White v. HENG LY LIM

2009 OK 79, 224 P.3d 679, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2009 WL 3261700
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 13, 2009
Docket107,068, 107,054
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 2009 OK 79 (White v. HENG LY LIM) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. HENG LY LIM, 2009 OK 79, 224 P.3d 679, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2009 WL 3261700 (Okla. 2009).

Opinion

WATT, J.

T1 The language of 60 O.8. Supp.2008 § 837 1 provides that: the "sole and exclusive civil remedy at common law or otherwise" under the Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act (Disclosure Act), 60 0.8.2001 § 831, et seq. "shall be an action for actual damages;" awards "shall not 2 include the remedy of exemplary damages"; and the Disclosure Act "applies to, regulates and determines rights, duties, obligations and remedies at common law or otherwise ... and supplants and abrogates all common law liability, rights, duties, obligations and remedies...." The consolidated causes present a single issue of statutory construction: whether the quoted language limits a purchaser's *681 recovery for failure to disclose defects in residential property to those damages allowed under the Disclosure Act? 3

T2 This cause is before the Court pursuant to a certified interlocutory order 4 to which certiorari has been granted. Upon a de novo review of the legal question presented, 5 we determine that the mandatory, clear, and unmistakable language of 60 0.8. Supp.2008 § 887 limits the right of a purchaser 6 to recover for failure to disclose known defects in residential property to those provided in the Disclosure Act which expressly prohibits awards for exemplary damages.

13 Our holding is supported by the amendatory language of the Disclosure Act enacted after this Court's pronouncement in Rogers v. Meiser, 2003 OK 6, 68 P.3d 967 *682 construing the prior version of the same statute 7 as an insufficient expression of legislative intent to supplant or abrogate a common law actual fraud claim or to preclude the award of punitive damages. It is also material that in amending the Disclosure Act, the Legislature utilized language identified by this Court as sufficient to abrogate all common law claims. Although the reasoning of Rogers was correct under the then-existing statute, it is not in accord with the expression of legislative intent in the amended statutory language and is overruled.

FACTS

T4 This cause arises out of the purchase and sale of a single-family residence (residence/property) located in Oologah, Rogers County, Oklahoma. The sale closed on June 11, 2006. The purchasers filed suit against the sellers and the agents in November of the same year alleging that the property had extensive termite damage and that the condition of the property had been misrepresented in the disclosure statement and in oral communications. The Whites sought relief on grounds of breach of contract, unjust enrichment, misrepresentation/fraud, violation of the Disclosure Act, and deceit. In the alternative, the Whites requested rescission of the contract, asserting claims for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. The purchasers sought recovery of actual and punitive damages.

5 In their answer of December 15, 2006, the sellers issued a general denial of all allegations. They also argued that all the Whites' claims were governed exclusively by the Disclosure Act.

T6 In February of 2008, the purchasers issued their second discovery request. The purchasers sought production of financial records including tax returns and financial statements beginning with those dated January 1, 2004, and monthly statements for all financial accounts for the years 2006 through 2008. In response to the request, the sellers filed a motion for a protective order along with motions for summary judgment or partial summary judgment. They argued that the purchasers' exclusive recovery was governed by the Disclosure Act which limited recovery to actual damages making the discovery of financial records inappropriate. The sellers' motion for summary judgment was denied, and the Limgs' filed a motion for new trial,. While the new trial motion was pending, the purchasers filed a motion to compel the production of the earlier requested financial records. On October 29, 2009, the agents filed a motion for summary judgment joining in the sellers' argument that punitive damages were not recoverable under the Disclosure Act. The trial judge heard argument on the motions to compel discovery, new trial, and summary judgment on January 14th, 2009. In an order filed on April 15, 2009, the trial court sustained the discovery motion and overruled the motions for new trial and summary judgment. Additionally, the journal entry certified the issue of the award of punitive damages as appropriate for review as an interlocutory order. 8

T7 The sellers filed an original action in this Court on May 5, 2009, seeking a writ prohibiting the discovery of personal financial information. Three days later, the agents timely filed a petition for certiorari review of the certified interlocutory order. On June 15, 2009, we issued an order consolidating the causes, requiring preparation and transmission of the record, and setting a briefing cycle. While the briefing cycle was completed on August 19, 2009 with the filing of the sellers' and the agents' reply briefs, the record was not received until August 24, 2009.

T8 The mandatory, clear, and unmistakable language of 60 0.8. Supp.2008 § 837 limits the right of a purchaser to recover for failure to disclose known defects in residential property to those provided in the Residential Property Condition Disclosure Act (Disclosure Act), 60 0.8.2001 § 831, et seq. which expressly prohibits an award of exemplary damages.

%9 The sellers and the agents assert that the only reasonable interpretation of the *683 language of 60 0.8. Supp.2008 § 837 9 is that the Legislature intended that representations regarding the condition of the sale of residential property be governed exclusively by the Disclosure Act which limits recovery to actual damages while expressly prohibiting awards of exemplary damages. The purchasers concede that only actual damages may be recovered under § 837. 10 Petitioners neither intimate nor argue that the legislative exclusion from recovery of exemplary damages rests on some constitutional infirmity. Nevertheless, the Whites assert that their common law claims are independent of anything contained in the disclosure statement and, instead, refer to the sellers' actions and assurances allegedly made before and after delivery of the statement. We disagree with the purchasers' contention that they may maintain an action independent of the Disclosure Act.

1) Significance of amendment of statutory language following the pronouncement in Rogers v. Meiser.

110 The Whites rely heavily on this Court's pronouncement in Rogers v. Meiser, 2008 OK 6, 68 P.3d 967, for the proposition that their common law claims are not prohibited by the Disclosure Act.

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Bluebook (online)
2009 OK 79, 224 P.3d 679, 2009 Okla. LEXIS 84, 2009 WL 3261700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-heng-ly-lim-okla-2009.