McIsaac v. Huckins (In Re Huckins)

17 B.R. 620, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4894
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedFebruary 4, 1982
Docket19-20020
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 B.R. 620 (McIsaac v. Huckins (In Re Huckins)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIsaac v. Huckins (In Re Huckins), 17 B.R. 620, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4894 (Me. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

FREDERICK A. JOHNSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding arises out of a dispute which has been smoldering since the fall of 1976. The Plaintiffs now seek a determination that their claim against the Debtor is excepted from discharge on the ground that the Debtor obtained money from the Plaintiffs by false pretenses, false representation, or fraud.

After carefully reviewing the evidence the Court concludes that the Debtor did obtain money from the Plaintiffs by a false representation.

In 1975 the Debtor was a general partner and president of Indian Head Estates, a Maine partnership. The partnership owned a small housing development, with the same name, located in the Town of Wells. The *622 development was situated upon 20 acres more or less purchased by the Debtor and Harry V. Catsoulis, also a general partner, on September 29, 1975 and conveyed by them to the partnership.

When the Debtor and his partner purchased the 20 acres they were unaware that the property, or part of it, had served the Town of Wells, in former years, as a town dump, or disposal site.

During November of 1975 the foundation for what was to be the Plaintiffs’ house was poured. During December the well which was to serve the house, was drilled. The house was completed during February or March of 1976.

On October 6, 1976 the Plaintiffs were shown the house by a real estate broker. The Debtor was present. After an examination of the house they signed a contract for its purchase. The Debtor also signed the contract in his capacity as President of the partnership. 1

On October 10,1976, the Plaintiffs visited the house in order to check it out and show it to Mrs. Mclsaac’s parents. The Debtor was present. During this visit the Plaintiffs turned on the water for the first time. The water had a very bad smell and taste. When the Plaintiffs questioned the Debtor about this he assured them that the water was fine, that it was a newly drilled well and that all it needed was flushing.

The Debtor explained to the Plaintiffs, who were unfamiliar with rural living, that flushing merely meant running the water for a few hours in order to flush out old water that had been standing in the system for several months.

On the next weekend the Plaintiffs visited the house again with another relative. In checking the water the Plaintiffs found that it still had an offensive odor. The Debtor again assured the Plaintiffs that all the water needed was a good flushing, that he had been too busy to do it, but that he would take care of it.

On November 15th the Plaintiffs again visited the property for the specific purpose of checking the water. When they arrived on the premises they found the Debtor and another man in the basement installing a water softener. Mr. Huckins again assured the Plaintiffs that a water softener would take care of any problem and that he had not yet had time to flush the system. He promised to take care of it.

On November 19th the closing on the property was held. Mrs. Mclsaac was reluctant to go through with the closing until the problem with the water was settled. Again, the Debtor assured the Plaintiffs that there was no problem with the water that a good flushing would not take care of and that he had not yet had a chance to do so. Thus reassured, the Plaintiffs went through with the closing.

On the next day, November 20, 1976, the Plaintiffs again visited the property. In checking the water they found that there was no improvement, so Mr. Mclsaac himself undertook to flush the system. He ran the water all day and observed no improvement in the smell of the water. Again, on the next day, he flushed the system all day and the odor persisted.

The Plaintiffs moved into the house a week or so later. The water was still bad but the Debtor continued to reassure them. The Plaintiffs continued to flush the system. The running water filled the house with a putrid smell.

*623 On December 20, 1976, at the Debtor’s request, Mr. Partridge, who had originally drilled the well, visited the site. He resealed the well which cut off a vein of water located 27 feet under the surface. 2

After Mr. Partridge resealed the well there was insufficient water to serve the requirements of the house. He then red-rilled the well to 135 feet and was still unable to obtain sufficient water.

Finally, in the spring of 1977, the water stopped completely. The Plaintiffs arranged to hook a garden hose to a neighbor’s water supply during the summer of 1977. During the winter of 1977 and 1978 the Plaintiffs dug a trench from the neighbor’s house and buried the hose to keep it from freezing as a temporary solution to their problem.

On May 24, 1978 the Plaintiffs borrowed money and drilled a new well. The new well, although not completely satisfactory, is adequate.

The Debtor denies that he misrepresented the condition of the water to the Plaintiffs. He argues that he, in good faith, believed that a flushing of the system would correct the problem with the water system, that he was unaware of the odor of the water and that he acted in the utmost good faith in his efforts to solve the Plaintiffs’ problems. The Court, upon the evidence, must find that the Debtor knew of the existence of the water problem and knew that a flushing of the system would not solve it.

The deposition of the Plaintiffs’ neighbor, Joann Flood, which was admitted into evidence, demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence that the Defendant was aware of the odoriferous water several weeks before the Plaintiffs signed the contract for the purchase of the property. Mrs. Flood lived in the house next to the Plaintiffs, which she had purchased during the early summer of 1976. During that summer Mrs. Flood used the water from the Plaintiffs’ water system daily for watering her new lawn and other landscaping. She described the water as “stinky water.” She testified that with the lawn sprinkler on it smelled up the whole area.

The testimony of Mr. Partridge, the well driller, is also revealing. He testified that the Plaintiffs’ well was the first one drilled within the development. He recalled that the Debtor was concerned about the old dump site and the obtaining of potable water. This means that the Debtor was aware of the old Town dump during December of 1975.

Further evidence of the Debtor’s knowledge of the extent of the problem is the installation of the water softener on November 15, 1976, four days before the closing. There is no provision in the sale contract regarding a water softener. The Debtor’s gratuitous installation of this equipment is further evidence that he was aware of the extent of the problem.

Despite the Debtor’s denials and his good faith efforts to correct the problem after the fact, the Court must find that the Debt- or, prior to the sale of the house to the Plaintiffs, and during the time that he was assuring and reassuring them about the water, the Debtor knew the extent of the problem and that further flushing of the system would not solve it.

Section 523 of the Bankruptcy Code provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 B.R. 620, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcisaac-v-huckins-in-re-huckins-meb-1982.