Vista Village Mobile Home Park v. Basnett

731 P.2d 700, 1987 Colo. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 20, 1987
Docket84SC411
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 731 P.2d 700 (Vista Village Mobile Home Park v. Basnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vista Village Mobile Home Park v. Basnett, 731 P.2d 700, 1987 Colo. LEXIS 467 (Colo. 1987).

Opinion

ROVIRA, Justice.

We granted certiorari to review the adoption by the court of appeals of section 15.2(2) of the Restatement (Second) of Property in Basnett v. Vista Village Mobile Home Park, 699 P.2d 1343 (Colo.App.1984). Section 15.2(2) prohibits a landlord from unreasonably refusing consent to alienation by a tenant unless a freely negotiated provision in the lease allows such unreasonable refusal. However, because we conclude that the record does not support the finding on which the ruling was based, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals without reaching the propriety of adopting section 15.2(2).

I.

Carl Monroe (tenant) and his wife purchased a vacant mobile home from John Pollock, a mobile home broker, in August 1979. The home was situated on lot 77 of the Vista Village Mobile Home Park (the park). Tenant moved into the park on September 1, 1979, after signing a month-to-month lease for rental of lot 77.

In February of 1980, tenant tendered the monthly rent to Fran Thompson, the assistant manager, and told her that he was moving out and selling his home. Mrs. Thompson told him that, because the owners wanted the older homes out of the park, he would not be able to sell his home “on site”; that is, the new buyer would not be allowed to continue to lease lot 77 from the park. This meant that if tenant sold the home, it would have to be moved out of the park. 1

Tenant then checked with Mr. Thompson, the park manager, and was told the same thing. Tenant was then given a notice by Mr. Thompson, dated April of the previous year, listing the criteria the park used in determining when on-site sales would be permitted. Tenant wrote on the top of the notice “Given to me 2/27/80.” Tenant then spoke with David Holdsworth, a general partner of the partnership that owned the park, and was again told he would not be allowed an on-site sale. Tenant had previously arranged to sell the home back to Pollock, the mobile home broker, but this was not communicated to the park.

The notice stating when on-site sales would be allowed was developed in reliance on paragraph seven of the lease, which provides:

*702 RENTAL HOMES NOT PERMITTED: Lessee agrees not to lease, sublet or assign any part of said premises nor of his mobile home located thereon without advance written consent of Lessor and not to allow any other persons to occupy said premises hereby rented except in the case of casual visits of friends or guests. Lessee agrees that if he should sell a mobile home located on the leased premises, the sales agreement will provide for a delivery of the mobile home to the buyer at a place other than the leased premises; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that no such provision is necessary if prior to such delivery the prospective buyer has submitted to Lessor a signed lease and Lessor has accepted and executed said lease.

How carefully the lease was explained to tenant was disputed. Tenant 2 and his wife later testified that Mr. Thompson, the park manager, just skimmed the lease, and never mentioned paragraph seven at all. Mr. Thompson testified that he went over all the provisions, including paragraph seven.

In June, tenant filed suit against the park, Mr. Thompson, and Holdsworth, claiming fraud, intentional concealment, negligent misrepresentation, and unreasonable restraint on alienation of property. The complaint alleged that the park had either intentionally or recklessly failed to point out the significance of paragraph seven to him. It also stated that had he known that he would not be allowed to resell on site, he never would have purchased the home. Further, it alleged that the prohibition against on-site sales was an unreasonable restraint on alienation of property and unconscionable. He requested compensatory and exemplary damages.

Tenant ceased paying rent in July. In response, the park filed a Forcible Entry and Detainer action in August. The cases were consolidated and a hearing on the F.E.D. action was held on September 8, 1980.

At that hearing, the court heard testimony that the park’s usual practice was to allow on-site sales as a “reward” to good tenants. If a tenant had not earned such reward, the park would not allow an on-site sale. The court also heard testimony that the park was concerned about tenant’s attitude because he had been outspoken against a rent increase.

The trial court held that the lease required the park “not to unreasonably withhold [its] consent to a lessee who desires to sell a mobile home. In this case, however, the lessee did not come to the lessor with a prospective buyer....” The court held further, though, that since the park had made it “unequivocally clear” that tenant would not be allowed to sell his mobile home on site no matter who the buyer was, tenant’s failure to communicate the existence and identity of the prospective buyer to the park for its approval did not relieve the park of the duty to act reasonably. Therefore, the tenant was not in breach and owed no rent.

At the end of the hearing, the following colloquy occurred:

MR. ADLER: (tenant’s counsel) As I understand it, sir, there is no present rent obligation and if I understand the Court’s ruling?
THE COURT: There is no present rent obligation until the [park] considers a prospective tenant and reasonable (sic) and that is a very broad term, rejects a prospective purchaser or other circumstances which may arise then clearly your client owes the rent, yes.
MR. LETOFSKY: (the park’s counsel) I am thinking if there is some duty on the part of the tenant to try to sell the premises, try to obtain a prospective tenant-buyer, otherwise he could conceivably keep it there indefinitely without any effort?
THE COURT: Absolutely not, if he doesn’t have a buyer, if he doesn’t — let me amplify on the order slightly. I am *703 going to assume that [tenant] has a buyer and that the lease from the prospective buyer will be tendered to the [park] no later than five days from this date, otherwise, Mr. Adler, I have given you carte blanche and I agree with you, Mr. Letofsky.
MR. ADLER: I can understand. (Emphasis added).

Within the five-day period, the only buyer presented by tenant was Pollock, the mobile home broker. Pollock refused to sign a lease with the park because he had no intention of being a tenant, and only wanted the home for resale. The park therefore would not allow an on-site sale to him.

The trial on the fraud and related claims began on April 20, 1982. Tenant produced evidence that the importance of paragraph seven had been intentionally hidden from him, and that he would not have bought the home had he known he would not be allowed to resell on site.

The park attempted to show that its reason for not allowing the on-site sale in February of 1980 (the original attempted sale, before the F.E.D.

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Bluebook (online)
731 P.2d 700, 1987 Colo. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vista-village-mobile-home-park-v-basnett-colo-1987.