Tindall v. H & S Homes

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 3, 2005
Docket2005-UP-535
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tindall v. H & S Homes (Tindall v. H & S Homes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tindall v. H & S Homes, (S.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals

Terry Cartrette Tindall,        Respondent,

v.

H&S Homes, LLC, d/b/a Horton Homes of Conway; and Pete Hughes, Jr., Individually and as an Agent for H&S Homes, LLC, d/b/a Horton Homes of Conway, Horton Homes, Inc., and Bombardier Capital, Inc.,        Defendants,

Of Whom, H&S Homes, LLC is,        Appellant.


Appeal From Horry County
Steven H. John, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2005-UP-535
Heard September 13, 2005 – Filed October 3, 2003   


AFFIRMED


J. Boone Aiken, III, of Florence, and James B. Richardson, Jr., of Columbia, for Appellant.

Peter L. Hearn, Sr, of Conway, and Richard M. Lovelace, Jr., of Conway, for Respondent.

PER CURIAM:  Terry Tindall brought this action against H&S Homes, LLC, Pete Hughes, Jr., and Horton Homes, Inc. for breach of contract, fraud, negligence, and breach of express and implied warranty.  The jury awarded Tindall actual and punitive damages on her negligence cause of action against H&S.  H&S appeals, arguing the trial court should have granted its motions for directed verdict, JNOV, and a new trial.  We affirm.

FACTS

Horton Homes, Inc., of Edenton Georgia, is a mobile home manufacturer that principally owns and operates approximately thirty mobile home dealerships in the Southeast.  H&S Homes, LLC, of Conway, is a Horton Homes dealership.  Pete Hughes, Jr., began working as H&S’s general manager in September of 1998.  Hughes testified that H&S received a damaged 1997 model mobile home some time prior to the time he began his employment.

Terry Tindall is a disabled and dyslexic forty-four-year-old single mother with minimal education.  In March of 1999, Tindall and her teenage daughter visited H&S Homes on several occasions to purchase a double-wide mobile home.  Hughes showed Tindall several homes, including the damaged 1997 model, which Tindall alleges Hughes told her was a 1998 model.  On March 5, 1999, Tindall signed a purchase agreement to buy the alleged 1998 model home for $53,210.  The purchase agreement did not include the model year, but it did indicate the home was new.

H&S allowed Tindall and her daughter to move into the home prior to the April 16, 1999 closing.  During the closing, Tindall learned the home was a 1997 model.  The closing attorney delayed the closing in response to Tindall’s concern regarding the model year, but Tindall completed the purchase because H&S sold her trade-in, a single-wide mobile home, and the purchaser of the trade-in had already moved in to the home prior to the closing.  Tindall testified she felt “stuck” because “she didn’t have anywhere to go.”

Tindall’s neighbor testified the walls “looked like somebody took a hammer and just beat holes in it.”  The home leaked around the windows, under the sinks, behind the refrigerator, and in the bathrooms.  As a result, the exterior walls, floors, and cabinets rotted and the vinyl floor became discolored.  The leaks also created mold and mildew, resulting in a bad odor throughout the home.  The commode was replaced three times, the doors were unlevel and would not close properly, and the molding around the front door was three quarters of an inch off the wall.  A carpenter hired by Tindall testified the molding was “not even touching the wall to seal the draft . . . around the doorway.”  The ceiling fan fell out of the ceiling, and the chandelier was damaged to the extent it had to be taken apart and put back together.  Tindall testified the linoleum in the bathroom, kitchen, and her daughter’s room had “cuts in it” from when H&S “set the house up.”  Tindall also testified the kitchen “smell[ed] like sewer” and when she hired a plumber to determine the cause of the smell, the plumber found one of the plumbing vents did not have a vent cap to prevent the sewer gas from backing up the line.  Additionally, the brick underpinning on the house was falling down because there was not enough mortar in the brickwork.  Incidentally, a neighbor witnessed H&S’s work crew drinking liquor as the crew set up Tindall’s brick underpinning.

Tindall contacted H&S on several occasions asking H&S to repair her home.  H&S attempted to repair some of the problems, but many of the repairs were unsuccessful or inadequate.  Tindall testified concerning several of H&S’s attempts to repair including the following:  (1) H&S tried to fix the leak under the bathroom sink, “but when they would come out they would . . . screw that little screw . . . where the sink is and it would split all the way up, so it kept leaking”; (2) H&S replaced the first commode and “tried to put caulking on it, silicon, to stop it from leaking, and it leaked around the commode pipes, and it turned the floor dark”;  (3) H&S put clear caulking on the ceiling cracks, but the clear caulking could not be painted; (4) H&S replaced the back door because of water damage, but did not attempt to repair the leak that caused the damage; (5) H&S attempted to repair the doors, but the doors remained unlevel and never shut properly; (6) H&S patched the torn linoleum floors in the kitchen, bathroom, and bedroom with silicone instead of replacing the floors with vinyl; and (7) H&S placed screws in the bottoms of leaking windows, but the screws blocked the weep holes, prevented drainage, and caused the windows to rust out.  H&S did not even attempt to repair several of the problems, including repair or replacement of furniture that was damaged during the transport of the home.

Tindall brought this action against H&S Homes, Horton Homes, and Pete Hughes, Jr., for negligence, fraud, breach of contract, and breach of express and implied warranty.  At trial, the defendants moved for a directed verdict on all causes of action.  The trial judge granted the motion for negligence as to Horton Homes, but denied the motion on all grounds as to H&S Homes.  At the close of the testimony, the defendants renewed the motions.  Following the motions, the court conducted a charge conference.  During the conference, the trial judge determined the jury could choose only one theory of liability.  Tindall elected to forgo the warranty causes of action to “simplify matters for the jury.”  The court, therefore, instructed the jury on the following causes of action: (1) breach of contract as to H&S Homes and Horton Homes; (2) fraud and deceit as to H&S Homes and Pete Hughes, Jr.; and (3) negligence as to H&S Homes.  In addition, the court submitted the issue of punitive damages to the jury on the theory of fraud and deceit and on the theory of negligence.

The jury found for the defendants on the breach of contract action and on the fraud and deceit action.  The jury found for Tindall on the theory of negligence.  The jury awarded $95,000 actual damages and $300,000 punitive damages.  H&S Homes moved for a new trial, a new trial

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Tindall v. H & S Homes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tindall-v-h-s-homes-scctapp-2005.