Creekside Apartments v. Poteat

446 S.E.2d 826, 116 N.C. App. 26, 1994 N.C. App. LEXIS 869
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 16, 1994
Docket9315DC894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 446 S.E.2d 826 (Creekside Apartments v. Poteat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creekside Apartments v. Poteat, 446 S.E.2d 826, 116 N.C. App. 26, 1994 N.C. App. LEXIS 869 (N.C. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

COZORT, Judge.

In this case, plaintiff initiated proceedings to evict defendants from plaintiff’s apartments because defendants had not paid their rent. Defendants alleged the premises were unfit and counterclaimed for rent abatement, breach of the implied warranty of habitability, and damages under the unfair practices statutes. The trial court found the premises unfit and ordered partial abatement of rent owed by defendants. The trial court denied defendants’ counterclaims for breach of the implied warranty of habitability and for unfair trade practices. We find the trial court erred in not ordering additional abatement and in denying these two counterclaims of defendants. We remand for further proceedings on these issues. The facts and procedural history follow.

Plaintiff, the owner of Creekside Apartments, initiated summary ejectment actions in small claims court against defendants on 23 September 1992 for nonpayment of rent. In the actions against defendants Poteat and Siler, the magistrate granted judgments for possession and back rent owed to plaintiff and awarded a rent abatement to defendant Siler. The magistrate dismissed the actions against defendants Currie and Dawkins. Defendants Poteat and Siler and plaintiff landlord appealed to Alamance County District Court, where the four cases were consolidated.

Defendants Poteat, Siler, Currie, and Dawkins each moved to allow amended answer and counterclaim, which motions were allowed. In their amended answer and counterclaim, defendants Dawkins and Poteat asserted as a defense plaintiff’s waiver of their failure to pay rent. Each defendant further asserted as defenses, *29 among other things, plaintiffs unlawful eviction attempts in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 42-25.6 and 42-25.9 (1984) and breach of implied warranty of fitness. With respect to plaintiffs breach of implied warranty of fitness, defendants alleged that plaintiff knowingly leased the premises with serious defects which include, among other things: cockroach infestation, unreliable heat and air conditioning, unreliable appliances, leaking and stopped up plumbing, apartments are not weathertight, entire apartment building in unsafe disrepair, no lights in hallway and common areas, dumpsters not emptied regularly, mice in Dawkins’ apartment, no smoke detector in Poteat’s apartment, faulty smoke detector wiring in Currie’s apartment, holes in ceiling of Currie’s building, exposed electrical wires in Poteat’s apartment, faulty wiring in apartments of Currie, Dawkins, and Siler, and no locks in the doors of Siler’s apartment. Each defendant sought retrospective and prospective rent abatement; plus special or consequential damages for breach of implied warranty of fitness.

Each defendant made counterclaims for, among other things, rent abatements and compensatory damages for breach of implied warranty of habitability and treble damages for unfair and deceptive trade practices in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-1.1 (1988).

The case was heard before the Honorable Spencer B. Ennis in Alamance County District Court. On 2 February 1993 Judge Ennis entered a judgment containing, among others, these conclusions:

97. Prior to initiation of its Small Claims actions in Summary Ejectment against defendants, and prior to July, 1992, plaintiff had had difficulty operating the complex due to unreliable managerial and maintenance staff, and poor co-operation from some residents.
98. Plaintiff has since made, and continues to make reasonable efforts to alleviate this difficulty. . . .
99. Prior to that time, plaintiff did not make reasonable efforts to alleviate problem conditions and/or Code violations at the premises; in some instances, plaintiff did not have reasonable notice concerning problem conditions.
104. Plaintiff has had due notice of problem conditions and Code violations at the premises. . . .
*30 105. [T]hat plaintiff unreasonably delayed in making repairs to the air conditioning and the balcony rail at this [1925-C] apartment.
106. The Court finds no evidence that problems with the heating and air conditioning systems in the other defendants’ apartments caused those apartments to be unreasonably cold or hot. . . .
* * ‡ ‡
108. Plaintiff has had notice ... of the infestation at. . . the Curries’ apartment [and] had due notice of the roof leaks, the defective plumbing and carpet in that apartment,... [and] did not timely repair the roof leaks nor the carpet, although the carpet problem is a minor defect. The Court further finds that . . . the plumbing was timely repaired.
109. Plaintiff has had due notice of the plumbing and heating/air conditioning problems in ... defendant Poteat’s apartment [and] . . . plaintiff made reasonable efforts to make, and did timely make repairs to that system and to the plumbing. . . .
110. Plaintiff has had due notice of the infestation, the plumbing and air conditioning problems, and the rodents in . . . defendant Dawkins’s apartment [and] ... of the defective stairway and absent hall lighting in [defendant’s] building .... [P]laintiff timely made repairs to the plumbing and air conditioning, and . . . repairs to the stair and the hall light were made within a reasonable time.
* * 5¡í *
112. Since at least August of 1991, there has been a serious, ongoing cockroach problem at the premises. Plaintiff cannot completely exterminate the cockroaches by fumigation or other means, while the premises are occupied by defendants. Within the last two (2) months, and particularly since December 8th, 1992, plaintiff has made reasonable efforts to alleviate the cockroach infestation, without success.
113. Since at least October of 1991, there have been vacant apartment units in the four (4) buildings in which defendants’ apartments are located. Plaintiff has had written notice of this .... Unauthorized persons have gained entry to various apartment units, and pose continuing risks to the health and safe *31 ty of the defendants. Plaintiff has been unable to prevent unauthorized persons from gaining entry to vacant apartment units in the four (4) buildings in which defendants’ apartments are located.
114. Plaintiff is in the process of installing deadbolt locks at the vacant apartment units at the complex and is now taking reasonable steps to secure the vacant units. Since December 8th, 1992, plaintiff has made reasonable efforts to make these and other necessary repairs. Despite its reasonable efforts plaintiff has not alleviated the cockroach infestation, nor has plaintiff prevented unauthorized persons from gaining access to vacant apartment units in the four (4) buildings in which defendants live.

The court further concluded that each defendant failed to pay rent or to timely pay rent and thus breached the rental contract with plaintiff. The court also concluded:

125.

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Bluebook (online)
446 S.E.2d 826, 116 N.C. App. 26, 1994 N.C. App. LEXIS 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creekside-apartments-v-poteat-ncctapp-1994.