Hansen v. Lien Termite & Pest Control Co.

428 N.W.2d 195, 229 Neb. 596, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 306
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1988
Docket86-570
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 428 N.W.2d 195 (Hansen v. Lien Termite & Pest Control Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Lien Termite & Pest Control Co., 428 N.W.2d 195, 229 Neb. 596, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 306 (Neb. 1988).

Opinion

Grant, J.

Defendant, Lien Termite and Pest Control Company of Omaha, Inc., a Nebraska corporation (hereinafter Lien), appeals from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiffs, Randall and Jo Ellen Hansen. Plaintiffs, prior to purchasing a home, contracted with defendant to inspect the home for termites. Defendant issued a certificate of termite inspection, and subsequently, termites were found in the house. Plaintiffs cross-appeal for an increase of the damages award.

On January 23,1983, plaintiffs entered into an agreement to purchase a residence located in Omaha, Nebraska. On February 17,1983, plaintiffs contracted with Lien to conduct a termite inspection of the house. Upon completion of the inspection, Lien issued its standard certificate of inspection, which stated in part:

IT IS OUR OPINION there is no termite activity present at this time and termites have not impaired the strength of this building. This examination was made by inspecting exposed and accessible wood members and without opening plastered or finished parts of a building such as plastered or finished ceiling, walls and floors or by moving and removing building furnishings unless otherwise authorized.

*598 Lien also issued a Veterans Administration wood destroying insect information report, which stated that “[t]he inspection covered the readily accessible areas of the property ...” This report also stated that “[v]isible evidence of previously treated infestation, which is now inactive, was observed” and that “ [t]he window frame in basement bedroom at west wall has old termite damage.”

About 13 months after the inspection, in early April of 1984, while Mrs. Hansen was vacuuming in the basement of the residence, she hit the mopboard with the vacuum cleaner, and the mopboard “disintegrated.” This episode, in conjunction with the knowledge that the floors had been “giving real bad” since the time they moved in and that a basement archway was falling down, led plaintiffs to conclude that there was a problem. Plaintiffs then had the residence inspected by a different termite inspector, who discovered evidence of termites and termite damage.

Plaintiffs brought this action in May of 1984 against Lien in the district court for Douglas County, alleging in their petition that Lien had breached the contract because “the inspection by Lien’s agent did not meet the skill and knowledge normally possessed by other termite inspectors in good standing in a similar community [in that] areas of visible evidence of prior damage was [sic] not noted in areas other than the window frame of the basement bedroom.” A trial was held to the court, without a jury, and a judicial view of the premises was made. Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs for $16,700. Lien timely appealed.

On appeal to this court, Lien assigns six errors that may be consolidated into three: (1) “The trial court awarded the Appellees an improper measure of damages” for various reasons; (2) “[t]here was no evidence as to when the alleged damage occurred . . . therefore, the Appellant’s Motion for Directed Verdict should have been sustained”; and (3) the trial court admitted, over Lien’s objection, testimony and exhibits of plaintiffs which were not disclosed in plaintiffs’ responses to discovery requests.

Plaintiffs’ cross-appeal assigned as error that the trial court failed to accept uncontroverted evidence of damages as *599 controlling, thereby abusing its discretion and committing reversible error.

We first discuss Lien’s assignment of error in the trial court’s refusing to grant a directed verdict in favor of Lien because there was no evidence as to when the termite damage occurred.

Plaintiffs presented the evidence of a qualified longtime termite inspector from another termite control company. The witness testified that, at plaintiffs’ request, he inspected plaintiffs’ house on April 2,1984. At the time of this inspection, there was a dry wall ceiling in the basement. This ceiling obscured a view of some of the floor joists in the basement, but this inspector found termite damage in an area 3 to 4 inches wide by 36 to 40 inches long located between the air ducts and the furnace. This area was not covered by dry wall and was visible on inspection. This damage was not reported by Lien in its examination. This witness further testified that the damage he saw on April 2,1984, could not have occurred after February 17, 1983, which was the date of Lien’s inspection. This witness further testified that the damage should have been discovered if that visible area had been inspected.

There was evidence contradicting this testimony. In a law action, when a jury has been waived, the findings of fact made by the trial court have the effect of a jury verdict and will not be set aside unless clearly wrong. Murphy v. Stuart Fertilizer Co., 221 Neb. 767, 380 N.W.2d 631 (1986). Lien’s assignment of error in this connection is without merit.

Lien’s assignments of error concerning damages assert that the trial court used an improper measure of damages. Lien argues that the rule set forth in Flakus v. Schug, 213 Neb. 491, 497, 329 N.W.2d 859, 864 (1983), should be applicable in the instant case. In Flakus, we held that

where there has been a misrepresentation in the sale of real estate, the measure of damages is the cost of placing the property conveyed in the condition represented, not exceeding the difference in value of the property conveyed and the value of the property if it had been as represented.

We hold that applying the measure of damages rule from Flakus would be incorrect in the instant case. The present case does not involve a misrepresentation in the sale of real estate *600 and does not involve a contract between buyer and seller. Rather, it is a contract action between a termite inspector and its customer. There is no transfer of property between the termite inspector and its customer in this case, and therefore the rationale of Flakus is not applicable. Lien was not making representations as a seller of property, but had contracted to perform an inspection for a fee. Lien warranted that “there is no termite activity present at this time and termites have not impaired the strength of this building.”

A more appropriate rule is a modification of the rule set forth in “L” Investments, Ltd. v. Lynch, 212 Neb. 319, 327-28, 322 N.W.2d 651, 656 (1982), where the court stated:

Except as otherwise hereinafter limited, where an improvement upon realty is damaged without damage to the realty itself and where the nature of the thing damaged is such that it is capable of being repaired or restored and the cost of doing so is capable of reasonable ascertainment, the measure of damages for its negligent damage is the reasonable cost of repairing or restoring the property in like kind and quality....
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Bluebook (online)
428 N.W.2d 195, 229 Neb. 596, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-lien-termite-pest-control-co-neb-1988.