Cahaba Valley Development Corp. v. Nuding
This text of 512 So. 2d 46 (Cahaba Valley Development Corp. v. Nuding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CAHABA VALLEY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, INC., and Murray D. Roper
v.
Leroy NUDING and Hazel R. Nuding.
Supreme Court of Alabama.
*47 John W. Sudderth of Sudderth & Somerset, Birmingham, for appellants.
James W. May, Gulf Shores, for appellees.
PER CURIAM.
This is an appeal from a judgment on a jury verdict awarding the plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Nuding, $63,000 in a fraud action, and from the denial of defendants' post-trial motions. The alleged fraud was a misrepresentation of the number of acres in a parcel of land purchased by the Nudings. The defendants were Cahaba Valley Development Company, Inc. ("Cahaba Valley"), the seller of the property; its president, Murray Roper; and Southern Realty, which listed the property for sale. Only Cahaba Valley and Roper have appealed.
The Nudings were interested in purchasing a home. They testified that they intended to train horses and needed three acres of property for that purpose. On January 7, 1978, Mrs. Nuding read a newspaper advertisement offering for sale a house and three acres of land. She and her real estate agent, Faye Robinson, viewed the property. About a week later they viewed the property again and were accompanied by Lois Tillotson, a representative of Southern Realty. Mrs. Nuding testified that Mrs. Tillotson told her at this time that the property was three acres and pointed out the boundaries of the property. Mrs. Nuding testified, however, that it turned out that part of the land Mrs. Tillotson pointed out was not included in the deed description of the land the Nudings bought. The testimony indicated that the property was "rough" and covered with trees, and that neither it nor the neighboring property had fences.
On February 12, the Nudings signed a contract to purchase the property for $34,500. The contract described the property as being three acres, more or less. Shortly thereafter, they moved into the house and agreed to pay rent if the sale did not close. They lived there until the closing on July 7, 1978. Because Mr. Nuding was working 12-hour days, seven days a week, he did not spend much time on the property. Mrs. Nuding said that they did not use or maintain any of the property except the house and front yard during this period, and that they did not inspect the acreage in the back because they were waiting for a survey.
Southern Realty employed a surveyor who, on the day before the closing, surveyed the property and drew up the survey. The survey did not state the number of acres. The surveyor testified that his stakes could not be seen without walking the property line and that, after the closing, he computed the acreage and found that the property consisted of only 1.23 acres, including .13 acres taken by a city street. Thus, the property included only 1.1 acres of usable land.
Both Mrs. Nuding and the surveyor testified at trial that she did not ask him if the property included three acres. She testified that she saw him only when he first arrived, at which time she said "I hope we've got our three acres." On cross-examination, a defense attorney asked Mrs. Nuding about a statement she had allegedly made to the defendants approximately eight months after the closing, to the effect that she had asked the surveyor on the day before the closing if she had three acres and that he had answered, "[W]ell, I don't know. It looks like it, but it's so chopped *48 up I'll have to figure it out." In this statement Mrs. Nuding allegedly also said that, on the morning of the closing, her husband looked at the surveyor's stakes and said "this is no three acres," and that she answered to him "the surveyor said so." In response to this examination, Mrs. Nuding admitted that she had made statements to the effect that the surveyor had told her "he would have to go back and figure it out," and that her husband "just looked out there and said it [didn't] look like three acres to him." Mr. Nuding testified that he did not inspect the property before the closing.
Mrs. Nuding testified that at the closing, she asked Juanita Whitehead, the owner and registered broker of Southern Realty, "[A]re you sure we have our three acres before it closes?" Both Mr. and Mrs. Nuding testified that Mrs. Whitehead pointed to the survey and said, "Yes, you got two acres over here and here is the other acre." Both of the Nudings testified that they were not given a copy of the survey until the sale had been closed. Mrs. Nuding looked at the survey on the way home and calculated that the property was not three acres.
The jury specified its award as including $18,000 compensatory damages and $45,000 punitive damages. Appellants contend that the evidence is insufficient to support the compensatory damages award.
In denying the defendants' motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial, and their motion for remittitur, the trial court stated:
"Hazel Nuding further stated her opinion that the property had a value of $12,000 an acre, so that she and her husband were entitled to recover $18,000.00 as compensatory damages for the one and one-half acres of land which they had not received."
The surveyor's testimony indicates that the property was 1.77 acres less than three acres, or 1.9 less if the street is not counted. Several witnesses referred to the property as including only one and a half acres. Although Mrs. Nuding's testimony was not given precisely in the proper form of stating the value of the house and lot if it included three acres and the value as it existed, the trial court instructed the jury that it was to award damages based on this difference in fair market values at the time of the sale. See Earle, McMillan & Neimeyer, Inc. v. Dekle, 418 So.2d 97 (Ala.1982); Boriss v. Edwards, 262 Ala. 172, 77 So.2d 909 (1954). Given this correct instruction and the trial court's finding that her testimony supported the jury's award of compensatory damages, the judgment is not due to be reversed on this ground.
Appellants also argue that the evidence was insufficient to submit the question of punitive damages to the jury. In its opinion and order on the post-trial motions, the trial court concluded:
"The evidence presented at the trial was sufficient to support the jury verdict against all three Defendants, Cahaba Valley, Roper, and Southern Realty. Under the evidence submitted, the jury could also find that the misrepresentations made by the Defendants were made with knowledge that they were false or made so recklessly and heedlessly as to amount to the same thing as knowledge that the representation[s] were false. See, e.g., Ex parte Smith, 412 So.2d 1222 (Ala.1982)."
The trial court's original draft of its order included a part that would have granted a remittitur; the court mistakenly included that portion in its final order. By amendment, the court deleted that portion, stating: "After further reflection and consideration of the evidence presented in this case, the Court decided that it could not in this case order a remittitur." The corrected order included the following:
"This Court has carefully considered the evidence in this case regarding the conduct of the three Defendants. Based on the evidence most favorable to the Nudings, this Court is unable to conclude that the amount of $45,000.00 awarded by the jury as punitive damages is so excessive as to indicate prejudice, passion or some other controlling sentiment."
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