Beri, Inc. v. Salishan Properties, Inc.

580 P.2d 173, 282 Or. 569, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 950
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1978
Docket410-800, SC 25307; 423-464, SC 25287; 410-803, SC 25288; 409-823, SC 25289; 409-723, SC 25290; 409-722, SC 25291; 409-669, SC 25292; 409-668, SC 25293; 409-666, SC 25294; 409-665, SC 25295; 410-657, SC 25296; 410-654, SC 25297; 410-451, SC 25298; 410-450, SC 25299; 410-281, SC 25300; 410-248, SC 25302; 410-694, SC 25303; 410-799, SC 25304; 410-802, SC 25305; 410-801, SC 25306
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 580 P.2d 173 (Beri, Inc. v. Salishan Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beri, Inc. v. Salishan Properties, Inc., 580 P.2d 173, 282 Or. 569, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 950 (Or. 1978).

Opinions

[573]*573HOLMAN, J.

These 20 cases, consolidated for purposes of appeal, are companions to Cook v. Salishan Properties, 279 Or 333, 569 P2d 1033 (1977) and arise out of the same real estate development and promotion. Plaintiffs are lessees of oceanfront lots in the Salishan development in Lincoln County. Defendants are Salishan Properties, Inc., Russell Colwell, its president, and John Gray, its secretary.

In Cook we held that a commercial subdividerdeveloper who offers building lots for sale (or for long-term lease, which we treated as the equivalent of a sale for purposes of decision) does not impliedly warrant that the lots are free of latent defects or are fit for the purpose for which they are sold. The alleged defect in that case, as it is in the cases now before us, was that these oceanfront lots are subject to, and are being destroyed by, erosion. In Cook the jury had rejected plaintiffs’ claims based on negligence and false representations. The only question which was before us there was whether the trial court had erred in refusing to include the implied warranty count with those counts submitted to the jury.

In the present cases judgments were entered for the defendants at the pleading stage, the trial court having concluded that plaintiffs had failed to state a cause of action based on either negligence or implied warranty. Plaintiffs’ assignments of error challenge the trial court’s rulings on both counts. In reviewing these rulings, we will, as we did in Cook, consider plaintiffs’ long-term leases as the equivalent of purchases of the lots involved. See 279 Or at 338, note 4.

With respect to the implied warranty count, our decision in Cook concededly disposes of all but two of the present cases. In each of those two cases, plaintiffs contend that they did not simply lease a building lot; rather, they leased condominium dwelling units constructed by defendant Salishan Properties. Although defendants contend that these plaintiffs have not [574]*574adequately alleged that they leased buildings constructed by Salishan Properties, we will assume for present purposes that the allegations are sufficient to permit proof to that effect. Because our decision in Cook was concerned only with the warranty liability of the seller (or long-term lessor) of developed but unimproved land, the first question in the present case is whether it makes any difference for purposes of warranty liability that plaintiffs leased a structure and not just bare land. The relevant allegations of the complaints are:

"Since plaintiffs leased their lot and condominium damage to their lot and condominium and to the value thereof has been caused, and continues to be threatened, by erosion from the ocean and other water adjacent to said lot. Plaintiffs’ oceanfront lots are eroding into the ocean.
* * ifc *
"Defendants, by the acts of holding themselves out as highly skilled and competent land and resort developers and offering and entering into said lease and by expressly limiting the use of the land leased solely for the construction of permanent, residential structures, impliedly warranted that said lot was reasonably fit for construction and the maintenance thereon of permanent residential structures. The lot was not reasonably fit for that purpose, and defendants, therefore, breached this warranty.”

The complaint in Cook contained identical allegations as to the origin and nature of the claimed implied warranty.

In Yepsen v. Burgess, 269 Or 635, 525 P2d 1019 (1974), we held that in the sale of a new house by a builder-vendor, the law implies a warranty of workmanlike construction and fitness for habitation. We were persuaded to recognize that implied warranty for several reasons: (1) the provision of a habitable house is the essence of such a transaction; (2) the typical home buyer is forced to rely on the skill and knowledge of the builder-vendor with respect to the ingredients of an adequately constructed dwelling; (3) the buyer sees [575]*575the transaction primarily as the transfer of a house, with the land as merely an incident to the purchase. For these reasons, we concluded, there is no substantial difference between the sale of a house and the sale of goods. In Yepsen the specific defect alleged — the improper construction of the septic tank and drain field — was admittedly not in the house itself, but we held that it was within the implied warranty for two reasons: it was the product of the builder’s work on the land in conjunction with the construction and sale of the house, and it involved a system which was essential to the use of the house.

In Cook we refused to recognize an implied warranty of fitness for use in the sale or long-term lease of a subdivided lot, pointing out that the buyer of land has opportunities for inspection and investigation which are greater than those available to the buyer of a completed house. We also pointed out that we were not aware of any general expectation that a subdividerseller would provide a lot free of latent and undiscoverable defects.

In light of the reasoning which supported our decisions in Yepsen and Cook, we are convinced that an allegation of the purchase or lease of a condominium unit does not call for a result in these cases different from that which we reached in Cook. The defect alleged has to do solely with the inherent nature of the land involved in the transaction; it is in no sense the product of defendants’ work on the land. The defective condition alleged — susceptibility to erosion —was not alleged to have been caused or concealed by defendants’ construction work. The nature and significance of the alleged defect are the same whether the land is sold (or leased) with or without a structure already in place. Whatever the scope of the warranty implied in the sale or lease of a condominium unit, the reasoning in Cook leads us to conclude that it does not extend to conditions of the associated land which are not caused by the builder-seller’s work on the land.

[576]*576The trial court did not err in striking plaintiffs’ implied warranty counts.

We turn next to plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence. They are:

"Prior to the time plaintiffs entered into said lease, defendants knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known, that plaintiffs’ lot was located on real property that would be in the foreseeable future damaged and destroyed by erosion from the ocean and other water adjacent to the lot. Defendants were negligent in one or more of the following particulars: (1) in failing to warn plaintiffs of this danger prior to leasing said lot to plaintiffs, and (2) in failing to adequately inspect and investigate whether plaintiffs’ lot was suitable for development with permanent residential structures before offering the lot for lease for that purpose.”

As will be seen by an examination of this paragraph, plaintiffs have alleged two, apparently alternative, possible states of fact. One alternative is that defendants knew that plaintiffs’ lot would be "damaged and destroyed” by erosion and negligently failed to warn plaintiffs of that fact. The other is that defendants should, in the exercise of reasonable care, have learned of the impending erosion, but negligently failed to discover it. We treat these two alternative possibilities separately.

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Beri, Inc. v. Salishan Properties, Inc.
580 P.2d 173 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
580 P.2d 173, 282 Or. 569, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beri-inc-v-salishan-properties-inc-or-1978.