Mobley v. Copeland

828 S.W.2d 717, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 679, 1992 WL 76553
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1992
Docket17573
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 828 S.W.2d 717 (Mobley v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobley v. Copeland, 828 S.W.2d 717, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 679, 1992 WL 76553 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

SHRUM, Presiding Judge.

The plaintiff, Gilbert L. Mobley, appeals from a summary judgment denying his claims for damages arising out of his purchase of residential real estate from the defendants Donald D. Copeland and Jan L. Copeland. Count I of the plaintiff’s petition was based on allegations of fraud; Count III on allegations of a breach of an implied warranty of habitability. 1

At issue on appeal is whether, considering the record before the trial court, there *719 exists a genuine issue of material fact concerning the plaintiffs allegations that the defendants made fraudulent representations or breached an implied warranty of habitability. We answer that question in the negative and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

From the pleadings, the May 24, 1990, depositions of plaintiff and both defendants, and other exhibits, the following facts emerge. The subject property, located in Springfield, was used by the defendants as their residence for 12 years. The defendants purchased the lot in 1973, and the following year they hired a contractor recommended to them by friends to build a house on the lot on a “cost-plus” basis. The house was constructed with a “crawl space” but no basement. Approximately one year after the house was completed, the defendants hired a contractor to install a swimming pool.

As of the date of his deposition, Donald Copeland had been a cookware and china retailer for approximately 35 years. In early 1989, he obtained a Missouri real estate broker license. He denied being a real estate developer. During the time the house was under construction, the defendants were, in Donald Copeland’s words, “probably out there every weekend looking things over.” Donald Copeland denied that he supervised construction of the house; at the time it was being built he was working 70 hours a week at his retail business. At the time the house was under construction, Jan Copeland was a homemaker. As of the date of her deposition, she had been employed in the travel agency business for seven years.

In May 1986, the defendants listed their property for sale at a price of $279,900 with real estate agent Ethel Curbow. The property was shown to the plaintiff by Donna Truitt, who was associated with a different real estate agency than was Cur-bow, and the plaintiff purchased the property through Truitt.

After the August 27, 1986, closing, the plaintiff discovered certain conditions of the property upon which he based his claims for damages. In his petition, he alleged that he discovered — after August 27, 1986 — that (1) the house was constructed at a low elevation on the lot, the “landscaping around the residential dwelling was not terraced away from the foundation,” and, as a result, “surface water run off from [the lot] was directed to and remained under the residential dwelling”; (2) “electrical charges ran through the swimming pool”; (3) “several air vents throughout the residential dwelling did not have air ducts leading outside”; and (4) “rain poured through the roof onto the interior walls of the residential dwelling.” For convenience, we shall refer collectively to these alleged conditions as “the house problems.”

Summarized, the plaintiffs argument for recovery under Count I is that the house problems were latent defects, the defendants knew of the defects, they had a duty to disclose the defects to him, but they failed to disclose them. 2 Disposition of the plaintiffs Count I claims requires the recitation of additional facts.

We begin with material extracted from the plaintiffs deposition and other exhibits. The plaintiffs initial contact with the property came during his first visit to Springfield, in June 1986, when he interviewed to join a group of physicians. As part of the interview process, he was shown the community by Truitt, a real estate agent, *720 whose husband was a partner in the physicians’ group. During the tour, Donna Truitt showed the defendants’ property to the plaintiff. The defendants were not home at the time. On that first visit, the plaintiff could see “how beautiful it was, what a grand purchase it would be, how well kept it had been, the aesthetics of it were highly impressive.” The plaintiff was uncertain whether he went inside the house on the first visit.

In early July 1986, the plaintiff returned to Springfield, apparently after receiving an offer to join the physicians’ group. He and Donna Truitt again visited the defendants’ home; again, the defendants were not present. After this second tour of the property, the plaintiff offered $200,000 to purchase it. The defendants rejected the plaintiff’s offer but counter-offered to sell for $244,000. By a July 13 telegram to Donna Truitt, the plaintiff accepted the $244,000 counter-offer “as relayed by Donna Truitt.” At deposition, the plaintiff insisted that his agreement to purchase the property was contingent on his “having the ability to verify that the house was worth the money on my own — my own appraisal.”

Donna Truitt secured the services of a real estate appraisal firm for the plaintiff. The plaintiff told Truitt he wanted the appraisers to “make sure the house is worth the money. If the house has got any major problems, I needed to know about it and I was confident that an appraisal would take care of it.” 3

Although the plaintiff said he had the property “inspected” by the appraisers “to see if there are any problems with the house,” he did not talk to them prior to the closing and he did not know whether he received a copy of their report prior to closing. Asked why he did not talk to them prior to closing, he said, “I was interested in the bottom line figure, and the bottom line figure was that I was not being taken; it was probably worth that value.” According to the appraisal, the market value of the property was $246,000.

At some point during the period between August 7 and the closing, the plaintiff telephoned the defendant Jan Copeland from his place of employment in Georgia to obtain information about utility companies. The plaintiff said Jan Copeland was “extremely upset” because an appraiser was at the house (or had recently been there) at a time when the house was not presentable because the defendants were “in the process of moving out,” there were “boxes everywhere,” and “all the pictures [were] off the walls.”

The plaintiff went to the property a total of “four or five times” before closing. During his tours of the property, the plaintiff looked “everywhere that I knew to look_” He confirmed he “had an opportunity to look all around the house and the grounds, do anything you wanted to,” and he agreed that no one prevented him from “checking anything that you wanted to.”

The plaintiff characterized “two or three” of his visits as “invited, scheduled, be-sure-the-Copelands-are-gone” occasions, accompanied by real estate agent Truitt. One visit, already described, concerned second mortgage financing.

The plaintiff also visited the property— alone and in the absence of the defendants — twice on the day before closing, once in the afternoon and once in the evening.

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Bluebook (online)
828 S.W.2d 717, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 679, 1992 WL 76553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobley-v-copeland-moctapp-1992.