Paul Leonard v. Leo's Exterminating Services, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 27, 2010
DocketE2009-01398-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Leonard v. Leo's Exterminating Services, Inc. (Paul Leonard v. Leo's Exterminating Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Leonard v. Leo's Exterminating Services, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 21, 2010 Session

PAUL LEONARD v. LEO’S EXTERMINATING SERVICES, INC.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Sullivan County No. 17-574-L E. G. Moody, Chancellor

No. E2009-01398-COA-R3-CV - FILED MAY 27, 2010

In May 1997, Paul Leonard (“the Homeowner”) discovered termites in his home. On June 11, 1997, he contracted with Leo’s Exterminating Services, Inc., to treat his home. Leo’s performed the initial treatment. The contract provided for annual renewals at a reduced rate. The Homeowner renewed twice. The last renewal was on June 11, 1999, which renewal qualified the Homeowner to receive, free of additional charge, retreatment1 for a “live infestation” until June 11, 2000. Unfortunately, the initial treatment did not eliminate the termites. The Homeowner reported a recurrence of termites several times between 1997 and 1999. Leo’s made additional treatments. In 1998, Leo’s assisted the homeowner with repairs to a sagging hallway over the area of infestation. In 1999, the Homeowner switched to another exterminator who installed a “bait” system to control the termites. On July 24, 2000, the Homeowner filed this action against Leo’s in which he alleged that his home had been damaged as a result of deficient treatment by Leo’s. He alleged a breach of contract and violation of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“the TCPA”), Tenn. Code Ann. § 47- 18-101 et seq. (2001). In the bench trial that ensued, Leo’s challenged almost every aspect of the Homeowner’s case including the causal connection between the deficiencies and the damage. Leo’s also raised the defense that the contract limited the Homeowner’s remedy to retreatment only, and that the statute of limitations had expired on the TCPA claim. In its opinion and order, entered as the final judgment, the trial court found that Leo’s had failed to control the termites and that its failure amounted to a breach of the contract; that the Homeowner sustained damages of $39,910.87 as a result of the breach; and that Leo’s was guilty of willful deception in violation of the TCPA, justifying trebled damages of $119,732.61. The trial court also awarded the Homeowner his resonable attorney’s fees of $30,000. Leo’s appeals. We affirm that part of the judgment awarding damages of

1 Normally, we would hyphenate the word “retreatment” to distinguish its root word, “retreat,” from what soldiers are forced to do when overcome by the enemy. However, based on our reading of the cases, and the usage in this case, it appears that the usage in the pest control industry is to spell it as one word without the hyphen. We have followed that practice in this opinion. $39,910.87 for breach of the contract. We reverse that part of the judgment awarding treble damages and attorney’s fees under the TCPA because we find that the TCPA claim is barred by the statute of limitations.

Tenn. R. App. P 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Case Remanded

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Gary L. Edwards and Christie Hayes, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the appellant, Leo’s Exterminating Services, Inc.

John P. Chiles, Kingsport, Tennessee, for the appellee, Paul Leonard

OPINION

I.

The Homeowner lives in a house he had built in 1968. When the house was built it was treated for termites with a product that is now obsolete and banned from use but is generally considered to be effective against termites for at least a decade and possible multiple decades. The first indication of a termite problem was in May 1997, when the Homeowner saw a “swarm” of termites in the basement.

The configuration of the house is important to an understanding of this appeal. The house is rectangular in shape with a full basement. The long part of the house runs parallel to the street, with the front of the house facing the street. The front, back, and left side of the basement, as you face the house, are below grade. A two-car garage makes up about half of the basement and opens to the right as one faces the house. To the left of the garage is the finished part of the basement which takes up the other half of the basement area. The basement floor is a concrete slab. The stairs from the top floor start at the back of the house and descend, toward the front of the house, into the basement. The stairs traverse approximately one-half the width of the home. The stairs end at a doorway in the basement at the bottom of the stairs (“the basement doorway”). The framing for the basement doorway is a short wall that makes contact at its top with a long wooden 6 inch X 10 inch beam (“the center beam”). The center beam runs the full length of the house near the mid-point of the width of the house. The center beam, in turn, supports the floor joists for the main floor. The top floor has a hallway that runs with, and directly above, the center beam. The

-2- refrigerator for the kitchen in the top floor is plumbed for an automatic ice-maker and sits near the hallway, in fairly close proximity to the basement doorway, just slightly to the side of the center beam.

The significance of the basement doorway is that, by all accounts, the framing around the doorway is the main point of entry of the termites. Specifically, one of the framing members of the basement doorway extends below the slab where it makes what is referred to in the industry as “wood to ground contact.” Wood to ground contact is a danger point for termite control because termites are wood-destroying insects that are cryptobiotic, which means they avoid exposing themselves to the open air2 . The typical colony lives beneath the surface of the ground. They need food, moisture and shelter to survive. Wood is the termite’s food. The ground supplies the moisture and shelter. Obviously, when the food source comes into contact with the shelter and moisture, the creatures are invited to eat. When they travel above ground, they build shelter tunnels out of their own feces and the most convenient building material available–which is usually mud. In this case there is no dispute that the tunnels built by the termites in the Homeowner’s basement were built with mud.

The significance of the center beam is that it is the focal point of the structural damage to the house. It supports the floor and walls along the middle of the top level of the house. Approximately 25 feet of the forty-plus foot beam is now weakened by termite damage and needs to be replaced. The Homeowner testified that when he first discovered the termites in 1997–prior to Leo’s involvement– approximately three feet of the center beam showed active termite damage when prodded with a screwdriver. The initial damage to the center beam was immediately above the framing of the basement doorway.

The significance of the hallway is that, as a result of termite damage to the structural supports, the hallway was found in May 1998 to be sagging approximately ½ inch below the walls. The Homeowner asked Leo’s to help him with the repairs and Leo’s agreed. The Homeowner removed the top layer of flooring, and took responsibility for replacing the top level of flooring and Leo’s took over the work from there. When Leo’s removed the particle board substrate in the hallway, it found a layer of moisture barrier. According to the Homeowner, there was a minute amount of moisture present that the Homeowner attributed to condensation. According to Randy Rinick, who is an employee of Leo’s, the flooring was “sopping wet” with moisture. By all accounts, however, the bottom of the plywood subflooring situated below the moisture barrier was dry.

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