Filed 12/2/15 Lion 2020 7th Street v. Zepeda CA2/8
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION EIGHT
LION 2020 7th STREET, LLC, B258424
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County
Super. Ct. No. BC544259)
v.
SALVADOR ZEPEDA et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County.
Gregory W. Alarcon, Judge. Affirmed.
Law Offices of Lottie Cohen and Lottie Cohen for Defendants and Appellants.
Hollenbeck & Cardoso and Tania Cardoso for Plaintiff and Respondent.
__________________________
Salvador Zepeda and Agustin Zepeda appeal from both the unlawful detainer
judgment in favor of the lessor of the building where they operated their restaurant and
the trial court’s order denying their motion for relief from forfeiture of the lease on the
ground of undue hardship. Because the appellate record does not include a reporter’s
transcript of the unlawful detainer trial, we presume that the findings in the trial court’s
statement of decision and order denying relief from forfeiture were correct. We affirm
both rulings.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In April 2002, Salvador Zepeda entered a four-year written lease of a building on
East 7th Street in Los Angeles where he operated his restaurant and dance/banquet hall
known as the Chavas Café. (We will refer to Salvador and Agustin Zepeda by their first
names, or collectively as appellants.) The lease required Salvador to: (1) provide copies
of all necessary business licenses and operation permits; (2) keep in place a liability
insurance policy with coverage limits of $2 million per occurrence that named the lessor
as an additional insured; (3) pay the cost of any insurance premium increases; and
(4) cover his proportionate share of any property tax increases.
In 2005, the lessor and Salvador signed an addendum extending the lease until
2012, along with scheduled increases in the monthly rent. The addendum also provided
an option to extend the lease another five years. Although Salvador was the sole lessee,
the 2005 addendum stated that “these options” were also extended to Salvador’s son,
Agustin. Both Salvador and Agustin signed the 2005 addendum. Another undated
addendum signed by Salvador and Agustin describes a five-year lease extension option
that would run until 2010. The undated addendum refers to the parties as being Salvador
and the original lessor. Another addendum dated in July 2011 extended the lease through
April 2017, along with scheduled rent increases. That addendum referred to both
Salvador and Agustin as lessees and was signed by each of them.
The original lessor sold the property to Lion 2020 7th Street, LLC in December
2013. On December 31, 2013, Lion sent four letters to Salvador demanding that,
pursuant to the lease, he: (1) provide copies of all required business licenses and permits;
2
(2) provide a copy of a liability insurance policy with limits of $2 million per occurrence
that named Lion as an additional insured; and (3) pay a property tax increase of more
than $19,000 that resulted from the sale of the property. On March 18, 2014, Agustin
gave Lion a copy of an insurance policy with coverage limits of $1 million per
occurrence, but made no further attempts to comply with Lion’s demands at that time.
On March 27, 2014, Lion gave 10- and 30-day notices to comply with the lease
provisions or quit the premises. The notices were served on Salvador but stated that they
applied to all others in possession. The 10-day notice was based on the failure to provide
copies of both the requisite business licenses and permits as well as a copy of an
insurance policy that named Lion as an additional insured in the amount of $2 million per
occurrence. The 30-day notice was based on the failure to pay the property tax increase
of $19,000 or a liability insurance premium increase of more than $6,100.
On April 17, 2014, Agustin provided copies of all required permits and licenses
except one: a City of Los Angeles tax registration certificate for retail sales. Instead,
Agustin provided only a copy of a tax registration certificate for “music machines.”
Appellants never paid the property tax or insurance premium increases. On April 30,
2014, Lion brought an unlawful detainer action against Salvador only.
Agustin was the lone defense witness at the two-day bench trial in June 2014. One
of the primary issues raised both at trial and on appeal was whether Agustin was in fact
Salvador’s cotenant. If so, as appellants contend, then the notices to quit and the
complaint were both defective because they did not name and were not served on
Agustin. As a result, any judgment for Lion would have no effect on Agustin’s right to
stay on the property.
Because appellants failed to designate the reporter’s transcript of the trial, we are
left with only the trial court’s statement of decision and concomitant findings to describe
the trial testimony. The lease required the landlord’s written consent before Salvador
could assign any portion of his interest to another person and Agustin “testified that he
had not signed an addendum adding him to the lease as a formal tenant.”
3
According to the statement of decision, a witness for Lion testified that Salvador
received both notices to quit. Agustin admitted seeing the 30-day notice, but denied
seeing the 10-day notice. Agustin testified that after reading Lion’s demand letters he
consulted a lawyer and an accountant. He claimed that he did not review the lease terms
dealing with liability insurance or licensing requirements because he believed the
property tax and insurance premium demands were more important. Agustin also
testified that he did not obtain a liability insurance policy in the correct amount and form
until May 28, 2014.
The trial court found that the 30-day notice to quit was defective because it was
premature and because Lion’s estimate of the property tax owed “far exceeded” a
reasonable estimate. However, the trial court found for Lion on the 10-day notice to quit
based on the failure to provide copies of all required business operation permits and the
failure to have had in place the proper liability coverage. The trial court awarded Lion
holdover damages of nearly $14,000 and attorney fees and costs of nearly $3,000.
As for the status of Agustin’s possessory interest, if any, in the leased premises,
the trial court found that he “had not signed any specific addendum specifically adding
himself to the lease as a formal tenant.” Code of Civil Procedure section 1164 states that
only tenants and subtenants who actually occupy the premises need be named in an
unlawful detainer complaint.1 It also provides that anyone who “enter[s] the premises
under the tenant” after the action starts is bound by the judgment as if they had been
made a party. Relying on this provision, the trial court found that Agustin’s absence
from the complaint was not fatal to the unlawful detainer claim and that he was bound by
the judgment.
The trial court then granted a motion by Lion to add Agustin as a defendant,
stating that the amendment was “not at material variance with the complaint” and did not
mislead Agustin or prejudice his ability to defend the action. The trial court found that
Agustin “had every right and opportunity to be heard by the court, was heard by the
1 All further section references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
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court, and has been added as a Defendant.” As a result, Agustin would be “treated as a
co-lessee.” Although the statement of decision said that judgment would be entered
against both Salvador and Agustin, the judgment itself identified only Salvador and all
occupants of the premises.
Before judgment was entered appellants filed a motion asking for relief from their
lease forfeiture on the ground that the judgment would create undue hardship to
themselves, their employees, and customers who had rented the banquet hall for
upcoming special occasions. (§ 1179.) Agustin’s supporting declaration claimed that the
family-run business stood to lose capital investments over the years that exceeded
$500,000. In addition, they would lose their clientele and good will that they had built up
since the restaurant began operating in 1979. Agustin also listed numerous deposits taken
to reserve the banquet hall from July through December 2014. In addition to losing the
deposits, those events would be disrupted, he said. Based on the restaurant’s past
performance, Agustin estimated lost income of $640,000 due to the early termination of
the lease.
Agustin said that insurance had always been in effect, albeit in the amount of
$1 million per occurrence and $2 million in the aggregate, and that he had simply
misunderstood the lease requirement of a policy with limits of $2 million per occurrence.
A policy in the correct amount was obtained in May 2014, which was “retroactive.” He
also said that the Los Angeles city tax registration statement for “music machines” was
meant to include retail sales. Agustin said he had tendered the monthly rent to Lion’s
counsel for May through July 2014 and that he would comply with court-imposed
conditions for forfeiture relief, including the property tax increases.
The trial court denied the forfeiture relief motion at the same time it issued its final
statement of decision. The trial court found that relief based on hardship to others was
improper because separate petitions had not been filed by those supposedly harmed. As
for appellants, the trial court found that the petition did not show extreme or convincing
hardship because appellants could move to a new location. Finally, the trial court found
that appellants’ failure to comply with Lion’s lease performance demands appeared
5
willful in light of Agustin’s testimony that he chose to ignore the 10-day notice to quit
and instead continued to book banquet hall reservations and take deposits even after the
initial statement of decision was issued. Weighing the equities, the trial court found that
appellants effectively brought about their own difficulties.
On August 25, 2014, appellants filed a notice of appeal from the judgment, and the
next day filed a petition for writ of mandate with this court, along with a request to stay
enforcement of the judgment (case No. B258418). On August 28, 2014, we issued a
temporary stay and ordered Lion to respond. We denied the writ petition on October 2,
2014. On October 17, 2014, appellants filed with this court a motion to stay the
judgment pending appeal. Five days later the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department
executed a lockout of the premises. On November 25, 2014, we decided to treat the stay
motion as a writ of supersedeas and issued a stay of execution. We denied that writ on
December 16, 2014, after Lion informed us that appellants were no longer in possession
of the premises.
DISCUSSION
1. The Incomplete Appellate Record Compels Affirmance of the Judgment
A. The record supports a finding that Agustin was not a cotenant.
If the appellate record does not include a reporter’s transcript, and if no error is
apparent on the face of the existing appellate record, the judgment must be conclusively
presumed correct as to all evidentiary matters. We therefore presume that the unreported
trial testimony would show that no error occurred. (Estate of Fain (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th
973, 992.) As a result, an appellant who fails to provide a reporter’s transcript cannot
challenge a judgment based on the sufficiency of the evidence. (Ibid.)
Appellants contend this rule does not apply here because the 2011 lease addendum
that purports to identify both Agustin and Salvador as lessees conclusively shows that
Agustin was a cotenant. This contention overlooks the statement of decision, where the
trial court said that, after reviewing the undated option to extend the lease signed by both
Agustin and Salvador, Agustin testified that “he had not signed an addendum adding him
to the lease as a formal tenant.” One representative of Lion testified that it was not clear
6
in what capacity Agustin had signed either document. Another testified that Agustin
acted as Salvador’s interpreter and that Agustin said his father was the decision maker.
Based on this, the trial court found that Agustin “had not signed any specific addendum
specifically adding himself to the lease as a formal tenant.”
Based on Agustin’s testimony that he never signed an addendum adding him as a
cotenant, the trial court might well have found that the 2011 addendum did not actually
approve Agustin as a cotenant and was simply recognition that Agustin was involved in
the business and took part in any negotiations as Salvador’s interpreter. We must
presume that the trial court did so and therefore see no error appearing on the face of the
record. (Estate of Fain, supra, 75 Cal.App.4th at p. 994.) As a result, there was no need
to serve Agustin with the notices to quit or name him in the complaint. (§ 1164 [only
tenants and subtenants need be served].)
B. Agustin waived any objections to being added as a party.
Appellants contend the trial court erred by amending the complaint to add Agustin
as a defendant after the trial ended. Lion contends the trial court properly exercised its
discretion to do so under section 473, which permits amendments that add new parties at
any time before judgment is entered. Appellants counter that amendments adding new
defendants have been allowed only to correct technical pleading defects or misnomers.
We need not resolve that issue, however. Instead, we turn once more to the statement of
decision, where the trial court said Agustin “desired to make himself a party to the
action.” Because the record does not include the reporter’s transcript from the trial or the
hearing on Lion’s motion to amend, we presume that the trial court found Agustin asked
to be added as a party and therefore waived any objections to the court doing so. (See
Cochran v. Brown (1927) 84 Cal.App. 743, 748 [finding waiver of irregularity in adding
a party defendant].)
We alternately hold that even if the trial court erred by adding Agustin as a
defendant, that error was harmless because judgment was not entered against Agustin.
(Moon v. Marker (1938) 26 Cal.App.2d 33, 38-39.)
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C. The judgment against Salvador also binds Agustin.
The trial court found that its judgment would also bind Agustin pursuant to
section 1164, which provides: “All persons who enter the premises under the tenant,
after the commencement of the [unlawful detainer] suit, shall be bound by the judgment,
the same as if he or they had been made party to the action.” Appellants contend the trial
court erred because this section applies to only tenants and subtenants.
Appellants base this contention on the first sentence of section 1164, which states
that “[n]o person other than the tenant of the premises and subtenant, if there be one, in
the actual occupation of the premises when the complaint is filed, need be made parties
defendant in the proceeding . . . .” However, the last sentence of this statute also provides
that any unlawful detainer judgment is binding on all those who enter the premises under
the tenant after the action is brought as if they had been made parties to the action.
Therefore, the statute provides that although tenants and subtenants must be named as
defendants to an unlawful detainer action, nonparties who enter the premises after the
action is brought will be bound by the judgment.
At bottom, appellants’ contention rests on their mistaken belief that Agustin was a
cotenant. As discussed above, the limited record on appeal supports the trial court’s
finding that he was not a cotenant. Appellants do not address whether Agustin entered
the premises under Salvador after the action was brought. We therefore deem that issue
waived. (Luckett v. Keylee (2007) 147 Cal.App.4th 919, 927, fn. 11.)
Alternatively, given the silent record on this matter, we presume that the reporter’s
transcript would show that Agustin, who had no legal possessory interest in the premises,
entered at his father’s request after the unlawful detainer action commenced in order to
protect his father’s possessory interest and is therefore bound by the judgment.
2. Judgment Was Proper Based Solely on the 10-day Notice to Quit
Section 1161.1 provides that a notice to cure unpaid rent or quit may state that the
amount specified as owing is an estimate. (§ 1161.1, subd. (a).) So long as the amount
stated was reasonably accurate, the landlord may still prevail in an unlawful detainer
action. (WDT-Winchester v. Nilsson (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 516, 534 (WDT-
8
Winchester).) If the estimate is within 20 percent of the amount actually owed, there is a
rebuttable presumption that the estimate was reasonable. (§ 1161.1, subd. (e).) If the
estimate was not reasonable, however, then the landlord cannot prevail. (WDT-
Winchester, supra, at p. 534.)
Relying on WDT-Winchester, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th 516, appellants contend they
were entitled to judgment on the 10-day notice to quit because the trial court found that
the 30-day notice to quit was defective for having overestimated the amount of property
taxes owed. This contention rests on a misreading of WDT-Winchester. In that case, the
lessor served two notices to cure or quit. The first specified the amounts owed for unpaid
rent and property taxes, but did not state that those were estimates. The second notice did
state that the amounts claimed were estimates. In both cases, the property tax figures
were significantly higher than the actual amount owed. (Id. at pp. 523-524.) In reversing
a judgment for the lessor, the WDT-Winchester court noted that the lessor argued on
appeal that the first notice, which did not purport to supply an estimate, was the operative
one, and that as a result, section 1161.1 did not apply. The Court of Appeal refused to
consider that issue because it had not been raised below. (Id. at pp. 526-527.)
Appellants extrapolate from this that if one notice to cure a default or quit is
defective, then judgment must be entered for the defendant even if another notice was
proper. However, an appellate decision is authority for only those issues actually
decided. (Huscher v. Wells Fargo Bank (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 956, 962.) Therefore
appellants’ reliance on WDT-Winchester is misplaced.
Regardless, section 1161.1 applies only to notices to cure defaults for unpaid rent
or other amounts owed. (§ 1161.1, subd. (a) [stating it is applicable to unlawful detainer
actions for unpaid rent brought under § 1161, subd. 2].) Lion’s 10-day notice sought
unlawful detainer under section 1161, subdivision 3 for defaults in conditions or
covenants other than the payment of rent. Therefore, although section 1161.1 governed
Lion’s 30-day notice based on estimates of amounts owed for property taxes and
insurance premiums, it did not apply to the separate 10-day notice based on the failure to
fulfill the lease covenants of supplying proof of the correct insurance and of having the
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necessary business licenses and permits. Lion’s complaint was based on both notices to
quit, and we view each as analogous to separate causes of action. This case is therefore
unlike WDT-Winchester, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th 516, where the lessor’s notices to cure
were based solely on claims for unpaid rent, property taxes, and other charges. We
therefore conclude that the judgment for Lion was proper based on the 10-day notice to
quit.
3. The Trial Court Did Not Err by Denying Appellants’ Motion for Relief From
Forfeiture of the Lease
After the trial court issued its statement of decision, appellants moved for relief
from the forfeiture of Salvador’s lease under section 1179. Under that section,
application for such relief can be made by a tenant, subtenant, or any interested person.
A ruling on such a motion lies so largely in the discretion of the trial court that it would
require a very clear showing of an abuse of discretion to justify a reversal of an order
granting or denying the motion. (Superior Motels, Inc. v. Rinn Motor Hotels, Inc. (1987)
195 Cal.App.3d 1032, 1064.)
The mere fact that a hardship exists is not enough to warrant granting the motion
because a hardship will exist in almost all unlawful detainer actions. (Thrifty Oil Co. v
Batarse (1985) 174 Cal.App.3d 770, 777.) In balancing the equities, the trial court
should consider the circumstances of the case, the hardships to both lessor and lessee
from either granting or denying the motion, and whether the breach of lease was willful.
(Ibid.)
The trial court’s written order denying the motion for relief from forfeiture found
that appellants could not rely on hardships to others because the others – their employees
and customers – had not filed separate applications for relief. The hardship to appellants
was not sufficiently extreme, the trial court found, because a Lion representative testified
he offered to help appellants relocate but they refused and took no steps to do so.
According to the trial court, “loss of possession of the premises does not equate to loss of
the business.”
10
The trial court also noted that appellants continued to book banquet hall
reservations and take deposits even after the statement of decision was issued, showing
that they had contributed to their own hardships. The trial court found that even after
appellants had been counseled by a lawyer and an accountant they ignored their lease
obligations. The trial court pointed to testimony by Agustin that he admitted ignoring the
10-day notice to quit, although with an explanation, making the lack of compliance
willful.
The trial court concluded that, by failing to obtain the proper insurance until after
the action was filed, appellants exposed Lion to a risk of potential liability. Granting
relief from forfeiture and reinstating Salvador until 2017 would prejudice Lion, which
had properly made its formal demands for compliance, waited for compliance, and
brought and litigated the unlawful detainer action, the trial court found. The trial court
therefore found that the equities weighed in Lion’s favor and denied the motion.
Appellants raise three challenges to the trial court’s ruling: (1) a separate
application by other affected parties was not required; (2) the trial court should not have
relied on findings that appellants contributed to their own problems; and (3) the trial
court’s findings and interpretation of the evidence are unsupported.
Accepting for the sake of discussion that the first contention is correct, we see
little effect on our analysis because the essential claim of hardship was the effect on the
business and, by extension, the Zepeda family.2 We disagree with the second for two
reasons. First, denial of relief from a lease forfeiture may be based on the existence of
hardships that are self-imposed. (Cambridge v. Webb (1952) 109 Cal.App.2d Supp. 936,
938.) Second, the evidence is also relevant to the extent it shows a lack of good faith.
(Thrifty Oil Co. v. Batarse, supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at p. 778.)
2 In finding that a separate application from injured third parties was required, the
trial court relied on Artesia Medical Development Co. v. Regency Associates, Ltd. (1989)
214 Cal.App.3d 957, 964-965. As appellants point out, the Artesia court merely recited
section 1179 for the proposition that applications for relief may be made by affected
persons other than a displaced tenant.
11
Most important, however, is the third contention, which asks us to examine (and
essentially reweigh) the evidence at trial, yet does so in the absence of a reporter’s
transcript. As we read the trial court’s order, it depended heavily on its own view of the
evidence. Without the reporter’s transcript, we must presume that the unreported
proceedings support the trial court’s factual findings. While we share appellants’
concerns and sympathize with their loss of the premises, the rules of appellate review
compel us to affirm the trial court’s order.3
DISPOSITION
The unlawful detainer judgment against Salvador Zepeda, and the order denying
appellants’ motion for relief from forfeiture of the lease, are affirmed. Respondent shall
recover its appellate costs.
GRIMES, J.
I CONCUR:
FLIER, J.
3
Because we affirm on this basis, we need not reach Lion’s contention that our
denial of appellants’ petition for writ of mandate collaterally estopped appellants from
raising the issue again on appeal.
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Lion 2020 7th Street v. Zepeda – B258424
RUBIN, J. – Concurring and dissenting.
I concur in the majority’s decision to the extent it affirms the unlawful detainer
judgment for respondent Lion 2020 7th Street, but dissent from that part of the decision
that affirms the order denying appellants’ motion for relief from forfeiture of the lease.
I acknowledge the trial court’s broad discretion in granting or denying motions for
relief from lease forfeiture under Code of Civil Procedure section 1179. I also agree with
the majority that, regardless of whether separate petitions were required by all those who
might suffer hardship from the unlawful detainer judgment, the true focus here is on the
hardship to the Zepeda Family, not to its customers. I believe that the hardships the
family will suffer, seen in light of undisputed circumstances, mandate relief from the
lease forfeiture.
Agustin Zepeda’s declaration in support of the forfeiture relief motion showed that
Chava’s Café had been in operation since 1979. That is 35 years. It was a family-run
business that served as the sole source of income for nine family members and their
children, the loss of which left them unable to make the monthly mortgage payments on
their homes or otherwise provide for their families. The Zepedas had made more than
$500,000 in capital improvements to the premises, all of which will be forfeited. They
were unable to relocate on such short notice.
As for their lease defaults, it is important to note that the Zepedas never defaulted
in their rent and continued to tender rent payments while the unlawful detainer action was
pending. The purported default for non-payment of property tax increases was rejected
by the trial court as unsupported by the evidence. Instead, the Zepedas’ lease was
terminated because they failed to maintain property insurance in the correct amount and
because they could not show that they had obtained a proper business license from the
City of Los Angeles.
Agustin explained that liability insurance had always been in place, with aggregate
coverage limits of $2 million instead of the $2 million per occurrence limits required by
the lease. This was due to his misunderstanding of what the terms “aggregate” and “per
occurrence” meant. Misunderstanding is the stuff of which relief from forfeiture is made.
And Agustin obtained a policy in the correct amount as soon as he learned of his error.
As for the supposedly unpaid business license fee, the judgment was based on a
City of Los Angeles business license certificate that listed “Music Machines” as the
described business, leading the trial court to conclude that the license did not cover the
full spectrum of the café’s business operations. However, as Agustin explained and as
the documents show, this was not the case. The account number on the “Music
Machines” business license is 215698-0001-1. The city’s license renewal form for 2014
lists as applicable under that account number a retail sales tax basis of more than
$230,000, with a tax basis of $2 for amusement machines and $1 for music machines, for
a total license fee of $362.42. Accompanying these documents is a check from Chava’s
Café to the City of Los Angeles in that sum payable for that account number. In short,
the Zepedas in fact had the proper business license, and the unlawful detainer judgment
was based solely on a mix-up over the amount of property insurance required by the
lease.
The trial court found that the absence of the proper insurance exposed respondent
to potential liability. I acknowledge that theoretical possibility and the importance of
insurance to the respondent, but the record does not show that any claims against the
restaurant were made before the error was corrected, much less any that exceeded the
incorrect coverage amount that had previously been in place. As for Agustin’s supposed
bad faith in ignoring the 10-day notice to quit, there was no bad faith: Agustin was
confronted with a claim that he owed $19,000 in readjusted property taxes. He dealt with
that before other matters by asking respondent for proof of its property tax increase
claim. Lack of bad faith was conclusively shown by the trial court’s finding that
respondent had overstated the amount of the property tax increase, and that its claim was
premature.
2
I acknowledge that this is an abuse of discretion case. I suggest that abuse of
discretion is a standard that often defies articulation. Appellate courts often use the
familiar “arbitrary, capricious or whimsical.” I do not suggest by my dissent that the trial
court acted either capriciously or out of whimsy. Nor do I consider the ruling arbitrary in
the sense that word is used to describe an act that is “done without concern for what is
fair or right.” (Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary (2015) [as of Dec. 2, 2015].) But appellate courts often hide
behind the abuse of discretion standard to avoid addressing issues where deference to the
trial court is questionable. This, I believe, is one of those cases.
Justice Howard Weiner wrote years ago that the abuse of discretion standard
should be applied in terms of the proper roles of the trial and appellate processes in our
jurisprudence:
“Focusing instead on the concept of ‘discretion,’ that term in one sense refers
generally to the power to decide. But every court -- both trial and appellate -- has
‘discretion’ in that sense. Whether the source of the power to decide is constitutional or
statutory, the essence of the judicial function is decisionmaking. ‘Discretion’ in the sense
of the ‘abuse of discretion’ standard refers instead to the relationship between the trial
and appellate decisionmaking processes and, more particularly, to the amount of
deference which appellate courts accord to trial court determinations. Discretion in this
sense -- that is, trial court discretion -- is not a sacrosanct concept. Harsh as it may
sound, the nature of the relationship between superior and inferior courts dictates that
trial courts have discretion only to the extent appellate courts perceive a reason to defer.
The breadth of trial court discretion is a function of the degree to which appellate courts
exercise deference.” (Hurtado v. Statewide Home Loan Co. (1985) 167 Cal.App.3d
1019, 1022, disapproved on another point in Shamblin v. Brattain (1988) 44 Cal.3d 474,
479, fn. 4.) Justice Weiner suggests that the two areas where the appellate court should
allow the greatest deference are situations in which factual determinations are involved
and in trial management. (Id.)
3
We have neither here. To be sure there were factual determinations involved in
the underlying trial but the facts related to the motion for relief from forfeiture were
undisputed. Less deference should be afforded the trial court.
Even though the law abhors a forfeiture (Civ. Code, §§ 3275, 3369), not one
reported appellate case has reversed the denial of a motion for relief from forfeiture under
Code of Civil Procedure section 1179. Many of those cases deal with familiar facts such
as a tenant refusing to pay rent for months in an attempt to force a landlord to make
repairs when no obligation existed. (E.g. Cambridge v. Webb (1952) 109 Cal.App.2d
Supp. 936, 938.) This is not that case. This case involves a venerable family owned
business 35 years in operation, a family who had invested some $500,000 in capital
improvements, a landlord found to have overreached when it demanded $19,000 in
additional property tax reimbursements, and minor breaches of no practical consequence
to the landlord. The hardship is obvious.
On the other hand, I see virtually no hardship to respondent by relieving the
Zepedas of their lease forfeiture upon satisfaction of conditions that would remove any
defaults. Nowhere does the landlord explain how it has been actually harmed by
anything the Zepedas did or did not do. On the contrary the only apparent harm to the
landlord by granting the relief from forfeiture would be the lost opportunity to deprive the
Zepedas of favorable lease terms agreed upon with the landlord’s predecessor, and
instead to lease the property to someone else.
Balancing the equities on the two sides compels the conclusion that there was no
reasonable basis to deny the relief from forfeiture and, in the parlance of the present
standard of review, the trial court abused its discretion in so ruling.
RUBIN, Acting P. J.
4