J. Craig Reed & Kristi L. Reed v. Wally Conrad Construction

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 13, 1999
Docket03A01-9807-CH-00210
StatusPublished

This text of J. Craig Reed & Kristi L. Reed v. Wally Conrad Construction (J. Craig Reed & Kristi L. Reed v. Wally Conrad Construction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Craig Reed & Kristi L. Reed v. Wally Conrad Construction, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT KNOXVILLE

J. CRAIG REED, and ) C/A NO. 03A01-9807-CH-00210 FILED October 13, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk wife, KRISTI L. REED, ) ) Plaintiffs-Appellees,) ) ) ) ) v. ) ) ) ) WALLY CONARD CONSTRUCTION, ) APPEAL AS OF RIGHT FROM THE INC., GREGORY D. SHANKS, ) KNOX COUNTY CHANCERY COURT d/b/a SHANKS & BLACKSTOCK, ) and JIM NICELY, d/b/a JIM ) NICELY CONSTRUCTION, ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) ) WEST KNOX PROPERTIES, INC., ) ) HONORABLE FREDERICK D. MCDONALD, Defendant-Appellant. ) CHANCELLOR

For Appellant For Appellee

W.F. SHUMATE, JR. HENRY T. OGLE Shumate & Bowling Knoxville, Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee

Page 1 OPINION

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED Susano, J. This is an action under the Tennessee Consumer

Protection Act (“the Act”) that arose out of the sale of a

residence. Following a bench trial, the court below awarded

compensatory damages, attorney’s fees, and discretionary costs

to the plaintiffs, J. Craig Reed and wife, Kristi L. Reed (“the

Reeds”) to remedy a violation of the Act, i.e., a

misrepresentation by the seller of the property as to whether

the location of the residence violates a subdivision setback

restriction. The seller of the residence, West Knox

Properties, Inc. (“West Knox”), appeals, raising three issues:

1. Did the Chancellor properly determine that West Knox had violated plaintiffs’ rights under the Act?

2. Did the Chancellor correctly determine the amount of compensatory damages to which the Reeds were entitled in order to cure the violation of the setback requirement?

3. Are the plaintiffs entitled to an award of $5,300 in attorney’s fees and an award of $2,803.10 in discretionary costs?

The Reeds argue in their brief that this case should be

remanded “for consideration of an additional award of attorney’

s fees incident to the defense of this appeal.”

Page 2 I.

In December, 1994, the Reeds purchased a

newly-constructed house in the Crest Haven Subdivision of Knox

County from defendant West Knox. The purchase price was

$138,350. At the closing, West Knox gave the Reeds a warranty

deed, which deed provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

[West Knox] for itself and for its successors does hereby covenant with the [Reeds], their heirs and assigns that it is lawfully seized in fee simple of the premises above conveyed and has full power, authority and right to convey the same, that said premises are free from all encumbrances except the county property taxes, and that it will forever warrant and defend the said premises and the title thereto against the lawful claims of all persons whomsoever.

(Emphasis added). The deed further provides that the

conveyance is “made subject to all applicable restrictions,

easements, and building set back lines of record....” By

virtue of this edict, the conveyance was made subject to a

provision of the subdivision restrictions stating that no

building could be located within five feet of any side lot

line.

At the closing, the title agent instructed the Reeds

to sign a survey plat that reflected the layout of the house

on the property. The survey plat shows that the house faces

generally south; and that the side lot lines run generally

Page 3 from south to north as one faces the property. The front lot

line is wider than the rear lot line. Thus, the width of the

property narrows from the front to the back.

A notation in cursive on the plat indicates that a

building setback of five feet is required along the side lot

lines. Another such notation indicates that a five-foot

utility and/or drainage easement exists inside the side lot

lines. The northeast corner of the house is shown on the plat

as being very close to the eastern lot line. This aspect of

the survey was not mentioned at the closing, and neither of

the Reeds interpreted the plat as reflecting a violation of

the setback requirement.

When the Reeds inspected the property, they believed

that the house was properly located on the lot. Mr. Reed

noted that the house seemed to blend with the rest of the

subdivision in terms of the distance between their house and

the neighboring houses. When the Reeds inspected the

property, the lot lines were not staked. Thus, even though

the northeast corner of the house is 1.9 feet from the eastern

lot line, this fact was not readily apparent from an on-site

inspection. 1

The Reeds did not discover the encroachment until

their neighbor advised them that he planned to erect a fence

along the Reeds’ eastern lot line. In planning the fence, the

Page 4 neighbor did a survey of the property and discovered that the

Reeds’ house intruded into the setback area. This was the

first notice the Reeds had that the house violated a provision

of the subdivision restrictions.

The Reeds brought suit against West Knox, alleging a

violation of the Act and requesting treble damages. 2 Upon

hearing the proof, the court awarded the Reeds a judgment in

the amount of $3,600. Thereafter, the Reeds filed a motion to

reopen the proof and to recover treble damages, attorney’s

fees, and discretionary costs. While denying the motion to

reopen the proof and to award treble damages, the court

granted an award of attorney’s fees and discretionary costs.

West Knox filed a motion to reduce the judgment by

$3,000, the amount that the defendant title attorney paid to

settle the claim against him. In its memorandum opinion, the

trial court held that West Knox was entitled to the requested

reduction. In reviewing the amount of the judgment, the court

also reconsidered its initial award of damages:

This review has led to the conclusion that the amount of the damages awarded Plaintiffs at trial was erroneous. The award was based upon West Knox’s contention that the error in the location of Plaintiffs’ home on the lot could be remedied by taking a notch out of the corner of their house at a cost of $3,600.00. While notching out could correct the location problem, in ruling in favor of that solution virtually no

Page 5 consideration was given to Plaintiffs’ view of how the location problem should be resolved. The notching out and damages resulting therefrom would be proper for a commercial structure in which aesthetic considerations are of lesser, if any significant, import. However, in considering the amount and extent of damages to a home aesthetics are generally entitled to greater consideration. See: Edenfield v. Woodlawn Manor, Inc. , 462 S.W.2d 237, 240-242 (Tenn.App. 1970). Applying an essentially commercial standard to the allowance of damages in this case, rather than a residential standard, was error.

Plaintiffs sought to have the correction

to their home be made by squaring off its

entire end, and they objected to having a

notch taken out of a corner of it.

Plaintiffs’ aesthetic sensibilities were

accorded essentially no weight.

Plaintiffs view that a squared off end on

the house would be aesthetically more in

keeping with the generally square type of

home they contracted for and which they

believed they had purchased, rather than a

house with a notched out corner is

understandable, and has merit. While

Plaintiffs’ desires do not totally

control, their opinion of what would be

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