ABC Builders, Inc. v. Phillips

632 P.2d 925, 1981 Wyo. LEXIS 365
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1981
Docket5468-5470 and 5484
StatusPublished
Cited by129 cases

This text of 632 P.2d 925 (ABC Builders, Inc. v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ABC Builders, Inc. v. Phillips, 632 P.2d 925, 1981 Wyo. LEXIS 365 (Wyo. 1981).

Opinions

RAPER, Justice.

The liability of vendors of new and used residential property for damages arising out of the dangers of building site location will be the primary subject of this opinion. These appeals arise from a jury verdict holding a developer-builder-vendor and a city negligent and thus liable for damage to a house resulting from a landslide. We will address four major issues: 1) the effect of the district court’s dismissal of an intermediate owner whose conduct may have contributed to the damages, between the builder-vendor and ultimate owner damaged by the landslide; 2) whether a builder-vendor can be liable by reason of negligence in selecting the site upon which to build a home for sale; 3) from what point in time the statute of limitations starts to run when a suit is maintained based upon negligent site selection; and 4) if sufficient evidence was presented to establish municipal liability for contribution to the ultimate loss to the final owner because of a failure to maintain a drainage ditch.

We will affirm.

I

This case concerns the rise and fall of a house located in Sheridan. On November 14,1968, ABC Builders, Inc. (ABC) obtained from the City of Sheridan (City) a building permit for the construction of a residence at 40 Kelly Drive in a subdivision known as Sheltered Acres. The particular lot picked for the new home was situated at the toe of a hillside. Some excavation work was necessary to fit the two-story house into the hill. The final result was a residence with the front of the first floor facing east at street level, while at the back of the house the same floor was subterranean.

On August 24, 1969, the house was sold by ABC to Kenneth and Virginia Raster (Rasters). During the time the Rasters owned the home, they added a patio to the rear of the second floor which was all above ground. This addition included a roof and an attached storage shed. The earth taken to level the ground for the patio was used in leveling out the south side of the lot so that a driveway could be installed. Mr. Raster also added a four-inch perforated drain pipe from a downspout off the patio roof which drained into an adjacent lot which the Rasters had also purchased from ABC. We will later discuss this drain as it relates to the liability of the vendor in the sale of a used residence.

In August of 1971 the Rasters conveyed the property to Gary and Betty Benson (Bensons).1 The Bensons made no alterations to the structure. They sold and transferred the home to William and Cynthia Phillips (appellees), in June, 1977. Up until May, 1978, the only complaint voiced about the house was that during the last year that the Bensons owned it, there was some minor seepage of water from the back wall of the first floor identified as being caused by a defective sump pump. At the time of sale by the Bensons to appellees, the Ben-sons replaced water-stained carpet which had resulted; but then in May of 1978 heavy rains began falling.

The National Weather Service office at the Sheridan County airport officially recorded 6.80 inches of rain for the month of [928]*928May, 1978. This was. 4.35 inches above the average amount of rain for the month. The daily breakdown shows that most of the rain fell during two wet spells. The first one began May 3 and lasted through May 11. With almost daily rainfall, 2.23 inches of precipitation was recorded during that period. The rain then abated until May 16, when during the ensuing four-day period, another 3.78 inches of rain was recorded.

The appellees first observed water leaking into the first-floor bathroom on May 7. The next day, some slight displacement of the home’s foundation was noticed. With the rain continuing to fall, the Phillipses left the home on May 9 when they realized the hillside behind them was sliding down and pushing against the house. However, Mr. Phillips returned the next week during the short respite between the rainy periods. Efforts were made to save the residence by digging trenches around its foundation. But, this proved useless with the return to wet weather on May 16. All that the Phil-lipses could do was to find a house mover who saved the top floor, subsequently moved elsewhere and used in the construction of a new residence.

The following illustration may clarify how the slippage of the hillside destroyed the house:

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Bluebook (online)
632 P.2d 925, 1981 Wyo. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abc-builders-inc-v-phillips-wyo-1981.