Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp.

592 P.2d 620, 1979 Utah LEXIS 828
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1979
Docket15467
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 620 (Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp., 592 P.2d 620, 1979 Utah LEXIS 828 (Utah 1979).

Opinions

HALL, Justice:

Defendant appeals from a judgment requiring it to respond in damages for breach of an option agreement.

The basic facts pertaining to the option are not in dispute. By the terms of the agreement, plaintiff paid defendant $10,000 for a seven-month option to purchase for the sum of $502,000 some 30 acres of land in Park City, Summit County, Utah. In the event the option was exercised, defendant was then to install, or cause to be installed, a paved roadway and various utility lines to the boundary of the optioned property. Plaintiff exercised the option in a timely manner, but thereafter the defendant repudiated the agreement to install the road and the other facilities, all of which prompted the initiation of this proceeding.

This case has been tried twice. The first trial resulted in a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff for sums designated as expenditures made in reliance upon the option and for lost business profits. For reasons not discernible from the record, the trial judge subsequently granted defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The second trial was to the court, sitting without a jury. At the outset, the judge ruled, as a matter of law, that lost business profits was not a proper measure of damages in this case, but that reliance costs and expenditures, and the difference between market value of the land and the option price were. The trial went forward on that basis, however, plaintiff limited its presentation of evidence on the damage question to items of special damage claimed to have been incurred in reliance upon the contract.1 The items of said special damages comprised two categories, the first being actual expenditures made and the second being obligations incurred, but as yet unpaid.

Plaintiffs evidence of its expenditures was supported by a photocopy of its check register and a series of cancelled checks corresponding thereto which appear in the [623]*623record as Exhibits 5 and 6 and which total $24,982.41 and $2,587.39, respectively. We categorize said checks for convenience purposes as follows:

$10,000.00 paid to defendant for the option.
5,000.00 representing the total of several checks paid to James D. Fahs, Jr., plaintiffs president, and designated as “architectural and management fees.”
5,000.00 representing the total of several checks paid to D. Michael Tuckett, plaintiff’s vice president, and designated as “engineering and management fees.”
2,500.00 paid to Grant S. Kesler, plaintiff’s officer and legal counsel, designated as “legal services.”
5,069.80 the composite sum paid to persons outside plaintiff corporation for various services consisting of logo and brochure design work, reproduction costs, marketing consultation, surveying, soil testing, architectural drafting consultation, sketches, and transportation.
$27,569.80 Total

Plaintiff’s officers, Fahs and Tuckett, also testified as to their further services performed for plaintiff valued at $43,500, none of which had been paid. Specifically, the further services of Fahs were managerial and professional in nature. His managerial services were also referred to as “quarter-backing services,” having to do with zoning and financing approvals and efforts to conform the proposed subdivision development with the master plan of Park City, while his professional services consisted of the preparation of final architectural plans for the development. All of his said services were valued at $17,500, computed on the basis of an anticipated annual salary of $30,000. Tuckett’s further services were valued at $26,000 and consisted of the final engineering plans pertaining to all 104 lots plaintiff contemplated by its subdivision of the land in question.

In contrast with the foregoing evidence of plaintiff’s as to the reasonableness and the foreseeability of the expenses incurred, defendant’s expert witness, Henry Traynor, established the industry standard for the steps to be taken by a reasonably prudent developer after obtaining an option but before exercising it. His testimony was un-controverted and, in sum, consisted of the following: First, a developer must assure himself that the property can be rezoned, if necessary, for the intended use; and the expenditure of time consists of “a little leg work.” Second, a preliminary plat may be required (at a maximum cost of $500) but no other “renderings, working drawings, architectural or engineering plans are needed until after the option is exercised." With a preliminary plat, a developer should be able to get a commitment for financing but there is no need for any drawings of plans during the option period since “that’s just too much expense to get into at this point.” Third, a developer should get a preliminary estimate of costs which can be based on the preliminary plat. Fourth, if F.H.A. financing is desired, a verbal understanding is sufficient; and during the option period, it is premature to submit any plans to F.H.A.

Mr. Traynor further testified:

With the exception of whatever charge the engineer may have to work a — work out a preliminary plat and unless the community would require some sort of a filing fee, there shouldn’t have to be any costs.

The trial court awarded judgment in favor of plaintiff totaling $42,587, plus prejudgment interest and the costs of both trials. The award includes the sum of $27,-587 designated in the court’s findings of fact as “expended in reasonable reliance upon the option agreement,” and the further sum of $15,000 designated as “services performed through its officers.” It is thus apparent that the trial court arrived at its award by merely “rounding off” and combining the totals of plaintiff’s exhibits referred to supra and by reducing plaintiff’s [624]*624claim of $43,500 for “officers’ services” to $15,000.

Defendant’s appeal challenges only to the propriety of the damages awarded and the imposition of interest and costs.

First addressing the issue raised as to the proper measure of damages, we conclude that the trial court committed no error in considering special, as well as general damages, as a proper measure of loss under the facts of this case.2

The term “general damages,” as applied to the instant case, denotes those damages which in the usual course of things flow from the breach. They are of course limited to those resulting from the ordinary and obvious purpose of the contract, which in the case at hand would be the “loss of bargain” represented by the difference between the market value of the land and the option price. On the other hand, the term “special damages” denotes those damages which arise from the special circumstances of the case. They have been said to be such damages as, by competent evidence, are directly traceable to failure to discharge a contractual obligation.3

This Court has on numerous occasions noted the distinction between general and special damages and the applicability of each as a proper measure of damages.4

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Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp.
592 P.2d 620 (Utah Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 620, 1979 Utah LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ranch-homes-inc-v-greater-park-city-corp-utah-1979.