Coyne v. De Leo ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 7/30/18; Modified and Certified for Publication 8/28/18 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    MARTIN J. COYNE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A149660
    v.
    DIEGO DE LEO,                                                   (San Francisco City and County
    Super. Ct. No. CUD-16-655485)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    In this unlawful detainer action filed under the Ellis Act (Gov. Code, § 7060
    et seq.), defendant Diego De Leo appeals from a judgment of possession entered in favor
    of his landlord, Martin J. Coyne. De Leo argues, inter alia, the trial court committed
    prejudicial error in its exclusion of evidence. We agree the trial court abused its
    discretion in excluding the evidence and reverse.
    I.      LEGAL BACKGROUND
    The Ellis Act sets forth the procedure by which a landlord may go out of business
    by removing all of his or her rental units in a building from the market. (Drouet v.
    Superior Court (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 583
    , 589–590 (Drouet).) “The Ellis Act . . . provides
    that no statute, ordinance, regulation, or administrative action ‘shall . . . compel the owner
    of any residential real property to offer, or to continue to offer, accommodations in the
    property for rent or lease.’ (Gov. Code, § 7060, subd. (a).) . . . If necessary, the landlord
    may institute an action for unlawful detainer to evict the tenants and recover possession
    of the property. (Gov. Code, § 7060.6.)” (Drouet, at p. 587.) “The right articulated in
    the [Ellis] Act, however, is expressly made subject to certain other laws. For example,
    1
    the Act is not intended to interfere with local authority over land use . . . . Nor does the
    Act permit a landlord to withdraw from rent or lease less than all of the accommodations
    in a building. ([Gov. Code, § 7060.7], subd. (d).)” (Drouet, at p. 590.)
    Unlawful detainer actions are authorized and governed by Code of Civil Procedure
    section 1161 et seq. “The statutory scheme is intended and designed to provide an
    expeditious remedy for the recovery of possession of real property. [Citation.] Unlawful
    detainer actions are, accordingly, of limited scope, generally dealing only with the issue
    of right to possession and not other claims between the parties, even if related to the
    property.” (Larson v. City and County of San Francisco (2011) 
    192 Cal. App. 4th 1263
    ,
    1297.) “Affirmative defenses may be asserted only to the extent they might defeat the
    landlord’s right to possession.” (Lincoln Place Tenants Assn. v. City of Los Angeles
    (2007) 
    155 Cal. App. 4th 425
    , 452; accord, Green v. Superior Court (1974) 
    10 Cal. 3d 616
    ,
    633.)
    Retaliatory eviction, codified at Civil Code section 1942.5, is one such defense.
    
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 587.) Civil Code section 1942.5 makes it unlawful for a
    landlord to engage in specified conduct against a tenant who is not in default on rent,
    including “bring[ing] an action to recover possession,” because of a tenant’s lawful and
    peaceable exercise of any rights under the law (id., subd. (d)) or because of a tenant’s
    complaints regarding habitability (id., subd. (a)). However, a landlord retains the right to
    bring an action to recover possession “for any lawful cause.” (Id., subd. (f).) To recover
    possession for a good faith, nonretaliatory reason, the landlord must give the tenant
    notice of such grounds and, if controverted, the landlord must prove the truth of the
    reason stated. (Id., subd. (g).)1
    1
    Civil Code section 1942.5 was recently amended. At the time relevant herein,
    the language now appearing in subdivisions (d), (f), and (g) was found in former
    subdivisions (c), (d), and (e) respectively. (See Stats. 2017, ch. 489, § 6.) Former
    subdivision (d), provided: “Nothing in this section shall be construed as limiting in any
    way the exercise by the lessor of his rights under . . . any law pertaining to the hiring of
    property or his or her right to do any of the acts described in subdivision (a) or (c) for any
    lawful cause.” Former subdivision (e) provided: “Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) to
    2
    In Drouet, our Supreme Court harmonized the Ellis Act and the retaliatory
    eviction statute. The landlord and tenants in that case had a long history of conflict.
    Several months after the tenants requested various repairs, the landlord served notice he
    was withdrawing his property from the rental market pursuant to the Ellis Act. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 588.) When the tenants failed to vacate, the landlord filed an
    unlawful detainer action, to which the tenants raised a retaliatory eviction defense. (Id. at
    pp. 588–589.) The landlord unsuccessfully moved for summary adjudication of that
    defense. (Id. at p. 589.) On writ review, Division One of this appellate district held that,
    in unlawful detainer proceedings commenced under the Ellis Act, a tenant may not raise
    an affirmative defense of retaliatory eviction. (Ibid.)
    The Drouet court reversed and remanded, concluding the Ellis Act did not
    supersede the retaliatory eviction statute. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at pp. 593, 600.)
    Giving effect to both statutory sections, the Supreme Court held: “[W]here a landlord
    has complied with the Ellis Act and has instituted an action for unlawful detainer, and the
    tenant has asserted the statutory defense of retaliatory eviction, the landlord may
    overcome the defense by demonstrating a bona fide intent to withdraw the property from
    the market. If the tenant controverts the landlord’s bona fide intent to withdraw the
    property, the landlord has the burden to establish its truth at the hearing by a
    preponderance of the evidence. ([Civ. Code, former] § 1942.5, subd. (e).)” (Drouet, at
    pp. 599–600.)
    The Drouet majority also rejected the tenants’ argument that the landlord “should
    be compelled to prove not merely that he has a bona fide intent to go out of business but
    also that this bona fide intent was not motivated by the tenant’s exercise of rights under
    subdivisions (a) and (c) of [Civil Code former] section 1942.5.” 
    (Drouet, supra
    ,
    (d), inclusive, a lessor may recover possession of a dwelling . . . if the notice of
    termination . . . states the ground upon which the lessor, in good faith, seeks to recover
    possession . . . or do any of the other acts described in subdivision (a) or (c). If the
    statement is controverted, the lessor shall establish its truth at the trial or other hearing.”
    (Italics added.)
    3
    31 Cal.4th at p. 596, italics omitted.) Thus, the fact finder should “consider first whether
    the landlord’s intent to withdraw the property is bona fide. If it is, the statutory defense
    of retaliatory eviction has been overcome. If the landlord’s intent is contested, the
    landlord has the burden to establish its truth. ([Civ. Code, former] § 1942.5, subd. (e).)
    Only when the landlord has been unable to establish a bona fide intent need the fact
    finder proceed to determine whether the eviction is for the purpose of retaliating against
    the tenant under subdivision (a) or (c) of [Civil Code former] section 1942.5.” (Drouet,
    at p. 600.)
    Drouet’s interpretation “give[s] effect to the plain language of [Civil Code
    section 1942.5], including [former] subdivisions (d) and (e), which permit a landlord to
    go out of business and evict the tenants—even if the landlord has a retaliatory motive—
    so long as the landlord also has the bona fide intent to go out of business. . . . If, on the
    other hand, the landlord cannot establish a bona fide intent to go out of business, the
    tenants may rely on [former] subdivisions (a) and (c) to resist the eviction.” 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 597, fn. omitted.)
    Bearing these principles in mind, we turn to the facts of this case.
    II.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The Parties and Lease
    Martin Coyne has owned the real property located at 566–568A Chestnut Street,
    San Francisco (the Property) since 1996.2 The Property includes a building with three
    apartments (upper, middle, and lower units) and a free-standing, three-bedroom cottage.
    De Leo, who was 81 years old at the time of trial, had resided in the cottage since
    August 1989. Pursuant to an oral lease with the Property’s previous owners, De Leo paid
    2 Because Martin Coyne shares the same last name as his children, Deirdre,
    Michael, and Cecilia, we will refer to all by first name. Martin owns a contracting
    company, Coyne Development Company (Coyne Development), which employs Deirdre.
    During some of the time relevant herein, the Property has been owned by Martin, his
    children, and trusts benefiting his children, as tenants in common. However, Martin is
    the sole plaintiff in the unlawful detainer action.
    4
    $770 per month in rent. After Martin purchased the Property, De Leo paid $800 per
    month in rent.
    2012 Efforts to Move De Leo from the Cottage
    The Property was completely occupied by tenants most of 2012. Maria
    Esclamado, who was also a Coyne Development employee, rented the upper unit for
    $2,250 per month. De Leo rented the cottage for $800 per month. Karl and Kate Beale
    rented the middle unit for $2,250 per month. Dan Guenther and his girlfriend rented the
    lower unit for $1,600 per month.
    Martin testified that, sometime in 2012, he decided to move into the cottage.
    Martin asked De Leo to move to the lower unit in exchange for a reduced rent of $600
    per month. Martin could not recall if he communicated, at the time, the reason he wanted
    De Leo to move.3 De Leo initially agreed to move. Martin entered into an oral
    agreement with Guenther and his girlfriend to vacate the lower unit in exchange for
    $10,000. At the end of October 2012, Guenther and his girlfriend moved out and Martin
    painted the lower unit.
    De Leo then spoke with his son, who expressed concerns about De Leo moving.
    Neither De Leo’s son, nor any other caregiver, would have a place to stay if De Leo
    moved to the lower unit. Thus, three to four weeks after he initially agreed to move,
    De Leo called Martin to say he changed his mind. Martin was frustrated and explained to
    De Leo that he was committed to moving himself and his children into the Property, and
    the only viable option left would be to invoke the Ellis Act, which would mean evicting
    De Leo and the other tenants. De Leo refused to vacate the cottage, and Martin hired
    counsel.
    In December 2012, Martin transferred ownership of a portion of the Property to
    three trusts established for the benefit of his children, with Martin’s sister, Margaret,
    acting as trustee. Martin, Michael, Deirdre, and Margaret acting as trustee of the three
    3   According to De Leo, Martin did not state, in 2012, his desire to occupy the
    cottage.
    5
    trusts, also executed a tenancy in common agreement. The amended and restated
    agreement, effective May 2016, assigned exclusive use of each of the four units as
    follows: the upper unit to Martin and the trust benefiting Cecilia, the cottage to Martin
    alone, the middle unit to Martin, Michael, and the trust benefiting Michael, and the lower
    unit to Martin, Deirdre, and the trust benefiting Deirdre.
    In approximately February 2013, Esclamado moved from the upper unit to the
    lower unit. She paid $1,600 per month in rent. Deirdre moved into the upper unit in
    March 2013.
    Initial Invocation of Ellis Act and First Unlawful Detainer Action
    On July 1, 2013, Martin filed a “Notice of Intent to Withdraw Residential Units
    from the Rental Market” (NOITW) with the San Francisco Residential Rent Stabilization
    and Arbitration Board (Rent Board). That filing was superseded on August 8, 2013, with
    a second NOITW. In the second NOITW, Martin listed himself as the occupant of the
    upper unit, even though he did not reside in that unit until January or February 2016, over
    two years later.4 In August 2013, Deirdre lived in the upper unit, but she was not listed
    as its occupant on the second NOITW. Her payments to Martin for mortgage and
    building expenses also were not included on the second NOITW. Esclamado was listed
    as the lower unit occupant, but no rent was listed because lower and upper units were
    designated as “owner occupied.” The cottage and middle unit were listed as tenant
    occupied.
    On receiving notice of termination of his tenancy, De Leo requested an extension
    of the withdrawal date, based on his age. Martin notified De Leo that his tenancy would
    be extended to August 8, 2014. Martin also enclosed an amount equal to 50 percent of
    the relocation assistance to which De Leo was entitled as a senior. Martin also extended
    the date of withdrawal for the middle unit—the Beales’ unit—to August 8, 2014. Martin
    did not extend the date of withdrawal for the upper and lower units. Thus, the Rent
    4 Martin moved into the lower unit in August 2015. Deirdre vacated the upper
    unit in December 2015.
    6
    Board recorded “Notice[s] of Constraints on Real Property,” which provided that the
    upper and lower units would be withdrawn from the rental market as of December 6,
    2013. The cottage and middle unit would be withdrawn as of August 8, 2014. The
    notices also described constraints on re-renting the units following the withdrawals (Gov.
    Code, § 7060.2; S.F. Admin. Code, § 37.9A).
    After the cottage’s withdrawal date expired without De Leo vacating the premises,
    Martin filed an unlawful detainer action against De Leo. De Leo successfully challenged
    the complaint on the ground the notice of termination of tenancy was technically
    defective. Judgment was entered in De Leo’s favor.
    Evidence of Continuing Tenancy in Upper Unit
    In the meantime, not long after the second NOITW was filed, Cecelia and a friend,
    Margaret Owens, joined Deirdre in the upper unit. Owens moved into the upper unit in
    November 2013, and Cecelia followed in December 2013.
    Even though the upper unit had been withdrawn from the rental market as of
    December 6, 2013, Deirdre collected rent from Owens until approximately
    February 2015. Owens had an oral month-to-month lease and paid $600 per month,
    primarily in cash.5 Although Owens started occupying the apartment in November 2013,
    Martin told Deirdre that Owens should not pay rent while the first eviction lawsuit was
    ongoing. Owens’s first recorded rent payment was for January 2014. At that time,
    Martin knew Owens was paying rent to live in the upper unit.
    Second Invocation of Ellis Act and Second Unlawful Detainer Action
    Martin was angry that the first unlawful detainer action was unsuccessful. After
    the action was dismissed, Martin’s and De Leo’s counsel discussed whether De Leo
    would be willing to move into the lower unit. These negotiations were not productive
    and De Leo did not move from the cottage. Martin testified he would no longer agree to
    5 At her deposition, Owens testified she was told to pay in cash. At trial, she said
    the cash payments made balancing her checking account easier. Martin denied telling
    Owens or Deirdre that Owens should pay her rent in cash.
    7
    De Leo moving into the lower unit because De Leo had publicly protested the attempted
    eviction. Martin felt De Leo had “dragged [his] name through the mud,” and he “didn’t
    want to have to deal with [De Leo] anymore.”
    In May 2015, Martin, his sister Margaret (as trustee for the three trusts),
    Esclamado, Deirdre, and Michael filed a third NOITW. The third NOITW listed Deirdre
    as the upper unit occupant, De Leo as the cottage occupant, Michael as the middle unit
    occupant, and Esclamado as the lower unit occupant. The only tenant identified on the
    third NOITW was De Leo. The other units were identified as owner-occupied. De Leo
    was also served with written notice terminating his tenancy and requiring him to quit the
    premises and deliver possession within 120 days.
    De Leo again claimed an extension of the withdrawal date based on his senior
    status. Martin did not dispute the extension, and May 8, 2016, was the new date set for
    the cottage’s withdrawal. The Board recorded new Notices of Constraints on Real
    Property, which provided that the top, middle, and lower units would be withdrawn from
    the rental market as of September 5, 2015. The cottage would be withdrawn as of May 8,
    2016. The notices also described constraints on re-renting the units following the
    withdrawals (Gov. Code, § 7060.2; S.F. Admin. Code, § 37.9A.)
    During the second invocation of the Ellis Act, Martin specifically directed his
    children that no rent was to be collected. Martin testified that Michael contributed to the
    mortgage, property taxes, and building expenses. In December 2015, Deirdre vacated the
    upper unit. Although she continued to claim an ownership interest in the Property, she
    did not continue to contribute to expenses or discuss moving back into any of the
    Property’s units after she moved out.
    Martin testified he moved into the lower unit in August 2015, and then into the
    upper unit in January or February of 2016. Martin’s friend, William Brisbane, also
    resided with Martin in the upper unit. Brisbane did not pay rent. In April 2016, Vincent
    Sollini, the son of a friend of Martin’s, moved into the lower unit. Sollini paid no rent,
    considered himself a guest, and would move out if asked.
    8
    Martin filed the instant lawsuit for unlawful detainer in May 2016, when De Leo
    failed to vacate the cottage by its withdrawal date. Martin invoked the superior court’s
    unlimited civil jurisdiction, seeking both possession of the cottage and fair market
    holdover damages. De Leo answered and alleged as affirmative defenses, inter alia,
    retaliatory eviction, noncompliance with the Ellis Act, and the Property was not intended
    to be withdrawn from the rental market.
    Trial was to a jury. The jury’s special verdict found Martin complied “with the
    necessary [Ellis Act] procedures” and had “a good faith intention to withdraw [the
    Property] from the residential rental business.” The jury was polled in open court. The
    jurors were unanimous that Martin had complied with the procedural requirements for
    withdrawal. With respect to Martin’s good faith intent to withdraw the Property from the
    rental market, the vote was 9 to 3 for Martin.
    The trial court entered judgment for possession in Martin’s favor. De Leo filed a
    timely notice of appeal. Pursuant to a stipulation, enforcement of the judgment was
    stayed pending appeal, on the condition that De Leo move into the lower unit and deposit
    $800 monthly with the superior court. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1176.) The parties also
    stipulated the appeal would be heard on an expedited basis and we granted, in part,
    Martin’s unopposed motion for calendar preference. (Cf. 
    id., § 1179a.)
                                        III.   DISCUSSION
    De Leo contends the trial court abused its discretion in sustaining Martin’s
    objections to various categories of evidence De Leo offered to support his position on the
    key factual issue of whether Martin had a bona fide intent to withdraw the Property from
    the residential rental market. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at pp. 599–600.) De Leo
    acknowledges the trial court admitted evidence the upper unit was rented after its
    December 2013 withdrawal date, as well as evidence of Martin’s inaccurate statement he
    was an occupant of that unit in August 2013. However, De Leo complains the trial court
    “essentially excluded everything else that would either directly or inferentially establish a
    lack of a bona fide good faith intent to withdraw” the Property from the rental market.
    De Leo also contends the trial court erred in its response to a jury inquiry during
    9
    deliberations. We address only one alleged evidentiary error because it, standing alone,
    constitutes prejudicial error. We need not address De Leo’s additional arguments.
    A.     Appellate Jurisdiction
    Out of an abundance of caution, we briefly address our appellate jurisdiction.
    California’s courts of appeal lack jurisdiction to hear appeals arising from the limited
    jurisdiction of the unified trial courts. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1, subd. (a).) A cause of
    action for unlawful detainer, alleging less than $ 25,000 damages, is such a limited civil
    case. (Id., § 86, subd. (a)(4).) Judgments in such matters are appealable to the appellate
    division of the superior court. (Id., § 904.2.) The courts of appeal have jurisdiction to
    hear appeals from judgments arising under superior court unlimited civil case
    jurisdiction, which requires an amount in controversy of $ 25,000 or more, or which
    requires relief of a type that cannot be granted in a limited civil case. (Id., §§ 85, 88,
    904.1, subd. (a).)
    When Martin’s unlawful detainer complaint was filed, it was classified as an
    unlimited civil case because he prayed for damages in excess of $25,000. However, the
    judgment was solely for possession; Martin deferred resolution of the damages issue to a
    separate lawsuit filed against De Leo. (See Northrop Corp. v. Chaparral Energy, Inc.
    (1985) 
    168 Cal. App. 3d 725
    , 729 [“recogniz[ing] the propriety of obtaining possession by
    unlawful detainer and leaving monetary damages to subsequent litigation”].) Although
    the unlawful detainer issue was the only issue tried, neither party sought reclassification
    nor did the trial court consider reclassification on its own motion. (See Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 403.040 [reclassification to limited status is not automatic]; Stern v. Superior Court
    (2003) 
    105 Cal. App. 4th 223
    , 230–231.) Thus, the case remained unlimited and we have
    appellate jurisdiction. (See Ytuarte v. Superior Court (2005) 
    129 Cal. App. 4th 266
    , 275
    [“a court presiding in unlimited civil actions may enter a judgment that falls within the
    range of a limited civil action and/or that could have been entered in a limited civil
    court”]; accord, Code Civ. Proc., § 403.040, subd. (e).)
    10
    B.     Evidentiary Rulings
    At trial, De Leo sought to introduce evidence that Martin sold Esclamado a sham
    ownership interest in the Property, thereby allowing Esclamado to remain as a tenant
    while Martin professed his intent to withdraw the Property from the residential rental
    market. Before any testimony was received, Martin moved in limine to exclude, among
    other things, such sham evidence, as well as all evidence of his behavior during the
    “previous Ellis Act withdrawal attempt.”
    In opposing these motions in limine, De Leo made an extensive offer of proof.
    The documents offered, but not presented to the jury, included documents facially
    showing Esclamado was deeded a 10 percent interest in the Property in April 2013. The
    deed was recorded a few months after Esclamado moved into the lower unit, where she
    had been paying $1,600 per month in rent, and a few months before the first NOITW was
    filed. Under the terms of the purchase agreement, which was signed in February 2013,
    Martin sold Esclamado a 10 percent interest in the Property for $500,000, and Esclamado
    obtained the exclusive right to occupy the lower unit. However, the terms of the sale
    were unusual. Esclamado did not make any down payment, and her purchase was
    100 percent seller-financed by Martin. Esclamado signed a deed of trust and a
    promissory note in Martin’s favor, pursuant to which she was to make monthly payments
    of interest only, in the amount of $1,583.33. The loan had a five-year term and required a
    balloon payment at the end. Martin paid all closing costs, including title insurance,
    except for a $20 notary fee paid by Esclamado. In April 2013, the tenancy in common
    agreement was amended to reflect Esclamado’s ownership and exclusive right to possess
    the lower unit.
    De Leo also offered to prove that Martin believed Esclamado’s ownership was
    temporary and was initiated, at Martin’s suggestion, after he decided to invoke the Ellis
    Act. When Esclamado stopped making monthly loan payments, vacated the premises,
    and moved to North Carolina in June or July 2015, De Leo offered to prove she did not
    seek to sell her interest. Instead, Esclamado notified Martin she was vacating, and Martin
    admitted taking possession of the lower unit in August 2015, well before Esclamado
    11
    signed a deed granting her interest back to Martin. The grant deed was recorded on
    December 8, 2015.
    The trial court denied Martin’s motion to exclude evidence of his behavior during
    the previous Ellis Act withdrawal attempt, explaining, “a broad range of evidence may
    reflect on the issue of [Martin’s] intent . . . when he announced his intention to withdraw
    from the rental business, and the court will not foreclose that examination . . . .”
    However, it granted Martin’s fifth motion in limine, wholly excluding “evidence or
    argument concerning [Esclamado], her relationship to [Martin], [and] her position as an
    occupier of the property at the premises or as owner.” In granting Martin’s latter motion
    in limine, the trial court concluded any evidence to show the transfer to Esclamado was
    pretextual or a sham “would lead into a potentially wide reaching inquiry concerning the
    manner in which title was acquired” and “would introduce matters extraneous [and]
    would frustrate the summary nature of this unlawful detainer proceeding.” The trial court
    further explained: “The relevance is slight, and any probative value is far outweighed by
    the probability of undue confusion and prejudice.” (Italics added.)
    Exclusion of Evidence Regarding Martin’s Sale to Esclamado
    De Leo contends the trial court abused its discretion in excluding evidence
    regarding the 2013 sale to Esclamado. He asserts the probative value of this evidence
    was not slight, but was highly probative of Martin’s intent.6
    Only relevant evidence is admissible. (Evid. Code, § 350.) Relevant evidence is
    evidence “having any tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action.” (Id., § 210.) The trial court is permitted
    to “exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability
    that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial
    danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” (Id.,
    6 We need not address De Leo’s alternative argument that the evidence was also
    relevant to whether Martin complied with the procedural requirements of the Ellis Act
    (Gov. Code, §§ 7060.4, subd. (a), 7060.6).
    12
    § 352.) “Evidence which has probative value must be excluded under section 352 only if
    it is ‘undu[ly]’ prejudicial despite its legitimate probative value.” (Rufo v. Simpson
    (2001) 
    86 Cal. App. 4th 573
    , 597.)
    We review a trial court’s order to exclude evidence under Evidence Code
    section 352 for abuse of discretion. (People v. Williams (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 153
    , 213.) An
    abuse of discretion occurs if, in light of the applicable law and considering all of the
    relevant circumstances, the court’s decision exceeds the bounds of reason. (Shamblin v.
    Brattain (1988) 
    44 Cal. 3d 474
    , 478–479.) “[A] trial court abuses its discretion when it
    applies the wrong legal standards. [Citation.] We decide questions of law de novo.”
    (People ex rel. Harris v. Shine (2017) 16 Cal.App.5th 524, 534.)
    De Leo argues the purchase contract, note, and deed of trust were sham
    agreements that did not, in substance, alter the tenant-landlord relationship between
    Esclamado and Martin. He contends the Esclamado evidence was thus highly probative
    of Martin’s intent in 2015 to exit the residential rental market. Martin, on the other hand,
    contends the evidence was properly excluded for a variety of unpersuasive reasons.
    In his first justification for the ruling, Martin argues the trial court “expressly
    stated” there was no evidence of continuing tenancies, other than De Leo’s, during the
    2015 Ellis Act withdrawal effort. As a factual matter, the trial court did not “expressly
    state” there was no evidence Esclamado was a tenant during the second invocation of the
    Ellis Act. The remark Martin relies on came during a discussion of jury instructions, well
    after the Esclamado motion in limine had been resolved and all such evidence excluded.
    Considered in context, the trial court was stating none of the evidence admitted at trial
    suggested tenancies (other than De Leo’s) existed during the second invocation of the
    Ellis Act. In other words, there was no evidence Sollini or Brisbane were tenants.
    Next, Martin attempts to convince us that Esclamado’s status as an owner or a
    tenant is wholly irrelevant due to timing. According to Martin, it does not matter if
    Esclamado remained, in substance, a tenant after April 2013, because she vacated the
    Property in June 2015, which was after Martin filed his third NOITW, but before the date
    Esclamado’s unit (the lower unit) was to be withdrawn from the rental market. Martin
    13
    suggests we must narrowly focus on either his intent with respect to De Leo’s unit alone
    or on his intent with respect to the entire Property only on the second Ellis Act
    withdrawal dates. He contends any broader focus on his intent will unduly burden a
    landlord’s right to exit the residential rental market. Martin’s argument would be better
    presented to the Legislature. The statute itself makes clear Martin may invoke the Ellis
    Act only to exit the residential rental market altogether, not to remove a mere subset of
    units at the Property. (Gov. Code, § 7060.7, subd. (d).) Drouet also demonstrates Martin
    is entitled to possession of the cottage only if he can prove, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, he had a bona fide intent to withdraw the Property in its entirety. (See 
    Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at pp. 590, 597–600.) The entire time period is relevant. It would
    certainly tend to suggest Martin did not have a good faith intent to exit the residential
    rental market if De Leo could show that, at the time Martin filed the third NOITW,
    another tenancy continued at the Property—one that Martin not only did not seek to end
    but also actively sought to obscure.
    Furthermore, the trial court explicitly rejected Martin’s argument that only his
    actions during the second invocation were relevant in its ruling on another of Martin’s
    motions in limine. To the extent the trial court contradicted itself and later viewed
    Martin’s intent in 2013 as a completely separate issue from Martin’s intent in 2015, the
    trial court acted arbitrarily and capriciously. Drouet emphasized the landlord’s re-renting
    of the premises after a prior Ellis Act eviction is “persuasive evidence” in a subsequent
    effort to withdraw units from the residential rental market. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at
    p. 598 [“an Ellis Act eviction followed closely in time by a re-renting of the premises to
    new tenants would be persuasive evidence of the landlord’s bad faith in any future Ellis
    Act proceeding. (Civ. Code, [former] § 1942.5, subd. (e); Evid. Code, § 1101,
    subd. (b).)”].) Martin does not demonstrate why we should not apply similar reasoning in
    a case where the landlord did not succeed in evicting all tenants during the previous
    withdrawal effort.
    Finally, Martin asserts broadly there is “no authority for the proposition that
    [De Leo] can defend termination of his tenancy on a perceived failure to terminate
    14
    another’s alleged tenancy,” particularly when San Francisco maintains ordinances that
    impose penalties for post-Ellis Act re-rentals. He is correct that both the Ellis Act and
    municipal ordinances impose penalties on landlords who re-rent withdrawn units in
    violation of the Ellis Act. (Gov. Code, § 7060.2; S.F. Admin. Code, § 37.9A.) “In order
    to prevent abuses by landlords who would falsely remove rent-controlled units from the
    market and then attempt to return them to the rental market at current market rates, the
    Ellis Act uses a three-tiered timeline, during which a landlord who returns previously
    withdrawn units to the market suffers a penalty for doing so. ([Gov. Code,] § 7060.2.)
    Thus, if the landlord offers the previously withdrawn rental units for rent within two
    years of their withdrawal, the landlord must offer the unit for rent or lease to the
    displaced tenant at the previous rental plus any intervening annual adjustments, the
    landlord is liable to the displaced tenant for actual and exemplary damages, and the
    landlord may be liable to the local public entity for exemplary damages. ([Id.,] § 7060.2,
    subd. (b).) [¶] If the landlord offers the previously withdrawn rental units for rent within
    five years of their withdrawal, the landlord must offer the unit for rent or lease to the
    displaced tenant at the previous rental plus intervening annual adjustments, and the
    landlord is liable to the displaced tenant for punitive damages (not to exceed six months’
    rent) for failure to offer the rental to the displaced tenant. ([Id.,] § 7060.2, subds. (a)(1)–
    (2)(B), (c).) [¶] If the landlord offers the previously withdrawn rental units for rent within
    10 years of their withdrawal, the landlord must offer the unit for rent or lease to the
    displaced tenant, and the landlord is liable to the displaced tenant for punitive damages
    (not to exceed six months’ rent) for failure to offer the rental to the displaced tenant.
    ([Id.,] § 7060.2, subd. (c).)” (City of West Hollywood v. Kihagi (2017) 16 Cal.App.5th
    739, 744, fn. omitted.)
    Drouet made clear that evidence controverting the landlord’s stated intent was
    highly relevant. In rejecting the tenants’ concern that “the retaliatory eviction defense is
    ‘the only method available to protect one’s home from an alleged phony Ellis [Act]
    eviction,’ ” the Drouet majority disagreed. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 597.) It
    explained, “[A] tenant who believes the landlord’s invocation of the Ellis Act . . . is
    15
    phony and that the landlord actually intends to offer the vacated units to new tenants may
    controvert the landlord’s statement of intent. The landlord will then have the burden to
    establish his or her bona fide intent to withdraw the property from the market by a
    preponderance of the evidence. It is that requirement, and not the retaliatory eviction
    defense itself, that will prevent or deter phony evictions.” (Drouet, at p. 597, italics
    added & omitted.) The tenants’ fear, “that a landlord may invoke the Act but secretly
    intend to re-rent the units once the existing tenants have been displaced . . . presupposes
    that although the tenant controverted the landlord’s intent, the landlord committed perjury
    at the hearing, the tenant was unable to uncover the perjury by cross-examination or by
    other evidence, and the fact finder was unable to detect the perjury. The likelihood of an
    erroneous outcome is further diminished by the landlord’s awareness that an Ellis Act
    eviction followed closely in time by a re-renting of the premises to new tenants would be
    persuasive evidence of the landlord’s bad faith in any future Ellis Act proceeding. (Civ.
    Code, [former] § 1942.5, subd. (e); Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b).)” (Drouet, at p. 598,
    italics added.) Finally, the Drouet majority noted that “perjury concerns do not arise in
    this case” because “San Francisco has eliminated the incentive for sham Ellis Act
    evictions by adopting ordinances strictly limiting the landlord’s right to re-rent the
    withdrawn property to others, to raise the rent, or to sell the property unencumbered by
    these limitations. (S.F. Admin. Code, § 37.9A, subds. (a), (c), (d), (g); see Gov. Code,
    §§ 7060.2, 7060.3.)” (Drouet, at p. 598.) Martin reads Drouet selectively to support his
    argument, asserting Drouet suggests there is no incentive for a San Francisco landlord to
    use the Ellis Act as pretext, all the while harboring a secret intent to re-rent withdrawn
    units. Yet, we cannot agree the existence of these penalties means circumstantial
    evidence of a landlord’s intent should be wholly excluded in an Ellis Act unlawful
    detainer action where the tenant raises a retaliatory eviction defense.
    Martin overlooks the clear teaching of Drouet: “[A] tenant who believes the
    landlord’s invocation of the Ellis Act . . . is phony and that the landlord actually intends
    to offer the vacated units to new tenants may controvert the landlord’s statement of
    intent.” 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at p. 597.) The Drouet court clearly anticipated that a
    16
    tenant could cross-examine and present other evidence to controvert the landlord’s stated
    intent. (Id. at p. 598.) We read Drouet to state that perjury concerns were lessened by
    San Francisco ordinances providing other disincentives for re-renting withdrawn
    properties. (Ibid.) But we cannot read Drouet as Martin suggests because this reasoning
    came only after Drouet emphasized the landlord’s re-renting of the premises after a prior
    Ellis Act withdrawal is “persuasive evidence” in a subsequent effort to withdraw units
    from the residential rental market. (Ibid.) To the extent the trial court was persuaded by
    Martin’s interpretation of Drouet, it erred.
    It also appears the trial court mistakenly assumed title issues, of any kind, were
    entirely off limits in an unlawful detainer case. “In unlawful detainer proceedings,
    ordinarily the only triable issue is the right to possession of the disputed premises, along
    with incidental damages resulting from the unlawful detention. (Larson v. City and
    County of San 
    Francisco[, supra
    ,] 192 Cal.App.4th [at p.] 1297; [citation].) Ordinarily,
    issues respecting the title to the property cannot be adjudicated in an unlawful detainer
    action. [Citations.] The denial of certain procedural rights enjoyed by litigants in
    ordinary actions is deemed necessary in order to prevent frustration of the summary
    proceedings by the introduction of delays and extraneous issues.” (Martin-Bragg v.
    Moore (2013) 
    219 Cal. App. 4th 367
    , 385 (Martin-Bragg).) But the general prohibition
    arose in a different context—where a tenant seeks to litigate his or her landlord’s title
    despite the issue being irrelevant to the tenant’s entitlement to possession. “The purpose
    of the unlawful detainer statutes is to provide the landlord with a summary, expeditious
    way of getting back his property when a tenant fails to pay the rent or refuses to vacate
    the premises at the end of his tenancy. If a defendant were allowed to assert affirmative
    defenses or cross-claims which were irrelevant to the right of immediate possession, the
    summary character of the proceedings would be lost. A defense which ‘arises out of the
    subject matter’ of the original suit, and, thus, is permitted in the usual case, is normally
    excluded in an unlawful detainer if the defense is extrinsic to the issue of possession,
    (Knowles v. Robinson [(1963)] 
    60 Cal. 2d 620
    , 625). This does not mean the defendant
    may not present any defense; rather, he may only assert those defenses which, if proven,
    17
    would either preserve his possession as a tenant or preclude the landlord from recovering
    possession.” (Nork v. Pacific Coast Medical Enterprises, Inc. (1977) 
    73 Cal. App. 3d 410
    ,
    413, italics added.)
    In the usual unlawful detainer case, the tenant is estopped from challenging his or
    her landlord’s title because (1) the tenant previously agreed to pay the landlord rent; and
    (2) if some third party has title to the property, the tenant nonetheless has no right to
    possession. (Reay v. Cotter (1865) 
    29 Cal. 168
    , 170–171.) In such a case, the tenant may
    not question his landlord’s title to the property because regardless of “[w]hether the
    tenant won or lost his claim that the landlord’s title was defective, it would not affect [the
    tenant’s] right to possession of the property.” (Nork v. Pacific Coast Medical
    Enterprises, 
    Inc., supra
    , 73 Cal.App.3d at p. 415.) California law does not prohibit an
    unlawful detainer defendant from interposing a defense involving title issues, so long as
    the defense, if established, would result in the tenant retaining possession of the premises.
    (Adler v. Elphick (1986) 
    184 Cal. App. 3d 642
    , 645–646.)
    De Leo contends he was not challenging his landlord’s title because he did not
    dispute Martin’s title; he was challenging only Esclamado’s title. However, even if the
    landlord’s title is deemed at issue, Martin and the trial court misplaced their reliance on
    the general rule laid out in Martin-Bragg for another reason—it is not an Ellis Act case.7
    7  If anything, Martin-Bragg supports De Leo’s position. In Martin-Bragg, the
    unlawful detainer defendant disputed the plaintiff’s title to the property, and claimed he
    owned the property instead. 
    (Martin-Bragg, supra
    , 219 Cal.App.4th at p. 392.) These
    disputes involved “ ‘complex and complicated property ownership issues’ ” which could
    entitle the defendant to quiet title. (Id. at pp. 385; see 
    id. at p.
    395.) The reviewing court
    held the court abused its discretion by refusing relief from the summary procedures (and
    limited discovery) that apply to limited unlawful detainer proceedings, rather than
    granting the defendant’s motion to consolidate the matter with a pending quiet title
    action. (Id. at pp. 384–395.) “[W]hen complex issues of title are involved, the parties’
    constitutional rights to due process in the litigation of those issues cannot be subordinated
    to the summary procedures of unlawful detainer. [Citation.] By failing to determine
    whether and how [the unlawful detainer defendant’s] rights and needs might be balanced
    with [the plaintiff’s] legitimate interests in the matter’s prompt resolution, and instead
    proceeding to try the complex issue of the parties’ rights to title of the property within the
    18
    In fact, Martin does not point us to any authority, and we are not independently aware of
    any, in which the prohibition on trying title issues was applied in an Ellis Act unlawful
    detainer case.
    Here, in contrast to the more traditional unlawful detainer cases, it is undisputed
    the key issue relevant to possession was Martin’s intent. 
    (Drouet, supra
    , 31 Cal.4th at
    pp. 599–600; Civ. Code, § 1942.5, subd. (g).) And, as previously stated, the disputed
    evidence regarding Esclamado’s title was relevant to Martin’s intent. In our view, there
    is ample reason not to apply a blanket prohibition on trying title issues in a case of this
    nature. Otherwise, it would be all too easy for an unscrupulous landlord to evade the
    Ellis Act’s requirement that the landlord intend to remove all units from the residential
    rental market. (Drouet, at p. 590; Gov. Code, § 7060.7, subd. (d).)
    We have been presented with no compelling reason which would justify
    precluding full and fair consideration of the key issue underlying possession in this
    matter (Martin’s intent), especially when Martin filed his unlawful detainer action in
    unlimited civil jurisdiction. (See Ytuarte v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 129 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 275 [“a court in a limited civil action cannot determine the title to real property”
    (italics added)].) “ ‘Certainly the interest in preserving the summary nature of an action
    cannot outweigh the interest of doing substantial justice. To hold the preservation of the
    summary proceeding of paramount importance would be analogous to the “tail wagging
    the dog.” ’ ” (Green v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 10 Cal.3d at p. 636 [considering whether
    summary nature of unlawful detainer should foreclose tenant from raising breach of
    habitability defense].) The trial court abused its discretion to the extent it relied on the
    summary nature of unlawful detainer actions to exclude evidence highly probative on the
    confines of the summary procedures that apply only to straightforward determination
    rights to possession, the court abused its discretion.” (Id. at p. 391, fn. omitted.) Here,
    unlike in Martin-Bragg, we are aware of no alternate proceeding in which to resolve the
    title issues presented by De Leo. And De Leo did not object to litigating the issue in the
    summary unlawful detainer proceeding. Martin-Bragg certainly does not suggest that a
    disputed title issue relevant to possession should be passed altogether.
    19
    key possession issue. “[W]hile the state does have a significant interest in preserving a
    speedy repossession remedy, that interest cannot justify the exclusion of matters which
    are essential to a just resolution of the question of possession . . . .” (Ibid.)
    Finally, Martin contends De Leo’s proffered evidence was irrelevant because it
    cannot, as a matter of law, support the conclusion he and Esclamado continued to have a
    landlord-tenant relationship. In particular, Martin points to the grant deed as
    uncontroverted evidence of Esclamado’s status as an owner, not a tenant.
    Evidence Code section 662 provides: “The owner of the legal title to property is
    presumed to be the owner of the full beneficial title. This presumption may be rebutted
    only by clear and convincing proof.” (Italics added.) This section applies “when there is
    no dispute as to where legal title resides but there is question as to where all or part of the
    beneficial title should rest.” (Murray v. Murray (1994) 
    26 Cal. App. 4th 1062
    , 1067,
    italics omitted.) De Leo made an offer of proof that suggests the transaction was a sham
    and beneficial title never passed to Esclamado.
    De Leo’s offer of proof showed that the sale’s terms suggested the transaction was
    being used as a pretext to allow Esclamado to remain in possession of the lower unit
    without obtaining any fee simple interest in the Property. Esclamado purportedly agreed
    to purchase a 10 percent interest in the Property for $500,000, which does not appear to
    have any relationship to the valuation of the Property. Esclamado paid no down payment
    and the entire purchase price was secured by a purchase money deed of trust in Martin’s
    favor, which imposed no personal liability on her. (Stone v. Lobsien (1952) 
    112 Cal. App. 2d 750
    , 756.) During the time Esclamado occupied the lower unit as a purported
    owner, she paid only interest on the loan—in an amount approximating the $1,600 she
    previously paid in monthly rent. Martin had a right of first refusal if Esclamado sought to
    sell her interest. De Leo offered to prove that when Esclamado stopped making
    payments on the note and moved to North Carolina, she did not seek to sell her interest.
    She simply stopped making payments, abandoned the premises, and Martin recovered
    20
    possession without the necessity of foreclosure on the deed of trust.8 Martin himself
    testified at deposition that the only reason Esclamado purchased an interest in the
    Property was because he could not collect rent from her while invoking the Ellis Act.
    A reasonable conclusion could be drawn that, despite the form of the transaction,
    Esclamado remained, in substance, a tenant—having obtained, in effect, only a present
    possessory interest in the lower unit, while Martin retained his future, reversionary
    interest. (See Avalon Pacific—Santa Ana, L.P. v. HD Supply Repair & Remodel, LLC
    (2011) 
    192 Cal. App. 4th 1183
    , 1190 [“[a] leasehold estate gives the lessee the exclusive
    possession of the premises against all the world . . . for the term of the lease,” but “the
    lessor has a future reversionary interest and retains fee title”].)
    The trial court’s and Martin’s reliance on Santa Monica Rent Control Bd. v.
    Bluvshtein (1991) 
    230 Cal. App. 3d 308
    (Bluvshtein) does not persuade us to reach a
    contrary conclusion. In that case, the defendants purchased a multi-unit residential
    property as tenants in common or joint tenants, invoked the Ellis Act to evict the existing
    tenants in eight of the building’s 10 units, and occupied the units themselves. They
    formed a general partnership and orally agreed each had a terminable right of exclusive
    possession to specified units, for renewable terms of a year, and agreed on a method for
    making mortgage payments and collecting maintenance fees. (Id. at pp. 312, 315.) The
    Santa Monica Rent Control Board sued the tenant in common owners for damages for
    violation of the Ellis Act. (Id. at pp. 311–312.) The Santa Monica Rent Control Board
    8 The parol evidence rule generally prohibits the consideration of extrinsic
    evidence to vary or contradict the terms of an integrated written instrument. (Code Civ.
    Proc., § 1856; Civ. Code, § 1625; Casa Herrera, Inc. v. Beydoun (2004) 
    32 Cal. 4th 336
    ,
    343.) However, the rule does not prohibit consideration of extrinsic evidence to explain
    the meaning of a writing if the writing is reasonably susceptible to the meaning shown.
    (Casa Herrera, at p. 343.) The parole evidence rule also does not prohibit the
    consideration of extrinsic evidence offered to show that a writing is a sham. (P. A. Smith
    Co. v. Muller (1927) 
    201 Cal. 219
    , 222; FPI Development, Inc. v. Nakashima (1991)
    
    231 Cal. App. 3d 367
    , 401; Parker v. Meneley (1951) 
    106 Cal. App. 2d 391
    , 401.) “Such
    evidence does not change a written contract by parol, but serves to establish that such
    contract had no force, efficacy, or effect.” (P. A. Smith Co., at p. 222.)
    21
    alleged the oral agreement created a landlord-tenant relationship between the owners,
    which constituted reentry into the rental housing market and triggered causes of action
    for exemplary damages and injunctive relief. (Id. at pp. 312, 313, 315.)
    The Second District Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s judgment of
    dismissal, reasoning that “the oral agreement did not establish a landlord-tenant
    relationship” as a matter of law. 
    (Bluvshtein, supra
    , 230 Cal.App.3d at p. 316.)
    “Whether the oral agreement is a lease is a question of law arising out of the construction
    of the agreement. [Citation.] The oral agreement here is not a lease as it neither
    evidences an intent to create a landlord-tenant relationship nor provides for the payment
    of rent. [¶] Provisions for the payment of rent and a transfer of use and possession of
    property are essential elements of a lease.” (Ibid.) Because the oral agreement did not
    specify the amount or manner of payment of rent, and the payments were to be for the
    mortgage and maintenance of the property and not for its use and possession, Bluvshtein
    concluded “they were not payments for rent.” (Id. at p. 317.)9 The oral agreement was
    not a lease, “but rather was a purchase agreement setting up a method for making
    mortgage payments and collecting maintenance fees from the owners of the units.”
    (Ibid.) Bluvshtein also observed that the oral agreement did not “ ‘show an intention on
    the part of one party to dispossess himself of the property and of the other to enter and
    hold in subordination to the title of the first party,’ ” which were deemed hallmarks of a
    lease. (Id. at pp. 316–317.) “Although appellant alleges that respondents purchased the
    property as tenants in common and gave up possession of units other than their own, such
    an action is not the normal dispossession of property by one party and possession by a
    second party in subordination to the title of the first party.” (Id. at p. 317.)
    9  More interesting for our analysis was the court’s observation that rent is defined,
    “[f]or income tax deduction purposes . . . as ‘payments required to be made as a condition
    to the continued use or possession . . . of property to which the taxpayer has not taken or
    is not taking title or in which he has no equity.’ (26 U.S.C. § 162(a)(3).)” 
    (Bluvshtein, supra
    , 230 Cal.App.3d at p. 317, italics added.)
    22
    Bluvshtein is distinguishable because the intent of the oral agreement at issue was
    clear. Furthermore, no extrinsic evidence suggested the Bluvshtein agreement was a
    sham. In particular, none of the owners were prior tenants of any other owner at the same
    building before the Ellis Act was invoked. No subset of the owners paid zero
    consideration for their ownership interests and merely paid interest to another owner in
    an amount that approximated their prior rent.
    We agree with De Leo the trial court abused its discretion in finding the
    Esclamado evidence more prejudicial than probative. Given the highly probative nature
    of this evidence on the key issue in the case, the prejudice flowing therefrom would have
    to be very high to justify its exclusion under Evidence Code section 352. Here, the trial
    court explicitly stated its apparent misunderstanding that the Esclamado evidence would
    introduce “extraneous issues” and that the “relevance is slight.” Neither the trial court
    nor Martin identified what is unduly prejudicial or confusing about the evidence.
    To be sure, the evidence may very well have damaged Martin’s case, but Evidence
    Code section 352’s reference to “prejudice” does not mean “damaging” to a party’s case.
    It means evoking an emotional response having very little to do with the issue on which
    the evidence is offered. (People v. Karis (1988) 
    46 Cal. 3d 612
    , 638; Rufo v. 
    Simpson, supra
    , 86 Cal.App.4th at p. 597.) Even if the Esclamado evidence could only be
    characterized as prior bad acts evidence admissible to show intent (see 
    Drouet, supra
    ,
    31 Cal.4th at p. 598; Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b)), the potential for undue prejudice
    remained minimal. The transaction with Esclamado was not remote in time; the
    transaction took place two years before the third NOITW was filed and shortly before the
    filing of the first and second NOITW’s. Esclamado still occupied the lower unit at the
    time the third NOITW was filed. We do not mean to suggest that a landlord’s actions in
    a prior Ellis Act withdrawal will always be admissible in an unlawful detainer action
    involving a subsequent invocation, no matter how much time has intervened. In the
    circumstances of this case, the trier of fact should have had the opportunity to consider
    23
    whether Esclamado’s purchase was a sham and did not, in substance, change her status as
    a tenant.10 The trial court’s evidentiary ruling completely foreclosed the inquiry.
    Given the conflicting evidence on the key issue—whether Martin had a bona fide
    intent to exit the residential rental market—and the fact that the jury was not unanimous
    in its resolution of the issue even when De Leo’s case was presented in a limited fashion,
    we cannot say no more than an abstract possibility existed that a result more favorable to
    De Leo might have been achieved in the absence of the error.11 (See College Hospital
    Inc. v. Superior Court (1994) 
    8 Cal. 4th 704
    , 715 [error in trial proceedings is prejudicial
    when there is a “ ‘reasonable probability’ ” the error affected the trial outcome].)
    Because the trial court erroneously foreclosed presentation of De Leo’s proffered
    evidence, which went to the heart of Martin’s right to possession of the cottage, the
    judgment in Martin’s favor must be reversed. We need not address De Leo’s remaining
    arguments.
    IV.    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded. De Leo is to recover his
    costs on appeal.
    10 The jury was instructed on the legal requirements for creation of a landlord-
    tenant relationship: “An owner who invokes the Ellis Act only violates the Act if the
    owner enters into a landlord-tenant relationship after the effective date of withdrawal.
    The landlord-tenant relationship is created by a contract between the parties. This
    contract, known by a variety of names, may be oral or written and express or implied.
    The contract must show (expressly or from the facts) that the parties intend to create a
    landlord-tenant relationship and must contain the following: a designation of the parties,
    a description of the premises, the rent to be paid, the time and manner of payment, and
    the term for which the tenant will rent the property. Provisions for the payment of rent
    and a transfer of use and possession of property are essential elements of a lease. Rent is
    the consideration paid by the tenant for the use, possession and enjoyment of the demised
    premises. The lease or rental agreement should clearly specify the amount and manner of
    rent payment.” Because De Leo has not urged any error in connection with this
    instruction, we do not address whether it provided a correct statement of the law.
    11
    During its deliberations, the jury also sent a note to the trial judge, which
    demonstrated the jury’s focus on the intent issue.
    24
    _________________________
    BRUINIERS, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    SIMONS, Acting P. J.
    _________________________
    NEEDHAM, J.
    25
    Filed 8/28/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    A149660
    MARTIN J. COYNE,
    (San Francisco City and County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                      Super. Ct. No. CUD-16-655485)
    v.                                                   ORDER MODIFYING AND
    DIEGO DE LEO,                                        PUBLISHING OPINION;
    DENYING REHEARING
    Defendant and Appellant.                     [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]
    THE COURT:
    Respondent’s petition for rehearing is DENIED. This court’s July 30, 2018
    opinion meets the standard for publication set forth in rule 8.1105(c) of the California
    Rules of Court. Accordingly, the requests for publication are GRANTED. It is further
    ordered that the opinion filed on July 30, 2018, shall be MODIFIED as follows:
    1.        On page 16, in the final sentence of the first partial paragraph on the page,
    the phrase “where the tenant raises a retaliatory eviction defense” shall be deleted.
    2.        On page 20, between the second complete paragraph and the final, partial
    paragraph on the page, add the following new paragraph:
    We question whether Evidence Code section 662 would necessarily apply
    in these circumstances. “Section 662 codifies the common law rule [citations] that
    oral trusts in derogation of title are disfavored . . . .” (People v. Semaan (2007)
    
    42 Cal. 4th 79
    , 88.) “Evidence Code section 662 does not apply, however, when
    title itself is challenged as not genuine.” (Ibid.) In any event, the relevant focus
    here is not the operative effect of the disputed Esclamado deed, but Martin’s state
    of mind and his intent for purposes of the Ellis Act.
    3.        On page 23, following the first complete paragraph on the page, new
    second and third paragraphs are added. Those new paragraphs shall read:
    1
    Contrary to Martin’s suggestion, contract construction does not always
    present a question of law. “Interpretation of a written instrument becomes solely a
    judicial function only when it is based on the words of the instrument alone, when
    there is no conflict in the extrinsic evidence, or when a determination was made
    based on incompetent evidence. (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co. (1965)
    
    62 Cal. 2d 861
    , 865; [citation].) But when . . . ascertaining the intent of the parties
    at the time the contract was executed depends on the credibility of extrinsic
    evidence, that credibility determination and the interpretation of the contract are
    questions of fact that may properly be resolved by the jury (Warner Constr. Corp.
    v. City of Los Angeles (1970) 
    2 Cal. 3d 285
    , 289 [‘since the interpretation of the
    crucial provisions turned on the credibility of expert testimony, the court did not
    err in submitting the construction of the contract to the jury’]).” (City of Hope
    National Medical Center v. Genentech, Inc. (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 375
    , 395, italics
    added & fn. omitted.)
    In contrast to Bluvshtein, the record here shows significant extrinsic
    evidence in addition to the deed and written agreements. (See Cedars-Sinai
    Medical Center v. Shewry (2006) 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 964
    , 980 [“[e]xtrinsic evidence
    can include the surrounding circumstances under which the parties negotiated or
    entered into the contract; the object, nature and subject matter of the contract; and
    the subsequent conduct of the parties”].) There is Martin’s deposition testimony
    (from which multiple inferences could reasonably be taken), evidence of Martin’s
    and Esclamado’s relationship before the agreements were signed, as well as
    evidence regarding their conduct after the agreements were signed. Because this
    extrinsic evidence presents conflicting inferences and because a credibility
    determination will need to be made regarding Martin’s testimony, construction of
    the agreements is not a question of law.
    4.     On page 23, a new footnote is added at the conclusion of the last complete
    sentence on the page which reads, “We do not mean to suggest that a landlord’s actions
    in a prior Ellis Act withdrawal will always be admissible in an unlawful detainer action
    involving a subsequent invocation, no matter how much time has intervened.” The new
    footnote shall read:
    Nor are we suggesting the trier of fact in all Ellis Act unlawful detainer
    cases should make similar inquiries whenever a former tenant acquires an
    ownership interest. Our holding is limited to the unique circumstances presented
    in this case.
    The modification effects no change in the judgment.
    Date:                                       _____________________________              Acting
    P.J.
    2
    Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco, No. CUD-16-655485, Leslie C.
    Nichols, Judge.
    Tenderloin Housing Clinic and Stephen L. Collier for Defendant and Appellant.
    Zacks, Freedman & Patterson, Andrew M. Zacks and Emily L. Brough for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    3