Jade E. Robinson and Shannon K. Robinson v. William A. Welp and Joyce A. Welp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 3, 2019
Docket17-1801
StatusPublished

This text of Jade E. Robinson and Shannon K. Robinson v. William A. Welp and Joyce A. Welp (Jade E. Robinson and Shannon K. Robinson v. William A. Welp and Joyce A. Welp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jade E. Robinson and Shannon K. Robinson v. William A. Welp and Joyce A. Welp, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1801 Filed July 3, 2019

JADE E. ROBINSON and SHANNON K. ROBINSON, Plaintiffs-Appellees,

vs.

WILLIAM A. WELP and JOYCE A. WELP, Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, Steven J. Oeth,

Judge.

Home sellers appeal from the district court’s ruling finding they breached

their duty to disclose a snake problem in the home and awarding the home

buyers damages and attorney fees; home buyers cross-appeal the court’s

determination the sellers did not breach a duty in failing to disclose a pool leak

and the reduction of their requested award of attorney fees. AFFIRMED ON

BOTH APPEALS AND REMANDED.

Barry S. Kaplan of Kaplan & Frese, LLP, Marshalltown, for appellants.

Joseph M. Borg and Melissa A. Schilling of Dickinson, Mackaman, Tyler &

Hagen, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and May, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

Jade and Shannon Robinson purchased the home of William and Joyce

Welp. The Robinsons later initiated suit against the Welps, claiming the Welps

failed to disclose a number of known problems with the home. The district court

determined the Welps had a duty to disclose a snake problem pursuant to Iowa

Code chapter 558A (2016) and the purchase agreement, which they breached;

the court awarded the Robinsons damages in the amount of $64,216.42 and

costs and attorney fees of $55,212.

On appeal, the Welps challenge the district court’s ruling, arguing the

evidence does not support that there was a snake problem while they owned the

home or that they had actual knowledge of any such problem. In the alternative,

they argue newly-discovered evidence presented in their post-judgment petition

to vacate requires that the court’s judgment be vacated or modified. Additionally,

they contest the district court’s determination of “reasonable attorney fees,”

maintaining the award of fees should be further reduced.

On cross-appeal, the Robinsons maintain the district court should have

also determined that the Welps failed to properly disclose leaks in an in-ground

pool; they ask for additional damages. They also urge us to find that the district

court abused its discretion in reducing their attorney-fee request and ask for an

award of appellate attorney fees.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The Welps listed the property at issue for sale in 2014. After touring the

property a few times, the Robinsons made a full-price offer on the home for

$185,000 in late August 2014. The offer form included a requirement that the 3

“Seller or Seller’s Agent . . . deliver a written disclosure statement to Buyer prior

to accepting an offer.” Additionally, paragraph 8b provided: “Seller and Buyer

acknowledge that the Seller of the real property has a legal duty to disclose

MATERIAL ADVERSE FACTS and MATERIAL DEFECTS of which Seller has

actual knowledge and which a reasonable inspection by Buyer would not reveal.”

It also included a provision that entitled either the buyer or the seller to costs and

attorney fees from the “party at fault.”

The Welps filled out a disclosure form. One of the questions on the form

asked, “Is there a problem with mice, bats, snakes, spiders, roaches, etc?” The

form provided boxes to mark for “Yes,” “No,” or “Unknown,” and included a space

to explain the “yes” answer. The Welps marked “No.” Shannon Robinson signed

the acknowledgment as purchaser. The Welps accepted the Robinsons’ offer in

a purchase agreement signed by the Welps as sellers and by Shannon Robinson

as purchaser.

Although closing was not scheduled to take place until October, the Welps

allowed the Robinsons to move into the home a few weeks early. Two or three

days after moving in, the Robinsons found two large bull snakes in the home—a

four-foot long snake downstairs on top of the bar and a second snake on the first

floor of the home. The Robinsons, through their realtor, contacted the Welps

about the snakes, and the Welps agreed to pay for professional pest control to

come to the home. The Welps did not amend the disclosure for the home and

did not otherwise inform the Robinsons of any history of snakes.

The closing took place as scheduled in October. 4

The Robinsons found another five or six bull snakes inside the basement

of their home in the spring of 2015 and an additional three bull snakes in the fall

of 2015. They found two more in spring 2016—before construction began—and

another six or seven after. Altogether, the Robinsons estimate they found

between eighteen and twenty-two live bull snakes in the home, including one that

fell out of the drop ceiling onto Jade Robinson’s head. They also found a snake

in the pool on approximately three occasions. Additionally, they estimate they

found forty snake skins in the insulation in the walls and drop ceilings.

In spring 2016, the Robinsons hired a construction contractor, Thomas

Campbell, to remove the patio that abutted the home. Once the concrete was

removed, they found two snake nests with the remains of a number of eggs that

had been in a hollow spot under the patio. Additionally, once the concrete was

removed, Campbell noted that although the outside of the home was brick,

beneath the doorways was neither brick nor a wooden box sill, but rather bead

board insulation. The insulation had several holes through it into the basement

of the home, which Campbell and the Robinsons presumed was where snakes

had entered the home. Campbell put in box sills. For the demolition and

construction work, he charged the Robinsons $7200. He also prepared an

estimate for the Robinsons, in which he stated that he could not say the snake

problem had been eradicated because it was possible there were still snakes

living in the walls and ceilings. He stated, “The only way I can see to eradicate

the problem is to basically remove interior wall coverings on main floor and lower

level including insulation and [attic] insulation along with [front] stoop of home.” 5

He estimated it would cost $55,000 to complete the work and opined that the

home would be uninhabitable for the two months the work would take.

In early November 2016, the Robinsons offered to rescind the sale of the

property; the Welps refused to take the property back. The Robinsons then filed

a lawsuit against the Welps, alleging that by not disclosing the snake problem or

an issue with the in-ground pool leaking, the Welps breached both the

requirements of the purchase agreement and the statutory requirement to

disclose pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 558A. Based on the purchase

agreement, the Robinsons also claimed the right to recover reasonable attorney

fees and costs incurred in litigating the action.

The matter proceeded to a two-day bench trial in October 2017. At trial,

William Welp testified he owned and lived in the property at issue from 1982 to

2014. Joyce lived in the home with him from 2003 until 2014. During the years

he lived in the home, there were five times Mr. Welp found or knew someone

else found a snake in the home. Additionally, he saw three or four snakes

outside on the property each year, and other snakes made their way into the in-

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Jade E. Robinson and Shannon K. Robinson v. William A. Welp and Joyce A. Welp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jade-e-robinson-and-shannon-k-robinson-v-william-a-welp-and-joyce-a-iowactapp-2019.