AMBLING MANAGEMENT COMPANY v. Purdy

640 S.E.2d 620, 283 Ga. App. 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 28, 2006
DocketA06A1409, A06A1410
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 640 S.E.2d 620 (AMBLING MANAGEMENT COMPANY v. Purdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AMBLING MANAGEMENT COMPANY v. Purdy, 640 S.E.2d 620, 283 Ga. App. 21 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

Maria Purdy sued Ambling Management Company, the leasing agent and property manager of her apartment complex, alleging that its negligent maintenance of her apartment caused her personal injury and property damage. Purdy sought compensatory and punitive damages. At trial, Ambling moved for a directed verdict on *22 numerous grounds; the court granted the motion on the claim for punitive damages, denying it in all other respects; and the jury found in Purdy’s favor. The court entered judgment upon the jury’s verdict. In Case No. A06A1409, Ambling challenges the trial court’s denial of its motion for a directed verdict on certain grounds. In Case No. A06A1410, Purdy challenges the trial court’s grant of Ambling’s motion for a directed verdict on her claim for punitive damages. For reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s judgment in both cases.

In April 1998, Purdy was the first tenant to move into her particular unit within the complex. Within months, she noticed that a black substance had accumulated on surfaces throughout the apartment. She immediately reported the problem to Ambling’s property manager, who visited the apartment and told Purdy that the substance was possibly “soot from somewhere.” In April 1999, Purdy renewed her lease, but continued to complain about the worsening accumulation to the property manager, as she later did to about four subsequent property managers for Ambling. Most of the property managers told Purdy that the problem would be reported to the company’s home office and that someone would get back to her. Purdy testified, “we thought it was mildew,” and “we just kept dealing with the mildew problem or the water problems.” Purdy also asked Ambling to change air filters for the heating and air conditioning systems about every six months, which it did.

Meanwhile, around the “first of 2000,” Purdy became concerned that the black substance was something other than mildew and that it was adversely affecting her health because she was experiencing respiratory problems, i.e., “a lot of congestion, a lot of sputum, a lot of deep wheezing and coughing, and things of that nature.” After renewing her lease in April, she began in May to take steps herself to ascertain the content and origin of the substance. She summoned an assistant fire marshal to her apartment to investigate its “sooty” condition, as well as her heating unit. Noting from the outside of the unit that it was not gas, but electric, he instantly excluded it as a contributing factor. Instead, he attributed the soot accumulation to numerous candles placed throughout the apartment. Purdy next took an air filter from her apartment for testing by the county extension office, but that office had no explanation for her problem.

In January 2001, Purdy hired a chemist, Augusto S. Medina, Ph.D., to determine the content and source of the substance. She told him during his investigation tha.t she had been the first tenant in the apartment and that soon after she moved in, “black smudges” formed on surfaces throughout the apartment. Purdy showed Medina that the walls, the carpet, her clothing, the insides of her cupboards, and various other items and locations were all coated by black particles. Medina spent about three hours at the apartment, during which time *23 he particularly noted “streaks of black smudges coming from” the heating and air conditioning vents. He informed Purdy, “[I]t’s coming from your HVAC.” Examining the inside of the heating unit, Medina discovered “quite a bit of black soot in there” from which he took samples. He also took samples from the “thick wad” of black material he found inside a small gadget that Purdy had been using to filter air in her apartment.

Back at his lab, Medina analyzed the collected samples, finding burned particles containing polyvinyl acetate (PVA). According to Medina, PVA is a common paint ingredient. In a January 22, 2001 report to Purdy, Medina concluded, “The black smudges consist of residues of [PVA],” and further, “The black smudges came from a paint source, probably from the time the apartment was constructed paint fumes collected in the HVAC system and eventually burned in the heating system.” He testified that this was “the most probable scenario.”

Purdy gave a copy of Medina’s report to Ambling’s property manager and announced she planned to move. Ambling responded in late January 2001 by offering her another apartment in the same building. Concerned that the offered apartment would present the same problem, Purdy moved out of the complex in March 2001.

Purdy testified, “At the time [I was moving] I was having a lot of respiratory problems. . . . And during this time we had found a knot in my throat — in my neck.” In April 2001, she underwent surgery to remove the mass, which was determined to be a lymph node with Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH).

Purdy sought advice from Drs. Fredric Gerr and Michael Atta of the Environmental and Occupational Medicine Consultation Clinic of the Emory Clinic to determine whether the residue in the apartment had caused her respiratory and LCH problems. In a September 2001 report to Purdy, the physicians found the temporal relationship between her respiratory symptoms and her approximately three-year residence in an apartment with “sooty” coated walls “suggestive” of effects of exposure to a hazard in the apartment, but also noted that Purdy had been a “heavy cigarette smoker, a known cause of respiratory symptoms.” Gerr and Atta concluded, “[I]t is not possible to state that anything related to the apartment was responsible for her [LCH].”

Purdy next consulted Dr. Allen Lieberman, an occupational and environmental physician, to determine whether there was a connection between PVA and her respiratory and LCH conditions. Over a two-day period, Lieberman took Purdy’s case history and physically examined her. In a May 2002 medical report, he concluded that “the node can be unequivocally related to PVA” and that “it is also logical that chronic exposure to airborne pollutants could unequivocally *24 result in respiratory injury and immune suppression resulting in the history of chronic sinusitis and cough.” Lieberman stated in a subsequent medical report concerning Purdy’s respiratory and LCH conditions,

[T]here are no other reasonable explanations to account for her upper airway injury and distress. ... It is also more logical to conclude on the basis of temporality that whatever was causing the upper airway disturbance was also causing the proliferation of the submental lymph node. ... It is therefore more certain than not that her body was reacting to the presence of the [PVA]. . . .
In June 2002, Purdy sued Ambling.
Case No. A06A1409
OCGA§ 9-11-50 (a) provides in pertinent part that “(i)f there is no conflict in the evidence as to any material issue and the evidence introduced, with all reasonable deductions therefrom, shall demand a particular verdict, such verdict shall be directed.” In determining whether any conflict in the evidence exists, the court must construe the evidence most favorably to the party opposing the motion for directed verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
640 S.E.2d 620, 283 Ga. App. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ambling-management-company-v-purdy-gactapp-2006.