Slack v. Landmark Company
2011 MT 292
Mont.2011Background
- In 2002, MRDTF busted a clandestine meth lab at 1050 Mill Road, Helena, involving a property linked to LC County and a criminal operator; the operator was prosecuted by LC County and convicted.
- Montana enacted 75-10-1301 to -1306, MCA in 2005 to address cleanup standards for meth-contaminated properties, creating reporting and public-list requirements.
- The Mill Road home was not listed as contaminated until 2007, when DEQ notified the County; in 2005 the Slacks entered into a buy-sell with Grover of The Landmark Company, moving in after closing.
- Grover checked DEQ’s list before closing; the home was not on the list, and the Slacks later discovered contamination resulting in extensive cleanup needs and displaced personal property.
- In February 2008, the Slacks sued LC County, Grover, and Landmark for failure to provide proper notice under § 75-10-1306(1); the prior owner was later dismissed after settlement.
- A three-day trial led to a verdict finding Landmark and Grover not liable, LC County negligent with damages to the Slacks totaling $563,592; issues arose over jury instruction and attorneys’ fees.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duty under § 75-10-1306(1) | Slacks contend LC County owed a reporting duty for pre- and post-2005 discoveries. | County argues no duty or scope under the statute; issues not properly raised below. | Waived issue; district court correctly resolved that duty scope was not properly preserved. |
| Attorneys’ fees eligibility under § 25-10-711 | Slacks seek fees for a defense deemed frivolous or in bad faith. | County defends its position as legitimate and not frivolous; timely objection issues raised. | District court did not abuse discretion; no frivolous or bad-faith defense established. |
| Pretrial handling of the statute's effective date in instructions | Instruction error could have included the 2005 effective date to define duty. | No instructional error since the date issue was argued; no prejudice shown. | Not necessary to address as a separate error; waiver and preservation concerns apply. |
Key Cases Cited
- Sikorski v. Johnson, 333 Mont. 434 (Mont. 2006) (duty in negligence is a question of law)
- Plath v. Schonrock, 314 Mont. 101 (Mont. 2003) (failure to raise legal theory in pretrial order can cause waiver)
- LHC, Inc. v. Alvarez, 160 P.3d 502 (Mont. 2007) (pretrial assertions do not overcome failure to raise issue)
- Kakos v. Byram, 292 P.2d 909 (Mont. 1930) (existence of a legal duty is decided by the court)
- Roy v. Neibauer, 623 P.2d 555 (Mont. 1981) (scope of duty as a legal question for the court)
- Ganz v. United States Cycling Federation, 903 P.2d 212 (Mont. 1995) (legal duty and standard of care principles cited)
- State of Montana v. Butte-Silver Bow County, 353 Mont. 497 (Mont. 2009) (state-law analysis in duty determination)
- Weaver v. Advanced Refrigeration, 361 Mont. 233 (Mont. 2011) (costs do not include attorneys’ fees; bill of costs distinction)
- Ostergren v. Department of Revenue, 319 Mont. 405 (Mont. 2004) (frivolous or bad-faith standard under § 25-10-711)
- Jones v. City of Billings, 927 P.2d 9 (Mont. 1996) (abuses of discretion standard for fee determinations)
