Fowler v. Cooley

245 P.3d 155, 239 Or. App. 338, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 1600
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 8, 2010
Docket070302979; A139311
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 245 P.3d 155 (Fowler v. Cooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. Cooley, 245 P.3d 155, 239 Or. App. 338, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 1600 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*340 ARMSTRONG, J.

Defendant appeals a judgment for plaintiff in an action under the Oregon Unlawful Trade Practices Act (UTPA), ORS 646.605 to 646.656. 1 Plaintiff sought damages arising from defendant’s sale to plaintiff of a single-family home that had a water leak in the basement. Plaintiff alleged that defendant had misrepresented that the house was of sound quality and character and had failed to disclose the material defect that the basement leaked. See ORS 646.608(l)(e), (t). After a bench trial, the court awarded plaintiff $12,266.96 in damages. On appeal, defendant assigns error to (1) the trial court’s denial of her ORCP 54 B(2) motion to dismiss plaintiffs claim, which asserted that the house had not been purchased for personal, household, or family purposes and, thus, that the sale to plaintiff was not subject to the UTPA; (2) its denial of defendant’s motion to strike plaintiffs damages because plaintiff had not presented evidence at trial of the difference between the price paid for the house as represented and the value of the house as sold; and (3) its conclusion that defendant had violated the UTPA, because plaintiff had not presented evidence to support a finding that defendant knew when she sold the house that the basement leaked. We affirm.

We relate the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, who prevailed at trial. Rathgeber v. James Hemenway, Inc., 176 Or App 135, 137, 30 P3d 1200 (2001), aff'd, 335 Or 404, 69 P3d 710 (2003). In June 2006, plaintiff received a telephone call from a friend, Tillford, who worked for defendant. Tillford knew that plaintiff was interested in purchasing a home in north Portland, so he called to tell plaintiff that defendant was selling a house in the Kenton neighborhood in north Portland. 2 Tillford told plaintiff that defendant had “a couple other prospective buyers waiting to purchase the property if [he] wasn’t interested” and communicated “a sense of urgency about [plaintiffs] need to inspect and make a decision on the property that day.” Eight months before receiving Tillford’s telephone call, plaintiff had purchased *341 the home in northeast Portland in which he was then living. Nonetheless, plaintiff was interested in purchasing the Kenton house because he had a number of friends who lived in the Kenton neighborhood, which made living in that area attractive to him.

Accordingly, plaintiff inspected the house on the day of the call and was accompanied by his friend Smith. When they arrived at the house, plaintiff encountered two men “doing some sheet rock repairs in the basement * * * near [a] sump pump.” Plaintiff asked one of the men “what the sump pump was for.” The worker responded “that he didn’t know anything” and that plaintiff would need to ask defendant questions about the property. Plaintiff’s inspection of the property confirmed the basic characteristics of the house that Tillford had described, and later that day he went to defendant’s office “to fill out paperwork” for it.

Before going to defendant’s office, plaintiff sought the advice of Smith and another friend, Frisch, about “possibly selling [his] current property[,] moving into the Kenton neighborhood[,]” and purchasing defendant’s property. Smith recalled that, during his conversation with plaintiff, plaintiff explained to him that “he was looking for another place to live, [because] a lot of his * * * friends[ and] associates[ ] lived in that part of town and he was interested in moving to a different location.”

Similarly, Frisch remembered speaking with plaintiff at the time and plaintiff stating that he “was looking at purchasing an investment home, another home.” Specifically, Frisch recalled that plaintiff had said that

“his intent was that he would move into that house and refurbish, remodel, reconstruct, upgrade if you want to call it that, and sell the house that he was currently living in in northeast Portland, and pull the equity out of that home that he had done the same thing, gone in, fixed up, refloored, put hard wood floorings in, and then subsequently do the same thing to the other house, into the new house, live in it and fix it up.”

In addition, Frisch “advised [plaintiff], don’t do anything as an impulse buy. And, you know, I thought at that time two years ago the housing market was overpriced, over-inflated, *342 and the bubble was bursting.” Plaintiff also remembered that conversation with Frisch and how Frisch

“advised me that the market was declining, and, you know, as an investment- — -just as an investment property, it probably was not that great of an investment. And that’s when we got into a conversation, you know, about my interest in living in the Kenton neighborhood, and the fact that I had other friends in that neighborhood. And he thought that, you know, as a residence that it would be a good option, because it was a smaller square footage [and] I was a single guyU”

After speaking with Smith and Frisch, plaintiff went to defendant’s office to discuss the details of the transaction. Among the details that they discussed was the condition and history of the house. According to plaintiff, he asked defendant if there had been any water leaks in the basement, and she replied that there had not been any water leaks and that the sump pump in the basement was just precautionary. Unbeknownst to plaintiff, defendant previously had sold the house to another person, Saenguraiporn, who had experienced several water leaks in the basement after heavy rainfall during the winter of 2005-06. After making various attempts to fix the leaks, and discussions with defendant about the problem, Saenguraiporn had decided that she wanted out of the purchase contract, and defendant had taken the house back. In spring 2006, defendant hired a contractor, Ross, to fix the leaking basement. Ross took several actions to fix the leak, including pouring a cement sidewalk on the side of the house, building a French drain, and installing a sump pump in the basement.

At the conclusion of plaintiffs meeting with defendant and Tillford, plaintiff entered into a lease agreement with defendant and secured a five-year option to purchase the property. 3 Soon thereafter, plaintiff began making improvements to the property, including adding new landscaping, hanging new window blinds, installing cedar shakes on the front of the house, and completing numerous repairs *343 around the house. In August 2006, plaintiff listed the house for sale at a price roughly $50,000 higher than the price set in his option to purchase it, apparently not realizing that, at that time, the house was not his to sell. In October 2006, after realizing that he “didn’t really have all the rights * * * on the property,” plaintiff contacted defendant and exercised his purchase option.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P.3d 155, 239 Or. App. 338, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 1600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-cooley-orctapp-2010.