Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors

691 A.2d 350, 148 N.J. 582, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 15, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by457 cases

This text of 691 A.2d 350 (Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors, 691 A.2d 350, 148 N.J. 582, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 114 (N.J. 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

POLLOCK, J.

The primary issue is whether defendant, Weichert Co. Realtors (“Weichert”), as the sales agent of a residential real estate devel *590 oper, is liable under the Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to - 20 (the “Act”), for affirmative misrepresentations to purchasers of new homes from the developer. After a trial on liability only, the Law Division found Weichert liable as the sole proximate cause of the purchaser’s losses. In affirming the imposition of liability on Weichert, the Appellate Division also imposed liability on the builder, Allen Rumberg, and his wife, Ellen, under the Act and for common-law fraud. Finally, the court held that the Rumbergs were subject to punitive damages. We granted motions for leave to appeal by Weichert, Ellen, and the purchasers. We modify and affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division.

I.

Plaintiffs Roxanne Gennari, James and Joan Nestor, Rajan and Grace Mathews, and Raymond and Janet LaChapelle are purchasers of homes in a thirty-five house development in Lawrence Township known as Squire’s Runne. Timberline Property Development (“Timberline”), a corporation owned by Allen and Ellen Rumberg, built the houses, which suffered from substantial defects. Timberline is now bankrupt. Underlying this case are Weichert’s misrepresentations about Allen’s qualifications as a builder and the construction of the defective homes. This appeal arises from the trial of a consolidated action involving claims asserted by the purchasers against Weichert, Timberline, the Rumbergs and others.

Weichert is a real estate broker with offices throughout the United States. Ellen Rumberg was a sales associate in Weichert's East Brunswick office and the Weichert sales representative at Squire’s Runne. Weichert maintained a trailer and signs at the development. Joining Ellen Rumberg at the site was Weichert agent Ruth Skonieczny, now deceased. Another Weichert agent, Nancy Healey, also was active in selling homes at Squire’s Runne. In Weichert’s East Brunswick office, the manager, Thomas Gliek, approved marketing strategy and advertisements for the development.

*591 In a liability trial that extended for thirty-four days over eight months, the Law Division heard testimony about Weichert’s representations to purchasers and the defects in the homes. Perhaps because the trial was so protracted, the Law Division did not make detailed factual findings on all issues. The Appellate Division, however, filled in many missing details. To avoid unnecessary duplication, we draw on the factual findings of both courts.

The most direct link between Weichert, Allen Rumberg, and Timberline is Ellen Rumberg, Allen’s wife and a Weichert agent. Ellen’s dual role on behalf of the builder and the realtor is at the crux of this case. As a Weichert agent, Ellen had been the listing broker for Allen’s initial building effort, a four-lot development in Holmdel, New Jersey. With Ellen’s help, Allen and Thomas Glick negotiated the listing agreement for the Holmdel property. At Holmdel, as at Squire’s Runne, Weichert paid for all advertising, brochures, newspaper advertising, and communications with other brokers. Foreshadowing the problems at Squire’s Runne, the Holmdel houses suffered from numerous defects: shoddy workmanship, inadequate heating systems, roof problems, uninsulated pipes, improper foundation waterproofing, uneven floors, inadequate air conditioning systems, and delayed completion.

At Squire’s Runne, Allen again negotiated with Glick for a listing agreement concerning the advertising and marketing of the houses. Weichert agreed to provide a sales trailer at the site and to pay for advertising, telephone costs, and a sales brochure. Robert Albrecht, a Weichert regional vice-president, and Paul Christman, a senior vice-president, approved the arrangement for Weichert. The trial court concluded:

Here, high Weichert management made a determination to spend considerable funds that would boldly display its name in the signage at the construction site, in advertising, in brochures, and in the presence of its sales agents. Weichert was proclaiming the excellence of the project.

In brief, Weichert was intimately involved with Allen Rumberg in the sale of houses to the purchasers at Squire’s Runne. Weichert, however, did not verify the information provided by Allen. Nor did Weichert establish a procedure to confirm its agent’s *592 representations to prospective purchasers. Weiehert, moreover, was the means through which the purchasers learned about Allen. Weichert’s representations led the purchasers to believe that Weiehert agents were familiar with Allen and his workmanship.

The Law Division characterized the trust that the purchasers placed in Weichert’s representations by referring to the purchasers’ “belief[s] through the activities of Weiehert that their homes would be of high quality____ In essence, they were led to believe that Rumberg was an exacting and demanding builder of real substance. They were misled.”

The Law Division also found:

Plaintiffs purchased at Squire’s Runne because of the focused and highly specific misrepresentations made by Weiehert agents, and in part, by the equally misleading literature as to the quality of construction. Weiehert is the reason plaintiffs signed on with Allen Rumberg.

In the sale of the houses, Ellen Rumberg, Ruth Skonieczny, and Nancy Healey represented that Allen was an experienced builder who had built hundreds of quality homes throughout New Jersey. The facts were to the contrary. Generally speaking, he had always worked under the supervision of others, primarily his brother-in-law, Philip Kayne. His workmanship, moreover, was disastrous.

In meticulous detail, the Appellate Division expanded on the Law Division’s more general fact-findings concerning defective construction and Weichert’s role in the sale of the houses:

Roxanne Gennari was the first of the four plaintiffs to contract for a new home in Squire’s Runne. Gennari, a full-time real estate agent, was active in Mercer County since 1980. In April 1986, Nancy Healey, Gennari’s neighbor and a Weiehert agent, told her about a new development Weiehert was marketing. Although Gennari was not looking for a new home, she was impressed with Healey’s description of both the builder and the development because Healey was someone whose opinion Gennari respected. She and Healey were business partners, and had purchased a lot in a Windsor Township development on which they intended to have a house built and then to sell it.
Healey told Gennari that Squire’s Runne was to be constructed by a North Jersey builder who had built hundreds of homes and was a person of detail and craftsmanship. If they acted quickly, they could get in at preconstruction prices. In Healey’s opinion, this represented a wonderful investment. Gennari was *593 interested and excited not only because of her friend’s opinion but because she knew Weichert was a large and reputable firm and was behind the development. At the site, Gennari first met Ellen Rumberg.

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Bluebook (online)
691 A.2d 350, 148 N.J. 582, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gennari-v-weichert-co-realtors-nj-1997.