Allison v. Cook

744 N.E.2d 254, 139 Ohio App. 3d 473
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 2000
DocketCase No. CA99-09-109
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 744 N.E.2d 254 (Allison v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Cook, 744 N.E.2d 254, 139 Ohio App. 3d 473 (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Walsh, Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant, Samuel J. Allison, appeals the decision of the Warren County Court of Common Pleas granting judgment in favor of defendants-appellees, Marie E. Cook and Rhonda Coffman.

This suit involves the property located at 146 West Main Street, village of Harveysburg, Warren County, Ohio (“the property”). On its west and southwest borders, the property abuts lakefront land owned by the Army Corps of Engineers (“the Corps land”) surrounding Caesar Creek Lake. The property’s northern boundary is another private lot. The eastern side of the property is street frontage.

Looking at the property from the street, the property includes a carport along the southernmost boundary, with a concrete patio in the southwest corner behind the carport. A house is located just north of the carport and the patio near the western property line. A sidewalk and fence once ran from the patio behind the house, apparently above an embankment secured by a concrete retaining wall.

North of the house on the western border is a two-car garage. North of the garage was once a tool shed, situated on a ledge running along the western property line. The shed was supported by concrete bricks and wooden boards. In front of the garage and beside the house is a lawn. Standing on the lawn at the western property line between the house and the garage, or between the garage and the tool shed, one can see the Corps land and the lake.

Cook and her husband purchased the property in 1983. Cook’s husband maintained the house and property until he died in 1991. Little maintenance was done after that time. In early 1994, Cook noticed the Corps land falling into the lake. Cook told Blake Brewer, then mayor of Harveysburg, who then contacted the Corps. The Corps investigated and assured Cook that the property had not moved and was safe. No further problems occurred.

*476 In early 1995, Coffman, a realtor with E.A. Florence Realty in Waynesville, Ohio, came to Cook’s home. Coffman had sold properties in the area and was seeking new sales. Cook was not interested, but she took Coffman’s card.

In early 1996, there were unusually heavy rains and the lake rose dramatically. Cook’s then-fiancé, Dwight Dean, noticed that the sidewalk was cracking and moving away from the house. On Sunday, May 5, 1996, the southwest corner of the property fell, creating a ravine. Parts of the sidewalk and patio fell. The ground beneath these washed away, exposing a tank underneath the house that contained fuel for the furnace.

Cook called Maria Willis, then mayor of Harveysburg, and told her what had happened. Willis looked at the property that day. The Massie Township, Ohio Fire Department, which services Harveysburg, investigated and concluded that the house was unstable. The fire department ordered Cook to move out, and to empty and remove the fuel tank because it posed a danger. Willis called utility companies to turn off services. The fire department placed yellow caution tape around the perimeter of the property, as well as danger signs on the street frontage. Cook believed that the land collapse stemmed from the Corps land, which seemed to be falling into the lake,' creating a ravine into which the southwest corner fell.

Cook called Coffman for an “opinion of value,” an informal appraisal of the property. Cook was preparing a property insurance claim and contemplating action against the Corps. Cook and Coffman walked the property, discussing the property’s value as if the southwest corner were intact. Coffman opined that, without the damage, the property would be worth about $77,500.

Cook submitted a claim to Travelers Insurance Company (“Travelers”), her homeowner’s insurance carrier. On May 13, 1996, Travelers sent James Nickoli, a structural engineer, to investigate. Nickoli walked the property with Cook and Clayton Talley, Cook’s insurance adjuster. Cook informed Nickoli that she had received cost estimates to move the house inland.

Nickoli told Cook that the problems with the property appeared to be caused by the Corps land falling into the lake. He said that unless the Corps took action, nothing could be done to stop further damage to the property. Nickoli reported to Travelers that underground land slippage was causing the settling problems, but Cook did not receive a copy of the report. Talley wrote Cook a letter stating that the damage was excluded from coverage, but Cook lost the letter and is unsure of its exact contents.

After May 1996, the property stabilized. By this time, the embankment behind the shed had collapsed. The drop-off in this area was now steeper and higher, leaving a nearly twenty-foot drop behind the shed.

*477 In June 1996, Cook contacted Willis and told her that the property had been inspected and found safe. Cook wanted utility services resumed so that she could move back in. Willis informed the electric company that since the property was determined safe by an inspection, service could be resumed. In fact, Cook had not solicited any inspections. Nor did she move back in. Instead, she bought a home elsewhere. Cook expressed fear of moving back due to the land collapses.

Throughout this time, Cook contacted the Corps and Senator Michael DeW-ine’s office in Columbus, Ohio, in an attempt to determine the cause of the collapses. The Corps provided no information. In August 1996, Sen. DeWine’s office told Cook that excessive rainfall, combined with bad gutter drainage and natural erosion, was causing the problems. Cook found this explanation questionable.

In late 1996, Cook and Dean sought to sue the Corps for information about the Corps land and to force the Corps to remedy any problems. When it became obvious that such action would be costly and time-consuming, Cook decided to sell the property. Cook called Coffman to list the property. They met on January 10,1997, and Coffman briefly inspected the property at that time.

Cook and Coffman filled out a multiple listing service form on the property. Cook told Coffman the reasons she got from “the state” for the collapse of the southwest corner. The property was listed for $64,900. Coffman and Cook reduced the price from the earlier “opinion of value” to account for repairing the southwest corner.

Cook and Coffman also filled out a residential property disclosure form listing defects on the property. The form designated any flooding, drainage, settling or grading problems as “visible.” The form disclosed that the fuel tank was empty. No mention was made of the history of the property or the Corps land, or that the fire department had ordered that the fuel tank be drained and removed. Cook signed a dual agency agreement allowing Coffman to represent Cook and any potential buyer.

Coffman called Willis and asked if she could remove the caution tape from around the property so it could be sold. Because the village was no longer involved with the property, Coffman was allowed to do as she wished. Cook and Dean then removed the caution tape and danger notices, leaving caution tape only across the southwest corner. Willis told Coffman there were problems clearly due to erosion on the property’s western edge, not just its southwest corner. Willis told Coffman it was “morally wrong” to sell the property.

Allison saw the listing in a local newspaper.

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Bluebook (online)
744 N.E.2d 254, 139 Ohio App. 3d 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-cook-ohioctapp-2000.