Czarnecki v. Basta

679 N.E.2d 10, 112 Ohio App. 3d 418
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1996
DocketNo. 69092.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 679 N.E.2d 10 (Czarnecki v. Basta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Czarnecki v. Basta, 679 N.E.2d 10, 112 Ohio App. 3d 418 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Patricia Ann Blackmon, Presiding Judge.

Defendants-appellants, Paul and Debora Basta, appeal from a jury verdict awarded in favor of plaintiffs-appellees, Alexander Czarnecki and Pamela Lane, and assign the following errors for our review:

“I. The trial court’s failure to properly instruct the jury on critical issues was prejudicial to defendants.
“II. The court erred to the prejudice of defendants by admitting evidence of damages which violated Ohio Evid.R. 1006.
“HI. The jury’s verdict awarding $30,000 in damages was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
“IV. The award of attorney fees was erroneous.”

Having reviewed the record of the proceedings and the legal arguments presented by the parties, we affirm in part and reverse in part the decision of the trial court. The apposite facts follow.

Alexander Czarnecki and Pamela Lane were both employed at Cosmo Plastics when they decided to look for a two-family house to purchase. Lane was looking for a place to live and Czarnecki was interested in investing in real estate. After they contacted a realtor, they learned that their coworkers, Paul and Debora Basta, had a two-story two-family house for sale located at 1215 Rowley Avenue in the city of Cleveland.

On March 28, 1990, Czarnecki, Lane, and their realtor, Ruth Mather, went on an inspection tour of a house led by Paul Basta. Neither Czarnecki, Lane, nor Mather noticed any visible signs of water damage. Lane and Mather did, however, notice that the second floor had an unusual odor. Czarnecki did not detect the odor. Lane said that it smelled like “older people” and associated it with Basta’s mother who lived on the second floor. Mather, notwithstanding her experience as a realtor, did not recognize the odor, nor did she associate it with water damage. Czarnecki, Lane, and Mather did notice that many of the walls had been freshly painted.

Paul Basta guided them through the house, but did not show them the attic crawl space above the second floor, nor did he make them aware of its existence. During the tour, Czarnecki, Lane, and Mather asked Basta whether the roof leaked, and he told them, “no.” Basta also told Czarnecki that “the roofs in pretty good shape.”

*421 On that same day, Czarnecki, Lane, and Mather drafted a purchase agreement. After the Bastas accepted the purchase agreement, they filled out a disclosure form. The form stated, “I understand that I may be held responsible by a purchaser for any latent or hidden, undisclosed defects in, on or upon my property which are known to me but which are not disclosed to the purchaser at the time of sale. These include, without limitation, * * * problems with * * * roof * * * or needed repairs to these or any other items should be brought to the purchaser’s attention.” Paul and Debora Basta both signed the form and indicated that there were no latent defects in the house to be disclosed. Czarnecki and Lane subsequently purchased the house for $25,500.

Czarnecki moved into the house on or about June 6, 1990. He spent a week sleeping on the second floor of the house by himself. In one of the closets, he discovered that the Bastas had left some old clothes. When he removed the clothes, he noticed the wall in the back of the closet was bulging. During that week, he developed a burning skin irritation from something in the house and had to move out. Czarnecki subsequently discovered that the source of the skin irritation was approximately thirty to forty “Stick-up” brand air fresheners hidden throughout the second floor of the house.

On or about June 16, 1990, Lane moved into the first floor of the house. On June 22, 1990, there was a very heavy rain and Lane saw water coming through her dining room and living room ceilings, which had been recently stuccoed and painted by Basta. Initially, she did not associate the leaking ceiling with the rain outside. She went upstairs to see if there was running water overflowing in the kitchen or the bathroom, but there was none.

Czarnecki and Lane began to investigate to find the source of the water. They looked in the bedroom closet where the wall was bulging. Czarnecki applied a little pressure to the wall and the whole wall collapsed between the bedroom closet and the kitchen. The collapsed wall exposed a wooden beam in the wall. Czarnecki grabbed the beam and it came apart in his hand. Czarnecki also noticed that his kitchen floor shook when his sister’s twenty-pound dog ran across the floor. Czarnecki also noticed that the floor started to “belly” and became weaker.

Czarnecki got a ladder and went up into the attic crawl space with a lamp and an extension cord. Most of the boards supporting the shingles and the two-by-four lumber supporting the roof were rotten. The rotten two-by-four lumber was braced by newer lumber to support it. The portion of the chimney exposed in the attic was covered with black tar paint and the attic floor was covered with roofing paper. He also noticed that part of the roof structure was charred. His inspection of the attic crawl space revealed that the roof was the source of the leak.

*422 The leaking was so extensive that during heavy rains during the month of June and July 1990, Lane had to keep nine five-gallon buckets and a small baby pool placed throughout her living room and dining room to catch the dripping water. Her ceilings were spotted and her light fixture covers filled up with water. The ceilings that had been freshly painted and stuccoed when Lane first looked at the house were the same ones that were leaking water. Eventually, the plasterboard and stucco on her living and dining room ceilings started crumbling and falling off.

Czarnecki and Lane contacted roofing contractors to get estimates on repairing the roof. One roofing contractor refused to give an estimate on the repair because their engineer did not feel it was safe for their men to work on the roof. Another contractor gave- an estimate of $15,000 to repair the roof. A short time after they discovered the problem with the roof, Czarnecki lost his job at Cosmo Plasties, and he and Lane were unable to pay to have the roof repaired.

Czarnecki and Lane filed an action against Paul and Debora Basta for fraudulent misrepresentation. The case proceeded to trial. Czarnecki and Lane presented two experts at trial. John Marrelli, Jr., had nineteen years of experience in home inspections. He testified that the water damage leading to the problems experienced by Czarnecki and Lane could not have occurred in the short time they lived in the house because the type of deterioration he found would have taken years. James Stegmeyer was employed as an estimator for Yanesh Brothers Construction. He used an “Xactimate” computer program to estimate the amount of damages. He estimated the minimum cost for repairing the damage was $23,531.13.

The jury returned three verdict forms and found for the plaintiffs for $30,000 for compensatory damages, $0 for punitive damages, and held that the Bastas should be held liable for attorney fees. The trial court awarded the plaintiffs an additional $11,571.50 in attorney fees. This appeal followed.

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Bluebook (online)
679 N.E.2d 10, 112 Ohio App. 3d 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/czarnecki-v-basta-ohioctapp-1996.