Court Opinion

ID: 6335241
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-04-26 23:02:10.410214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:50.589826
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/26/22 Makaden, Inc. v. D.R. Horton L.A. Holding Co., Inc. CA4/1
                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

 MAKADEN, INC.,                                                       D079418

           Plaintiff and Appellant,

           v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. RIC1511181)

 D.R. HORTON LOS ANGELES
 HOLDING COMPANY, INC.,

           Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Riverside County, David
Chapman, Judge. Affirmed.
         John L. Dodd & Associates and John L. Dodd for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
         Schneider & Branch, David K. Schneider; Williams Iagmin, and Jon R.
Williams for Defendant and Appellant.

                                               INTRODUCTION
          This case arises out of a longstanding dispute between Makaden, Inc.
(Makaden) and D.R. Horton Los Angeles Holding Company, Inc. (Horton)
regarding a profit participation agreement in a residential land development
deal. The parties have now tried the case twice before different juries. The
second jury returned a verdict in favor of Makaden for $1,279,513 and the
trial court awarded Horton pre-judgement interest in the resulting judgment.
      Horton filed several posttrial motions, including a motion for a new
trial, in which it asserted the jury’s verdict was not supported by substantial
evidence, an alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict
(JNOV), and a motion to vacate the portion of the judgment awarding
prejudgment interest. The trial court granted the motion for a new trial,
finding the jury relied on a calculation of damages presented by Makaden’s
expert that was erroneous for several independent reasons, but denied the
motion for JNOV. In a separate order, the trial court vacated the award of
prejudgment interest, after concluding the amount of damages was not
certain or capable of being made certain before trial.
      Makaden appeals from the trial court’s orders granting a new trial and
vacating the award of prejudgment interest, and Horton cross-appeals from
the order denying its JNOV motion. We conclude the trial court did not
abuse its broad discretion in granting the motion for a new trial and did not
err in denying the JNOV motion. We also agree with the trial court that the
amount of damages was not certain or capable of being made certain before
trial and, thus, prejudgment interest was not appropriate in this case.
      Finally, Makaden asks us to address the trial court’s grant of Horton’s
motion for nonsuit, at the close of evidence, on Makaden’s cause of action for
breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Review of a trial
court’s ruling on a nonsuit is through an appeal from the underlying
judgment, but here there is no judgment as it was vacated when the trial
court conditionally granted Horton’s motion for a new trial and Makaden
refused to accept the reduced remittitur on damages. We therefore decline to

                                       2
provide what would essentially be an advisory opinion regarding the trial
court’s ruling on the nonsuit.
              FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
                                        I.
                          The Land Development Deal
      Makaden is a corporation owned entirely by Mike Doyle. Doyle owned
15 acres of land on three parcels in Riverside County. His brother owned an
adjacent parcel of five acres. Doyle initially tried his hand at ranching on the
undeveloped land, but not long after, the county redesignated the area for
residential development. Doyle then began the process for obtaining a
subdivision tract map for residential development on the collective 20 acres
belonging to him and his brother. Seven years later, in 2007, Doyle obtained
a tentative tract map to develop 59 lots across the 20 acres and began
negotiating with potential homebuilders, including Horton. By then, Doyle’s
brother had sold his five acres to Ronald and Frances Kipper.
      Around the same time, in 2006 or 2007, Doyle borrowed about $3.3
million against his land. The first, and primary, loan was from Gary E. Cox
& Friends, LLC (Cox) for approximately $2.8 million and the second was from
another lender for approximately $500,000. Doyle ran into financial trouble,
and within a year or two, he stopped making payments on the loans and filed
for bankruptcy. Cox initiated foreclosure proceedings on the $2.8 million loan
and, as of July 16, 2010, held title to Doyle’s 15 acres (the Cox Property).
      However, because Doyle had already done considerable work in
obtaining the tentative tract map and marketing the property to potential
developers, Cox agreed to allow him to continue to negotiate the potential
sale of the land. The Kippers also agreed to allow Doyle to negotiate the sale

                                        3
of their five acres (the Kipper Property) as part of the land development
project.
      Horton had expressed an interest in purchasing the land to build the
tract homes. Doyle began negotiating with David Stearn, Horton’s Senior
Vice President of Acquisitions and Planning. Stearn understood Doyle was
proposing a deal that would include the entire 20 acres, along with the
tentative tract map. Although the map added significant value to the land,
Doyle’s proposed purchase price was more than Horton was willing to pay.
To bridge the divide, Stearn proposed a profit participation agreement that
would allow Doyle to share in the profits if the residential development
project was successful.
      On August 23, 2010, Stearn sent Doyle a written letter of intent “to
acquire the aforementioned property (‘Property’), from Michael & Christine
Doyle and Ronald & Francis Kipper (‘Seller’)” on behalf of Horton. At the
time, Stearn did not know that Cox actually held title to the Cox Property.
The letter’s subject line identified the “ ‘Property’ ” as “Tract Map #32813 - 59
lot final map - 7200 SF min., lots in Temecula, CA.” (Boldface omitted.) The
letter stated the “Purchase Price for the lots” would be “$4,900,000

($83,051/lot).”1 The letter also included a term for profit participation,
which provided that the “Seller” would receive “one half (50%) of all profits
over a threshold of 22% Gross Margin.”
      Stearn subsequently learned that Cox held title to the Cox Property.
He then told Doyle that any profit participation agreement with Doyle would
need to be in the land purchase contract with Cox, since Cox was the property
owner. And any assignment of the profit participation agreement from Cox

1     Except where otherwise indicated, all boldface is in the original.

                                        4
to Doyle would be between Cox and Doyle. Stearn also told Doyle that
Horton would need a copy of the assignment before approving the land
purchase contracts with Cox and the Kippers.
                                       II.
                                 The Contracts
A.    The Assignment Agreement
      In February 2011, Cox and Makaden entered into an “Assignment
Agreement” (Assignment Agreement). Although Cox had not yet contracted
with Horton for the sale of the Cox Property, the recitals in the Assignment
Agreement stated Cox had “entered into a Contract of Sale as the Seller with
[Horton], as the Purchaser.” The recitals further stated that Cox agrees to
sell, and Horton agrees to purchase, the Cox Property for $3.3 million and, in
addition, Horton “agrees to pay certain Profit Participation, if any, to Seller
as described under Section 1.04.”
      Cox then agreed to assign certain rights under the contemplated
contract of sale with Horton to Makaden, as follows:
      “1.   Assignment. For good and valuable consideration, receipt
      of which is hereby acknowledged by [Cox, Cox] hereby assigns to
      [Makaden] all right, title and interest to sale proceeds in excess
      of $2.9 million on the net that [Cox] receives. On the sale
      proceeds net amount between $2.6 million and $2.9 million,
      [Makaden] will receive three percent of the proceeds. Any net
      sale proceeds under $2.6 million [Makaden] will not receive
      compensation out of escrow, but [Makaden] will receive its share
      in the Profit Participation as set forth in the Contract of Sale for
      the real property described on Exhibit A as more particularly
      delineated in Section 1.[0]4 of the Purchase and Sale Agreement,
      said assignment of the foregoing conditioned upon certain events
      described hereinbelow.”
      Doyle gave the signed, notarized Assignment Agreement to Stearn at a
budget meeting with Horton in March 2011. A month after the Assignment

                                        5
Agreement was executed, Horton signed land purchase contracts with both
Cox and the Kippers.
B.    The Cox Contract of Sale and the PAPA Provision
      In March 2011, Horton entered into a “Contract of Sale” with Cox (Cox
Contract of Sale). It identified Cox as the “ ‘Seller’ ” and Horton as the
“ ‘Purchaser.’ ” Section 1.01, subdivision (a), stated:
      “Seller hereby agrees to sell and convey unto Purchaser, and
      Purchaser hereby agrees to purchase and take from Seller, the
      real property in the County of Riverside (the ‘County’),
      California, more particularly described in Exhibit A . . . together
      with all improvements[, rights, appurtenances, easements,
      privileges, entitlements, rights-of-way] (all of such real property,
      rights, and appurtenances being hereinafter referred to
      collectively as the ‘Property’).”
The attached Exhibit A provided the legal description of the Cox Property,
consisting of the three parcels totaling 15 acres. Section 1.01, subdivision (a),
further stated:
      “The Property together with the adjacent real property (‘Kipper
      Property’) described on Exhibit A-1 are planned for 59 lots of
      land under Tract Map 32813 (the ‘Lots’). Purchaser is
      negotiating or has entered into a contract of sale to purchase the
      Kipper Property from the owner thereof (‘Kipper Contract of
      Sale’).”
      The Cox Contract of Sale further provided, in section 1.02, that: “Seller
shall sell, and Purchaser shall purchase, the Property for Two Million Nine
Hundred Five Thousand Dollars ($2,905,000) (the ‘Purchase Price’). In
addition to the Purchase Price, Purchaser agrees to pay Profit Participation,
if any, to Seller in accordance with Section 1.04.”
      Section 1.04 of the Cox Contract of Sale is the profit participation
provision (the PAPA provision). It is titled “PROFIT PARTICIPATION FOR
THE LOTS” (capitalization in original) and provided, in relevant part:

                                        6
     “Seller shall be entitled to receive fifty percent (50%) of any Gross
     Profit (as defined on Schedule 1 attached hereto) that exceeds a
     twenty-two percent (22%) Gross Profit Margin (as defined on
     Schedule 1 attached hereto) on the sale of all of the single-
     family residences to be developed by Purchaser on the Lots,
     including the Lots within the Kipper Property (‘Profit
     Participation’).”
     Schedule 1, in turn, set forth a formula that defined “Gross Profit” as
equaling “A − (B+C+D)” (the PAPA formula). Each of the variables in the
PAPA formula were defined as follows:
     “A = Sales Revenue

     [¶] Defined as the sum of the sales price of each residence
     pursuant to a sale to a member of the home buying public as
     reflected on the Home Closing Statement for such residence,
     including any premium for location, elevation, view or lot size,
     but excluding prices for extras and options offered by Purchaser
     in connection with the sale of any residence, including special or
     upgraded amenities, floor plan modifications, room options,
     appliance upgrades, cabinetry upgrades, countertop upgrades,
     finish carpentry upgrades, electrical options, fireplace options
     and all other options and upgrades, and minus sales incentive or
     concessions given to the home buyer.

     B = Land & Improvements

     [¶] Defined as Purchase Price paid to Seller for each Lot plus all
     escrow, title and closing costs, costs of third parties in connection
     with due diligence review of the Property, brokerage commissions
     and legal fees, incurred and paid by Purchaser in connection with
     the acquisition of title to the Lot; additional improvements by
     Purchaser (see Schedule l-B) . . . the costs of non-recurring,
     capitalized indirect construction costs (which for the purposes of
     this agreement shall be 1.50% of Sales Revenue) . . .

     C = Sticks and Bricks

     [¶] Defined as hard construction cost items and fees paid at
     building permit (see Schedule l-A).

                                       7
      D = Other Costs

      [¶] Defined as all costs paid by Purchaser in connection with the
      close of escrow for the sale of residences to members of the home-
      buying public, including, but not limited to, closing costs,
      including normal escrow and title charges and property taxes,
      documentary transfer tax, buyer referral fees, Homeowner
      Associate Fees, third-party co-broker real estate commissions,
      and a warranty expense accrual calculated at 1.0% of the sales
      price for detached product and 1.5% for attached product.”
      (Italics added.)
C.    Conditions Precedent to Closing
      The Cox Contract of Sale further provided the “Purchaser’s
obligation to close the purchase of the Property is expressly conditioned
upon the . . . conditions precedent” that (1) the “close of escrow under
the Kipper Contract of Sale occur[ ] concurrently with the Closing” of
escrow under the Cox Contract of Sale and that (2) “the County has
determined in writing that Final Tract Map 32813 that will create the
59 Lots is ready for approval.”
      Ronald and Frances Kipper also executed the Kipper Contract of
Sale with Horton in March 2011, and it also contained the same two
conditions precedent for closing under their contract. The Kipper
Contract of Sale was essentially identical to the Cox Contract of Sale,
but it did not include a PAPA provision.
D.    The Fifth Amendment to the Cox Contract of Sale
      Horton and Cox subsequently executed a number of amendments to the
Cox Contract of Sale. Relevant here, the fifth amendment, executed in July
2011, reduced the purchase price to $2,825,000, and reduced the percentage
of gross profit to determine the profit share under the PAPA provision from
50 percent to 35 percent. Stearn emailed the fifth amendment to Cox, and

                                        8
confirmed it reduced the purchase price and profit participation share.
Although Horton and Cox were aware that Cox had assigned the PAPA
provision to Makaden, neither informed Doyle, nor anyone else at Makaden,
of these amendments.
      In January 2013, Doyle emailed Stearn and requested a copy of the
final agreement between Horton and Cox “so [he] can confirm the profit
sharing terms are the original terms that [he] was assigned.” Stearn
responded that he would send the agreement and told Doyle, “[t]here are six
amendments, but I don’t think any involve the PAPA” provision. Based on
Stearn’s statement, Doyle did not read all six amendments.
                                      III.
                       Dispute Over Doyle’s Profit Share
      Horton eventually built and sold homes on 59 lots across the entire 20
acres that was the Cox and Kipper properties. The development project,
named “Morgan Heights,” was completed in 2015. On July 23, 2015,
approximately 90 days after escrow closed on the last house in Morgan
Heights, Horton made a payment of $44,548 to Doyle for his share of the
profits under the PAPA provision. Horton arrived at that amount by using
its total purchase price for all 59 lots across both the Cox and Kipper
properties.
      Doyle thought “there was a mistake.” He had expected his share of the
profits to be significantly higher, so he asked Horton to provide an
accounting. Horton agreed to provide more information and also sent Doyle a
copy of the fifth amendment to the Cox Contract of Sale. Doyle also inspected
Horton’s records. It was then that Doyle first learned the percentage of his
profit share under the PAPA provision had been reduced from 50 percent to

                                       9
35 percent. When the parties were unable to agree on the amount of profits
owed to Makaden, Makaden sued.
      In September 2015, Makaden filed a complaint against Horton for
breach of contract, breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and

accounting, among other causes of action.2 The complaint alleged Horton
breached the PAPA provision in the Cox Contract of Sale, which Cox had
assigned to Makaden, by failing to provide a complete accounting and failing
to pay “the appropriate amount of profit to be shared with [Makaden],
believed to be in excess of $4,500,000.” It further alleged Horton “breached
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing arising out of the
agreements between the two parties by failing to perform its obligations set
forth specifically in the agreements,” namely the Cox Contract of Sale and
the assignment of the PAPA provision to Makaden. Makaden also sought
damages for the breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing “in excess of
$4,500,000.”
                                        IV.
                                      Trial
      The case was tried twice.
A.    First Trial
      In the first trial, after certain legal issues of contract interpretation

were bifurcated for a bench trial,3 a jury awarded Makaden $850,000 in

2     These other causes of action were eliminated by rulings of the trial
court and are not at issue in the present appeal.

3     In the bifurcated bench trial, the trial court decided three specific
issues: 1) approximately $2 million in “ ‘sales incentives or concessions given
to the homebuyer’ ” were deductible from the “A = Sales Revenue” category;
2) another approximately $2 million in “ ‘house-related fees’ ” were deductible
as an allowable “B = Land and Improvements” expense; and 3) the Cox
                                        10
damages. The trial court then granted Horton’s motion for a new trial, on
several grounds. The court found, “[a]s the primary basis for granting the
motion,” that “the jury’s verdict of $850,000 [wa]s not supported by
substantial evidence.” The court found that Makaden “failed to identify
specific evidence in the record that could lead the jury to its verdict.” As a
second and alternative basis for granting the motion, the court found “it [wa]s
uncontroverted that the jury discussed and considered improper material,
. . . including [Horton’s] wealth and ability to pay, sympathy for [Makaden],
and research conducted outside of their deliberations.” Horton also filed a
motion for JNOV, which the trial court denied.
B.    Second Trial
      The parties tried the case again, but this time, Makaden raised a new
theory of calculating damages. Makaden had retained a new damages expert
and asserted, for the first time, that the PAPA provision limited Horton to

deducting only the purchase price of $2,905,0004 it paid for the Cox Property,
and excluded the cost of purchasing the Kipper Property, to calculate the
distributable gross profits. In all of its prior calculations, Makaden had also
included Horton’s purchase price for the Kipper Property as a deductible land

Contract of Sale, as amended, called for 35 percent profit sharing over the 22
percent gross profit margin threshold. As to these specific issues, the court
found there was no ambiguity in the Cox Contract of Sale. However, the
court made no determination as to whether the amendment was enforceable
against Makaden. The court also stated it would address the issue of
whether the profit share should be calculated based on actual costs and
revenues, as opposed to budgeted costs and revenues, in a motion in limine.

4     Although the Cox Contract of Sale was amended to reduce Horton’s
purchase price from $2,905,000 to $2,825,000, Makaden continued to rely on
the original purchase price of $2,905,000 in its calculations at trial.

                                       11
cost. The new theory would increase Makaden’s claim for damages by more
than $600,000.
      Horton filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence or testimony
concerning this new theory. It asserted that in the “entire 8-year history of
the PAPA [provision],” including four years of litigation, Makaden had never
contested that the profit share calculation would be based on Horton’s total
cost of purchasing all 59 lots across the 20 acres under both the Cox and the
Kipper contracts of sale. Horton argued Makaden should be precluded from
making this “eleventh-hour-back-flip” that the PAPA provision required
Horton to use only the purchase price for the Cox Property (consisting of 43
lots) and to exclude the purchase price for the Kipper Property (consisting of
16 lots), on three grounds. First, Makaden’s new argument relied on “one
arguably ambiguous provision” in the PAPA provision, that the “Purchase
Price paid to Seller for each Lot” meant only the purchase price paid to Cox
as the “Seller” under the Cox Contract of Sale. (Italics added.) Second,
Makaden’s new interpretation of the agreement was contrary to its prior
position for the past eight years and third, it was “contrived and
unreasonable per se.”
      The trial court denied Horton’s motion without prejudice. It essentially
deferred any ruling until evidence was presented at trial, stating that the
interpretation of the contract was not yet before it.
      At the second trial, the parties disputed three issues that affected the
amount owed to Makaden under the PAPA provision: (1) whether Horton’s
total purchase price for all 59 lots on the 20 acres (in the amount of

                                       12
$4,060,0005) should be deducted to determine distributable gross profits, or
whether the purchase price of only the 43 lots under the Cox Contract of Sale
(in the amount of $2,905,000) should be deducted; (2) whether $241,222 in
indirect costs and $95,416 in committed costs should also be deducted from
gross profits before calculating each party’s profit share; and (3) whether
Makaden was entitled to a 50 percent or 35 percent share of the final gross
profits, however calculated, based on the fifth amendment to the Cox
Contract of Sale.

      1.    Evidence at Trial6
            a.      Mike Doyle
      Doyle testified that, although Cox held title to the land, he had put
extensive effort into developing the tentative tract map, which significantly
increased the value of the land. For that reason, both Cox and Horton agreed
to keep Doyle involved in the sale of the land, and to compensate him for his
efforts on the land development deal with Horton. Doyle received a finder’s
fee from Horton for facilitating its purchase of the Cox and Kipper properties,
and Cox agreed to pay him a portion of the proceeds of sale above a certain
percentage and to assign the PAPA provision to him.
      Horton was aware that Cox was assigning the PAPA provision to
Makaden, and asked Doyle to confirm the assignment was complete before
executing the Cox Contract of Sale. Doyle participated in early budget
projection meetings with Horton and based on the numbers presented by

5    The parties agreed that Horton actually paid a total amount of
$4,060,000 for the entire 20 acres of land.

6    We summarize the testimony and evidence most relevant to the issues
on appeal and do not include all witnesses, testimony, or evidence.

                                      13
Horton, expected his share of the profits under the PAPA provision to be
significantly more than the $44,548 he ultimately received. He did not learn
that his 50 percent share had been reduced to 35 percent until after he
received the payment from Horton.
      On cross examination, Doyle testified he understood Horton was buying
the entire 20 acres, comprised of both the Cox and Kipper properties, in two
transactions, to facilitate development of the entire 59 lot tract map. He
conceded he understood the PAPA formula included “all the costs and
expenses for the 59 lots.” Specifically, at the time he executed the
Assignment Agreement, he understood “the land costs for all 59 lots was
going to be included in the PAPA calculation,” because “[t]hat’s what Horton
had told [him].” He admitted the “idea” of using only Horton’s cost in
acquiring the Cox Property to calculate his profit share came just before the
second trial. Indeed, up until approximately 40 days before the second trial,
Doyle used the “entire land costs” to Horton of over $4 million in preparing
his own spreadsheets to calculate the amount he was owed under the PAPA
provision.
             b.   David Stearn
      Stearn testified he was tasked primarily with locating and acquiring
new properties for residential home developments for Horton. He met Doyle
in that role and understood Doyle was negotiating the sale of both the 15
acres of land that Cox owned and the additional five acres owned by the
Kippers. Stearn testified the tentative tract map made the land significantly
more valuable, and that it was always his intention to include the entire cost
of all 20 acres of land in the PAPA calculation. He further explained the
tract map covered all 20 acres, that some of the lots were situated in such a
manner as to run across more than one parcel, and that the contracts were

                                      14
set up such that none of the deals would go through if Horton was not able to
purchase the entire 20 acres. Finally, he explained both the contracts, with
Cox and the Kippers, employed standard language and testified he believed
section 1.01, subdivision (a) of the Cox Contract of Sale “shows [Horton’s]
intent,” but acknowledged “it could have been altered to be more specific.”
      He also acknowledged he was aware that Cox had assigned the PAPA
provision to Makaden when Horton and Cox amended the Cox Contract of
Sale to decrease the profit share participation rate from 50 percent to 35
percent under the PAPA provision. He did not contact Doyle to let him know
about the amendment, and did not seek Doyle’s approval, because, as he
understood it, Horton’s contract was with Cox, not Doyle or Makaden. He
further explained: “[W]hile I did understand that it impacted Mr. Doyle,
Horton was not concerned as to which party [was] impacted. Our contract
was with [Cox] which was subsequently assigned to Mr. Doyle, and that was
our fiduciary duty to make the deal work, or there was no deal.”
            c.    Robert Taylor
      Taylor testified as Makaden’s expert witness in the field of forensic
accounting. He was a new expert retained for the second trial. Makaden
asked Taylor to calculate the amount of money Horton owed Makaden under
the PAPA provision. To do so, Taylor considered financial information from
Horton, including a job cost report that listed all of the costs incurred by the
project; information from Horton’s expert, Brian Bergmark; and “three
primary assumptions” Makaden asked him to make. First, he assumed
Horton’s land cost was limited to the purchase price of $2,905,000 under the
Cox Contract of Sale only. Second, he assumed Makaden was entitled to 50
percent of gross profit that exceeded the 22 percent gross profit margin. And
third, he excluded certain homebuyer options and upgrades from the net

                                       15
revenue and costs. Based on those assumptions, Taylor determined that
Horton owed Makaden either $1,279,513, based on the original profit
participation rate of 50 percent, or $882,295 if the percentage was reduced to
35 percent.
      Taylor used many of the same numbers as Horton in performing his
calculation of the amount owed to Makaden. However, his calculation
differed from Horton’s in several specific ways. First, as noted, Taylor used

the $2,905,000 land cost, instead of Horton’s figure of $4,315,009.7 Second,
Taylor also identified what he believed to be errors in some of Horton’s
numbers based on his review of the job cost report. Relevant here, one
adjustment Taylor made was for a “Possible Double Count of Capitalized
Indirect Costs.” Under the PAPA formula, the variable “B = Land &
Improvements” allowed Horton to deduct “the costs of non-recurring,
capitalized indirect construction costs (which for the purposes of [the PAPA
provision] shall be 1.5[ ]% of Sales Revenue).” Taylor explained that Horton
included the 1.5 percent of the selling price as capitalized indirect
construction costs, as permitted by the PAPA provision, but the job cost
report also had a column called “Capitalized Indirect Costs” with a total
amount of $241,222, which Horton also included as a separate development
cost figure. Taylor opined, based only on the title of the column in the job
cost report, that the $241,222 was duplicative of costs estimated by the 1.5
percent capitalized indirect construction costs figure and, therefore, should
have been excluded. In other words, it was his opinion that Horton had
double-counted $241,222 of deductible indirect costs. Taylor also opined that

7     As we explain later, Horton presented evidence that the total purchase
price reflected in its accounting system was $4,315,009.

                                       16
Horton improperly included an additional $95,000 of committed costs based
on an estimate for charges that would be, but had not actually been, incurred.
      On cross examination, Taylor testified, based on the job cost report,
that the $241,222 in indirect costs included, among other items, temporary
power, temporary construction, architecture, blueprints, structural
engineering, street cleaning, temporary fencing, and chemical toilets. He
conceded he did not know “everything that went into the overall [1.5 percent]
provision” and, thus, did not know for sure whether Horton actually double-
charged any particular cost. He further conceded that he would need to
change his opinion if the additional $241,222 was not subsumed within the
general 1.5 percent provision.
            d.    Marilyn Andrea
      Andrea was Horton’s Chief Financial Officer. She explained the
calculation Horton used to determine the $44,548 amount paid to Makaden
under the PAPA provision. She used the land cost for each individual lot, 59
in total, which totaled $4,315,009. She did not use the purchase price set
forth in the Cox and Kipper contracts of sale and instead, used the land price
for each individual lot as reflected in Horton’s accounting system. She did
not “look behind” the numbers generated by the accounting system for any of
the amount used in the PAPA payment calculation, but explained that
Horton did hold regular budget meetings in which the numbers were
reviewed. Andrea calculated the PAPA payment using 35 percent over the 22
percent gross profit margin, because that was the percentage in the final
PAPA provision.
      With respect to the $241,222 in allegedly double-counted indirect
construction costs, Andrea explained those costs included individual items
listed as potential deductions in the PAPA calculation, such as temporary

                                      17
power, temporary fencing, blueprints, consulting fees for architects and
structural engineers. She then testified:
      “Q. . . . Are you familiar that there is an issue in the case as to
      whether or not there was some double accounting for some
      certain expenses involving a temporary power, blueprints,
      structural and architect, engineering, chemical toilets, those sort
      of items?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. Were those items included in the other category that was
      titled Indirect Costs? In other words, did you double pay, did
      Horton double pay on those, double count them?
      “A. No.”
She further explained that the costs included in the 1.5 percent under “B” of
the PAPA formula were “superintendents salaries, salesperson’s salaries or
commissions, it is model maintenance, be it cleaning the models, landscape,
just any costs that were not part of the job cost expense or of the job cost
report but were related to the project.”
            e.    Brian Bergmark
      Bergmark, Horton’s expert in forensic accounting, testified he reviewed
Horton’s accounting underlying the PAPA payment made to Makaden. He
sampled various data points and confirmed each was consistent with the
accounting information Horton provided. In addition, he opined the $241,222
in indirect costs that Taylor claimed were double-counted were, instead,
additional cost items specifically included as costs in Schedule 1 of the Cox
Contract of Sale. Considering all of the data he reviewed, he concluded there
was nothing incorrect with Horton’s calculation.
      2.    Horton’s Motion for Nonsuit and Request for Special Jury
            Instruction
      At the conclusion of the evidence, before closing argument, Horton
presented a motion for nonsuit on the breach of covenant of good faith and

                                       18
fair dealing cause of action and a request for a special jury instruction.
Horton asserted Makaden could not pursue both a breach of contract and a
breach of implied covenant cause of action because the facts and damages
alleged by Makaden for both were identical. Makaden opposed the motion
and asserted, “a party who claims discretionary ability over another in a
contract is still held to the standard of good faith, even in acts that do not
expressly violate . . . the terms of the contract, but otherwise interfere and
frustrate [the] purpose of the contract.” Even if there was no provision
precluding Horton from modifying the Cox Contract of Sale, Makaden
asserted it should be able to argue the modification from 50 percent to 35
percent was a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
      The trial court determined this was a case where one party was
assigned rights from a principal contract, by a separate contract, without any
agreement that the principal contract would not be modified. In contrast, the
cases that Makaden relied on were inapposite because they addressed
situations in which one party had unilateral discretion under the terms of a
single contract. The court further noted the Cox Contract of Sale had not yet
been executed at the time Doyle and Cox entered into the Assignment
Agreement, stating: “I do not believe that you could have a breach of the
implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing on a contingency that might
arise in the future on a contract that has not yet come into existence.” The
court therefore granted Horton’s motion for nonsuit.
      In its request for a special jury instruction, Horton asked the trial court
to instruct the jury on three issues it asserted were matters of contract
interpretation for the court: 1) that sales incentives, allowances, and
concessions were deductible costs under the PAPA provision; 2) that permit
fees, site fees, and other fees were deductible costs under the PAPA provision;

                                        19
and 3) that the full land purchase price paid by Horton to buy all 59 lots,
including the amount paid to the Kippers, should be deducted. Regarding the
third point, Horton asserted the evidence at trial demonstrated both parties
always intended to use the full purchase price of all 59 lots, and that the
court should give effect to the intentions of the parties at the time of contract.
In opposition, Makaden asserted the term “ ‘Purchase Price’ ” in the Cox
Contract of Sale was not ambiguous but, to the extent there was any
ambiguity, that matter fell to the province of the jury because it required
consideration of conflicting extrinsic evidence.
      The trial court denied Horton’s request for a special jury instruction.
Specifically, with respect to whether the purchase price included all 59 lots or
not, the court explained: While the plaintiff would not “be allowed to tell this
jury that they get to go back and interpret the meaning of the contract. What
they can say is the contract says blank. And the only factual conclusion to
arrive from that language is this is the purchase price. That is not asking
them to interpret the contract or ambiguity, it is asking them to determine
the fact. And the fact is does the purchase price include all 59 lots or only the
Cox lots.”
      3.     Verdict and Post-Trial Motions
      The jury found in favor of Makaden and awarded damages in the
amount of $1,279,513⎯the exact amount Taylor had calculated based solely
on the purchase price of the Cox Property and the original profit participation
rate of 50 percent. The trial court entered judgment based on the verdict,
and also awarded Makaden prejudgment interest at the legal rate of 10
percent per annum from July 23, 2015.
      Horton filed a motion for JNOV or, in the alternative, for a new trial,
and a motion to vacate the verdict with respect to the prejudgment interest.

                                       20
Horton argued the jury’s verdict was based on an erroneous calculation
presented by Taylor, and thus the verdict was not supported by substantial
evidence. It asserted there was insufficient evidence to support Taylor’s
calculation because Taylor failed to deduct the following three items in full:
1) the $241,222 in allegedly double-counted indirect costs; 2) the $95,416 in
allegedly unpaid costs; and 3) the full land purchase cost of $4,060,000. For
the purposes of the posttrial motions, Horton did not dispute the use of a 50
percent participation rate, as opposed to 35 percent, in calculating the
amount owed to Makaden under the PAPA provision. Horton asserted the
three deductions would reduce the verdict from $1,279,513 to $533,694, and
asked the court to enter judgment in the corrected amount. In the
alternative, Horton asked the court to order a new trial on the limited issue
of damages.
      After hearing argument, the trial court agreed “[t]he jury verdict was
based on an erroneous calculation of the project profits by failing to deduct
the project’s full land purchase costs of $4,060,000; the indirect costs of
$241,222[;] and committed costs of $95,416.” In its tentative ruling, which
the court adopted and read into the minutes, the court stated that it had
“independently weighed the evidence and evaluated the credibility of the
witnesses.” It found that the evidence, including testimony from Doyle,
established the parties had always intended the PAPA calculation would
include the entire land costs for all 59 lots. As to the $241,222 deduction, the
court credited Andrea’s testimony that the costs were not duplicative, over
Taylor’s assumption that they were. Accordingly, the court conditionally
granted a new trial as to damages, unless Makaden accepted remittitur of the
damages award from $1,279,513 to $533,694. The parties declined to present

                                       21
additional argument on the JNOV, and the court adopted its tentative ruling
denying the motion.
      Finally, Horton asked the trial court to vacate the award of
prejudgment interest because the amount of damages was not certain or
capable of being made certain as required by Civil Code section 3287,
subdivision (a). The trial court agreed. It found, while the PAPA provision
included a formula, there were factual disputes as to the numbers to be used
in that formula, and those disputes directly affected the amount of damages.
The court therefore granted the motion to vacate the judgment with respect
to the award of prejudgment interest.
      Makaden timely appealed from the order conditionally granting a new
trial on damages and the order vacating the portion of the judgment
awarding pretrial interest. Horton then cross-appealed from the order
denying its JNOV motion.
                                 DISCUSSION
      On appeal, Makaden asserts the trial court erred by granting Horton’s
motion for a new trial on damages and by vacating the portion of the
judgment awarding pretrial damages. Horton counters that the trial court
ruled correctly on both motions, and further contends it should have granted
the JNOV motion. Based on the applicable standards of review, we find no
error in the trial court’s rulings on any of the three posttrial motions. We
also decline to address the trial court’s ruling on Horton’s motion for nonsuit,
despite Makaden’s request, because that issue is not properly within the
scope of the present appeal.

                                        22
                                        I.
  The Trial Court Did Not Err By Granting Horton’s Motion for a New Trial
                     or By Denying Horton’s JNOV Motion
A.    Relevant Legal Principles

      Code of Civil Procedure8 section 657 governs motions for a new trial
and provides that the trial court may vacate a jury’s verdict, in whole or in
part, and order a new trial on all or part of the issues, for any one of a
number of reasons including, as relevant here, “[e]xcessive or inadequate
damages” or “[i]nsufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict.” Section
629 governs JNOV motions and provides, in part: “The court, before the
expiration of its power to rule on a motion for a new trial, . . . on motion of a
party against whom a verdict has been rendered, shall render judgment in
favor of the aggrieved party notwithstanding the verdict when a motion for a
directed verdict for the aggrieved party should have been granted had a
previous motion been made.” (§ 629, subd. (a).)
      In ruling on a motion for a new trial, the trial court “is vested with the
authority, for example, to disbelieve witnesses, reweigh the evidence, and
draw reasonable inferences therefrom contrary to those of the trier of fact.”
(Mercer v. Perez (1968) 68 Cal.2d 104, 112−113 (Mercer).) The standard for
reviewing the trial court’s ruling on appeal is well settled. “After authorizing
trial courts to grant a new trial on the grounds of ‘[e]xcessive . . . damages’ or
‘[i]nsufficiency of the evidence,’ section 657 provides: ‘[O]n appeal from an
order granting a new trial upon the ground of the insufficiency of the
evidence . . . or upon the ground of excessive or inadequate damages, . . . such

8    All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil
Procedure.

                                        23
order shall be reversed as to such ground only if there is no substantial basis
in the record for any of such reasons.’ (Italics added.) Thus, . . . an order
granting a new trial under section 657 ‘must be sustained on appeal unless
the opposing party demonstrates that no reasonable finder of fact could have
found for the movant on [the trial court’s] theory.’ [Citation.] Moreover, ‘[a]n
abuse of discretion cannot be found in cases in which the evidence is in
conflict and a verdict for the moving party could have been
reached[.]’ [Citation.] In other words, ‘the presumption of correctness
normally accorded on appeal to the jury’s verdict is replaced by a
presumption in favor of the [new trial] order.’ ” (Lane v. Hughes Aircraft Co.
(2000) 22 Cal.4th 405, 411–412 (Lane).)
      The trial court does not have such broad discretion in ruling on a
motion for JNOV. (See Lane, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 412.) “ ‘ “A motion for
judgment notwithstanding the verdict may be granted only if it appears from
the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the party securing the
verdict, that there is no substantial evidence in support. [Citation.] [¶] . . .
As in the trial court, the standard of review [on appeal] is whether any
substantial evidence—contradicted or uncontradicted—supports the jury’s
conclusion.” ’ ” (Webb v. Special Electric Co., Inc. (2016) 63 Cal.4th 167, 192
(Webb), italics added.) Unlike a motion for new trial, the trial court may not
reweigh the evidence or make credibility determinations when considering a
JNOV motion. (See Lane, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 412; Johnson & Johnson
Talcum Powder Cases (2019) 37 Cal.App.5th 292, 313−314, 336 (Johnson &
Johnson) [applying Lane].) In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion for
JNOV, we are similarly constrained. (Johnson & Johnson, at p. 313.) “We,
like the trial court, may not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of
witnesses.” (Ibid.) We resolve all evidentiary conflicts and draw all

                                        24
reasonable inferences in favor of the verdict and consider only whether there
is any substantial evidence to support the verdict. (Id. at pp. 313−314.)
B.    The Motion for a New Trial
      In granting Horton’s motion for a new trial, the trial court concluded
there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict because the only
basis for the amount awarded was Taylor’s calculation, and it improperly
failed to deduct: 1) the $241,222 in allegedly double-counted indirect costs; 2)
the $95,416 in allegedly unpaid costs; and 3) the full land purchase cost of
$4,060,000. Makaden does not dispute that the jury relied on Taylor’s
calculation in reaching its verdict (the jury awarded Makaden the exact
amount calculated by Taylor), or the trial court’s finding that the equation
was improper because it failed to deduct the $95,416 in allegedly unpaid
costs. Makaden does contend the trial court erred on the other two points: 1)
by concluding the contract permitted Horton to deduct the full land purchase
cost of $4,060,000, and 2) by concluding the additional $241,222 was
deductible, and not already included in the 1.5 percent standard deduction
for capitalized indirect costs. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its
broad discretion to grant a new trial.
      1.    Deduction for the Full Land Purchase Price
      The calculation the jury relied on deducted only the $2,905,000 listed
as the “Purchase Price” for the Cox Property under the Cox Contract of Sale.
The trial court concluded the calculation should have, instead, deducted the
total land purchase price of $4,060,000, the full amount Horton paid for all 20
acres under the Cox and Kipper contracts of sale. In reaching that
conclusion, the court concluded the phrase “Purchase Price paid to Seller for
each Lot,” set forth in the PAPA formula (Schedule 1) to the Cox Contract of

                                         25
Sale, was ambiguous. The court therefore relied on extrinsic evidence
regarding the intent of the parties to resolve the ambiguity.
      Makaden asserts the trial court erred because the phrase is not
ambiguous, and instead, the plain language supports Taylor’s assumption
that “Purchase Price” in the PAPA formula was limited to the $2,905,000
paid to Cox. Horton contends, to the contrary, the plain language supports
its position that the purchase price to determine its land acquisition costs
included the full $4,060,000 Horton paid to acquire all 59 lots across the 20
acres. Alternatively, Horton asserts the contract is either ambiguous on its
face or reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation, and the
undisputed extrinsic evidence required a finding that the purchase price
included the full $4,060,000.
      “The interpretation of a contract is a judicial function. [Citation.] In
engaging in this function, the trial court ‘give[s] effect to the mutual intention
of the parties as it existed’ at the time the contract was executed. (Civ. Code,
§ 1636.) Ordinarily, the objective intent of the contracting parties is a legal
question determined solely by reference to the contract’s terms. (Civ. Code,
§ 1639 [‘[w]hen a contract is reduced to writing, the intention of the parties is
to be ascertained from the writing alone, if possible . . .’]; Civ. Code, § 1638
[the ‘language of a contract is to govern its interpretation . . .’].)” (Wolf v.
Walt Disney Pictures & Television (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 1107, 1125−1126
(Wolf).) Extrinsic evidence cannot be used to vary or contradict the
unambiguous terms of a written, integrated contract but may be admissible
to aid in the interpretation of an ambiguous term. (Ibid.)
      “When the meaning of the words used in a contract is disputed, the
trial court engages in a three-step process. First, it provisionally receives any
proffered extrinsic evidence that is relevant to prove a meaning to which the

                                         26
language of the instrument is reasonably susceptible. [Citations.] If, in light
of the extrinsic evidence, the language is reasonably susceptible to the
interpretation urged, the extrinsic evidence is then admitted to aid the court
in its role in interpreting the contract. [Citations.] When there is no
material conflict in the extrinsic evidence, the trial court interprets the
contract as a matter of law. [Citations.] This is true even when conflicting
inferences may be drawn from the undisputed extrinsic evidence [citations] or
that extrinsic evidence renders the contract terms susceptible to more than
one reasonable interpretation. [Citations.] If, however, there is a conflict in
the extrinsic evidence, the factual conflict is to be resolved by the jury.”
(Wolf, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1126−1127.)
      “On appeal, a ‘trial court’s ruling on the threshold determination of
“ambiguity” (i.e., whether the proffered evidence is relevant to prove a
meaning to which the language is reasonably susceptible) is a question of
law, not of fact. [Citation.] Thus[,] the threshold determination of ambiguity
is subject to independent review.’ ” (Horath v. Hess (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th
456, 464 (Horath).)
      Here, as the trial court noted in the context of Horton’s request for a
special jury instruction, both parties offered extrinsic evidence regarding the
interpretation of the contract without objection. The evidence was then
admitted without the court making an express finding as to its admissibility
to aid in the interpretation of the contract. Regardless, the question of
whether the language of the contract is ambiguous, and thus whether it was
appropriate for the trial court to consider the extrinsic evidence in the context
of the motion for a new trial, remains a matter of law that we review de novo.
(See Horath, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p. 464; Wolf, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 1126−1127.) To the extent we conclude there is ambiguity in the

                                        27
contract, and that the interpretation of the ambiguous term turns on
conflicting extrinsic evidence, we defer to the trial court’s weighing of the
evidence as the trier of fact. (See Wolf, at p. 1127; Oakland Raiders v.
National Football League (2007) 41 Cal.4th 624, 636 [a reviewing court
“defers to the trial court’s resolution of conflicts in the evidence”].)
       We begin by considering the threshold question of whether the
language of the contract is ambiguous. We conclude that it is. Schedule 1 to
the Cox Contract of Sale defined “Gross Profit” as “A − (B+C+D)” and defined
“B” to include, among other costs, the “Purchase Price paid to Seller for each
Lot.” Makaden asserts there is no ambiguity because the capitalized term
“Purchase Price” is specifically defined in the contract as $2,905,000, and the
capitalized term “Seller” is specifically defined as Cox. So Makaden contends
the “Purchase Price paid to Seller” is limited to the $2,905,000 Horton paid to
Cox.
       But the relevant phrase does not end there. Instead, it goes on to state
“for each Lot.” We do not focus on only a portion of the phrase, as Makaden
would have us do, and instead read the entire phrase in the context of the
entire agreement as a whole. (See Wind Dancer Production Group v. Walt
Disney Pictures (2017) 10 Cal.App.5th 56, 69 (Wind Dancer) [“ ‘We consider
the contract as a whole and interpret its language in context so as to give
effect to each provision, rather than interpret contractual language in
isolation.’ ”].) Doing so here, we note, as the trial court did, the contract also
defined the capitalized term “ ‘Lots.’ ” It stated: “The Property together with
the adjacent real property (‘Kipper Property’) . . . are planned for 59 lots of
land under Tract Map 32813 (the ‘Lots’). Purchaser is negotiating or has
entered into a contract of sale to purchase the Kipper Property from the
owner thereof (‘Kipper Contract of Sale’).” Thus, the term “ ‘Lots’ ” is

                                         28
specifically defined to include all 59 lots planned under the tract map, which,
in turn, included the adjacent Kipper Property.
      Considering the entire phrase in the context of the agreement as a
whole, there is an inherent ambiguity between three defined terms:
“Purchase Price,” “Seller,” and “each Lot.” The plain language of the contract
establishes the “Purchase Price” of $2,905,000 was paid to Cox, the “Seller,”
and that it was solely for the purchase of the Cox Property. But the contract
further expressly stated that Horton would concurrently purchase the Kipper
Property, and the Cox Property “together” with the Kipper Property “are
planned for 59 lots of land under Tract Map 32813,” which were collectively
defined as “the ‘Lots.’ ” (Boldface omitted, italics added.) Thus, the stated
purchase price of $2,905,000 does not represent the total amount Horton
“paid . . . for each Lot.” Instead, the contract is reasonably susceptible to the
interpretation urged by Horton, that the “Purchase Price paid to Seller for
each Lot” also includes the additional purchase price paid to the other Seller,
the Kippers, for the additional land necessary to develop all 59 Lots. (Italics
added.)
      Makaden asserts the Cox Contract of Sale was for the sale of three 5-
acre parcels, not 59 individual lots. To the contrary, the contract itself
specified the very purpose of the two concurrent land purchases was to
develop the “59 lots of land under Tract Map 32813 (the ‘Lots’).” Further, the
disputed term, “Purchase Price paid to Seller for each Lot,” appears in
Schedule 1, which set forth the PAPA formula that was to be used after
Horton developed all 20 acres and sold all of the homes on all 59 lots. As set
forth in Schedule 1, the PAPA formula determined the Gross Profit by
deducting the costs of development, including the “Purchase Price paid to
Seller for each Lot,” from the Sales Revenue, “[d]efined as the sum of the

                                       29
sales price of each resident.” (Italics added.) Similarly, the cost of land to be
deducted included the cost “for each Lot,” not just the portion of the lots
purchased from Cox. Certainly, the parties could have agreed to a
calculation that gave Makaden the benefit of the sales revenue on each of the
59 homes without deducting the cost of each of the 59 Lots, but the language
of the contract does not unambiguously state that is what the parties

intended. Instead, we conclude the language is ambiguous on its face.9
      Thus, the trial court properly considered extrinsic evidence relevant to
the interpretation of the contract, and the extrinsic evidence at issue was
directly relevant as it tended to prove the mutual intent of the parties at the
time the contract was executed. (See Civ. Code, § 1636; Wolf, supra, 162
Cal.App.4th at pp. 1126−1127.) Makaden argues the trial court nevertheless
erred by relying on the evidence because it directly contradicted the express
terms of the contract. Again, Makaden focuses solely on the definition of
“Seller” and asserts that term is expressly defined as Cox, and therefore is
not reasonably susceptible to an interpretation that “Seller” includes both
Cox and the Kippers. But as we have explained, the entire provision must be

9      While we conclude the phrase “Purchase Price paid to Seller for each
Lot” is ambiguous on its face, we note the extrinsic evidence also supports the
conclusion that the phrase is susceptible to the interpretation offered by
Horton. (See Wolf, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1126−1127.) Specifically,
there is no dispute the Kipper Contract of Sale also defined the capitalized
terms “Seller” and “Purchase Price,” but that it defines those terms in the
context of the sale of the Kipper Property. Although the Kipper Contract of
Sale was not explicitly incorporated by reference into the Cox Contract of
Sale, it is referenced in the Cox Contract of Sale and all parties knew, as
stated in both contracts, that escrow for both properties needed to close
concurrently. Thus, when considering the Kipper Contract of Sale, it is even
more evident that the phrase “Purchase Price paid to Seller for each Lot”
could be read to include the amount paid to the Kippers.

                                       30
interpreted in the context of the agreement as a whole. (See Wind Dancer,
supra, 10 Cal.App.5th at p. 69.) It is precisely the fact that the contract
defined “Purchase Price” and “Seller” solely in the context of Horton’s
purchase of the 15 acres from Cox, while also defining “ ‘Lots’ ” to include all
59 Lots spanning both the Cox and Kipper properties that creates an

inherent ambiguity.10
      Makaden concedes the extrinsic evidence demonstrated that Doyle
“may originally have understood the Kipper property cost to be included.”
However, it contends Doyle’s “ ‘undisclosed intent or understanding’ ” was
irrelevant, in part because the contract was executed by Horton and Cox, not
Doyle or Makaden. A party’s undisclosed subjective intent generally is not
relevant to the issue of contract interpretation, but the evidence at issue here
did not relate to an undisclosed intent, and instead was relevant to the
mutually disclosed intent of the parties at the time of contracting. (See
Founding Members of the Newport Beach Country Club v. Newport Beach
Country Club, Inc. (2003) 109 Cal.App.4th 944, 955, 957.)
      Here, there was ample evidence that the negotiations originally took
place between Doyle and Stearn; that the PAPA provision, in particular, was
included for Doyle’s benefit; and that Doyle and Stearn both understood, from
the beginning, that the PAPA calculation would include the full purchase
price of all 20 acres. Indeed, Horton’s August 23, 2010 letter of intent to
purchase the entire 20 acres defined “ ‘Property’ ” as both the Cox and Kipper

10    Makaden similarly asserts the contract had an integration clause and,
therefore, extrinsic evidence could not be used to add to or vary its terms.
(See Masterson v. Sine (1968) 68 Cal.2d 222, 225.) This argument fails for
the same reason—the extrinsic evidence of the intent of the parties does not
add to or vary its terms, and instead aids in interpreting an inherent
ambiguity.

                                       31
properties, “ ‘Seller’ ” as both “Michael & Christine Doyle and Ronald &

Francis Kipper,”11 and the “Purchase Price for the lots” would be
“$4,900,000 ($83,051/lot).” Further still, Doyle testified—consistent with
that understanding and the court’s ultimate interpretation of the contract—
that he himself used the total purchase price of over $4 million for all 20
acres to calculate the amount owed to him under the PAPA provision, up
until approximately 40 days before the second trial. Thus, the evidence was
relevant, and it was proper for the trial court to consider it when interpreting
the ambiguous contract term. Makaden does not otherwise dispute the
evidence supported the trial court’s conclusion that the mutual intent of the
parties was to include the entire $4,060,000 amount Horton paid to both Cox
and the Kippers for “each Lot” in the PAPA formula.
      In sum, we conclude the term “Purchase Price paid to Seller for each
Lot” is ambiguous as a matter of law, and the trial court did not err by
considering extrinsic evidence tending to prove a meaning to which the
contract language is reasonably susceptible. Further, the trial court was
entitled to weigh that evidence and conclude, as it did, that it supported
Horton’s proposed interpretation and, thus, that the jury based its verdict on
an erroneous calculation that did not include a deduction of the entire land
purchase price of $4,060,000. We defer, as we must, to the trial court’s
weighing of the evidence as the trier of fact. (See Wolf, supra, 162
Cal.App.4th at p. 1127.)

11   As previously noted, Stearn did not know at the time he presented
Horton’s letter of intent to Doyle that Cox held title to the Cox Property.

                                       32
      2.    $241,222 Deduction for Indirect Costs
      Makaden next contends there was not substantial evidence to support
the trial court’s finding that the damages calculation was erroneous for
failing to include the additional $241,222 in indirect costs. Not so. Unlike
the previous issue, the dispute over the $241,222 deduction was not based in
contract interpretation and was, instead, purely a factual dispute. As such,
the trial court is entitled to significant deference. As we have explained,
“ ‘[a]n abuse of discretion cannot be found in cases in which the evidence is in
conflict and a verdict for the moving party could have been reached.’ ”
(See Lane, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 412.) This is such the case.
      The only basis Makaden offered for excluding the $241,222 was
Taylor’s opinion, based solely on the title of the column in the job cost report,
that the $241,222 was duplicative of costs estimated by the 1.5 percent
capitalized indirect construction costs figure. Taylor conceded he did not
know “everything that went into the overall [1.5] percent provision” and,
thus, did not know for sure whether Horton actually double-charged any
particular cost. He further conceded he would need to change his opinion if
those costs were not subsumed within the general 1.5 percent provision.
      Horton then offered substantial evidence that the $241,222 deduction
was not double-counted. Horton’s CFO Andrea clarified:
      “Q. And included on here, for example, the second item is
      temporary power; do you see that?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. Was it your understanding that that would be an expense
      under the PAPA calculation?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. Did you expense that in your PAPA calculation, the
      temporary power?
      “A. Yes.

                                       33
      “Q. What about some of the consultant fees that are identified as
      architect and structural engineer, did you expense those?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. What about things like temporary fencing and blueprints
      and toilets, did you expense those?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. And is that different than the capitalized indirect costs that
      you mentioned a moment ago which are superintendent fees and
      those other items?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. Was there any double dipping or double counting on those
      expenses that I just identified compared to the indirect costs?
      “A. No.” (Italics added.)
Andrea addressed the issue again and testified further:
      “Q. . . . Are you familiar that there is an issue in the case as to
      whether or not there was some double accounting for some
      certain expenses involving a temporary power, blueprints,
      structural and architect, engineering, chemical toilets, those sort
      of items?
      “A. Yes.
      “Q. Were those items included in the other category that was titled
      Indirect Costs? In other words, did you double pay, did Horton
      double pay on those, double count them?
      “A. No.” (Italics added.)
      Makaden asserts Andrea’s testimony lacked foundation because it was
not supported by documentary evidence. However, Makaden presents no
authority on appeal, and we are aware of none, requiring documentary
evidence to establish foundation. (Cf. Evid. Code, § 702, subd. (b) [“A
witness’[s] personal knowledge of a matter may be shown by any otherwise
admissible evidence, including his [or her] own testimony.”].) Andrea
testified she was the division CFO for the relevant geographical area. Her
job duties for the past 10 years included working with the land department to

                                      34
prepare “land books or new land acquisitions,” with the sales department
“doing sales releases,” and performing all matters “accounting and finance
related.” Further, she attended budget meetings at least once per quarter.
And based on her job experience, she was able to explain precisely what was
included in the particular category of costs at issue. By contrast, the only
thing Makaden offered to support Taylor’s testimony was the title of the
column on a job cost report he did not prepare. The trial court was entitled to
find Andrea credible and to credit her testimony over Taylor’s. (See Mercer,
supra, 68 Cal.2d at pp. 112−113.) Doing so, it concluded the jury’s calculation
was erroneous for failing to deduct the additional $241,222 in indirect costs.
      In sum, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
granting the motion for new trial on the ground there was insufficient
evidence to justify the jury’s verdict.
C.    The JNOV Motion
      On cross-appeal, Horton asserts the trial court should have granted its

companion JNOV motion,12 thereby obviating the need for a third trial in
this case. Although the argument has appeal from an efficiency standpoint,
the governing standard of review makes clear the trial court did not err in
denying Horton’s motion for JNOV.
      As noted, unlike a motion for new trial, the trial court does not have
the same broad discretion in ruling on a motion for JNOV. (See Lane, supra,
22 Cal.4th at p. 412.) The trial court cannot reweigh the evidence or make
credibility findings and can grant the motion only if there is no substantial

12     Where the trial court grants a motion for a new trial but denies a
concurrent JNOV motion, the moving party may file a separate cross-appeal
as to the denial of the JNOV motion. (See § 629, subd. (d); Berge v.
International Harvester Co. (1983) 142 Cal.App.3d 152, 158−159.)

                                          35
evidence to support the verdict. (Webb, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 192.)
Similarly, on appeal, we must presume the correctness of the jury’s verdict
and uphold the trial court’s denial of a JNOV so long as there is any
substantial evidence to support that verdict. (Johnson & Johnson, supra, 37
Cal.App.5th at pp. 313−314.)
      Here, in deciding the motion for new trial, the trial court
“independently weighed the evidence and evaluated the credibility of the
witnesses,” as it is permitted to do sitting as the thirteenth juror. Thus, the
trial court determined the evidence did not support the jury’s inclusion of at
least the $241,222 in allegedly double-counted indirect costs and the $95,416

in allegedly unpaid costs (which Makaden does not dispute on appeal),13 in
reaching its damages award. But the trial court was not permitted to
reweigh the evidence or make such credibility findings on the JNOV motion
and, although minimal, there was at least some evidence to support some of
Makaden’s claims regarding the calculation of his profit share under the
PAPA provision.
      Taylor testified he assumed the $241,222 was double-counted, in part,
because the column in the job cost report containing that figure was titled
“Capitalized Indirect Costs.” Andrea, however, explained that those costs
were not, in fact, double-counted, but the jury was entitled to weigh the
evidence, including the testimony of both Taylor and Andrea, to resolve this
factual dispute. Further, while we have concluded the term “Purchase Price

13     Contrary to Horton’s assertion, Makaden’s decision not to dispute the
$95,416 in the context of the trial court’s ruling on the motion for a new trial
does not equate to a concession there was no substantial evidence to support
the jury’s apparent finding that the $95,416 should not have been deducted.
As we have explained, the standards of review for the two motions are
significantly different.

                                       36
paid to Seller for each Lot” is ambiguous as a matter of law, resolving that
ambiguity requires consideration of the extrinsic evidence—including
weighing the testimony of Doyle and Stearn—to determine the mutual intent

of the parties.14 While we agree that it may be difficult for Makaden to
establish damages in an amount greater than $533,694 at a third trial, we
cannot conclude that there was no substantial evidence to support any of
Makaden’s positions, and thus the trial court did not err by denying the

JNOV motion.15
      Horton asserts the maximum damages award has now been determined
by the court and the outcome of a third trial will be the same. To the
contrary, neither the trial court nor this court has determined the proper
deductions as a matter of law. Instead, as we have explained, the trial court,
sitting as the thirteenth juror, independently weighed the evidence and
concluded the jury’s calculation of damages was erroneous. The trial court
was entitled to do so on a motion for a new trial, but was not entitled to do so

14     Horton contends Doyle’s admission that he understood the PAPA
provision was going to include the full land acquisition cost for all 59 lots
forecloses any further dispute on this issue. Although persuasive, Doyle’s
testimony alone is not dispositive under the relevant standard of review for a
JNOV. Makaden also presented at least some evidence the deduction for the
“Purchase Price” in the PAPA formula was limited to the $2,905,000 figure
set forth in the Cox Contract of Sale.

15    We also note, as the trial court did, that the jury appears to have used
the calculation that awarded Makaden 50 percent of the profits over the
stated gross profit margin threshold of 22 percent. Although Horton
conceded for the purpose of its posttrial motions that Makaden was entitled
to 50 percent and also does not dispute that finding in its cross-appeal now, it
contends it could still assert Makaden is entitled only to 35 percent under the
amended Cox Contract of Sale in a new trial on damages. Thus, the damages
award could potentially be reduced further.

                                       37
in the context of a JNOV motion. (See Lane, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 412.) For
the same reason, the primary case on which Horton relies, Simon v. San
Paulo U.S. Holding Co., Inc. (2005) 35 Cal.4th 1159, is not helpful. There,
the issue was whether the punitive damages award was excessive, and that
“is a legal issue appellate courts determine independently.” (Id. at p. 1187.)
Here, at least some of the issues underlying the damages award are factual
disputes that a jury must decide. (See Ibid. [“we do not, in determining the
maximum constitutional award ourselves, decide any question of fact plaintiff
has a right to have decided by a jury”].)
      We therefore conclude the trial court did not err by denying Horton’s
alternative JNOV motion.
                                       II.
     The Trial Court Did Not Err By Vacating the Prejudgment Interest
      Makaden asserts the trial court erred in granting Horton’s motion to
vacate the portion of the judgment awarding prejudgment interest to
Makaden. Again, we disagree.
      Civil Code section 3287, subdivision (a), provides, in relevant part, “[a]
person who is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made
certain by calculation, and the right to recover which is vested in the person
upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon from that
day.” If the requirements of Civil Code section 3287, subdivision (a), are met,
an award of prejudgment interest is mandatory. (North Oakland Medical
Clinic v. Rogers (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 824, 828–829.) “Damages are certain
or capable of being made certain by calculation, or ascertainable, for purposes
of the statute if the defendant actually knows the amount of damages or
could calculate that amount from information reasonably available to the
defendant. [Citation.] In contrast, damages that must be determined by the

                                       38
trier of fact based on conflicting evidence are not ascertainable.” (Collins v.
City of Los Angeles (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 140, 150−151.) “The denial of
prejudgment interest under [Civil Code] section 3287, subdivision (a)
presents a question of law” that we independently review. (Employers
Mutual Casualty Co. v. Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co. (2008) 169
Cal.App.4th 340, 347; see also Tenzera, Inc. v. Osterman (2012) 205
Cal.App.4th 16, 21.)
      Makaden contends the requirements of Civil Code section 3287,
subdivision (a), were met in this case because the PAPA formula was set
forth in the Cox Contract of Sale and had all the information necessary to
calculate the correct PAPA payment using that formula. However, the
statute does not require an award of prejudgment interest “where the amount
of damage, as opposed to the determination of liability, ‘depends upon a
judicial determination based upon conflicting evidence and is not
ascertainable from truthful data supplied by the claimant.’ ” (Fireman’s
Fund Ins. Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co. (1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 1154, 1173.) Here,
although the contract contained a formula for determining the PAPA
payment, the formula was complex and included lengthy definitions of each of
the variables. Moreover, the parties had both legal disputes regarding the
proper interpretation of the definitions and factual disputes regarding
whether certain enumerated costs should be included under those definitions.
For example, as we have just discussed, whether the $241,222 was properly
double-counted was largely a factual dispute. The amount of damages was
not capable of being determined absent resolution of those disputes and, thus
the statute does not compel an award of prejudgment interest in this case.
(See ibid.)

                                       39
      Makaden relies on State of California v. Continental Ins. Co. (2017) 15
Cal.App.5th 1017 to assert the damages were certain because Horton could
have calculated them if it had known how the trial court would rule on the
legal issues. (Id. at p. 1043.) As an initial matter, unlike the present case,
Continental is an insurance coverage case, and the court specifically limited
its analysis to that context. (Id. at pp. 1039 [“At least in insurance cases,
what has been treated as controlling is whether the uncertainty is legal or
factual.”], 1042 [“Collectively, [the cases analyzed] stand for one simple
test: When the allocation of indemnity among insurers turns on factual
issues, damages are uncertain and pretrial interest is unavailable; when it
turns exclusively on legal issues, damages are certain and pretrial interest is
available.”].) Regardless, the disputes at issue here were not purely legal. As
we have already discussed, at least some of them, such as whether the
$241,222 for indirect costs was double-counted, were primarily factual
disputes. Indeed, Makaden belies its own position by asserting the trial court
properly denied the JNOV motion because the court was not permitted to
weigh the evidence or make credibility determinations in that context. If the
trial court could not determine the amount of damages as a matter of law in
the context of the JNOV, it follows that the damages calculation was not
based solely on legal issues.
      Makaden also asserts this case is similar to Cheema v. L.S. Trucking,
Inc. (2019) 39 Cal.App.5th 1142. It is not. “ ‘The principal issue in [Cheema]
was the effect of a verbal agreement between the parties under which LS
Trucking agreed to purchase the box that was on a Super Dump truck that
Cheema had purchased.” (Id. at pp. 1146−1147.) After determining the
alleged agreement was not enforceable, the trial court awarded damages to
Cheema to compensate it for rent it had paid, less an offset for payments

                                       40
made by LS Trucking for the box, but refused to award prejudgment interest.
(Id. at pp. 1147−1148.) The appellate court concluded the trial court erred
and explained there was no real dispute or uncertainty over the amount of
damages owed, only a legal dispute concerning liability, which did not render
the damages unascertainable. (Id. at pp. 1149, 1151.) To the contrary, here,
as we have discussed, the primary issues at trial and on appeal concern the
amount of damages owed. Again, Makaden belies its own position by
asserting, in opposition to Horton’s cross-appeal on the JNOV motion, that it
may present additional fact evidence at a new trial limited to damages. Even
now, in Makaden’s view, there remains a factual dispute regarding the
amount of damages.
      We therefore conclude the trial court did not err by granting the motion
to vacate the award of pre-judgment interest.
                                      III.
  We Decline to Address the Trial Court’s Ruling on the Motion for Nonsuit
      As a final matter, Makaden asks this court to provide what would be an
advisory opinion on the trial court’s granting of Horton’s motion for nonsuit
on the breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cause of
action. We decline to do so.
      The proper mechanism for addressing the trial court’s ruling on a
nonsuit is through an appeal from the underlying judgment. (See McKee v.
Lynch (1940) 40 Cal.App.2d 216, 228 [“An order denying a motion for nonsuit
is not an appealable order but may be reviewed on the appeal from the
judgment.”].) Here, there is no judgment as it was vacated when the trial
court conditionally granted Horton’s motion for new trial and Makaden
refused to accept the reduced remittitur.

                                      41
      Makaden asserts we should nevertheless decide the issue pursuant to

section 906,16 because, Makaden asserts, it is relevant to the issues on
appeal and may be relevant on remand. To the contrary, Makaden’s claim of
breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing was tied directly to
the amendment reducing the percentage of gross profits owed to Makaden
from 50 percent to 35 percent. However, there is no dispute the jury adopted
the 50 percent rate in its damages calculation, despite the court’s ruling on
Horton’s motion for nonsuit. Horton did not dispute the 50 percent profit
participation rate for the purposes of its posttrial motions and, similarly, does
not dispute the 50 percent rate on appeal. Thus, the matter is not relevant to
any issue on appeal.
      Makaden asserts Horton “most probably will argue the 35 percent
calculation is the appropriate measure of damages in the upcoming [third]
trial,” and therefore asks us to provide guidance on remand. Makaden’s
assertion is purely speculative. Further, as it did in the last trial, Makaden
will be permitted to argue the 50 percent rate applies, and it is possible the
jury will once again apply the 50 percent rate, even despite the trial court’s
ruling on the motion for nonsuit. Further still, if the parties do proceed to a
third trial and the jury does instead adopt a profit participation rate of 35
percent, Makaden will have an opportunity to address the issue on a proper
appeal from the resulting judgment.

16    Section 906 provides, in relevant part, “[u]pon an appeal pursuant to
Section 904.1 or 904.2, the reviewing court may review the verdict or decision
and any intermediate ruling, proceeding, order or decision which involves the
merits or necessarily affects the judgment or order appealed from or which
substantially affects the rights of a party.”

                                       42
                                 DISPOSITION
      The orders are affirmed. Horton is entitled to its costs on appeal. (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1) & (2).)

                                                                         DO, J.

WE CONCUR:

HALLER, Acting P. J.

O'ROURKE, J.

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