Smargon v. Grand Lodge Partners, LLC

2012 UT App 305, 288 P.3d 1063, 2012 WL 5258953, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
Docket20110059-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2012 UT App 305 (Smargon v. Grand Lodge Partners, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smargon v. Grand Lodge Partners, LLC, 2012 UT App 305, 288 P.3d 1063, 2012 WL 5258953, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 314 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

ROTH, Judge:

T1 Defendant Grand Lodge Partners, LLC (GLP) appeals from the district court's grant of summary judgment and subsequent award of damages to Plaintiffs Daniel M. Smargon and Audrey M. Viterbi (the Smar-gons). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 In February 2005, the Smargons entered into a contract (the Contract) with GLP for the purchase of a resort condominium unit (the Unit) near Park City, Utah. At the time of contracting, construction had not yet begun on the condominium development. Pursuant to the Contract, the Smargons paid GLP an option payment of $154,900 to reserve the Unit.

T 3 In March 2005, the Smargons reviewed the plans for the project and became aware that a mechanical room would be located across the hall from the Unit. The mechanical room would house a large chiller that would provide climate control for the development. The Smargons voiced concerns to GLP about the location of the mechanical room and the disturbance it could create in the Unit. GLP responded by letter on March 9, 2005, writing that "[it] w[ould] make every effort to mitigate the noise through insulation and extra construction methods to en *1066 sure that the noise is reduced to an acceptable level." The Smargons then let pass a time-limited option to rescind the Contract and paid GLP an additional $154,900 as an earnest money deposit. In the months that followed, the Smargons spent $92,717.17 to make several upgrades to the Unit, including, among other things, the installation of an exterior door and custom flooring and coun-tertops. Eventually, a closing date was set for August 10, 2007, and the Smargons wired the balance of the $1,549,000 purchase price into escrow in anticipation.

4 On August 9, the day before the scheduled closing, the Smargons conducted a walk-through inspection of the Unit, The walk-through inspection was an option provided to the buyer under the Contract, which, as GLP put it, would permit the Smargons to create a "punch list" of needed repair work. Specifically, the Contract stated that the Smargons "may conduct a "walk-through inspection' of the ... Unit .... for the purpose of identifying any corrective or repair work ... that needs to be completed to achieve substantial completion of the ... Unit." The Smargons began the inspection by noting a problem with the custom flooring, which they marked with blue tape. The walk-through was soon disrupted, however, by noise and vibration emanating from the equipment in the mechanical room. As a result, the Smargons cut short the inspection and did not complete a punch list of needed repair work.

T5 Because of the mechanical room problem, the Smargons did not attend the scheduled closing the next day. GLP contacted the Smargons later in the day, acknowledged the noise and vibration in the Unit, and apparently conceded that, under the cireum-stances, it did not expect the Smargons to close on the Unit at that time. Nevertheless, GLP requested that they complete a punch list to address needed repair work, including the noise and vibration problem. The Smar-gons declined to do so because they did not believe that the mechanical room problem was appropriately addressed as a punch list item.

16 Over the next month, the parties contacted each other to discuss the noise and vibration in the Unit and the Smargons' obligation to close on the Contract under the cireumstances. In the course of these discussions, the Smargons took the position that if they decided not to purchase the Unit, GLP should refund both their option payment and earnest money deposit, as well as the amount they had spent to upgrade the Unit. They also requested that GLP pay them the substantial appreciation in the value of the Unit from the date the Contract was executed to the date scheduled for closing, reasoning that they had missed the opportunity to purchase a comparable unit in this or another condominium development when such units were similarly priced. During this time period, GLP sent an email and two letters to the Smargons on August 20, 2007, August 29, 2007, and September 6, 2007 (collectively, the letters). The legal effect of these letters has become one of the main focuses of the dispute.

T7 In the August 20 email, GLP acknowledged the noise and vibration in the Unit caused by the equipment in the mechanical room. GLP explained that the problem was caused by "unusual cireumstances present when [the Smargons] were [in the Unit for the walk-through inspection] but" asserted that "the sound levels are, under normal conditions, much lower than you heard." GLP described some specific actions it "might do to further reduce the noise levels," such as to "put in spring isolators and dampers under the chiller," "put a sound blanket on the chiller," and "put isolators at pipe wall penetrations." GLP asserted that these actions "should greatly reduce the noise," and it "expect[ed] better than industry standards verifiable by acoustical instruments." GLP also asserted, "[ Wle feel we have an enforceeable contract. I am sorry about how you felt about the condition of your condominium but even with the ... things needing punchlist attention, the unit was as the contract specified." According to GLP, "(alll the issues . raised would be taken care of in a usual punchlist process." Nevertheless, GLP offered the Smargons the option to either proceed with closing or be "refund[ed] [their] deposit" and reimbursed what they had paid for modifications to the Unit.

*1067 18 On August 29, GLP again wrote to the Smargons, stating that it "would like to resolve the issue of your condominium as soon as possible" but also expressing the view that GLP was "on firm ground and that you are now technically in default." With regard to the mechanical room problem, GLP explained that "[slome aspects of the noise ... have been mitigated and further steps are being taken." GLP then reiterated its prior offer "to release you from [the] contract and refund both [the] deposit and the monies ... spent to modify" the Unit. However, GLP stated that it would not pay the Smargons the appreciation in value of the Unit. The letter gave the Smargons until September 7, 2007, to accept one of the options GLP had offered or it would "consider [them] in default with all the consequences that such condition warrants." GLP expressed regret for the letter's "litigious tone," but explained that it had "spoken to our attorney and he feels we are on extremely firm ground in our position" and "he feels that we do not need to make our generous offer of releasing you from your obligations and returning your money." GLP also pointed out that, under the Contract, "the loser in any litigation will pay for the legal cost of the prevailing party so we feel totally confident in what we have proposed herein."

T9 About a week later, on September 6, GLP sent a final letter to the Smargons, written by its attorney, asserting that GLP "hald] performed its obligations under" the Contract, but "[the Smargons failed to close on the purchase of the unit [on August 10] pursuant to the terms of the purchase contract and have thereby defaulted on their obligations under that contract." GLP also asserted that, "Irlather than closing on the unit as required by the contract," the Smar-gons had "attempted to impose upon [GLP] other demands and requirements not provided for in the contract, such as returning ...

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 305, 288 P.3d 1063, 2012 WL 5258953, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smargon-v-grand-lodge-partners-llc-utahctapp-2012.