Smith v. Benware

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMay 1, 2025
Docket24-cv-5026
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. Benware (Smith v. Benware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Benware, (Vt. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

7ermont Superior Court Filed 04/29/25 Franklin mit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT VEa CIVIL DIVISION Franklin Unit Case No. 24-CV-05026 17 Church Street 2 SES, St. Albans VI 05478 802-524-7993 AF

www.vermontjudiciary.org

David Smith v. Eric Benware

ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Title: Motion to Dismiss (Motion: 6) Filer: Eric J. Benware Filed Date: April 11, 2025

The Court previously issued a writ of possession in this case on April 2, 2025 due to Defendant's failure to make a rent escrow payment. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss this ejectment action on April 11, 2025. Plaintiff filed a response on April 21, 2025. The Court stayed the writ on April 15, 2025 to consider this motion to dismiss. As explained below, the Court grants the motion to dismiss. The writ of possession is vacated.

The motion to dismiss is premised on the argument that the agreement between the parties involves is a defective rent-to-own agreement of a mobile home under 9 V.S.A. § 2602(e). According to Defendant, the agreement does not satisfy the requirements of section 2602(e)(2). Defendant asks the Court to find that because the agreement is defective, he must be considered a tenant, and the Residential Rental Agreements Act ("RRAA") applies to this case, see zd., § 2602(e)(3). On that basis, Defendant then argues that the Court never should have issued a rent escrow order and this case should be dismissed because Plaintiff has failed to comply with the procedural requirements of the RRAA prior to filing this case.

On August 29, 2024, the parties executed what appears on its face to be a rent-to- own a mobile home agreement. The agreement identifies itself variably as a "Rent to Own- Mobile Home" and a "Lease Agreement." And although the title of an instrument is not necessatily determinative of its character, see Prue v. Royer, 2013 VT 12, § 20, 193 Vt. 267, this agreement is ostensibly what it purports to be a rent-to-own mobile home agreement, see Compl., at 6-11. See also Southwick v. City of Rutland, 2011 VT 53, J 4, 190 Vt. 106 (when a contract is unambiguous, the plain language of the contract governs its interpretation).

The Vermont Supreme Court has fleshed out the characteristics of such an agreement in the following terms:

Entry Regarding Motion Page 1 of 4 24-CV-05026 David Smith v. Eric Benware "ermont Superior Court Filed 04/29/25 Franklin -nit

A lease option to purchase is an agreement by which one binds himself to sell and convey to another party certain property at a stipulated price within a designated time, leaving it in the discretion of such other party to take and pay for the property. It is a unilateral contract: The optionor is bound that the offer shall be kept open and available in accordance with its terms, but its acceptance rests wholly in the discretion of the optionee, and there is no obligation upon the latter with regard to it. Besides its unilateral nature, ... the lease payments are not ... applied on the purchase price.

Prue v. Royer, 2013 VT 12, [q 23-24 (citations and internal quotations marks omitted). In simple terms, the key elements of a rent-to-own agreement are that (1) tenant/potential buyer has the option to buy at a specified price within a particular time period, but the decision to buy is solely tenant's, and (2) the lease payments are not applied to the purchase ptice. This is consistent with the language of the mobile home rent-to-own statute, which requires an agreement where tenant/ potential buyer has agreed to pay consideration in one or more installments to the owner of a mobile home for the right to use or occupy the home, see 9 V.S.A. § 2602(e)(1)(A), and upon full compliance with the terms of the agreement, tenant has the option of becoming the owner of the home, zd, § 2602(e)(1)(B).

Here, the contract is not as clear as it could be in certain aspects, but the option to buy is laid out explicitly as an option: it is exercisable by Defendant within a specific period and at a specific price, Plaintiff was required to keep the option open, and Plaintiff had no control over Defendant's decision to exercise the option. In addition, lease payments were not automatically credited toward the purchase price they could be in certain instances, but only after Defendant exercised the option. The Court therefore concludes that the Agreement here is a valid rent-to-own mobile home agreement.

As stated above, underlying Defendant's arguments in the motion to dismiss is his contention that this agreement fails to comply with the requirements of 9 V.S.A. § 2601(e)(2), section 2601(e)(3) and as a result, his tenancy subject to the RRAA.

The key question here is what happens when there is a rent-to-own agreement but there is a breach of that agreement before the option to purchase was exercised or completed. As noted above, after full compliance with the terms of a rent-to-own agreement, Defendant here has he option of becoming the owner of the home. 9 V.S.A. § 2602(e)(1)(B). Subdivision (2), on which Defendant telies, deals with the requirements to consummate a sale under rent-to-own agreements. Id., § 2602(e)(2). It dictates that under a rent-to-own arrangement, ownership does not transfer unless and until, there is a written retail installment contract compliant with requirements set out in Chapter 59 of this title, z., § 2602(e)(2)(A), and unless and until a mobile home uniform bill of sale transferring the mobile

Entry Regarding Motion Page 2 of 4 24-CV-05026 David Smith v. Eric Benware 7ermont Superior Court Filed 04/29/25 Franklin nit

home from the seller to the buyer is properly completed, endorsed, executed, and filed, 3 § 2602(e)(2)(B).

In this respect, Plaintiff is correct that the parties were not yet at the stage where all of the section 2602(e)(2) obligations had come into effect. If the rent-to-own agreement is in compliance with the sale steps when it reaches the sale stage, it is not subject to the RRAA. Id., § 2602(e)(3). Indeed, subdivision (2) ("Requirements to consummate sale under rent-to-own agreements") clearly indicates that rent-to-own, as the name suggests, is a two- part arrangement wherein tenancy (the rent part) can at the option of the tenant change into ownership (the own part). The sale part, however, as subdivision (2) indicates, needs to be consummated.

In reviewing the statute in detail, the only reasonable interpretation is that before the sale part of the arrangement is consummated, the RRAA applies. In other words, sections 2602(e)(3) and (4) only begin to operate at the sale stage of the arrangement. Before such time, however, the arrangement is a tenancy subject to the RRAA. See Pitman v. Sanditen, 626 S.W.2d 496, 498 (Tex. 1981) ("[A] tenant under a lease containing an option to purchase exercises the option, a binding, bilateral contract is formed. The relation of landlord and tenant ceases and that of vendor and purchaser arises.'').

Based on this analysis, Defendant has been renting and is considered a tenant waless and until he exercises the option to purchase. As a result, the RRAA currently applies. Since the parties are not at the sale stage, the sale formalities are irrelevant to its analysis.

In his opposition, Plaintiff argued that the Agreement falls outside the scope of the Mobile Home Act because it involves the sale of the home and "10 acres of land." See Compl., at 10. Plaintiff argues, section 2602(e)(2) explicitly excludes the application of the RRAA to the Agreement because it does not apply to agreements to purchase a mobile home financed as residential real estate. To further lend support he states that the home here has been permanently sited. See 9 V.S.A. § 2601(d).

The Court disagrees.

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Related

Prue v. Royer, Sr., and Department of Liquor Control
2013 VT 12 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2013)
Southwick v. City of Rutland
2011 VT 53 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2011)
Pitman v. Sanditen
626 S.W.2d 496 (Texas Supreme Court, 1981)
Stewart v. Thompson
3 Vt. 255 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1831)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Smith v. Benware, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-benware-vtsuperct-2025.