Hardy v. Montgomery

2018 UT App 133, 428 P.3d 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 28, 2018
Docket20160148-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2018 UT App 133 (Hardy v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Montgomery, 2018 UT App 133, 428 P.3d 78 (Utah Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

¶ 1 Richard Hardy appeals from the trial court's order awarding judgment in favor of Jeremy Montgomery and Julie Montgomery (collectively, the Montgomerys). We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Hardy owned a home in Helper, Utah. In late 2012 or early 2013, Hardy listed the home for sale with Bridge Realty. Before the home sold, Hardy met the Montgomerys, who were interested in buying the home. Hardy wanted to sell his home to the Montgomerys, but he did not want to pay a real estate commission to Bridge Realty. To avoid paying the commission, the parties agreed that the Montgomerys would lease the home from Hardy with an option to purchase the home after Hardy's listing agreement with Bridge Realty expired. Hardy retained an attorney, who drafted a lease agreement (the Lease Agreement). Attached to the Lease Agreement was a real estate purchase contract (the REPC) and a seller financing addendum. The Lease Agreement provided that the Montgomerys would pay $700 in rent plus $100 in "additional rent" to reimburse Hardy for property taxes and insurance. The Lease Agreement contained a "Non-Waiver" provision, which stated in part, "No failure of Landlord to enforce any term hereof shall be deemed a waiver, nor shall any acceptance of a partial payment of rent be deemed a waiver of Landlord's right to the full amount thereof." Most relevant here, the Lease Agreement contained an "Option to Purchase" provision, which stated:

Provided Tenant is not in default hereunder, Tenant shall have the right to purchase ("Option") the Premises for the Purchase Price of $126,775.00, ("Purchase Price") at any time after September 15, 2013 and before the end of the Term of the Lease. As consideration for the Option, Tenant shall pay Landlord, a non-refundable option payment of $7,000.00 ("Option Payment"), payable on or before the beginning of the Term, which shall be applied to the Purchase Price and shall be counted toward the Earnest Money Deposit. In the event the Tenant exercises the Option to purchase the Premises, Tenant shall execute a Promissory Note for the balance remaining on the Purchase Price, after the Option Payment has been applied, and the parties shall close the transaction, as outlined in [the REPC], attached hereto as Exhibit "A", together with its applicable amendments, and addenda.

The REPC stated that the $7,000 was an earnest money deposit and that Hardy, as the seller, would provide financing for the remaining balance of the purchase price.

¶ 3 The parties signed the Lease Agreement on April 17, 2013. The parties did not sign the REPC at that time. Hardy declined to sign the REPC because he allegedly had an "uneasy feeling" about selling the home to the Montgomerys. Nevertheless, the Montgomerys delivered a $7,000 check to Hardy as consideration for the option to purchase the home. Pursuant to the terms of the REPC, Hardy was required to "deposit the Earnest Money into [a] Brokerage Real Estate Trust Account" within four days of receipt. Instead, Hardy deposited the $7,000 into his personal checking account.

¶ 4 The Montgomerys paid $700 per month in rent from May 2013 to October 2013; the Montgomerys never paid the $100 in additional rent for property taxes and insurance. Hardy never mentioned the Montgomerys' failure to pay the $100 in additional rent nor advised them that this amounted to a default of the Lease Agreement.

¶ 5 In July 2013, Hardy and Jeremy Montgomery spoke on the phone, and Hardy indicated that he no longer wished to sell the house to the Montgomerys. Thereafter, in September 2013, Hardy's attorney sent a letter to the Montgomerys. The letter stated, in relevant part, that the Montgomerys still had "the ability to exercise [the] option to purchase the residence," but that Hardy was "not interested in financing the purchase of the property" based on the Montgomerys' late rent payments in May, June, and July 2013. The letter claimed that Hardy had no obligation to finance the purchase of the property because the REPC was "never executed or signed" and because the Lease Agreement provided that "the entire agreement is contained in the lease agreement and any additional agreement must be signed by all of the parties." The letter also alerted the Montgomerys that they were in default based on their late rent payments and stated that it gave Hardy "the option to terminate the entire agreement at his discretion if [the Montgomerys] fail[ed] to remedy the breach of contract by paying all associated late fees and damages within 7 days of this notice." The letter did not mention the fact that the Montgomerys had not been paying the full amount-$800-in rent and additional rent. The Montgomerys stopped paying rent in October 2013 but stayed in the home until the second week of February 2014.

¶ 6 Hardy sued the Montgomerys in May 2014, alleging breach of contract, unjust enrichment, conversion, and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. More specifically, Hardy claimed that the Montgomerys (1) violated the terms of the Lease Agreement and that the REPC and Seller Financing Addendum "should be ignored"; (2) owed rent in the total amount of $800 per month, not $700 per month; (3) owed late fees and liquidated damages; (4) owed Hardy damages for the sale opportunities Hardy had to forgo from May 2013 through March 2014 because of the Montgomerys' occupancy and claimed rights; and (5) owed Hardy damages for missing personal property.

¶ 7 The Montgomerys filed an answer and counterclaim, alleging that (1) the REPC was incorporated into, and was a part of, the Lease Agreement; (2) Hardy anticipatorily repudiated the option provision in the Lease Agreement; (3) Hardy was unjustly enriched based on his anticipatory repudiation, and the $7,000 Hardy received should be offset against anything the Montgomerys owed Hardy; (4) Hardy provided no evidence of any lost sales opportunities for the home; and (5) Hardy provided no evidence regarding alleged damages to his personal property.

¶ 8 The trial court held a bench trial on October 2, 2015. In its written findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court determined that the Lease Agreement "clearly integrates the REPC and seller financing addendum into the Lease and the REPC is dated the same date as the Lease." Regarding waiver, the court determined that "Hardy never told the Montgomerys that the rental payment was in the wrong amount" and that the September 2013 letter from Hardy's attorney did not demand the additional $100 per month "even though the letter details other amounts owing and references several provisions of the Lease." Thus, the court determined, "Hardy intentionally waived the right to collect the additional $100.00 each month in rent." The court further determined that the Montgomerys' June and October rent payments had been late. Applying the Lease Agreement's late-fee and liquidated-damages provision, the court determined that the Montgomerys owed $140 in late fees and $2,420 in liquidated damages. The court rejected Hardy's claim that he had lost potential sales of the home, finding that Hardy was "merely speculating that he may have been able to sell the house." The court also rejected Hardy's claims that "the Montgomerys kept or lost certain items of personal property [Hardy] left in the house."

¶ 9 The court further determined that Hardy had anticipatorily repudiated the option agreement and that the Montgomerys had the right to cure their default and exercise the option.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Untitled Case
D. Utah, 2026
Krueger v. Seed Capital Investments
Court of Appeals of Utah, 2026
Neeshan v. Ravonsheed
2024 UT App 144 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 UT App 133, 428 P.3d 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-montgomery-utahctapp-2018.