Jeff Dayton v. James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 31, 2011
DocketM2010-00922-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jeff Dayton v. James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc. (Jeff Dayton v. James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc.) 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
Jeff Dayton v. James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 15, 2011 Session

JEFF DAYTON, ET AL. v. JAMES ACKERMAN d/b/a HOME DESIGN, INC., ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 30704 Jeffrey S. Bivins, Judge

No. M2010-00922-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 31, 2011

Sellers of a house provided the purchasers with a Limited Warranty in which different aspects of the house were warranted to be without defects for a term not to exceed one year. The purchasers testified they complained two months following the closing that the windows did not operate properly, and the sellers testified the purchasers did not complain about the windows until after more than two years. The trial court found the purchasers’ testimony more credible, and based on the purchasers’ expert and other evidence, concluded the installation of the windows was defective. The court awarded the purchasers damages, consisting of the replacement cost for all the windows, even though not all the windows were defective. The sellers alleged the trial court erred by excluding its expert from testifying, by determining the window installation was defective, and in the way it calculated the purchasers’ damages. We affirm the trial court’s judgment as modified to correct a computational error in the calculation of damages.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed As Modified

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, joined.

Adam O. Knight, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc., Home Design, Inc., and James Ackerman and wife, Laureen Ackerman, Individually.

Donald N. Capparella, Candi Renee Henry, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Jeff Dayton and wife, Kasindra Dayton. OPINION

This is a breach of warranty case involving issues of notice, causation, and the proper calculation of damages for improperly installed windows in a newly constructed house. The case was tried by a judge, who rendered findings of fact and rulings of law in favor of the homeowners and against the sellers. The sellers appeal, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment in all respects. The trial court made a computational error in calculating the damages award, and we remand simply to correct this error.

I. B ACKGROUND

A. L IMITED W ARRANTY

Jeff and Kasindra Dayton purchased a house on August 17, 2000, from James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc., and his wife Laureen Ackerman (together, “the Ackermans”). The Ackermans operate a construction business together, and they designed and built the house the Daytons purchased. On the day of the closing, the Ackermans provided the Daytons with a Limited Warranty that included the following pertinent language:

For a period of one year, the floor, ceilings, walls, and other internal structural components of the home that are not covered by other portions of this Limited Warranty will be free of defects in workmanship.

.....

For a period of 60 days, the following items will be free of defects in materials or workmanship: doors (including hardware); windows; electric switches; receptacles; and fixtures; caulking around exterior openings; plumbing fixtures; and cabinet work.

As described in the Limited Warranty provided to you, which this statement of Nonwarrantable Conditions is made part of, the builder will correct defects that arise during defined time periods after construction is completed.

-2- B. P ROBLEMS WITH THE H OUSE

Shortly after moving into the house, the Daytons began experiencing problems, such as toilets backing up, water leaking from an upstairs bathroom through the ceiling into the downstairs area, and a malfunctioning hot water heater. As problems arose, the Ackermans generally addressed them to the Daytons’ overall satisfaction. However, when the Daytons began experiencing problems with their windows to the extent that they were unable to latch the windows in a closed position, the Ackermans did not resolve the Daytons’ concerns. The Daytons ultimately replaced all the windows in their house and filed a complaint in June 2004 against the Ackermans, their company Home Design, Inc., and Martin Doors, Inc., the company that supplied the windows to the Ackermans.

Following preliminary investigations, the Daytons dismissed Martin Doors from their action in August 2004. The Daytons filed an Amended Complaint in September 2004 against the Ackermans, alleging breach of contract, breach of warranty, misrepresentation, and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act. The Daytons sought damages for, inter alia, replacing the windows in their house, the cost of shutters for the windows, and the cost of repairing structural defects they alleged existed in the house.1

Discovery between the parties proceeded, and the trial court entered an Agreed Order in February 2005 setting the case for trial on May 31, 2005. The parties then asked the court to move the trial date to August 9, 2005, to allow additional discovery to take place. The court agreed and entered an Agreed Scheduling Order on May 24, 2005.

Trial did not begin on August 9 as the parties anticipated, and on October 10, 2005, the Daytons filed a motion requesting permission to file a third-party complaint against Martin Doors based on the theory that if the Ackermans were found liable for the Daytons’ problems with the windows, Martin Doors shared comparative fault. The trial court denied the Daytons’ motion, stating the motion was “not well taken and should be denied.”

C. T RIAL T ESTIMONY

The trial of this case occurred over several days, beginning on April 25, 2007. Mr. and Mrs. Dayton both testified that they began experiencing problems with several of their windows in October 2000. Mrs. Dayton testified that she did not become aware of the problems with the windows until the fall, because up to that time she and Mr. Dayton kept the windows closed and used the air conditioning. However, once the heat of the summer began to abate, she and Mr. Dayton began to open the windows during the days and

1 The alleged structural defects are not at issue in this appeal.

-3- experienced problems closing the windows in the evenings when the temperatures fell. Mrs. Dayton testified that she complained to Mrs. Ackerman about the windows not working properly in October 2000. Mr. Dayton testified he complained to Mr. Ackerman about the windows in the fall of 2000 as well as in the spring of 2001. Neither Mr. Dayton nor Mrs. Dayton could provide a firm date in October when they first informed the Ackermans of their problems with the windows.

Mrs. Ackerman testified she may have had a conversation with Mrs. Dayton about problems with the windows, but she did not think this occurred until at least one year after the Daytons closed on their house. Mr. Ackerman testified that the Daytons did not complain of any problems they were having with their windows until the fall of 2002. Mr. Ackerman testified that when he received the complaint about the windows, he contacted Martin Doors & Window (“Martin Doors”), the company that supplied the windows and asked Martin Doors to send a representative out to the Daytons’ house to look at the windows. Mr. Ackerman explained that he assumed the Martin Doors representative took care of whatever problem the Daytons were experiencing.

A representative from Martin Doors testified that he went out to the Daytons’ house to check their windows, but he could not remember what year this was. The representative testified, however, that he believed the windows were improperly installed. He explained that the frames of the windows bowed out, as if they were crimped.

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Jeff Dayton v. James Ackerman d/b/a Home Design, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeff-dayton-v-james-ackerman-dba-home-design-inc-tennctapp-2011.