the amount of $232,147.50 for breach of fiduciary duty and negligence. 1 The court held
that none of the defendants should recover anything on their cross-complaints for
indemnity.
Buyer appeals the trial court’s judgment only with respect to its finding of no
liability as to seller’s broker. Seller’s broker cross-appeals with respect to the trial
court’s ruling on his cross-complaint, seeking to revive his indemnification claims only if
the trial court’s judgment that he is not liable to buyer were to be reversed.
Buyer contends that seller’s broker’s statement on a multiple listing service was
false or inaccurate. For the reasons stated below, the trial court’s judgment will be
1 The trial court notes in its June 30, 2011, tentative statement of decision that plaintiff’s claims against Burton Commercial were dismissed pursuant to stipulation. The trial court’s judgment, however, awards money damages to plaintiff against both Burton and Burton Commercial. Nevertheless, the question of whether the judgment awarded to plaintiff should be against both Burton and Burton Commercial, or against Burton alone, is not relevant to the disposition of this appeal.
2
affirmed. The affirmance renders the cross-appeal moot, and it will be dismissed; thus,
neither the cross-appeal nor the cross-complaint will be further mentioned.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In June 2006, seller’s broker posted information about an undeveloped
commercial parcel, 0.62 acres in size and located in Hemet, California, on a multiple
listing service (MLS). (See Civ. Code,2 § 1087 [defining “multiple listing service”].)
Included in seller’s broker’s listing was the following language: “This parcel is in an
earthquake study zone but has had a Fault Hazard Investigation completed and has been
declared buildable by the investigating licensed geologist. Report available for serious
buyers.”
The Fault Hazard Investigation report seller’s broker cited dates to 1982:
“May 20, 1982” appears prominently on its cover. The report, prepared by a “Registered
Geologist,” finds “no evidence of an active fault” on the property, and concludes that “the
secondary effects of ground fissuring and cracking and the primary effects of ground
rupture and displacement on a fault are unlikely to occur on the subject property.” The
report makes certain recommendations regarding the potential forces and effects of
earthquakes that “[t]he design of all commercial structures to be constructed on the
subject property should take into consideration.”
On July 23, 1982, an engineering geologist for the Riverside County Planning
Department issued a letter granting “[f]inal approval of the report,” based on his opinion
2 All further citations to statutes are to the Civil Code unless otherwise specified.
3
that the report “was performed in a competent manner consistent with the present ‘state-
of-the-art’ and satisfies the requirements of the Alquist-Priolo Special Studies Zones Act
and the associated Riverside County Ordinance No. 547.”
In 2006, buyer sought to purchase, through his broker and his firm, an
undeveloped commercial parcel, with the intent of building a commercial building on the
property. Buyer’s broker brought to his attention the property owned by seller and listed
in the MLS by seller’s broker. In June 2006, buyer made an offer to purchase the
property; seller made a counteroffer, which buyer accepted.
During escrow, prior to the close of the transaction, seller’s broker gave buyer’s
broker a copy of the 1982 Fault Hazard Investigation report, together with the letter from
the Riverside County Planning Department approving the report. Buyer’s broker
provided these documents in turn to buyer, but buyer’s broker testified that he did so
without reading the report or even understanding what a fault hazard investigation report
is. Though buyer’s broker testified that he told buyer to “check out” the report, the trial
court found that buyer’s broker led buyer to believe that the report was current and could
be relied on as an indication that the property was “ready to build.” The transaction
closed without buyer or buyer’s broker performing any further investigation in relation to
geological issues on the property generally, or with respect to the Fault Hazard
Investigation report in particular.
After the close of the transaction, when buyer began to try to develop the property,
he discovered that the County of Riverside did not agree that the property was “ready to
build.” The County’s understanding of the “state of the art” regarding investigation of
4
fault hazards had changed after the 1994 Northridge earthquake, and it no longer
accepted fault hazard investigation reports performed under earlier standards. The
additional geological investigation now required by the County for approval rendered
buyer’s intended use of the property impractical; such investigation would have required
substantial excavation that, together with the small size of the parcel and required
setbacks from such excavation for any construction, meant buyer could not feasibly move
forward with his plans for a commercial building on the property.
After a bench trial on buyer’s claims, the trial court issued a “Tentative Decision”
on June 30, 2011, which it supplemented and incorporated by reference in an August 18,
2011, “Statement of Decision.”
As noted, buyer appeals the trial court’s judgment only with respect to seller’s
broker.
II. DISCUSSION
Buyer contends that seller’s broker’s statement in the MLS regarding the Fault
Hazard Investigation report is false or inaccurate because the statement fails to specify
that the report dates to 1982, thereby giving a false impression that the report was current
as of the date of the MLS listing and remained “valid” as a basis for commercially
developing the property in 2006. He argues that the trial court erred in its application of
the law to the facts by finding seller’s broker not liable for damages under section 1088.
Buyer does not dispute the truth of seller’s broker’s statement in the MLS with
respect to the existence of a Fault Hazard Investigation report regarding the property at
issue. Nor does he challenge the accuracy of seller’s broker’s summary description of the
5
author’s conclusions (though no specific declaration that the property is “buildable” is
contained in the Fault Hazard Investigation report).
While real estate brokers owe their own clients fiduciary duties, they owe third
parties who are not their clients, including the adverse party in a real estate transaction,
only those duties imposed by regulatory statutes. (Padgett v. Phariss (1997) 54
Cal.App.4th 1270, 1279.) These duties include a general obligation of “‘honesty, fairness
and full disclosure toward all parties.’” (Holmes v. Summer (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th
1510, 1524 (Holmes) [quoting Norman I. Krug Real Estate Investments, Inc. v. Praszker
(1990) 220 Cal.App.3d 35, 43]; see also Field v. Century 21 Klowden-Forness Realty
(1998) 63 Cal.App.4th 18, 24-27 (Field) [distinguishing duties owed by brokers to their
clients from duties owed to nonclients].) A broker’s duties with respect to any listing or
other information posted to a MLS are specified in section 1088. Section 1088 states in
relevant part that the broker “shall be responsible for the truth of all representations and
statements made by the agent [in an MLS] . . . of which that agent . . . had knowledge or
reasonably should have had knowledge,” and provides a statutory negligence claim for
“anyone injured” by the “falseness or inaccuracy” of such representations and statements.
(§ 1088; see Furla v. Jon Douglas Co. (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 1069, 1077 (Furla)
[discussing § 1088].) Here, the dispositive facts are not challenged on appeal, and indeed
were largely undisputed below, so we review de novo whether seller’s broker’s statement
in the MLS was false or inaccurate in the meaning of section 1088. (Cuiellette v. City of
Los Angeles (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th 757, 765 [a statute’s interpretation and application
to undisputed facts are questions of law reviewed de novo].)
6
There are two previous published appellate opinions that discuss section 1088. In
Furla, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1077-1079, the appellate court reversed a grant of
summary judgment to a defendant broker, finding triable issues of material fact regarding
whether the broker’s inaccurate representation regarding the square footage of a property
should give rise to liability under section 1088, among other statutory provisions. In
Holmes, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 1525, the appellate court noted, but did not resolve,
the question of whether section 1088 is violated where a broker knows, but does not
disclose in a listing, that the property is so overencumbered with debt that any attempted
transaction at the listed price is unlikely to close. Neither Furla nor Holmes provides a
dispositive answer to the question posed by this case.
Buyer correctly identifies seller’s broker’s statement in the MLS as a statement of
fact, the truth of which is seller’s broker’s responsibility under section 1088. Buyer’s
claim against seller’s broker fails, however, for the fundamental reason that he does not
identify anything about seller’s broker’s statement itself that is false or inaccurate, as
would be required for liability under section 1088. As noted, the existence of the Fault
Hazard Investigation report is undisputed. Buyer has not argued that seller’s broker’s
description of the conclusions of the report—that the property was “declared buildable by
the investigating licensed geologist”—is an untrue or inaccurate summary of the report’s
conclusions. Furthermore, by disclosing a copy of the Fault Hazard Investigation report
and associated approval letter during escrow, seller’s broker fully satisfied his duty to
buyer of “honesty, fairness and full disclosure toward all parties.” (See Holmes, supra,
188 Cal.App.4th at p. 1524.)
7
Buyer contends only that the passage of time between 1982 and 2006 rendered the
Fault Hazard Report unreliable and invalid, thus making seller’s broker’s statement in the
MLS false or inaccurate. We disagree with buyer’s conclusion. Certainly, the
significance of the Fault Hazard Investigation report for purposes of acquiring approval
from the County of Riverside to build a commercial development on the site changed
between 1982 and 2006: as the trial court found, the report had become “outdated” for
that purpose. Buyer’s broker and buyer believed that the property was fully cleared for
building, without any further scientific analysis or governmental approvals, at the time of
the transaction in 2006. The property, as buyer discovered after closing, was not
“buildable” in that sense. But seller’s broker never said that it was.3 Seller’s broker
wrote in the MLS that the “parcel . . . has been declared buildable by the investigating
licensed geologist” and that the “[r]eport [is] available for serious buyers.” Those
statements were true, and he provided the report to buyer’s broker. Whatever
conceivably misleading characterization of the report may arguably be implied by the
MLS statement, notification that the report itself was available for “serious buyers,” and
actually providing the report, cured any such mischaracterization.
3 At trial, plaintiff’s expert opined that seller’s broker’s statement meant that the property had been “declared buildable” and implied that a buyer could “take that to the bank.” Even assuming this opinion regarding the meaning and implications of seller’s broker’s statement could properly be given any evidentiary weight, the opinion was rejected by the trier of fact; after a bench trial, the judge found seller’s broker’s expert “more believable.” We will not disturb that determination here. (See Cuiellette v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 194 Cal.App.4th at p. 765.)
8
Furthermore, in the MLS statement the seller’s broker did not affirm that the
geologist performed his investigation in accord with current County of Riverside
requirements, nor did he state that all necessary approvals for building had been obtained.
A realtor is “responsible for the truth of all representations and statements” he or she
posts in an MLS. (§ 1088.) There is nothing in section 1088, or any other source of law,
imposing responsibility on a seller’s broker to ensure that true statements in an MLS are
not misconstrued, or to make certain that the buyer and the buyer’s broker perform the
appropriate due diligence to evaluate the significance of such true statements for the
buyer’s particular purposes.
To be sure, an omission of information may sometimes render an otherwise true
statement false or inaccurate, in the meaning of section 1088. For example, in Holmes
the Court of Appeal noted the possibility of a violation of section 1088 where the broker
listing a property omitted the information that the transaction could only close at the
listed price if lenders agreed to accept less money than the amounts owed by the seller or
the seller had sufficient cash to deposit into escrow to cover the excess debt. (Holmes,
supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1522-1523, 1525.) In that case, however, there was
something false about the broker’s representation in the MLS, namely, the suggestion that
the property could be bought at a particular price—it was highly unlikely the transaction
could close at the listed price, even if buyer and seller wanted it to. (Id. at p. 1525.)
Here, by contrast, nothing about the passage of time between 1982 and 2006 makes
seller’s broker’s description of the report or the nature of the report’s conclusions any less
true; the omission of the report’s publication date therefore does not render his statement
9
false or inaccurate. Again, we observe that any misleading effect the omission of the
report’s publication date conceivably had on a reader was corrected by offering to the
reader who is a “serious buyer” a copy of the report itself, which displayed the date on its
cover, and by actually providing the report to buyer.
Additionally, even if seller’s broker’s language could be construed to imply that
the Fault Hazard Investigation report was recent and therefore could be relied on as a
current geological evaluation of the property, there is nothing in the record that supports
the conclusion buyer was injured by the alleged inaccuracy, as would be required for
liability under section 1088. (See § 1088 [providing a claim to “anyone injured by [the]
falseness or inaccuracy” of representations and statements in an MLS].) Buyer contends
that the absence of the date of the report from the MLS listing rendered seller’s broker’s
statement misleading. But the report itself was disclosed to buyer during escrow, prior to
the close of the transaction. Buyer and buyer’s broker need not have even read the report
following its disclosure to learn that it was authored in 1982: as noted, the date appears
prominently on the cover. Thus, to the extent seller’s broker’s statement could be
considered false or inaccurate for failure to include the date of the report, that purported
defect was cured prior to the time when buyer could have suffered any damage from the
lack of such information. (Cf. Holmes, supra, 188 Cal.App.4th at p. 1519 [buyers sold
their existing home to purchase seller’s property, and were damaged when seller failed to
convey title].) Buyer’s alleged injury arises from a failure to investigate and understand
the implications of the information that the Fault Hazard Investigation report dates to
10
1982—a failure the trial court found was buyer’s broker’s responsibility—not any failure
to provide that information in a timely manner on the part of seller’s broker.
In short, we conclude that seller’s broker’s statement in the MLS was true and neither
violated section 1088 nor caused buyer any damage.
Buyer’s arguments on appeal generally suffer from a failure to engage with what
seller’s broker actually wrote in the MLS listing. If seller’s broker had stated in the MLS
listing that “the Property had been cleared to build upon by the County of Riverside,” or
had seller’s broker “blindly assert[ed] the ability to build,” as buyer would have it,
seller’s broker would be responsible for the truth of such statements. But that is not what
the record shows seller’s broker wrote in his posting on the MLS. Rather, as noted,
seller’s broker asserted the existence of a Fault Hazard Investigation report, summarized
its conclusions, and offered to provide the report to serious buyers. Absent anything
untrue or inaccurate about the statement seller’s broker actually made in the MLS, and
absent damage to buyer from such falsity or inaccuracy, seller’s broker is not liable under
section 1088.
Buyer further contends that “any reasonably competent realtor in Southern
California” would be aware of the changes to the regulatory landscape that occurred after
the 1994 Northridge earthquake, so seller’s broker should have known that the 1982 Fault
Hazard Investigation report was outdated. Seller’s broker never affirmed, however, that
the report was current to 2006 standards. He described the existence of a report,
summarized its conclusions, and offered to provide the report to serious buyers; he is
responsible for the truth of that statement. It was incumbent on buyer—and on buyer’s
11
broker, in his role as a fiduciary for buyer—to determine whether the Fault Hazard
Investigation report was something buyer should rely on for his particular purposes.
Seller’s broker had no obligation to perform that research for buyer and buyer’s broker.
(See, e.g., Field, supra, 63 Cal.App.4th at pp. 24-25 [stating that “a selling broker has no
obligation to purchasers to investigate public records or permits pertaining to title or use
of the property,” but the buyer’s broker “‘is expected to perform the necessary research
and investigation in order to know those important matters that will affect the principal’s
decision’”]; Sweat v. Hollister (1995) 37 Cal.App.4th 603, 605 [“[i]t is not the obligation
of the seller to research local land-use ordinances and advise a buyer as to their effect on
the realty”], disapproved on another ground in Santisas v. Goodin (1998) 17 Cal.4th 599,
609, fn. 5.) To the extent seller’s broker’s statement in the MLS could be interpreted to
imply that the report was recent and therefore likely to have been performed under
current standards, that purported inaccuracy was cured by disclosing the report itself
during escrow, prior to any possible injury to buyer from lack of information regarding
the date of the report.
Buyer’s reliance on authority regarding a broker’s duty to verify the truth of his
statements is similarly misplaced. Seller’s broker is responsible under such authority for
verifying the truth of what he wrote and posted to the MLS. (See, e.g., Furla, supra, 65
Cal.App.4th at p. 1081 [finding triable issue of fact regarding whether a broker’s
approximation of square footage of property constituted actionable misrepresentation of
fact].) He performed that duty adequately by obtaining a copy of the Fault Hazard
Investigation report and accurately describing its conclusions. Had seller’s broker relied
12
solely on his client’s description of a report seller’s broker had never read, and that
description turned out to be inaccurate in a material way, buyer’s arguments in this regard
would be more on point. But the record demonstrates that is not what happened here.
III. DISPOSITION
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed. Seller’s broker’s cross-appeal is dismissed
as moot. Seller’s broker, Robert Schmeling, is awarded his costs on appeal.
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
HOLLENHORST Acting P. J. We concur:
RICHLI J.
KING J.
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AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. A seller's broker is not liable under Civil Code section 1088 for statements in a multiple listing service (MLS) that are factually true, even if the buyer later discovers the information is outdated for their specific development purposes. The broker's duty to disclose is satisfied by providing the underlying report, and the broker has no duty to ensure a buyer or their agent performs adequate due diligence.
Issues
Whether a seller's broker's MLS statement regarding a 1982 geological report was false or inaccurate under Civil Code section 1088.
Whether a seller's broker has a duty to ensure a buyer or their agent understands the implications of a disclosed report for the buyer's intended use.
Disposition. Affirmed.
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“A realtor is “responsible for the truth of all representations and statements” he or she posts in an MLS. (§ 1088.)”
“There is nothing in section 1088, or any other source of law, imposing responsibility on a seller’s broker to ensure that true statements in an MLS are not misconstrued”
“Buyer’s claim against seller’s broker fails, however, for the fundamental reason that he does not identify anything about seller’s broker’s statement itself that is false or inaccurate”