Crowley v. Dubuc

430 A.2d 549, 1981 Me. LEXIS 806
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 13, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 430 A.2d 549 (Crowley v. Dubuc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crowley v. Dubuc, 430 A.2d 549, 1981 Me. LEXIS 806 (Me. 1981).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The defendants, Roger and Pauline Du-buc, husband and wife, appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court, Androscoggin County, awarding the plaintiffs, Anthony and Anna Crowley, in their action for deceit based on misrepresentations made by Mr. Dubuc in the course of a real estate transaction between the parties, damages in the aggregate amount of eight thousand four hundred and thirty-four ($8,434.00) dollars, together with costs and interest. The Court’s order specifically allocated five thousand nine hündred and thirty-four ($5,934.00) dollars as compensatory damages for the deceit, which included four hundred ($400.00) dollars as compensation for injury to personal property directly flowing from the misconduct. The balance of the monetary award in the amount of two thousand five hundred ($2,500.00) dollars was stated to be punitive damages for the false representations made by Mr. Dubuc in a wanton, wilful and deliberate manner. We affirm the judgment.

Facts

In the spring of 1975, the defendants were attempting to sell their Golder Road property in Lewiston, title to which was in Mrs. Dubuc’s name. The cellar walls of the structure had been severely damaged during the preceding winter, while the house was occupied by a tenant, and the Dubucs spent a considerable part of the spring repairing the damage and sprucing up the premises for the purpose of putting the property on the market. During late April or early May, the plaintiffs noticed the “For Sale” sign on Mrs. Dubuc’s property and, after obtaining the keys from a neighbor, went through the house. Finding it to their liking, they returned for several more visits, and finally, at a meeting at the Dubucs’ new home on May 22, 1975, they agreed to purchase the property from the defendants for the price of twenty-five thousand ($25,-000.00) dollars. The closing of the sale took place on June 4, 1975, the plaintiffs taking possession on that same day.

During the following winter, in January, 1976, Mr. Crowley discovered that there was water in the workshop portion of the basement of his new home, which he was using as a storeroom. He also noticed that there were horizontal cracks in several of the workshop walls. A closer examination of those cracks revealed that they had previously been filled with patching cement and painted over. Mr. Crowley thereafter learned that the foundation walls would need extensive repair, and perhaps, even removal and replacement.

Two sharply contrasting versions of the events leading up to the sale evolved at trial. Mr. Crowley, who admitted that he had independently gained some expertise in foundation work since his dealings with Mr. Dubuc, nonetheless asserted that he had never noticed any crack or other visible defect in the foundation in the cellar or the workshop prior to January, 1976. He testified that on one of the visits he made to the property before agreeing to buy it, Mr. Dubuc had assured him that the foundations of the cellar and the workshop were in good condition.

Mr. Dubuc admitted that the cracks resulted from the water damage to the foundation that occurred during the winter preceding the sale of the home, and also that he had patched those cracks himself. How *551 ever, he testified that, at the time of Mr. Crowley’s first visit to the house, the cracks were plainly visible. According to Mr. Du-buc, when Mr. Crowley subsequently returned for another examination of the house, he came through the workshop and watched Mr. Dubuc as he was patching and painting the foundation surface.

Findings

The Superior Court Justice, sitting as trier of the facts in the jury-waived trial (see M.R.Civ.P. 52(a)), found that Mr. Dubuc did assure Mr. Crowley that the foundation was in good condition, as testified to by Mr. Crowley. The Justice then determined that those assurances were false, and that Mr. Dubuc made them knowing that they were false and with the intention that the plaintiffs act in reliance upon them. The Justice then found that the plaintiffs had indeed relied upon Mr. Dubuc’s misrepresentation to their detriment and that they did not know and could not have learned by the exercise of reasonable care that it was false. The Justice also found that Mr. Du-buc had deliberately and wilfully concealed the defects in the foundation walls so that prospective purchasers of the house would not notice them. His award of damages, as previously indicated, followed.

Standard of Review

The defendants contend that the trial Justice’s decision was based on sympathy and not on facts. They assert that the plaintiffs did not demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that the damages claimed were caused by any wrongful acts of the defendants. We understand the defendants by their argument to be challenging the trial Justice’s factual findings, including his ultimate determinations on the issues of liability and damages. In order to demonstrate that the Justice made the wrong factual findings, however, the defendants must show that those findings were clearly erroneous. M.R.Civ.P. 52(a). A trial court’s factual determinations are not clearly erroneous if they are supported by credible evidence in the record. Leighton v. Leighton, Me., 329 A.2d 164, 166 (1974); LaPointe Brothers, Inc. v. Farrell, Me., 363 A.2d 225, 228 (1976); O’Halloran v. Oechslie, Me., 402 A.2d 67, 69 (1979). We conclude that there was sufficient competent evidence on the record in the instant case to support the presiding Justice’s determination on liability and damages.

Prom the testimony of the plaintiffs, Anthony and Anna Crowley, the presiding Justice could have found the following facts: the plaintiffs were never told about the cracks in the foundation of the house they were purchasing; they first discovered the cracks in January, 1976, when they noticed that water had leaked into the workshop area of their cellar; an attempt had been made to conceal the cracks by filling them with patching material and by painting over them; Mr. Dubuc had told Mr. Crowley that the foundation was in good condition; in fact the foundation was not in good condition, but instead, needed extensive repairs. From Mr. Dubuc’s own testimony, the Justice could furthermore have found that Mr. Dubuc himself had patched the cracks, and he could reasonably have inferred from the totality of the evidence presented to him that Mr. Dubuc had done so before the Crowleys or other prospective purchasers viewed the premises, in an effort to mislead them into thinking that the badly damaged foundation walls were sound. It is true that the parties to the case presented the trial Justice with two sharply contrasting accounts of the events preceding the sale of the property, and that the Justice could have reached a different determination if he had accepted the defendants’ version rather than the plaintiffs’. Inasmuch as his findings were supported in the record, however, they are conclusive upon this Court, even though there is evidence in the record that could have supported contrary determinations. See Benner v. Sherman, Me., 371 A.2d 420, 421 (1977).

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Bluebook (online)
430 A.2d 549, 1981 Me. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-dubuc-me-1981.