Kraft v. Bartholomew

620 P.2d 755, 1 Haw. App. 459, 1980 Haw. App. LEXIS 164
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1980
DocketNO. 6695
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 620 P.2d 755 (Kraft v. Bartholomew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraft v. Bartholomew, 620 P.2d 755, 1 Haw. App. 459, 1980 Haw. App. LEXIS 164 (hawapp 1980).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PADGETT, J.

This case involves an appeal and a cross-appeal from a judgment entered below and an order for remittitur. Appellants Barry Kraft and Frances Kraft were awarded a judgment of $11,606.56 against Appellee, Cross-Appellant American Abstract and Escrow, Inc. The court below, pursuant to motion, reduced the jury award to $8,200 and entered an amended judgment therefor. Appellants appeal from the reduction in the judgment and from the granting of a partial directed verdict in favor of appellee preventing appellants from recovering $12,000 which they had paid to Stephen L. *460 Bartholomew and Marjorie K. Bartholomew. The Bartholomews were defendants below who were dismissed without prejudice because no service could be made upon them. Appellee cross-appeals contending a directed verdict should have been entered in its favor at the close of appellants’ evidence.

Three issues are presented in this appeal. First, whether appellee had a duty in the circumstances of this case to inform appellants, upon inquiry by them, what had been revealed in the preliminary title report with respect to the property in question. We hold that there was such a duty and that therefore, appellee’s motion for a directed verdict was properly denied. Second, whether the court below erred in entering a remittitur without giving to appellants the alternative of a new trial. We hold that the court’s action was erroneous. Third, whether the court below erred in granting a verdict in favor of the appellee with respect to the $12,000 deposit paid by appellants to the Bartholomews. We hold that there was no error in so partially granting appellee’s motion for a directed verdict.

On October 6, 1975, appellants entered into an exchange agreement with the Bartholomews whereby they were to acquire the Bartholomews’ premises at 580 North Kalaheo Street, Kailua, Oahu, Hawaii. That agreement provided that escrow was to be handled by Appellee American Abstract and Escrow, Inc. On October 7th, appellants delivered to Stephen Bartholomew a cashier’s check of $12,000 made out to Bartholomew as payee as a down payment on the Kalaheo Street premises. In November, appellants moved in to the premises. On December 17, 1975, appellants and the Bartholomews executed a Deposit, Receipt, Offer and Acceptance' agreement setting forth the terms of their transaction. Pursuant to the request of Bartholomew, appellants made a check for $100 for “escrow fees on 580 North Kalaheo” and turned it over to Bartholomew with the payee left blank. Bartholomew told them, at the time, that he was ninety per cent certain he would use appellee’s services. Bartholomew apparently filled in appellee’s name as the payee and delivered the check and a copy of the DROA to appellee.

*461 Appellee cashed the check, assigned an escrow number to the transaction, placed its employee Mary Castro in charge of the matter and ordered a preliminary title search. That search, which is dated December 29, 1975, and which was delivered to appellee early in January, revealed a plethora of encumbrances against the title of the Bartholomews to the premises in question including judgment liens, mortgages and delinquent taxes. Beginning in January, appellants made numerous inquiries of appellee as to what was holding up the closing of the transaction. Appellee never gave a copy of the title search to the appellants although it gave one to Bartholomew. It claimed to have given a copy to Hawaii National Bank with the permission of appellants in April of 1976 although the records of Hawaii National Bank refuted that claim.

Although the evidence is not without conflict, the jury could have believed from the testimony of Appellant Barry Kraft that all the appellee ever revealed to him was that there was some problem closing the transaction but it looked like everything was going to be okay; that he was unable to get specifics from appellee as to what the problem was; that he accordingly made inquiry of Bartholomew who assured him that the problem had to do with a dispute with Fireside Thrift over interest charges; and that when he reported this to appellee, he was left with the impression that that was the problem. Appellee knew that there were, in fact, a whole multitude of problems including, as we have said, mortgages, judgment liens and delinquent taxes.

There is also evidence from which an inference could have been drawn by the jury that while appellee’s president admitted that appellants should have been told that the title was not clear and that there were clouds on the title, they were not, in fact, so told despite their inquiries. Appellee’s president did take the position in his testimony that appellee had no responsibility to inform appellants of the lis pendens against the property in question when the appellants made inquiry as to what was holding up the closing of the transaction.

During the period that appellants were making their inquiries, they were also expending money on the improvement *462 of the premises in reliance on the belief that the transaction would close. In August, they discovered through a phone call from the Mortgagee Fireside Thrift that a mortgage foreclosure suit had been pending since the inception of the transaction. Eventually, the property was foreclosed and appellants lost the down payment which they had made as well as the monies they had spent in improving the premises. There was testimony from them as to resulting mental anguish, pain and suffering.

At the close of appellants’ evidence, appellee moved for a directed verdict. The court granted the directed verdict with respect to the claim for the $12,000 paid to Bartholomew, apparently on the ground that the appellants were at least as much at fault if not more than the appellee in the loss of that money. The other issues were permitted to go to the jury. The court below also denied appellee’s requested instructions to the effect that there was no contract between appellants and appellee and that appellee owed no duty to the appellants. The jury returned the verdict for $6,506.56 special damages and $5,100 general damages. A judgment pursuant thereto was entered.

Appellee then moved for judgment non obstante veredicto, for a new trial and for the granting of a remittitur. The court below denied the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto but reduced the amount of the judgment to the amount of specials (exclusive of the $12,000) claimed by the appellants, or $8,200. The order granting the remittitur did not give the appellants the option of accepting the remittitur or undergoing a new trial. An amended judgment accordingly was entered and this appeal followed.

Appellee contends that, absent escrow instructions requiring it to do so, it was under no duty upon appellants’ inquiry to reveal to them that there were problems with the title of the premises in question. Numerous cases are cited by both sides from other jurisdictions, none of which involve a set of facts closely paralleling those which we have here.

Appellee accepted and cashed appellants’ check for escrow fees. It assigned an escrow number to the account, put Mary Castro in charge thereof and ordered a preliminary title *463 search.

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Bluebook (online)
620 P.2d 755, 1 Haw. App. 459, 1980 Haw. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraft-v-bartholomew-hawapp-1980.