DeNardo v. Corneloup

163 P.3d 956, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 2016740
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 2007
DocketS-11703
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 163 P.3d 956 (DeNardo v. Corneloup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeNardo v. Corneloup, 163 P.3d 956, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 2016740 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Daniel DeNardo sued his landlord and his neighboring tenant alleging that cigarette smoke emanating from the neighbor's apartment was making DeNardo ill. The superior court ultimately rejected all of DeNardo's claims.

We affirm. There was no error in dismissing DeNardo's claims of negligence and breach of the covenant of habitability after he voluntarily moved for dismissal of those claims and failed to preserve them in the superior court. There was no error in rejecting his claim that the landlord breached the covenant of quiet enjoyment, because there was no evidence the landlord substantially disturbed his use of the land. There was no error in rejecting his battery claim, because there was no contention that either defendant deliberately caused smoke to contact him. There was no error in rejecting his trespass and nuisance claims, because the arguments DeNardo makes here for imposing a duty on the tenant to refrain from smoking are unpersuasive, because he has not established that the landlord should be liable in trespass for tenant conduct it cannot control, and because he has not established that cigarette smoking by a tenant is ultra-hazardous activity. We also affirm the grant *958 of summary judgment on DeNardo's claim of retaliatory eviction, because we conclude that he has not established that his failure to pay his rent in full was excused. He was therefore "in default in rent" per AS 34.08.310(c)(1) and ineligible to claim retaliatory eviction.

Finally, we detect no hint of bias, prejudice, or unfairness in the superior court's rulings and therefore reject DeNardo's appellate contention that the judge should have been disqualified.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1991 Daniel DeNardo began renting an Anchorage apartment from the Foreman's Properties, a partnership of five members of the Foreman family. We sometimes refer to it as the landlord. The rental term was month-to-month, and rent was $385 throughout the rental period.

In March 2002 Pat Corneloup moved into the apartment next to DeNardo's in the Foreman's Properties's building. During the spring of 2002 Corneloup smoked cigarettes in his apartment. The lease did not restrict smoking in the Foreman's Properties apartments. DeNardo asserted that he complained to Corneloup that smoke could be smelled in adjoining apartments. He also asserted that he complained to Helen Foreman in March 2002, although she denied this assertion under oath. One other resident also complained to Corneloup that she smelled smoke "every now and again." This other resident later testified that the situation "cleared up" after she complained to Corneloup, and that she never complained to the landlord.

On June 7, 2002 DeNardo filed suit against Corneloup for "battery, negligence and trespass" as a result of cigarette smoke "in-vad[ing]" his property. Corneloup was the only defendant. The complaint did not name the Foreman's Properties or any individual partners as defendants.

As of June 12 DeNardo owed his landlord $677.78 for May and June rent; on June 12 he tendered a rent payment of $185, leaving him $492.78 in arrears. Later that day the Foreman's Properties served DeNardo with an eviction notice. Relying on a superior court affidavit signed by Helen Foreman, the Foreman's Properties contended below and argues here that it had no knowledge until June 13 that DeNardo had filed suit against Corneloup. DeNardo asserts that the Foreman's Properties had notice of the lawsuit as early as June 8, and that the eviction notice was retaliatory.

On June 20 DeNardo amended his complaint to name the Foreman's Properties Partnership and its individual partners as additional defendants. He later testified in the eviction proceeding that at the same time he sued the landlord, he gave written notice that he was withholding rent because Corne-loup's smoking made the apartment uninhabitable. The Foreman's Properties's brief of appellee asserts that the individual partners were never served with a summons or complaint. Although the record contains copies of supplemental summonses issued by the superior court for Penny, Helen, Oliver, Reed, and David Foreman, it contains no return of service for any of them. Because DeNardo's reply brief does not argue that the individual Foremans were served, we assume that they were not. As a result, the only defendants before the superior court were Corneloup and the Foreman's Properties.

On June 24 the landlord served DeNardo with a Forcible Entry and Detainer (FED) summons and complaint seeking his eviction. In opposing the attempt to eviet him, DeNar-do successfully argued that he should not be evicted while his eviction appeal was pending; both he and Corneloup therefore continued to reside in their apartments. DeNardo asserted that he suffered from "anxiety, nausea, headaches, dizziness, sleeplessness, and general ill feeling" in addition to "humiliation" and "distress" caused by exposure to secondhand smoke. DeNardo was never medically evaluated for these alleged ill effects, and he admitted that "no medical ree-ords exist associated with the claims in this case."

DeNardo proceeded pro se in his lawsuit against Corneloup and the landlord and claimed: (1) breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment, (2) breach of the covenant of habitability, (8) negligence, (4) trespass, (5) *959 battery, (6) nuisance, and (7) retaliatory eviction. The superior court dismissed all claims against Corneloup and granted summary judgment to the landlord on all claims exeept breach of the covenant of habitability and negligence.

DeNardo moved for reconsideration, and also argued that dismissing some but not all of the causes of action was logically inconsistent; he therefore "move{d] the court for an entry of judgment for defendants on all counts as the logical result of the summary opinion." The Foreman's Properties joined DeNardo's motion for entry of a judgment dismissing those remaining claims. The superior court granted DeNardo's motion and issued a final judgment dismissing the case, thus effectively dismissing all remaining causes of action, including the claim for breach of the covenant of habitability and the claim of negligence.

During litigation DeNardo moved for "re-cusal for cause" of the assigned judge, Superior Court Judge Sharon L. (CHeason. De-Nardo had filed two lawsuits against Judge (Gleason in which he accused her of, among other things, not being fair and objective. Judge Gleason declined to disqualify herself. Superior Court Judge Eric Smith was then assigned to consider whether Judge Gleason should be disqualified; his order denying DeNardo's disqualification motion found "no sign of either incompetence or bias. To the contrary, the file reveals a careful and timpar-tial consideration of the relevant law and facts on the part of Judge Gleason."

DeNardo appeals pro se. 1

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 P.3d 956, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 2016740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denardo-v-corneloup-alaska-2007.