Morris v. Holt

Decision Date11 March 1980
Citation380 Mass. 133,401 N.E.2d 851
PartiesHarold MORRIS et al. 1 v. James H. HOLT, et al. 2
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

James Goldberg, Attleboro, for defendants.

Henry G. Barrett, North Attleboro, for plaintiffs.

Before HENNESSEY, C. J., and QUIRICO, WILKINS, LIACOS and ABRAMS, JJ.

WILKINS, Justice.

The plaintiffs purchased a house in Attleboro which once had been owned by the defendants. While the defendants owned the house, they negligently constructed an addition to it by placing the addition over a cesspool. The plaintiffs sustained damage to their property as a result of the negligent construction. We hold that the plaintiffs, who purchased the property from the defendants' grantee, are entitled to recover from the defendants in these circumstances, and we affirm the judgment entered after a jury verdict in the plaintiffs' favor. We transferred the defendants' appeal here on our own motion.

The defendants argue that their motion for a directed verdict should have been allowed. 3 We summarize the evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs. Originally, a building for commercial use was constructed on the property, and a cesspool to serve the building was installed in 1938. The defendants, who had their home on an abutting lot, acquired the property from one Pinder in 1969, and shortly thereafter undertook to convert the building for use as a single family residence. One of the alterations was the addition of a room, ten feet by sixteen feet. Pinder had told the defendant James H. Holt (Holt) that the cesspool was sixteen feet from the house and that Holt should not construct his proposed addition that close to the cesspool. Holt performed or supervised the construction work himself and built a cement supporting wall for the addition. He testified that he knew that a corner of the addition was "sort of over the cesspool." Mrs. Morris testified that Holt told her that he had put the concrete blocks in the foundation and had "found out the septic system was inside." The State Sanitary Code required that a cesspool be twenty feet from a dwelling unit. Although plumbing work was done inside the house by a licensed plumber, he gave no consideration to the location of the sewage disposal system. In fact, the cesspool was under the addition, inside its foundation walls. The jury would have been warranted in finding that Holt did not obtain a building permit for the addition.

In April, 1971, the defendants sold the property to one Budjinski, who lived in the house until shortly before he sold it to the plaintiffs in June, 1973. The plaintiffs encountered problems with sewage disposal and smelled unpleasant odors which continued in greater or lesser intensity depending on weather conditions. They also had certain water problems in the cellar. 4 In May, 1974, the plaintiffs consulted a "registered sanitarian" (see G.L. c. 112, §§ 87LL-87OO ), who discovered the basement toilet backed up and also a pool of water and methane gas in the closed crawl space under the addition. He found the cesspool, which was a hole in the ground about six feet deep and three or three and one-half feet around, located under the addition. The vertical walls of the hole were covered with a slime similar to that found in a dead septic system. As a city health agent, he found that the building was unfit for human habitation and ordered that a lawful sanitary disposal system would have to be installed within seven days or the house would be condemned for human habitation. The plaintiffs installed a new septic system at a cost of $1,500.

There is no serious question that Holt was negligent in the construction of the addition over the cesspool. That construction was a violation of the sanitary code, which the defendants concede is itself some evidence of negligence. See LaClair v. Silberline Mfg. Co., --- Mass. ---, --- - --- a, 393 N.E.2d 867 (1979). The jury could reasonably infer that Holt knew the addition was constructed over the cesspool and that he acted unreasonably in so constructing the addition. 5 Additionally, the plaintiffs' plumbing problems, the obnoxious odors in the house, and the need to build a new system in compliance with the sanitary code were foreseeable consequences of that negligence. 6

The fact that the plaintiffs and Holt had no contractual relationship does not aid the defendants. In McDonough v. Whalen, 365 Mass. 506, 313 N.E.2d 435 (1974), we rejected any requirement of privity in a similar (but not identical) situation and upheld the right of the purchaser of a new house to recover for the consequences of the negligence of both the designer and the installer of a septic system on the...

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2 cases
  • Coburn v. Lenox Homes, Inc.
    • United States
    • Connecticut Supreme Court
    • 2 de março de 1982
    ...not, however, view the lack of privity to be fatal to the plaintiffs' tort action. Id., 573-74, 378 A.2d 599; see Morris v. Holt, 380 Mass. 133, 401 N.E.2d 851, 853 (1980). Accordingly, we remanded the case for a trial on the merits of the negligence count. Coburn v. Lenox Homes, Inc., supr......
  • Drexel Properties, Inc. v. Bay Colony Club Condominium, Inc.
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • 4 de novembro de 1981
    ...v. Majestic Savings & Loan Association, 615 P.2d 71 (Colo.App.1980); Terlinde v. Neely, 271 S.E.2d 768, (S.C.1980); Morris v. Holt, 380 Mass. 133, 401 N.E.2d 851 (1980); Sands v. R.G. McKelvey Bldg. Co., 571 S.W.2d 726 (Mo.App.1978); Crowder v. Vandendeale, 564 S.W.2d 879 (Mo.1978); Tavares......

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