Victoria L. Sloan v. Kelly O'Neil, Regina Sabbia, Kerrie Cathcart, Uptown Realty & Management, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 27, 2016
DocketA16-611
StatusUnpublished

This text of Victoria L. Sloan v. Kelly O'Neil, Regina Sabbia, Kerrie Cathcart, Uptown Realty & Management, LLC (Victoria L. Sloan v. Kelly O'Neil, Regina Sabbia, Kerrie Cathcart, Uptown Realty & Management, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victoria L. Sloan v. Kelly O'Neil, Regina Sabbia, Kerrie Cathcart, Uptown Realty & Management, LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A16-0611

Victoria L. Sloan, Appellant,

vs.

Kelly O'Neil, Respondent,

Regina Sabbia, Respondent,

Kerrie Cathcart, Respondent,

Uptown Realty & Management, LLC, Defendant.

Filed December 27, 2016 Affirmed Peterson, Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-CV-14-12814

Susan D. Minsberg, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)

Samuel C. Spaid, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent O’Neil)

Joshua S. Casper, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent Sabbia)

Craig A. Buske, Shulman and Buske, PLLC, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent Cathcart) Considered and decided by Cleary, Chief Judge; Peterson, Judge; and Worke, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

PETERSON, Judge

In this landlord-tenant dispute arising from damage to a rental unit, appellant-

landlord argues that the district court erred in (1) granting summary judgment for

respondent-tenants on appellant’s claim for willful destruction of property, (2) awarding

statutory attorney fees to respondents for the willful-destruction-of-property claim,

(3) offsetting the jury verdict on appellant’s breach-of-contract claim against respondents

by the amount of appellant’s settlement with defendant property-management company,

and (4) deducting the amount of the security deposit from the jury verdict. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant-landlord Victoria L. Sloan, through defendant Uptown Realty & Property

Management, rented a house that she owned to respondent-tenants Kelly O’Neil, Regina

Sabbia, and Kerrie Cathcart. The lease term ran from April 15, 2013, through April 30,

2014. Although Sloan initially intended to include a no-dog provision in the lease, she

agreed to allow O’Neil’s dog to live in the home. To accommodate O’Neil’s dog, the lease

permitted one dog weighing less than 50 pounds to live in the house.

Before renting the house, Sloan, her real-estate agent, and friends and family

members visited it multiple times, and Sloan and her sister lived in the home for two weeks.

No one noted any pet damage to the home or any damage of any kind to woodwork or

millwork. Damages noted in an inspection report prepared by Uptown Realty before the

2 tenants moved in included one tiny crack in the stained glass on the dining-room door, a

hole that had been repaired and some permanent staining in the master-bedroom carpeting,

water damage on the upstairs foyer ceiling, uncracked but bowed stained glass on a

staircase window, and two staircase spindles cracked near the bottom but not broken

through. The report described the dining room’s sliding wooden passage or pocket door

as “flawless.”

In June 2013, Sloan’s sister was at the house and saw two dogs inside scratching the

woodwork under a living-room window. She saw what appeared to be urine stains on

carpeting in the house and smelled a urine odor on the second floor. O’Neil admitted that

a second dog was present two to three times a month for an overnight stay from May

through October 2013. In September 2013, Sloan talked to respondents about the urine

stains on the carpeting, which were still there, and respondents assured Sloan that the issue

would be resolved. In November 2013, a contractor saw dog feces inside the house and

urine stains on the carpeting.

Following these discoveries, Sloan hired contractor Tim Jahnke to inspect the extent

of urine damage. Using an ultraviolet light, Jahnke found several areas of urine stains on

the library carpeting. He also found a large urine stain in the front south fireplace room

under a dog bed, a few urination spots in the second-floor hallway, and two very small

urination spots in the master bedroom.

Sloan then hired Dan Schilling, who had 33 years of experience as a building

inspector and had been providing environmental-inspection services since 1998, to perform

an environmental inspection of the home. Schilling concluded that the urine damage and

3 the woodwork damage attributable to dogs was inconsistent with the previous owner’s

small dog. Schilling determined that the urine and woodwork damage were consistent with

O’Neil’s dog and the dog that visited between May and October 2013.

Using an ultraviolet light, Schilling estimated that there were 250 occurrences of

urination on library carpeting on the first floor. Schilling found urine and fecal damage to

the hardwood flooring in the kitchen. Schilling found that the edges of a Persian rug in the

dining room had been damaged by dog claws. Schilling described the urine odors in the

house as “pungent upon entry.”

In May 2014, after respondents had moved out, Schilling performed a follow-up

inspection, during which he found additional damage. Paint and wallpaper in the first-floor

bathroom were peeling due to respondents’ failure to use the exhaust fan. Hardwood

flooring in a second-floor bedroom was scratched by respondents’ furniture. A front-door

screen was ripped out. The wooden door jamb on that door was split due to a forced entry,

during which a chain lock was forced open. The hardwood finish on built-in cabinetry was

scratched and stained. Damage to leaded glass on the cabinetry was consistent with

respondents’ bicycles’ pedals and handle bars. Schilling determined that respondents’

indoor storage of their bicycles was the apparent “cause of breakage to a wood panel of a

custom-crafted historic wood door, breakage to stair spindles, damage[] [to] the rim on a

newel post, and severely scratched and gouged woodwork in various areas.” The damage

was consistent with the sharp metal edges of bicycle axles and pedals. Two pieces of trim

molding were missing from a staircase post adjacent to the damaged spindles. Damage to

hardwood trim on a first-floor door and jamb were consistent with bicycle pedals and axles.

4 Schilling also found that damage to the hardwood trim on the stairway going to the second

floor and on walls and to the dining-room sliding door were apparently caused by the metal

parts of bicycles. Schilling found additional damage to woodwork caused by dog teeth and

claws and scratches in the glass in windows and doors caused by dog claws. He found

additional damage to the Persian rug caused by dog teeth or claws and additional urine

damage to carpeting and hardwood flooring on the first floor.

Schilling determined that chemical stains on the hardwood flooring under the library

carpet were due to the overuse of chemicals to clean the carpet. Schilling also stated that,

due to the carpet pad remaining soaked with dog urine for extended time periods, “the foam

padding had become bonded to the hardwood flooring.” Schilling stated that the 250

instances of urination found on the library carpet during the initial investigation included

areas that had not been cleaned, indicating a lack of care or a lack of awareness of the

frequency and locations of urination. Schilling opined, “In cases such as this where there

have been hundreds of pet urination and fecal accidents in a home, it is reasonable to

conclude that [respondents] had direct knowledge of the problem they were creating in the

home during their occupancy.” Schilling also opined that “the discovered evidences of

new and additional damage to the walls, hardwood flooring and woodwork that was caused

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Victoria L. Sloan v. Kelly O'Neil, Regina Sabbia, Kerrie Cathcart, Uptown Realty & Management, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-l-sloan-v-kelly-oneil-regina-sabbia-kerrie-cathcart-uptown-minnctapp-2016.