Spitale v. Smith, 97-00932.
Decision Date | 21 October 1998 |
Docket Number | No. 97-00932.,97-00932. |
Citation | 721 So.2d 341 |
Parties | Raymond SPITALE, Appellant, v. Charles H. SMITH, Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Alan E. Tannenbaum of Levin and Tannenbaum, P.A., Sarasota, for Appellant.
David S. Maglich of Fergeson, Skipper, Shaw, Keyser, Baron & Tirabassi, P.A., Sarasota, for Appellee.
Raymond Spitale appeals the trial court's entry of judgment against him for fraudulent nondisclosure of construction defects in a home he sold to Charles H. Smith. We are compelled to reverse because the evidence presented during the bench trial was insufficient to support a finding that Spitale had knowledge of and failed to disclose a defect materially affecting the value of the property.
In 1987, Mr. and Mrs. Spitale1 contracted with Unicorn Construction to build a home on their lot in The Landings development in Sarasota. The home was to be a residence for the Spitales, but they decided to sell the property and listed it with a realtor, Sharon Straw. Because the home was slow to sell, Spitale rented it to the Rogers commencing January 1988.
Charles Smith became interested in the Spitale home after seeing it pictured in a real estate advertisement. He contacted realtor Straw and toured the home. In April 1988, Smith and his wife2 contracted to purchase the home for $465,000, with a closing deadline of June 1988. Smith was aware that the home was being rented, but he did not ask the tenants any questions about the home.
Paragraph six of the contract, entitled CONDITION OF PROPERTY AND WARRANTY, provided in pertinent part:
Between the Contract Date and the closing date, the property, improvements, and any personal property shall be maintained by SELLER in the same condition as existed as of the Contract Date, ordinary wear and tear accepted. SELLER warrants that all major appliances and the heating, cooling, plumbing, electrical, and pool systems, installations and machinery included in the sale shall be in working condition as of the closing date. BUYER may inspect same prior to closing....
No express warranties concerning the general condition of the home were otherwise incorporated.
During their tenancy, the Rogers diligently reported in writing any problems with the home. Mr. Rogers recalled that Spitale responded by making satisfactory repairs. In February 1988, Mr. Rogers wrote Spitale:
On April 29, 1988, after Spitale signed the contract with Smith, Mr. Rogers wrote Spitale again:
Spitale testified that he looked at all of these problems and arranged to have them corrected. He advised his builder of the problems with the roof, and the builder called in the original roofer to make the repairs. Spitale believed that the roofing problems were corrected before closing.
Realtor Straw conducted a walk-through of the home with Mrs. Rogers prior to closing. As a result, Straw wrote to Smith on May 27, 1988:
Straw testified that she and Mrs. Rogers inspected every room and that if she had noticed any water stains, she would have mentioned them in the letter. She admitted that interior water stains she observed in subsequent visits well after closing were not visible at the time of her inspection a week before closing. Smith, himself, performed no inspection of the home pursuant to paragraph six of the contract. The closing took place by mail on June 3, 1988. Smith never met or spoke to Spitale either before or after the closing. The Rogers continued to rent the home until November 1988.
Smith testified that when he visited the home in the fall of 1988, the tenants showed him water stains in the front guest bathroom and in a corner of the garage. However, Mr. Rogers testified that at the time he and his wife moved out in November 1988, they had seen leaks only in the garage. Before the Rogers moved out, Mrs. Rogers gave Smith a copy of their April 29, 1988, letter to Spitale.
Spitale was living in California in the fall of 1988. His Sarasota lawyer, friends, and business associates knew of his whereabouts and he was receiving forwarded mail. In early 1989, Spitale returned from California and moved into a rented home in The Landings, a couple of blocks from the Smiths. Smith never contacted Spitale to inform him of any problems with the home prior to filing suit in 1992.
Instead, Smith hired roofer Alvin Singleton to check the roof. He reroofed the flat portion on the north side of the house and replaced broken tile on the sloped portions for $3000. Singleton testified that he did not consider his work to be a temporary job. He warranted the work for three years, but no warranty claim was made by Smith from 1988 through 1991.
Smith testified that additional areas of the home began to reflect leak damage in 1989. Although interior leak damage apparently continued to occur, Smith took no action to fix the damage until February 1991, when he repaired interior water damage for $3150. In the fall of 1991, Smith hired roofer Chris Koloski to pressure clean the home, repair the flat roof areas worked on three years earlier by Singleton, repair broken tile, reset tile caps, and correct other areas of the roof. Smith paid Koloski $3200.
Koloski testified that he told Smith that the work he was doing could stop the water from coming in. He stated that pressure cleaning was normal maintenance for a house of that age; that a blister he cut out and patched was a correction of Singleton's work; that the amount of broken roof tile he observed was not unusual; and that the tile repair he performed was permanent. He further testified that he...
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