” (Ibid.) The court reiterated the rule that parol evidence is admissible to prove
fraud: “‘Parol evidence is always admissible to prove fraud, and it was never intended
them from the separately stated claims seeking damages for fraud and negligent
misrepresentations.
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that the parol evidence rule should be used as a shield to prevent the proof of fraud.’
[Citation.]” (Id. at pp. 1180-1181.) The court made no distinction between evidence of
false promises and evidence of misrepresentations of fact; it made no distinction between
promises or fraudulent representations that contradicted the express provisions of the
written contract and those that did not. In closing, the court noted that fraud, including
promissory fraud, still requires a showing of justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation
or promise. (Id. at p. 1183.)
After remand to the trial court, defendant again moved for summary judgment,
asserting plaintiffs could not establish the fraud necessary to invoke the fraud exception
to the parol evidence rule because they could not demonstrate they justifiably relied on
the alleged misrepresentations. Defendant contended plaintiffs cannot demonstrate their
reliance on the alleged misrepresentations was justifiable because they could have
learned the true terms of the written agreement simply by reading it, and nothing
prevented plaintiffs from doing so. The trial court granted the summary judgment
motion, finding plaintiffs had not raised a triable issue of fact regarding reasonable
reliance. Plaintiffs appeal.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
A grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. (Knapp v. Doherty (2004)
123 Cal.App.4th 76, 84 (Knapp).) Summary judgment is properly granted when no
triable issue exists as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) In moving for summary judgment,
a “defendant … has met his or her burden of showing that a cause of action has no merit
if that party has shown that one or more elements of the cause of action … cannot be
established, or that there is a complete defense to that cause of action.” (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 437c, subd. (p)(2).) Once the moving defendant has met its initial burden, “the burden
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shifts to the plaintiff … to show that a triable issue of one or more material facts exists as
to that cause of action or a defense thereto.” (Ibid.)
In independently reviewing a summary judgment, “we apply the same three-step
analysis as the trial court. First, we identify the issues framed by the pleadings. Next, we
determine whether the moving party has established facts justifying judgment in its favor.
Finally, if the moving party has carried its initial burden, we decide whether the opposing
party has demonstrated the existence of a triable, material fact issue.” (Chavez v.
Carpenter (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 1433, 1438.) “There is a triable issue of fact if, and
only if, the evidence would allow a reasonable trier of fact to find the underlying fact in
favor of the party opposing the motion in accordance with the applicable standard of
proof.” (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 850, fn. omitted.) The
evidence of the party opposing the motion must be liberally construed, and that of the
moving party strictly construed. (Johnson v. Superior Court (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th
297, 308.) “[W]e review the ruling of the trial court, not its rationale.” (Knapp, supra,
123 Cal.App.4th at p. 85.)
II. The Parol Evidence Rule
The parol evidence rule is codified at Code of Civil Procedure section 18562 and
Civil Code section 1625.3 It generally prohibits the introduction of extrinsic evidence,
including evidence of any prior or contemporaneous oral agreement, to vary, alter, or add
to the terms of an integrated written agreement. “Although the parol evidence rule results
2 Code of Civil Procedure section 1856, subdivision (a), provides: “Terms set forth in a
writing intended by the parties as a final expression of their agreement with respect to the terms
included therein may not be contradicted by evidence of a prior agreement or of a
contemporaneous oral agreement.” All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil
Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.
3 Civil Code section 1625 provides: “The execution of a contract in writing, whether the
law requires it to be written or not, supersedes all the negotiations or stipulations concerning its
matter which preceded or accompanied the execution of the instrument.”
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in the exclusion of evidence, it is not a rule of evidence but one of substantive law.
[Citation.] It is founded on the principle that when the parties put all the terms of their
agreement in writing, the writing itself becomes the agreement. The written terms
supersede statements made during the negotiations. Extrinsic evidence of the
agreement’s terms is thus irrelevant, and cannot be relied upon. [Citation.] ‘[T]he parol
evidence rule, unlike the statute of frauds, does not merely serve an evidentiary purpose;
it determines the enforceable and incontrovertible terms of an integrated written
agreement.’ [Citations.] The purpose of the rule is to ensure that the parties’ final
understanding, deliberately expressed in writing, is not subject to change. [Citation.]”
(Riverisland, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1174.)
There are exceptions to application of the parol evidence rule:
“(f) Where the validity of the agreement is the fact in dispute, this
section does not exclude evidence relevant to that issue.
“(g) This section does not exclude other evidence … to establish
illegality or fraud.” (§ 1856, subds. (f), (g).)
A. The Pendergrass decision
In 1935, the Pendergrass decision placed limits on the otherwise broad reach of
the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule: “Our conception of the rule which permits
parol evidence of fraud to establish the invalidity of the instrument is that it must tend to
establish some independent fact or representation, some fraud in the procurement of the
instrument or some breach of confidence concerning its use, and not a promise directly at
variance with the promise of the writing.” (Pendergrass, supra, 4 Cal.2d at p. 263.)
Thus, under Pendergrass, a prior or contemporaneous oral promise that directly
contradicted a promise contained in the written agreement was not admissible to prove
fraud. (Ibid.)
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B. Our prior decision
Defendant’s first motion for summary judgment was granted after the trial court
excluded plaintiffs’ parol evidence of oral statements Ylarregui allegedly made prior to
and at the time plaintiffs signed the written forbearance agreement. Plaintiffs asserted
Ylarregui misrepresented that the terms contained in the written agreement were the same
as those discussed and agreed to earlier, when in fact they were not. The trial court
excluded evidence of Ylarregui’s alleged oral statements, concluding the statements
constituted promises directly contradicting the promises made in the written agreement,
which Pendergrass made inadmissible.
We interpreted Pendergrass to bar only parol promises that were contrary to the
promises contained in the written contract. We distinguished such promises from factual
representations about the terms contained in the contract. Because plaintiffs asserted
Ylarregui represented to them that the written contract provided for a two-year
forbearance period and identified as additional security only two pieces of real property,
while the written contract actually provided for a three-month forbearance period and
identified eight pieces of real property as additional security, we determined plaintiffs
were not seeking to introduce evidence of promises that contradicted those contained in
the writing, but evidence of factual misrepresentations about the content of the writing.
Accordingly, we found the evidence should have been admitted and reversed the
judgment.
C. The Riverisland decision
In Riverisland, the court overruled Pendergrass and abrogated the limits it placed
on the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule. (Riverisland, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
p. 1182.) The court reasoned: “[T]he parol evidence rule, intended to protect the terms
of a valid written contract, should not bar evidence challenging the validity of the
agreement itself. ‘Evidence to prove that the instrument is void or voidable for mistake,
fraud, duress, undue influence, illegality, alteration, lack of consideration, or another
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invalidating cause is admissible. This evidence does not contradict the terms of an
effective integration, because it shows that the purported instrument has no legal effect.’
[Citations.]” (Id. at pp. 1174-1175.) The court concluded Pendergrass was an
aberration. “It purported to follow section 1856 [citation], but its restriction on the fraud
exception was inconsistent with the terms of the statute, and with settled case law as well.
Pendergrass failed to account for the fundamental principle that fraud undermines the
essential validity of the parties’ agreement. When fraud is proven, it cannot be
maintained that the parties freely entered into an agreement reflecting a meeting of the
minds.… The Pendergrass court sought to ‘“prevent frauds and perjuries”’ [citation], but
ignored California law protecting against promissory fraud.” (Riverisland, at p. 182.)
In closing, the Riverisland court noted “that promissory fraud, like all forms of
fraud, requires a showing of justifiable reliance on the defendant’s misrepresentation.”
(Riverisland, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 1183.) Although defendant argued plaintiffs failed
to raise a triable issue of fact regarding the element of justifiable reliance, because they
admitted they did not read the written contract before signing it, the court declined to
address the issue of reliance; it had not been addressed in either the trial court or this
court. (Ibid.) In a footnote, however, the court observed:
“In Rosenthal v. Great Western Fin. Securities Corp. (1996) 14
Cal.4th 394, 419 … (Rosenthal), we considered whether parties could
justifiably rely on misrepresentations when they did not read their
contracts. We held that negligent failure to acquaint oneself with the
contents of a written agreement precludes a finding that the contract is void
for fraud in the execution. [Citation.] In that context, ‘[o]ne party’s
misrepresentations as to the nature or character of the writing do not negate
the other party’s apparent manifestation of assent, if the second party had
“reasonable opportunity to know of the character or essential terms of the
proposed contract.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]
“We expressed no view in Rosenthal on the ‘validity’ and ‘exact
parameters’ of a more lenient rule that has been applied when equitable
relief is sought for fraud in the inducement of a contract. [Citations.] Here
as well we need not explore the degree to which failure to read the contract
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affects the viability of a claim of fraud in the inducement.” (Riverisland,
supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 1183-1184, fn. 11.)
D. Justifiable reliance
Defendant’s current motion for summary judgment addressed four causes of
action: fraud, negligent misrepresentation, rescission, and reformation. All were based
on the same allegations of misrepresentation. Plaintiffs alleged they reached an
agreement with Ylarregui that defendant would not foreclose on plaintiffs’ properties,
which defendant held as security for their loan, for a period of two years; in exchange,
plaintiffs would pledge two ranches as additional security for the loan. Further, at the
time plaintiffs executed the written contract, Ylarregui falsely represented to them that
the writing contained the agreed upon terms, when it actually provided for only a three
month forbearance period and added eight properties as additional security, including
plaintiffs’ residence and a truck yard.
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment presented three arguments. (1)
Plaintiffs’ action was based on a claim of fraud in the execution of the contract, and the
element of justifiable reliance essential to that claim could not be established because
plaintiffs failed to read the contract. (2) If plaintiffs’ action was instead based on fraud in
the inducement, a more lenient rule allowing for relief even when plaintiff did not read
the contract, would apply only to claims for equitable relief, and plaintiffs’ claims for
equitable relief are moot. (3) Even if the first two arguments were inapplicable, the
undisputed facts presented by defendant demonstrated that plaintiffs’ reliance on
Ylarregui’s alleged misrepresentations was not justifiable.
1. Fraud in the execution
“California law distinguishes between fraud in the ‘execution’ or ‘inception’ of a
contract and fraud in the ‘inducement’ of a contract. In brief, in the former case ‘“the
fraud goes to the inception or execution of the agreement, so that the promisor is
deceived as to the nature of his act, and actually does not know what he is signing, or
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does not intend to enter into a contract at all, mutual assent is lacking, and [the contract]
is void. In such a case it may be disregarded without the necessity of rescission.”’
[Citation.] Fraud in the inducement, by contrast, occurs when ‘“the promisor knows what
he is signing but his consent is induced by fraud, mutual assent is present and a contract
is formed, which, by reason of the fraud, is voidable. In order to escape from its
obligations the aggrieved party must rescind ....”’ [Citation.]” (Rosenthal, supra, 14
Cal.4th at p. 415.)
In Rosenthal, the plaintiffs invested in stock and bond mutual funds through the
defendants, a stockbrokerage and its representatives. (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at
p. 402.) When the value of the mutual funds declined, the plaintiffs sued the defendants
for fraud and negligent misrepresentation, among other things. (Ibid.) The defendants
moved to compel arbitration of the dispute, pursuant to an arbitration provision contained
in the client agreements. The plaintiffs opposed, asserting fraud in the execution of the
agreements. (Id. at p. 403.) The plaintiffs asserted the stock brokers led the plaintiffs to
believe they worked for Great Western Bank, where most of the plaintiffs held accounts,
misrepresented the nature of the investments being sold, did not advise the plaintiffs of
the arbitration provision, and assured the plaintiffs the client agreement was a mere
formality needed to open the account. (Id. at pp. 403-404.)
The court in Rosenthal concluded the plaintiffs’ claim of fraud in the execution of
the entire agreement was an issue for the trial court to decide, not an arbitrator. “If the
entire contract is void ab initio because of fraud, the parties have not agreed to arbitrate
any controversy,” including whether the agreements were void due to fraud in the
execution. (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 416.) The defendants contended the
plaintiffs could not establish fraud in the execution, because they could not demonstrate
justifiable reliance on the alleged misrepresentations; the plaintiffs had a reasonable
opportunity to learn the true terms of the client agreements by simply reading them, but
failed through their own neglect to do so. (Id. at p. 419.) The court agreed with the
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defendants “that fraud does not render a written contract void where the defrauded party
had a reasonable opportunity to discover the real terms of the contract. A contract may,
however, be held wholly void, despite the parties’ apparent assent to it, when, ‘“without
negligence on his part, a signer attaches his signature to a paper assuming it to be a paper
of a different character.”’ [Citations.]” (Id. at pp. 419-420.)
The court noted some prior cases stated a broader rule: while misrepresentations
once excused failure to read a contract only within a fiduciary relationship, that excuse
may now be asserted even when there is no fiduciary relationship between the parties.
(Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 420.) Rosenthal concluded those cases stated the rule
too broadly. “While some prior cases have held equitable relief, such as rescission or
reformation of the contract, may be available despite the defrauded party’s failure to read
the contract, our law is clear that misrepresentation does not render the contract void
unless the misled party, before making the agreement, lacked a reasonable opportunity to
learn its terms.” (Id. at p. 421.)
Thus, the court distinguished between fraud in the execution, asserted in support
of a claim the contract is void, and fraud in the inducement, asserted to obtain equitable
remedies, such as rescission or reformation. It concluded “that, whatever validity the
[broader] rule … may have when the plaintiff seeks equitable relief for fraud in the
inducement of a contract, and whatever the exact parameters of that rule might be, the
rule is not a correct statement of the test to be applied when the plaintiff seeks a judicial
determination the contract is void for fraud in the execution.” (Rosenthal, supra, 14
Cal.4th at p. 423.)
Some of the plaintiffs in Rosenthal declared that, because they believed the
stockbrokers were representatives of Great Western Bank, a bank with which the
plaintiffs had established a long-term relationship, they trusted the stockbrokers and
relied on their misrepresentations and assurances that the plaintiffs did not need to read
the agreements. (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 423-424.) The court held these
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declarations did not establish fraud in the execution of the client agreements. (Id. at
p. 425.) The plaintiffs did not demonstrate they lacked a reasonable opportunity to
discover the nature of the client agreements before they signed them. (Ibid.) As to the
plaintiffs who submitted declarations stating they could speak and read little or no
English or were legally blind, and they had informed the defendants’ representatives of
this, and the plaintiff whose daughter asserted the plaintiff suffered from Alzheimer’s
disease and could not understand the transaction, the trial court should have resolved
conflicts in the evidence and determined whether the plaintiffs established fraud in the
execution of their agreements. (Id. at pp. 427-431.)
Thus, Rosenthal reiterated a rule that a party to a contract cannot demonstrate
justifiable reliance on the other party’s misrepresentations, for purposes of establishing
fraud in the execution of the contract and rendering the contract void, when the allegedly
defrauded party had a reasonable opportunity to read the contract and discover its terms.
Defendant invokes this rule, asserting plaintiffs’ claims were based on fraud in the
execution of the forbearance agreement, and the undisputed facts indicate nothing
prevented plaintiffs from reading the contract prior to signing it. Because plaintiffs had a
reasonable opportunity to discover the true terms of the written agreement by simply
reading it, defendant contends, they cannot show their reliance on Ylarregui’s alleged
misrepresentations was justifiable.
In its brief, defendant repeatedly assures us that, in our decision in the prior appeal
in this case, we “held Plaintiffs’ claims constitute ‘fraud in the procurement or
execution,’ and not ‘fraud in the inducement.’” Defendant adds that “it is undisputed”
and “Plaintiffs concede” we so held. In our prior opinion in this case, however, we
distinguished a false promise, made prior to or at the time of execution of a written
contract, that directly contradicted the promises made in the written contract, from a
misrepresentation of fact, made at the time of execution of the written contract,
concerning the terms actually contained in the written contract. We did not discuss any
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distinction between fraud in the execution and fraud in the inducement, much less “hold”
that the fraud alleged by plaintiffs fell into one category or the other. We were
interpreting Pendergrass and the limit it placed on the fraud exception to the parol
evidence rule; that limit applied when the fraud took the form of a false promise directly
contradicting the promise made in the written agreement, and the court distinguished
such promissory fraud from other forms of fraud that might invalidate an agreement.
In our prior opinion in this case, we quoted the language of Pendergrass placing a
limit on the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule: “Our conception of the rule which
permits parol evidence of fraud to establish the invalidity of the instrument is that it must
tend to establish some independent fact or representation, some fraud in the procurement
of the instrument or some breach of confidence concerning its use, and not a promise
directly at variance with the promise of the writing.” (Pendergrass, supra, 4 Cal.2d at
p. 263.) We characterized plaintiffs’ allegations of fraud as alleging a misrepresentation
of fact as to the terms actually contained in the written agreement, rather than a false
promise directly contradicting the promises in the written contract. We concluded:
“Misrepresentation of the terms of the written contract, in order to induce the other party
to sign it, constitutes ‘fraud in the procurement of the instrument’ [citation], which
Pendergrass and Fleury [v. Ramacciotti (1937) 8 Cal.2d 660 (Fleury)] recognized as an
appropriate circumstance for application of the fraud exception to the parol evidence
rule.” We interpreted the Pendergrass court’s use of the term “some fraud in the
procurement of the instrument,” and used the term ourselves, not as a technical term
referring to either fraud in the inducement or fraud in the execution, but as a general term,
referring to any circumstance in which one party uses fraud to obtain the signature of the
other party on a written contract to which the other party does not actually agree. In other
words, it was a broad term, encompassing both fraud in the execution and fraud in the
inducement.
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In any event, our opinion in the prior appeal discussed, interpreted, and applied the
rule set out in Pendergrass. The Supreme Court, in its Riverisland opinion, overruled
Pendergrass, holding that it incorrectly interpreted the fraud exception to the parol
evidence rule. Thus, the Riverisland decision superseded our opinion interpreting and
applying Pendergrass to plaintiffs’ case. Riverisland abrogated the Pendergrass rule and
our interpretation and application of it. Thus, defendant’s repeated assertions that we
“held” that plaintiffs’ claim is one of fraud in the execution, and its assertion that this
holding is law of the case and survives the Supreme Court’s overruling of Pendergrass,
are in error.
Fraud in the execution exists when “‘the promisor is deceived as to the nature of
his act, and actually does not know what he is signing, or does not intend to enter into a
contract at all.’” (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 415.) “To make out a claim of fraud
in the execution … plaintiffs must show their apparent assent to the contracts—their
signatures on the … agreements—is negated by fraud so fundamental that they were
deceived as to the basic character of the documents they signed and had no reasonable
opportunity to learn the truth.” (Id. at p. 425.) There was no evidence plaintiffs were
deceived as to the basic character of the documents they signed or did not know what
they were signing. The evidence indicates plaintiffs knew they were entering into a
contract; they were not tricked into signing the contract believing it to be something else.
They knew they were executing a forbearance agreement, the effect of which was to
postpone any action by defendant to foreclose on the properties securing the loan and to
extend plaintiffs’ time to repay the loan. Certain terms of the agreement were allegedly
misrepresented to them, but they were not deceived about the basic nature of the
documents they signed.
Further, plaintiffs did not seek to have the contract declared void due to lack of
mutual assent. Rather, their complaint sought damages, as well as rescission and
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reformation of the contract, equitable remedies consistent with a claim of fraud in the
inducement.
Accordingly, we conclude that, inasmuch as defendants’ motion for summary
judgment failed to establish plaintiffs’ complaint sought to avoid the contract on the
ground of fraud in the execution, defendant was not entitled to summary judgment on the
ground plaintiffs could not demonstrate justifiable reliance on defendant’s alleged fraud
as a matter of law due to their failure to read the contract.
2. Fraud in the inducement
In Riverisland, the court acknowledged that some cases have applied a more
lenient rule to a party’s failure to read the contract, when the party seeks equitable relief
for fraud in the inducement, rather than seeking to void the contract based on fraud in the
execution. (Riverisland, supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 1183-1184, fn. 11.) The court noted
that it declined, in Rosenthal, to express any view on the validity or exact parameters of
such a rule. (Riverisland, at pp. 1183-1184, fn. 11.) Because it did not address the issue
of justifiable reliance, the court in Riverisland likewise declined to “explore the degree to
which failure to read the contract affects the viability of a claim of fraud in the
inducement.” (Ibid.)
In California Trust Co. v. Cohn (1932) 214 Cal. 619 (Cohn), when the plaintiff
sued to quiet title to certain real property, the defendants cross-complained against them
alleging fraud. (Id. at p. 622.) The defendants alleged the plaintiff owned the subject
property and represented to the defendants that, if they would pay the plaintiff $7,500, the
plaintiff would hold title to the property as trustee for the benefit of the plaintiff and the
defendants; the plaintiff would also improve the property, sell it within a year, and pay
the defendants $17,500 of the proceeds. The plaintiff prepared a written agreement,
which it represented contained these provisions. In reliance on that representation, the
defendants signed the agreement without reading it. (Id. at p. 623.) When the plaintiff
demanded further payment from the defendants pursuant to the written agreement, the
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defendants read the contract for the first time and discovered it contained provisions
significantly different from the prior oral agreement. (Id. at pp. 623-624.) The cross-
complaint sought a determination that the plaintiff held title to the property in trust for
itself and the defendants, reformation of the written agreement to make it conform to the
parties’ oral agreement, and damages resulting from the fraud. (Id. at p. 624.) The
plaintiff’s demurrer to the cross-complaint was sustained and the defendants appealed.
The court found the cross-complaint alleged sufficient facts to warrant reformation
of the contract. (Cohn, supra, 214 Cal. at p. 626.) “It is elementary that when through
fraud, or mutual mistake of the parties, or a mistake of one party which the other at the
time knew or suspected, a written contract does not truly express the intention of the
parties, it may be revised.” (Id. at p. 626.) The plaintiff asserted a party has a legal duty
to ascertain the contents of a written agreement before signing it and, having failed to
read it, cannot attack the agreement on the ground he relied on the false representations of
the other party about its contents. (Ibid.) After noting there was a “contrariety of
opinion” on the issue, the court stated that “the failure to read a written instrument which
it is sought to have reformed need not necessarily constitute a bar to relief. [Citation.]
Whether or not such a failure amounts to such grossly and inexcusably negligent conduct
as to preclude relief by way of reformation, depends upon the peculiar circumstances of
each case.… There has always been a sharp struggle in the courts between the desire to
repress fraud upon the one hand, and on the other to discourage negligence and the
opportunity and invitation to commit perjury.” (Id. at p. 627.) The court concluded:
“[W]here the failure to familiarize one’s self with the contents of a written contract prior
to its execution is traceable solely to carelessness or negligence, reformation as a rule
should be denied; but … where such failure, and perhaps negligence, is induced … by the
false representations and fraud of the other party to the contract that its provisions are
different from those set out, the courts, even in the absence of a fiduciary or confidential
relationship between the parties, should reform, and in most cases have reformed, the
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instrument so as to cause it to speak the true agreement of the parties. [Citations] … [A]
party to an instrument who by fraud leads the other party to sign without reading it is in
no position to urge the latter’s negligence in bar of reformation.” (Ibid.)
In Fleury, supra, 8 Cal.2d 660, the defendants executed a note and mortgage to the
payee, who died before the note was paid. Babin, the executor of the payee’s estate,
failed to enforce the obligation and the statute of limitations ran. The defendant,
Ramacciotti, because he was a friend and business associate of Babin, agreed to permit
foreclosure, provided no deficiency judgment would be entered against him; he waived
the defense of the statute of limitations and signed a renewal note without reading it,
based on Babin’s representation it contained the provision preventing a deficiency
judgment. Babin filed an action on the new note and Ramacciotti defaulted. Babin died
and Ramacciotti discovered a deficiency judgment had been entered against him.
Ramacciotti had the default set aside and the trial court subsequently denied a deficiency
judgment. (Id. at p. 661.) The Supreme Court affirmed.
The plaintiff contended Ramacciotti could not raise Babin’s fraud as a defense to
the debt, because of his carelessness in failing to read the renewal note. The court
rejected the argument: “Plaintiff … conceives the rule to be that only where confidential
relations exist between the parties is one who negligently fails to read an instrument
entitled to avoid it for fraud. Such is not, however, the view adopted by this court. In
California Trust Co. v. Cohn …, we declared that where failure to read an instrument is
induced by fraud of the other party, the fraud is a defense even in the absence of fiduciary
or confidential relations.” (Fleury, supra, 8 Cal.2d at p. 662; accord, Security-First Nat’l
Bank v. Earp (1942) 19 Cal.2d 774, 777-778 (Security-First).)
In Van Meter v. Bent Construction Co. (1956) 46 Cal.2d 588 (Van Meter), the
defendant, a contractor, contracted to construct a dam for the city; the plaintiff
subcontracted to clear brush and trees from the reservoir basin. (Id. at p. 590.) The
defendant represented to the plaintiff that the area to be cleared would be marked with
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flags by the city. When the plaintiff examined the area prior to making his bid, only one
portion of the basin area had been marked, and the plaintiff's bid was based on that area.
After his bid was accepted and the plaintiff began his work, he was informed a larger area
needed to be cleared. (Id. at p. 591.) The trial court concluded the defendant’s conduct
constituted fraud, although it was not willful; the plaintiff was negligent in not using
reasonable care to determine the extent of the work to be performed under the
subcontract. The trial court granted the plaintiff no relief. (Id. at p. 593.) The Supreme
Court reversed the judgment.
“[E]ven in the absence of any misrepresentation, the negligent failure of a party to
know or discover facts as to which both parties are under a mistake does not preclude
rescission or reformation because of the mistake.” (Van Meter, supra, 46 Cal.2d at
p. 594.) “There is even more reason for not barring a plaintiff from equitable relief where
his negligence is due in part to his reliance in good faith upon the false representations of
a defendant, although the statements were not made with intent to deceive. [Citations.]
A defendant who misrepresents the facts and induces the plaintiff to rely on his
statements should not be heard in an equitable action to assert that the reliance was
negligent unless plaintiff’s conduct, in the light of his intelligence and information, is
preposterous or irrational.” (Id. at p. 595.) The section of the contract describing the
work to be done stated the area would be flagged by the city; a map that showed the area
to be cleared was included in the general contract, but was not referenced in the portion
describing the work to be done by the plaintiff. (Id. at pp. 590-591, 595.) The
defendants, who were in a position to know the facts, represented to the plaintiff that the
area had been flagged. (Id. at pp. 595-596.) Thus, the plaintiff’s conduct was not
preposterous or irrational, and the plaintiff should not have been precluded from
obtaining relief. (Id. at p. 596.)
More recently, in Chapman v. Skype, Inc. (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 217 (Chapman),
the plaintiff filed a class action complaint alleging the defendant misrepresented that its
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monthly telephone calling plan was unlimited when it was not. (Id. at p. 222.) The word
“unlimited” in the plan description was followed by a footnote designator; the footnote
stated a fair usage policy applied. On another page, the fair usage policy indicated the
plan had time limits on daily and monthly calls. When she purchased a subscription to
the calling plan, the plaintiff did not notice the footnote. (Id. at p. 223.) The trial court
sustained the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint, concluding the footnote and
limitation were conspicuous and clearly disclosed. (Id. at p. 224.)
The appellate court reversed, concluding the plaintiff adequately alleged a
misrepresentation of fact, based on the use of the term “unlimited” to describe calling
plans that were not unlimited. (Chapman, supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at p. 222.) Relying on
Rosenthal, the defendant argued the plaintiff could not have justifiably relied on the
alleged misrepresentation after being given a reasonable opportunity to read the
subscription agreement. The court noted Rosenthal distinguished fraud in the execution
from fraud in the inducement; it also “distinguished cases holding that a plaintiff may
obtain equitable relief from the terms of a contract that was procured through fraud in the
inducement despite his or her negligence in failing to read the contract or otherwise
failing to discover the facts. [Citation.] Although the failure to read a contract precludes
a claim of fraud in the execution, so as to render the contract completely void [citation], it
does not necessarily preclude equitable relief from the contract terms based on a
misrepresentation.” (Chapman, at pp. 232-233, fn. omitted.) The plaintiff did not allege
fraud in the execution or contend the contract was void, so Rosenthal was not on point.
(Chapman, at p. 233.) The court concluded the plaintiff’s “failure to read the entire
subscription agreement does not necessarily preclude her justifiable reliance on a
representation in the subscription agreement that the plan was ‘Unlimited’ for purposes of
negligent and intentional misrepresentation.” (Ibid.)
Thus, the cases distinguish between allegations of fraud in the execution, made in
support of a claim that the contract is void, and allegations of fraud in the inducement,
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made in support of a claim for equitable remedies, such as rescission or reformation of
the contract. Where a party seeks to avoid a contract due to fraud in the execution, the
party must establish “fraud so fundamental that they were deceived as to the basic
character of the documents they signed and had no reasonable opportunity to learn the
truth.” (Rosenthal, supra, 14 Cal.4th 425.) The doctrine applies when there is no mutual
assent to the contract because the defrauded party does not know he is executing a
contract. (Id. at p. 415.) Generally, in that situation, only a brief reading or review of the
document by the party before signing it would reveal its nature as a contract affecting the
legal rights of the party, or would at least raise sufficient suspicions to warrant further
inquiry as to the nature and effect of the document to be signed. Thus, the party
reasonably can be expected to read and discover, or inquire into, the true nature of the
document before signing it, absent some disability or other circumstance that prevents the
party from reading the document.
Where there is fraud in the inducement, however, the allegedly defrauded party is
aware he is signing a contract, but may not be aware of all of its terms. If the other party
attempts to induce him to sign the contract by misrepresenting the terms it contains, or
misrepresenting that it contains the terms the parties already agreed to, it may take more
than a brief reading or review of the contract to discover the falsity of that representation.
In Van Meter, for example, the map showing the actual area required to be cleared by the
subcontractor for the construction of the dam was contained in a 110-page general
contract, which included 27 folded pages of drawings and maps; the relevant map was
not referred to in the subcontract, in the table of contents of the general contract, or in the
section of the general contract describing the area to be cleared, which the plaintiff had
reviewed. (Van Meter, supra, 46 Cal.2d at pp. 590-591.) The plaintiff would have been
required to review the entire general contract, most of which did not pertain to his work,
in order to discover the map illustrating the area to be cleared and to determine the area
encompassed a larger area than that actually marked with flags by the city.
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The more lenient rule, which permits the allegedly defrauded party that seeks
equitable remedies to pursue a claim or defense of fraud despite the party’s failure to read
the contract and discover its true terms, permits the court to balance the equities between
the parties. It can balance the alleged neglect of the party that failed to read the contract,
which may amount to negligence or mere carelessness, against the fraud of the other
party, which may consist of intentional or merely negligent misrepresentation.
The cases that have permitted a party to allege and prove fraud in the inducement,
based on misrepresentation of the terms of the written contract, despite the party’s failure
to read the contract, have done so in the context of claims for equitable relief. Defendant
contends this more lenient rule does not permit plaintiffs to pursue equitable claims for
rescission and reformation because those claims are moot; it asserts they became moot
because, after the filing of the complaint, plaintiffs paid off their operating loan and
defendant dismissed its cross-complaint for foreclosure. Thus, the contract has been fully
performed and there is nothing left to rescind or reform. Plaintiffs did not initially
address the assertion those causes of action are moot. After oral argument, we requested
additional briefing from the parties regarding whether the rescission and reformation
causes of action were rendered moot when plaintiffs paid off the loan after the action was
commenced and, if not, what effectual relief plaintiffs could still obtain on those causes
of action.4
4 In connection with their supplemental brief, plaintiffs requested we augment the record
with notices of default recorded by defendant in Kings County and Tulare County in March 2008
and a notice of trustee’s sale recorded in Kings County on October 23, 2008. They assert these
documents support their claim for damages for sale of the cold storage facility because they
show plaintiffs sold the facility to prevent defendant from conducting a nonjudicial foreclosure
sale of their residence, which was scheduled for November 18, 2008. We deny the request.
Evidence of the recording of the notices of default in March 2008 is already in the record. The
notice of trustee’s sale recorded in October 2008 is not relevant to demonstrate plaintiffs’ motive
for selling the cold storage facility seven months earlier, in April 2008.
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3. Rescission
Full execution of a contract does not necessarily bar rescission. (Engle v. Farrell
(1946) 75 Cal.App.2d 612, 617-618.) Rescission is effected by giving notice of
rescission to the other party and “[r]estor[ing] to the other party everything of value
which he has received from him under the contract or offer[ing] to restore the same upon
condition that the other party do likewise, unless the latter is unable or positively refuses
to do so.” (Civ. Code, § 1691, subd. (b).) “It is the purpose of rescission ‘to restore both
parties to their former position as far as possible’ [citations] and ‘to bring about
substantial justice by adjusting the equities between the parties’ despite the fact that ‘the
status quo cannot be exactly reproduced.’ [Citations]” (Runyan v. Pacific Air Industries,
Inc. (1970) 2 Cal.3d 304, 316.) When a contract has been rescinded, a party may bring
“an action to recover any money or thing owing to him by any other party to the contract
as a consequence of such rescission or for any other relief to which he may be entitled
under the circumstances.” (Civ. Code, § 1692.) “The aggrieved party shall be awarded
complete relief, including restitution of benefits, if any, conferred by him as a result of
the transaction and any consequential damages to which he is entitled.” (Ibid.)
As a practical matter, because of the nature of the contract involved, it does not
appear either party can restore to the other the consideration exchanged under the
contract. The consideration plaintiffs received was time—an extension of time to pay the
outstanding loan. The consideration defendant received was a security interest in several
pieces of real property. Presumably, since defendant acknowledges plaintiffs paid off the
loan, defendant has already released the security interest it held in plaintiffs’ real
property. Thus, it does not appear plaintiffs would receive anything as a result of
rescission of the contract and restoration of the consideration exchanged.
Plaintiffs asserted in their supplemental brief that, if the forbearance agreement
were rescinded, they would still be entitled to equitable relief, including a monetary
award, to put them back in the position in which they were before the agreement was
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executed. According to plaintiffs, before the forbearance agreement was executed, the
only property pledged as security on the loan was a 15-acre ranch and a truck yard.5
Plaintiffs were in possession of the cold storage facility and it was not pledged as security
for the loan; plaintiffs assert the cold storage facility and plaintiffs’ residence were
fraudulently included as additional security in the forbearance agreement, and they
contend they were forced to sell the cold storage facility for less than its fair market value
in order to avoid a foreclosure sale of their residence. Plaintiffs contend Civil Code
section 1692 entitles them to consequential damages that will afford them complete relief
and put them back in status quo in the event of rescission of the forbearance agreement.
They imply, without specifically stating, that they believe they may recover damages for
the forced sale of the cold storage facility, presumably the difference in value between
the sale price and the fair market value of the facility. Plaintiffs also list as consequential
damages foreclosure costs they paid, their own attorney fees for prosecuting this action,
and punitive damages.
The object of rescission is to put the parties back in the position in which they
were before execution of the rescinded contract. Before execution of the forbearance
agreement, plaintiffs were in default on their loan and owed defendant approximately
$776,000. In February 2007, defendant sent plaintiffs a letter demanding payment.
Plaintiff Lance Workman met with Ylarregui and told him that he was already trying to
sell the cold storage facility in order to pay off the loan, but a real estate agent told him it
could take up to two years to sell it. On March 26, 2007, the parties entered into the
forbearance agreement. By the terms of the forbearance agreement as written, plaintiffs’
extended time to pay off the debt expired on July 1, 2007. In February 2008, plaintiffs
received an offer for the purchase of the cold storage facility. In March 2008, defendant
5 This assertion contradicts the allegations of the complaint, which stated the truck yard
was fraudulently included as additional security in the forbearance agreement.
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recorded a notice of default. Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action on April 2,
2008. They sold the cold storage facility on April 15, 2008, for an amount in excess of
the balance due on the loan. Defendant filed its cross-complaint for judicial foreclosure
of the deeds of trust on June 27, 2008. The record does not reflect when the loan was
paid off.
If the parties were returned to the status quo that existed prior to execution of the
forbearance agreement, plaintiffs would be in default on their loan and subject to judicial
foreclosure or a trustee’s sale of the properties then pledged as security. In the absence of
the forbearance agreement, the need to pay off the loan would have been even more
pressing than it was after execution of the forbearance agreement. Even before the
parties entered into the forbearance agreement, plaintiffs intended to sell the cold storage
facility to pay off the loan. Thus, plaintiffs’ attempt to blame defendant’s alleged fraud
and the forbearance agreement for their “fire sale” of the cold storage facility is
unavailing. Equity would not support plaintiffs’ recovery from defendant of damages as
a result of plaintiffs selling the property at less than its value in order to pay off their
loan.6
Plaintiffs also assert they could recover as consequential damages their attorney
fees in this action, as well as punitive damages. They have cited no legal authority that
would support an award of attorney fees as damages in this action. Punitive damages are
not recoverable when no actual damages are awarded. (Mother Cobb’s Chicken
Turnovers v. Fox (1937) 10 Cal.2d 203, 205-206.)
We conclude plaintiffs’ cause of action for rescission of the forbearance
agreement based on alleged fraud has become moot, in that the contract could not be
6 We note that the record does not suggest defendant received anything from the sale of the
cold storage facility other than what it was entitled to both before and after execution of the
forbearance agreement: the balance due on the loan plus costs of foreclosure.
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effectively rescinded because the parties cannot return the consideration they received in
the transaction and plaintiffs have not demonstrated they are entitled to any other relief
based on rescission of the contract. Summary judgment of this cause of action was
therefore proper.
4. Reformation
A contract may be reformed as a remedy for fraud. “When, through fraud … a
written contract does not truly express the intention of the parties, it may be revised on
the application of a party aggrieved, so as to express that intention, so far as it can be
done without prejudice to rights acquired by third persons, in good faith and for value.”
(Civ. Code, § 3399.) This is true whether the contract is executed or executory. (Merkle
v. Merkle (1927) 85 Cal.App. 87, 110-111.) If plaintiffs prevailed on the reformation
cause of action, however, the contract could not be reformed so the parties could perform
in accordance with its revised terms, because the parties have already fully performed. A
contract may be reformed, then specifically enforced. (Tomas v. Vaughn (1944) 63
Cal.App.2d 188, 192 (Tomas).) “[W]here through no fault of the plaintiff in equity,
specific performance cannot be decreed, the court … will grant, as an alternative,
monetary relief, which in an action strictly at law would be by way of damages.” (Ibid.)
Tomas illustrates the type of monetary award that may be made incidental to
granting equitable relief. In Tomas, the plaintiff entered into a contract to purchase an
automobile from the defendant, a used car dealer. (Tomas, supra, 63 Cal.App.2d at
p. 190.) The plaintiff alleged he agreed to make 18 monthly installment payments of $20
each and a final payment of $95. When the plaintiff signed the contract, the defendant
hid the portion actually providing for 24 monthly payments of $20 and a final payment of
$95. (Ibid.) The defendant later assigned the contract to a third party. The trial court
reformed the contract by reducing the final payment to the third party, then entered a
monetary award against the defendant equal to the six extra payments. The defendant’s
assignment of the contract to the third party prevented the trial court from simply
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reforming the contract and specifically enforcing it against the defendant. The reviewing
court determined the monetary award was proper, because it was “purely incidental to the
equitable relief originally sought.” (Id. at p. 192.) It adjusted the equities between the
parties and prevented the third party from suffering any prejudice to the rights it acquired
in good faith through assignment of the contract. (Id. at p. 193.)
In Tomas, the monetary award was incidental to the reformation. Through no fault
of Tomas, because of the assignment of his contract, the contract could not simply be
reformed and specifically enforced in accordance with the parties’ actual agreement.
Further, the amount of compensation required to put Tomas in the same position as if the
contract had been reformed and enforced was definite and easily calculable. Here,
however, plaintiffs’ actions contributed to the inability to specifically enforce the
agreement as reformed. Additionally, attempting to return plaintiffs to the status quo that
existed prior to execution of the forbearance agreement by awarding monetary
compensation would result in a speculative monetary award that is not merely incidental
to reformation.
Plaintiffs’ own evidence demonstrates they intended to sell the cold storage
facility to pay off their debt to defendant even prior to entering into the forbearance
agreement. They sold the facility thirteen days after filing their complaint, which
included a cause of action for reformation. Rather than promptly suing for reformation
and following through by enjoining enforcement of the contract as written, obtaining
reformation, and performing pursuant to the reformed contract, plaintiffs performed and
accepted defendant’s performance consistent with the contract as written.
While the court can, in connection with reforming a contract, adjust the
performance of the parties to do equity (see Tomas, supra, 63 Cal.App.2d at pp. 192-
193), it cannot award damages based on speculation about what might have happened if
the contract had been reformed prior to full performance and if the parties had performed
in accordance with the reformed contract. Plaintiffs chose to sell the cold storage facility,
26.
which they contend was not security for the loan prior to execution of the forbearance
agreement or part of the property they agreed to pledge as additional security in exchange
for the forbearance agreement. They did not choose to sell property they concede was
security for the loan prior to the forbearance agreement (a 15-acre ranch and a
commercial truck yard) or either of the two ranches they contend were to be the
additional security for the forbearance agreement. They cannot now speculate on what
would have happened if defendant had performed in accordance with the forbearance
agreement as plaintiffs contend it should have been written, and if defendant had
attempted to foreclose only on the original security or the two ranches plaintiffs concede
were to be additional security under the forbearance agreement.
Plaintiffs assert that, if they prevail on their reformation cause of action, the
forbearance agreement would be reformed to reflect that the security for the agreement
included only the two ranches, and not the cold storage facility or plaintiffs’ residence.
Then, they contend, defendant’s attempt to foreclose on the cold storage facility and
plaintiffs’ residence would be a breach of the reformed agreement for which plaintiffs
could recover damages. A plaintiff cannot, after the contract is fully performed pursuant
to the original terms, obtain reformation in order to create a breach by the other party for
which to recover damages. “An executed contract cannot be reformed where the
aggrieved party, with knowledge of the facts accepts performance in accordance with the
terms of the contract as written.” (Vantress Farms, Inc. v. Sydenstricker (1970) 11
Cal.App.3d 943, 950-951.)
In their reply brief, plaintiffs also assert that, as an alternative, they had the right to
affirm the contract and sue for damages. That claim for damages, however, is exactly
what is presented in the first two causes of action of plaintiffs’ complaint, which seek
damages for fraud and negligent misrepresentation. Those claims are not equitable
causes of action, where justifiable reliance on the other party’s misrepresentation of the
terms of the contract could be established despite the plaintiff’s failure to read the
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contract. Plaintiffs have cited no authority allowing the more lenient rule to be applied to
a legal cause of action for damages. As defendant points out, the cases discussing the
more lenient rule have applied it only to equitable claims. Plaintiffs, as appellants, bear
the burden of demonstrating prejudicial error. (In re Marriage of McLaughlin (2000) 82
Cal.App.4th 327, 337.) Because they have not demonstrated that the trial court applied
the wrong rule of law to the causes of action for damages for fraud and negligent
misrepresentation, they have not met that burden.
We conclude the trial court correctly granted summary judgment on all of
plaintiffs’ causes of action.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Defendant is entitled to its costs on appeal.
_____________________
HILL, P.J.
WE CONCUR:
_____________________
LEVY, J.
_____________________
KANE, J.
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