LeBlond v. Moss

1986 Mass. App. Div. 151
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 22, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1986 Mass. App. Div. 151 (LeBlond v. Moss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LeBlond v. Moss, 1986 Mass. App. Div. 151 (Mass. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Dohoney, J.

This is an action wherein the plaintiff s seek damages for breach of implied warranty, negligence, misrepresentation and violation of General Laws, Chapter 93A. The findings of the Trial Justice indicate the following background.

On April 15, 1978, the plaintiffs entered into a written agreement for the purchase of certain real estate at #25 Forest Road in Belchertown, Massachusetts from First Old Colony Builders, Inc., hereinafter referred to as “Seller”, and for the construction of a dwelling on said premises, as more particularly described in said agreement. The agreement further provided for the installation of a septic system with the provision that the Seller will “guarantee the construction and workmanship of the house for one (1) full year from date of closing” and “seller shall. .. comply with all local building codes and shall keep the buyers and brokers indemnified against all fines, penalties, and losses incurred by reason of this stipulation”. The agreement was to be performed on or before August 14,1978 and construction took place during the summer of 1978.

The defendant Philip Moss, hereinafter referred to as “Moss”, was employed by the Seller and at the direction of the Seller signed the application for a Disposal Works Construction Permit by the Seller for authority to install a septic system in connection with the construction of this dwelling. Attached to the application were plans showing the detail of the system and its location on the easterly side of the dwelling, which were drawn by Harold Mellin, a civil engineer, now deceased. The application was approved on June 10, 1978 by James A. Bonafini, on behalf of the Belchertown Board of Health. Moss then, at the direction of the Seller, installed the septic system on the west side of the dwelling, although the plan attached to the application showed the system on the east side of the dwelling. There was no evidence presented at the hearings [152]*152as to whether Moss installed the system according to the plans, other than its location relative to the dwelling. On August 29,1978, Mr. Bonafini, on behalf of the Belchertown Board of Health, certified that the installation of the system was in accordance with the provisions of Title 5 of The State Sanitary Code as described in the application of Disposal Works Construction Permit. This approval was made after the installation of the system and before it was filled

The real estate closing took place in September of 1978 and the plaintiffs and their family took occupancy of the completed dwelling. In March of 1979, the plaintiffs noticed a black fluid with a sewage type of odor oozing from the ground near the leach field of the septic system. The situation worsened.

During the week of April 19, 1979, Moss visited the premises, observed the problem and conferred with the plaintiffs. Moss suggested that a fifth trench in the leach field might solve the problem, and at the direction of the Seller, Moss installed a fifth trench on May 15,1979 with materials furnished by the Seller. The problem abated until September of 1979 when the blackfluid reappeared. The plaintiffs called Mr. Dudek and Mr. Bonafini of the Belchertown Board of Health who observed the condition. The plaintiffs wrote a letter to the Seller but received no reply.

The condition worsened and the plaintiffs hired John A. O’Keefe, a civil engineer, in November of 1979 who surveyed the premises and drew up a plan for a new septic system. O’Keefe discovered that the tank and leach field were not located as shown on the Millin plan. The Belchertown Board of Health approved the new plan but could not approve the new application for a Disposal Works Construction Permit as drainage easements had been created since the construction of the dwelling on both sides of the house. In February of 1980, the Town of Belchertown, at a special town meeting, removed the drainage easement on the east side of the house, the new application for a Disposal Works Construction Permit was approved by the Belchertown Board of Health in May of 1980 and a new septic system was installed in June of 1980. The plaintiffs expended a total sum of $6,000.57 for this new system, which included a charge of $1,100.00 for the O’Keefe survey and plan. The new system has operated properly since that time.

The Trial Justice found that the defendant did not breach any implied warranty, that he was not negligent, that he was not liable for misrepresentation, and that he did not engage in unfair or deceptive practices.The plaintiffs filed certain Requests for Rulings of Law which were denied.

An analysis of the respective claims of the defendant indicate that the findings for the defendant were warranted.

Breach of Implied Warranty. The Trial Justice found no breach of implied warranty on the basis that Moss was an employee of the Seller and had no contractual relationship with the plaintiff. The plaintiffs take exception to this and have cited strong authority to us that a direct contractual relationship is not necessary for recovery. Massachusetts was one of the leading jurisdictions in imposing liability in tort on manufacturers or suppliers of chattels when they were negligently made despite lack of privity. See Carter vs. Yardley, Ltd., 319 Mass. 92 (1946). However, the rule had been different with respect to allegedly negligent construction work. In Cunningham vs. T.A. Gillespie, Co., 241 Mass. 280 (1922) the Supreme Judicial Court refused to [153]*153assess similar liability against such a building contractor. However, in McDonough vs. Whalen, 365 Mass. 506 (1974) this rule was expressly abolished and the Court stated

We therefore hold that a builder or contractor may be liable for injuries or damage caused by his negligence to persons with whom he has no contractual relation and even though his work is completed and accepted by the owner before the injuries or damage occurred. Liability will be imposed, however, only if it is forseeable that the contractor’s work, if negligently done, may cause damage to the property or injury to persons living on or using the premises.

The McDonough case is particularly interesting in that it involved the installation of a septic system by defendants who were never the owners of the property and had no connection with the plaintiffs. Similarly, in Morris vs. Holt, 380 Mass. 133 (1980) the defendants were the owners of certain property and built an addition over a cesspool. The plaintiffs purchased the property from the grantee of the defendants. The Court had no difficulty in finding the defendants liable saying

The fact that the plaintiffs and Holt had no contractual relationship does not aid the defendants. In McDonough v. Whalen, 365 Mass. 506 (1975), we rejected any requirement of privity in a similar (but not identical) situation and upheld the right of the purchaser of a new house to recover for the consequences of the negligence of both the designer and the installer of a septic system on the plaintiffs’ premises. Id. at 510-512. See generally Annot., 25 A.L.R.3d 383, 399-402 (1969). We found no sound reason to treat a builder of houses or other realty structures differently from a manufacturer of chattels. McDonough vs. Whalen, supra at 511. We held that a contractual relationship was not essential to the establishment of liability for foreseeable harm to the property or injury to persons living on or using the premises. Id. at 512.

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Bluebook (online)
1986 Mass. App. Div. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leblond-v-moss-massdistctapp-1986.