Farmer v. Rickard

2007 WY 19, 150 P.3d 1185, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 18, 2007 WL 258316
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2007
Docket06-132
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2007 WY 19 (Farmer v. Rickard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmer v. Rickard, 2007 WY 19, 150 P.3d 1185, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 18, 2007 WL 258316 (Wyo. 2007).

Opinion

*1187 HILL, Justice.

[11] Appellant, Randy Farmer, dba Randy Farmer Construction, a sole proprietorship (Farmer), seeks review of an appealable order of the district court awarding Appel-lees, Edwin and Elizabeth Rickard, Trustees under the Elizabeth A. Rickard Living Trust (Rickards), damages in the amount of $220,000.00. Farmer built a home and detached garage/bus barn near Cody, for the Rickards. Before trial, the district court granted the Rickards motion for a partial summary judgment which had the effect of assigning Farmer the duty to guarantee the adequacy of the Rickards' house plan for the soil conditions present on a lot they purchased from a third party, prior to entering into their construction contract with Farmer. As a result, the trial phase of this case addressed only the issue of damages. We will reverse and remand because the contract between Farmer and the Rickards is unambiguous that Farmer did not specifically agree to be responsible for subsurface soil conditions at the work site, and his duty to the Rickards with respect to soil conditions, if any, cannot rest upon their written contract. However, the Rickards' complaint and the defenses interposed by Farmer preclude summary judgment because they have generated genuine issues of material fact that must be sorted out by the fact finder.

ISSUES

[12] Farmer raises these issues:

1. Did the trial court err in denying Farmer summary judgment and in granting a partial summary judgment for the Rickards establishing a duty on the part of Farmer to guarantee the adequacy of the blueprints chosen by the Rickards for unknown soil conditions on a lot selected by the Rickards?
2. Did the trial court err in extending its partial summary judgment to strike Farmer's defense that the Rickards breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing which was based on the fact that the Rickards had been warned about the soil conditions on their lot and withheld these warnings from Farmer?
8. Should this case be reversed with instructions to the trial court to grant summary judgment to Farmer?

The Rickards' statement of the issues is similar enough to that provided by Farmer that we need not set it out in detail here.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

[13] In July of 1999, the Rickards purchased the land upon which the home in dispute in this case was built. Farmer was not a party to that transaction. In a "Contract to Buy and Sell Real Estate (Farm & Ranch) (Vacant Land)," dated July 17, 1999, the Rickards agreed to buy 5.28 acres of unimproved land near Cody. The purchase price was $35,000. The contract provided the Rickards the right to have any inspections performed on or before August 3, 1999. In an addendum to the real estate contract, the parties to that contract agreed:

Exhibit A noted as additional provisions in that purchase offer dated July 17, 1999 by and between Edwin Ray Rickard and Elizabeth Ann Rickard as buyers, and Table-works Inc. as seller.
1. This offer is contingent upon the buyers['] approval of a soil stability test to be performed on the subject property within the inspection period stated previously in the offer. Any and all costs for said testing shall be paid for by buyer.
2. This offer is contingent upon the buyers['] approval of a percolation test to be performed on the subject [property]. [Buyers reserve] the right to approve, or disapprove said test results at buyers['] sole discretion. Should buyer[s] disapprove of said testing as noted for soil stability or percolation, buyer{s] may terminate this offer to purchase and have all earnest monies returned in a timely manner.

[T4] The Rickards wanted to have soil testing done because they anticipated the need for a septic system for their home, ie., the soil needed to percolate. In addition, the Rickards were informed by the seller that there was the potential for bentonite (expansive clay soil) in the soil, in the general area of their proposed home. The Rickards had *1188 an expert, Fred Kunz, check the soil for bentonite. He dug four test holes and said the soil "looked fine to me," based on visual observation of the soil. An offer of proof made by Farmer established that such soils often cannot be ascertained solely by visual inspection.

[T5] Next, the Rickards picked out a house plan from a book provided to them by a contractor other than Farmer. Mr. Rick-ard approached Farmer at a construction site near the Rickards' lot and asked him if he would like to bid on constructing their home. Farmer and two other contractors submitted bids based on a drawing of the proposed house, which included a statement of the materials required for the project (the house plans were not obtained until later). The Rickards conceded that at the time they contracted with Farmer, they were not concerned about soil problems and Mr. Rickard never discussed potential soil problems with him. It was only after Farmer had begun exeavation for the foundation of the home that Mr. Rickard broached the subject "because the hole was so much deeper than what Fred's original backhoe would go...." Mr. Rickard asked Farmer if the soil looked "okay" to him and Framer replied, "It looks fine to me." In an offer of proof placed on the record, Farmer asserted that at that time he specifically told Mr. Rickard that soil testing could be done but it might cause delay, and Rickard declined to have any testing done. Mr. Rickard agreed that when he was negotiating with Farmer, he was not concerned about soils or soil testing because he had already been assured that the soil on his lot was not problematic. Mr. Rickard never discussed Fred Kunz's soil testing results with Farmer.

[16] The rather informal contract that Farmer and the Rickards entered into on September 2, 1999, was this:

CONTRACTOR AGREEMENT

This Agreement made the 2nd day of September 1999 by and between Randy Farmer dba Randy Farmer Construction, hereinafter called the Contractor and Ed and Betsy Rickard, hereinafter called the Owner.
Witnesseth, that the Contractor and the Owner for the consideration named agree as follows:
1. The Contractor shall furnish all of the materials and perform all of the work to build home according to plans and specifications agreed to by Contractor and Owner.
2. The work to be performed under this Contract shall begin at or near September 3, 1999 and end approximately March 15, 2000.
3. The Owner shall pay the Contractor for the material and labor performed under the Contract in monthly installments as billed for work completed. Payments of the Contract Price shall be paid monthly by the tenth day of the month as requested by Contractor. Any extras or additions will be brought to Owners attention and agreed upon before said work is begun. Said extras or additions will be billed in addition to Contract price.
4, Agreements between Contractor and Owner are as follows:
Contractor to provide:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 WY 19, 150 P.3d 1185, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 18, 2007 WL 258316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-rickard-wyo-2007.