Rohweder v. Fleetwood Homes of Oregon, Inc.

767 P.2d 187, 1989 Alas. LEXIS 4, 1989 WL 4444
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1989
DocketS-2521
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 767 P.2d 187 (Rohweder v. Fleetwood Homes of Oregon, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rohweder v. Fleetwood Homes of Oregon, Inc., 767 P.2d 187, 1989 Alas. LEXIS 4, 1989 WL 4444 (Ala. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

Rohweder sued the manufacturer, seller and installers of his mobile home, after the manufacturer’s attempt at repairing it failed. Prior to trial, the trial court entered an order precluding Rohweder (1) from using documents Rohweder was ordered to produce, but did not produce; (2) from using information requested through interrogatories, but not furnished; (3) from maintaining his remedy of rescission against the manufacturer for failure to properly plead it or assert it in interrogatories; and (4) from giving hearsay testimony as to the cost of individual repair items.

As a result of the trial court’s ruling, Rohweder was left virtually without a remedy. At the trial court’s suggestion, Roh-weder petitioned this court for review. 1 Trial was stayed pending resolution of the petition. We granted review.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In mid-1984, Rohweder purchased from Arctic Turn-Key Systems, Inc. (Arctic) a mobile home manufactured by Fleetwood Homes of Oregon, Inc. (Fleetwood) and installed by Arctic and George Miller d/b/a George Miller Construction, Inc. (Miller). Several months after the installation, problems developed in the structure. Rohweder complained to Arctic and Fleetwood, but their subsequent efforts to resolve the problems did not satisfy him.

Rohweder sued the above parties, alleging four causes of action: (1) breach of duty to construct the home in a workmanlike manner; (2) misrepresentation that the home was constructed in a workmanlike manner, upon which Rohweder relied “to his detriment”; (3) misrepresentation of the adequacy of the construction of the home, upon which Rohweder relied, entitling him “to rescission and restitution of the contract for purchase”; (4) breach of an express warranty that the home would conform “to the purpose for which it was intended to be used.” Rohweder prayed for damages or, alternatively, for rescission of the contract and restitution of the amount paid.

In February 1987 a pretrial order was entered that governed the course of pretrial preparation, including discovery, amendments to pleadings, pretrial motions and memoranda, and related matters. Discovery was to be completed by October 23, 1987. Jury trial was set for November 1987.

*189 Fleetwood’s attempts to obtain discovery did not go smoothly. It served interrogatories 2 and requests for production 3 on Roh-weder on February 11, 1987. Having received no response by April 6, Fleetwood mailed a letter to Rohweder requesting a prompt response to the discovery requests. By letter of April 16, Rohweder requested two weeks additional time to respond, but failed to do so within that period. On August 8, Fleetwood moved to compel discovery. 4

Rohweder answered the interrogatories on August 17. Fleetwood later claimed in its pretrial memorandum that the answers were perfunctory. The trial court granted the motion to compel production on September 3, 1987. Because the interrogatories had been answered, the court drew a line through the order as it related to the interrogatories. The same day Rohweder filed a response to the production request in which he stated that “there are currently not any documents available at this time which fit the description of Defendant’s request.”

The answers to interrogatories provided little useful information. Answers to questions requesting specific information about an expert and the cost of additional repairs stated only the name of the expert, and that additional information would be furnished after the expert had inspected the home and made his report. The only direct expense reported was $110 in plumbing repairs. Question 3 and the answer to it are as follows:

3. List all damages which you intend to seek against Fleetwood Homes of Oregon, Inc. For these damages, please state the cause of the damage and the factual basis for the amount of damages which you are seeking.
Until our expert witness conducts a full study of the structure we will not be able to answer this question. As soon as a full study is completed, we will provide the results of said study.
Damages we seek to recover from Fleet-wood Homes include but are not limited to:
1. Emotional damages
2. Damages for breach of contract
3. Damages for breach of warranty, both expressed and implied
4. Damages for negligence

Rohweder’s expert still had not inspected the home when Rohweder’s deposition was taken a week before the close of discovery. His engineer’s report was not delivered to Fleetwood until November 2, three days before the pretrial conference.

In its November 3 pretrial memorandum, Fleetwood pointed out that Rohweder had never responded further to the order to compel production. This was despite the fact that Rohweder, submitted most of these documents for marking as exhibits on October 30. Fleetwood also maintained that answers to the interrogatories had not been supplemented and, as they stood, were evasive. Fleetwood requested that the trial court inquire into the matter of the failure of Rohweder to comply with discovery procedures and sanction Rohweder or his counsel under Civil Rule 37, in whatever manner was warranted. Fleet-wood did not assert that Rohweder’s conduct was willful, only that it was apparently willful.

In regard to the merits, Fleetwood admitted that it owed Rohweder what was promised in an express warranty given as part of the sale, but argued that the only implied warranty applicable was that found in the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), AS 45.02.314. It further argued that since Rohweder failed to comply with the revocation of acceptance requirements of the *190 UCC, AS 45.02.608, rescission was not an available remedy.

Fleetwood did not claim in its pretrial memorandum that it was uncertain as to the remedies sought by Rohweder. Nor did Fleetwood argue that because Rohweder had failed to include rescission as a damage in his interrogatory answer, rescission was not an appropriate remedy.

During the pretrial conference held November 5, the trial court entered a preclusion order, memorialized in a formal order, which held inter alia as follows:

4. Any documentation which was requested in a motion to compel production and not produced will not be used at trial.
5. Any information requested in interrogatories and not furnished in answers to interrogatories will not be testified to at trial.
6. Rescission will not be allowed as a claim against the manufacturer, and because of a failure by the plaintiff to list a claim for rescission as a damage claim in response to Question Three of defendant Fleetwood Homes’ interrogatories.
7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
767 P.2d 187, 1989 Alas. LEXIS 4, 1989 WL 4444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohweder-v-fleetwood-homes-of-oregon-inc-alaska-1989.