Oxton v. Rudland

2017 SD 35, 897 N.W.2d 356, 2017 WL 2590206, 2017 S.D. LEXIS 70
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 2017
Docket28070; 28084
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2017 SD 35 (Oxton v. Rudland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxton v. Rudland, 2017 SD 35, 897 N.W.2d 356, 2017 WL 2590206, 2017 S.D. LEXIS 70 (S.D. 2017).

Opinion

WILBUR, Retired Justice

[HI.] The purchasers of a home brought suit against the sellers for fraud and failure to disclose defects. The circuit court dismissed the purchasers’ claims on summary judgment. The purchasers appeal. We reverse and remand.

Background

[¶2.] In February 2013, Dwight Oxton executed a purchase agreement for a home located at 1017 Gladys Street in Rapid City, South Dakota owned by Eugene and Cathy Rudland. The Rudlands had purchased it for $165,000 from Todd and Kari Wang just a couple months before—in December 2012 and listed it for sale for $262,500. When the Rudlands listed the home for sale, they prepared a property disclosure statement. On the disclosure statement, they indicated that they had installed a “new sidewalk slab” and repaired “slight sheetrock cracking.” In a handwritten statement in the section for additional comments, the Rudlands noted that they had not lived in the home and were “selling the home as is.” The Oxtons received the property disclosure statement and made an offer to purchase the home for $245,000. They made then* offer contingent upon the sale of their home in Florida and set a closing for March 29, 2013. They also made their offer contingent on obtaining a property inspection, which they obtained.

[¶3.] Real estate agent Terrance J. Wo-jtanowicz acted as a limited agent for Dwight in this transaction. The Oxtons’ home in Floi’ida did not sell by March 29, 2013, but they still wanted to purchase the home. Wojtanowicz advised the parties to enter into a contract for deed.

[¶4.] On April 12, 2013, Dwight Oxton and the Rudlands entered into a contract for deed for the same property to be purchased at the same price. The contract for deed indicated that Dwight was purchasing the home “as is” and that the parties agreed that neither party made any representations or warranties except those made in the contract for deed. The contract reiterated: “Buyer further acknowledges that he has made an inspection of the property and is fully aware of the environmental condition of the property and further confirms it [sic] is buying the property ‘as-is’ with no representations or warranties from Sellers regarding the environmental condition of the property.” The agreement contained an integration clause, indicating that it constituted the entire agreement between the parties.

[115.] Within a year after moving into the home, the Oxtons began to notice new cracks in the sheetrock throughout the home. The Oxtons later learned from the Wangs that the home had been the subject of a prior lawsuit when the Wangs owned it. The Wangs told the Oxtons that the home suffered significant damage because of major settling and the presence of expansive soil. The Oxtons also learned that Wojtanwicz had acted as an expert for the Wangs in that lawsuit. In his report, Wo-jtanwicz opined that the home’s value if sold “as is” would be between $150,000 and $155,000 because of the presence of expansive soil. The Wangs told the Oxtons that they sold the home after the lawsuit settled. The Oxtons learned that Wojtanwicz had acted as the limited agent in the sale of the home from the Wangs to the Rud-lands. The Oxtons also learned that the Rudlands had received a property disclosure statement, which indicated that the home had “major settling,” that the “house sold as is,” that expansive soils existed, and that the “[h]ome was part of a lawsuit do [sic] to settling and is being sold as is[.]”

*359 [¶6.] In July 2014, the Oxtons brought suit against the Rudlands and Wojtanow-icz. This appeal concerns only the suit against the Rudlands. The Oxtons claimed that the Rudlands violated SDCL 43-4-38 when they negligently and intentionally failed to disclose defects. They also asserted that the Rudlands fraudulently misrepresented the value of the home by selling it “as is” and fraudulently deceived Dwight by suppressing facts known to the Rud-lands related to the property. The Oxtons sought compensatory and punitive damages.

[¶7.] The Rudlands answered and asserted that any problems with the home were caused by the Oxtons’ undertaking of significant landscaping, which they claimed compromised the ability to keep water away from the home’s walls and away from the soil beneath the home. The Rudlands also asserted multiple affirmative defenses. The Rudlands counterclaimed against Dwight Oxton for breach of contract based on the alterations he completed to the property, including the landscaping project, and for Dwight’s failure to maintain property and liability insurance coverage and name the Rudlands as additional insureds. They claimed that they gave Dwight notice of his defaults under the contract and that Dwight failed to cure the defaults. Because of Dwight’s breaches and failures to cure, the Rudlands requested that the circuit court order the Oxtons to vacate the property and award the Rud-lands damages, costs, and attorney’s fees.

[¶8.] The Rudlands moved for partial summary judgment. They argued that the unambiguous language of the contract for deed foreclosed the Oxtons’ claim that the Rudlands violated SDCL 43-4-38 and the claims that the Rudlands misrepresented any facts or fraudulently concealed any facts. According to the Rudlands, Dwight agreed to buy the home “as is” and agreed that the Rudlands made no representations or warranties other than those made in the contract for deed. In response, the Oxtons asked the circuit court to consider parol evidence.

[¶9.] After a hearing, the circuit court granted the Rudlands’ motion for partial summary judgment. The court found the language of the contract for deed unambiguous and refused to consider parol evidence. Specifically, the court held that “[t]he enforceable, fully-integrated and unambiguous contract disposes of all causes of action against the Rudlands.” In regard to the Oxtons’ claims of fraud, the court refused to consider parol evidence because the purchase agreement and property disclosure statement had “been, expressly supplanted by the terms of the contract for deed when Oxtons could not close on the original transaction” and under the contract for deed, the Oxtons purchased the property “as is.” The court further concluded that there was “no factual support for the claim that Dwight Oxton was fraudulently induced to enter into the contract for deed.” In the court’s view, it would be a “twist of logic” to allow the Oxtons to use the property disclosure statement to support their fraud claim when the Oxtons agreed to buy the property “as is.”

[¶10.] In regard to the Oxtons’ claims that the Rudlands negligently and intentionally failed to disclose defects as required by SDCL 43-4-38, the court found Lucero v. Van Wie, 1999 S.D. 109, 598 N.W.2d 893 controlling. In that case, this Court held that parties can waive the requirement of SDCL 43-4-38. Relying on Lucero, the circuit court held that the contract for deed provided that necessary waiver.

[¶11.] The Oxtons appeal, asserting the following issues:

*360 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 SD 35, 897 N.W.2d 356, 2017 WL 2590206, 2017 S.D. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxton-v-rudland-sd-2017.