Vastano v. Killington Valley Real Estate

2010 VT 12, 996 A.2d 170, 187 Vt. 628, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 24, 2010
Docket08-167
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2010 VT 12 (Vastano v. Killington Valley Real Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vastano v. Killington Valley Real Estate, 2010 VT 12, 996 A.2d 170, 187 Vt. 628, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 14 (Vt. 2010).

Opinion

¶ 1. In Vastano v. Killington Valley Real Estate, 2007 VT 33, 182 Vt. 550, 929 A.2d 720 (mem.) (Vastano I), we held that the defendant realtor’s failure to inform the plaintiff purchasers about ongoing environmental monitoring of a well for gasoline contamination constituted a material omission as *629 a matter of law and a violation of the Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), 9 V.S.A. §§ 2451-2480n. We remanded to the trial court for a determination of damages. Following additional briefing, the court awarded plaintiffs $7,875, representing the sales commission earned by defendant Killington Valley Real Estate (KVRE), plus interest and attorney’s fees. Plaintiffs appeal, contending the court erred in failing to award the full consideration they paid for the property as a “civil penalty” under 9 V.S.A. § 2461(b), notwithstanding the fact that plaintiffs resold the property for more than the original purchase price. KVRE has cross-appealed, claiming that the court erred in declining to reduce the damage award by the amount of a settlement reached with a co-defendant, failing to reduce the attorney’s fees in proportion to the damages, and including prejudgment interest in the award of attorney’s fees. We strike the prejudgment interest portion of the attorney’s fee award and affirm in all other respects.

¶ 2. The facts underlying this dispute are set forth in full in Vastano I, and need only be summarized here. Plaintiffs purchased the subject property for $225,000 in November 2000, unaware that its well was being monitored for possible gasoline contamination. After discovering the situation, plaintiffs sued KVRE, which had served as the listing agent, and Century 21 Contemporary Associates, Inc., which had served as plaintiffs’ broker, for failure to disclose the monitoring, in violation of the CFA. Plaintiffs thereafter settled with Century 21 for an undisclosed amount, and the case proceeded against KVRE. The trial court subsequently denied plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, ruling that, although KVRE was both aware of and failed to disclose the monitoring, the question nevertheless remained whether the omission was material. The court bifurcated the liability and damage issues. Following the first phase of trial, the jury returned a special verdict, finding that KVRE had made an omission likely to mislead a reasonable consumer, but that the omission was not material. Accordingly, the court entered judgment for KVRE, and plaintiffs appealed.

¶ 3. As noted, we reversed the judgment, concluding that the omission was material as a matter of law, and remanded to the trial court to address the question of damages. Vastano I, 2007 VT 33, ¶ 11. On remand, plaintiffs argued that they were entitled to damages measured by the consideration they had paid for the property under § 2461(b), which provides that a consumer may recover from the seller, solicitor or other violator “the amount of his damages, or the consideration or the value of the consideration given by the consumer, reasonable attorney’s fees, and exemplary damages not exceeding three times the value of the consideration given by the consumer.” KVRE countered that plaintiffs had been made whole by their resale of the property and therefore were not entitled to the return of their consideration — particularly as KVRE was not the seller and had never actually received the purchase price — but plaintiffs maintained that this was irrelevant because the remedy was not in the nature of restitution but rather a “civil penalty” designed to deter unlawful conduct and encourage private enforcement. 1

IF 4. The court was not entirely persuaded by either argument, ruling instead that it retained broad equitable discretion under the CFA to fashion a remedy; that it would be inequitable and *630 disproportionate for plaintiffs to realize a ‘“windfall” of $226,000 having resold the property for more than that amount; but that it would be equally inequitable for KVRE to retain any benefit it received from the transaction. Accordingly, the court ruled that equity called for KVRE to “disgorge” as unjust enrichment its $7,875 sales commission and that a further award of prejudgment interest and attorney’s fees would “provide[] sufficient disincentive to the CFA violator to achieve a policy-based deterrent effect, while assuring that the consumer [plaintiffs are reasonably rewarded for their role in enforcement.” Following a subsequent hearing, the court awarded attorney’s fees totaling $74,988 and denied KVRE’s request to disclose the settlement reached with Century 21 and reduce the damage award by that amount. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.

¶ 5. As they argued below, plaintiffs claim here that the provision of § 2461(b) authorizing recovery of the “consideration given by the consumer” was not designed to afford the consumer an alternative form of compensatory relief in the nature of restitution, but rather to provide a civil penalty untethered from the normal restitutionary requirement of restoring the parties to their original status. See In re Estate of Gorton, 167 Vt. 357, 365, 706 A.2d 947, 952 (1997) (restitution is designed to “return [the parties] to their former position”). Thus, plaintiffs argue that it is irrelevant under the statute whether they subsequently sold the property for more than they purchased it.

¶ 6. Although the issue as framed poses an interesting question of statutory interpretation, it need not — and therefore should not — be resolved on the facts presented. See In re Keystone Dev. Corp., 2009 VT 13, ¶ 7, 186 Vt. 523, 973 A.2d 1179 (mem.) (declining to issue “a mere advisory opinion, which we lack the authority to render”); Wood v. Wood, 135 Vt. 119, 120, 370 A.2d 191, 192 (1977) (noting that the most basic limitation on this Court’s jurisdiction is “the prohibition against advisory opinions”). The reason is that the CFA simply authorizes a recoupment of consideration from, the party to whom it was given. This is evident from the language of the CFA authorizing the consumer to “recover from the seller, solicitor or other violator the amount of his damages, or the consideration or the value of the consideration given by the consumer.” 9 V.S.A. § 2461(b). It is reasonable and logical to construe this provision as providing essentially that, regardless of whether the plaintiff was otherwise damaged, a violator must return any ill-gotten gains in order to effectuate the CFA’s goals of protecting consumers from deceptive practices and deterring future misconduct. Id. § 2451; Elkins v. Microsoft Corp., 174 Vt. 328, 331, 817 A.2d 9, 13 (2002). We fail to see how allowing a plaintiff to recover the “consideration given” from a defendant who did not receive the consideration in question would serve these purposes.

¶ 7. Thus, even assuming — without deciding — that plaintiffs are correct in arguing that they were entitled to recover their purchase price without returning the property, then remedy lay against the party to whom the purchase price was given, i.e., the seller. Plaintiffs cannot recover from KVRE — the listing agent — money that it never received.

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Bluebook (online)
2010 VT 12, 996 A.2d 170, 187 Vt. 628, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vastano-v-killington-valley-real-estate-vt-2010.