Lead Opinion
Defendants-appellants Carolyn Riley Realty, Inc. and Carolyn Riley (collectively, “Riley”) appeal from the judgment rendered by the Summit County Court of Common Pleas awarding $28,250 in damages to plaintiffs-appellees Allen Bartholet and Leanne Bartholet. We reverse.
In August 1992, the Bartholets purchased a residence in Akron, Ohio. The home had been listed by Riley. The Bartholets sued Riley for,
inter alia,
fraud in misrepresenting or concealing the condition of the basement. Riley, in turn, sued Sheila Eaton, a former agent for Riley, and Robert and Mary Zwisler, the
Riley appeals only the size of the damage award. Riley’s sole assignment of error is as follows:
“In a homeowners action for compensatory damages for a basement water problem, the trial court reversibly erred in awarding $28,000 in ‘cost of repair’ 'damages, when the problem had already been fixed at no cost to the homeowners, and where the awarded damages exceeded the $8,000 diminution in market value attributable to the water problem.”
In analyzing the damages issue, the trial court cited the settled rule for temporary and reparable injury to real property:
“If restoration can be made, the measure of damages is the reasonable cost of restoration, plus the reasonable value of the loss of the use of the property between the time of the injury and the restoration, unless such cost of restoration exceeds the difference in the market value of the property as a whole before and after the injury, in which case the difference in the market value before and after the injury becomes the measure.”
Ohio Collieries Co. v. Cocke
(1923),
Having noted that Leanne Bartholet testified that she and her husband desire to five in the house and not to sell the house, the trial court relied upon the following modification of the Ohio Collieries Co. rule advanced by the First District Court of Appeals:
“In an action for temporary damages
to a building that the owner does not plan to sell but intends to use as his home in accordance with his personal tastes and wishes, when restoration is practical and reasonable,
the owner is entitled to be compensated fairly and reasonably for his loss even though the market value of the building may not have been substantially decreased by the tort.
The owner may recover as damages the fair cost of restoring his home to a reasonable approximation of its former condition, and his failure to prove the difference between the value of the whole property just before the damage was done and immediately thereafter is not fatal to the oumer’s lawsuit.
The diminution in overall value is relevant to the issue of damages, and evidence about such diminution, whether presented by the plaintiff or the defendant, may be taken into consideration in assessing the reasonableness of damages.” (Emphasis added.)
Adcock v. Rollins Protective Serv. Co.
(1981),
Professional excavator Donald McElravy opined that a “French drain” or trench system, built around the perimeter of the house, would remedy the water problem in the basement. McElravy further opined that it would cost $25,000 to install such a system. Dr. Youram Echstein, a licensed hydrogeologist and a professor of geology, stated that the plan outlined in a repair estimate prepared by McElravy’s excavation firm would remedy the water problem. Echstein also stated that, prior to the installation of such a system, computations and tests costing $8,000 would have to be conducted.
The trial court entered judgment for the Bartholets against Riley for $28,250, by adopting the experts’ figures and adding to them $250 to reflect the deductible paid by the Bartholets to the carrier of their homeowners’ insurance for damage caused by two flooding accidents.
Riley argues that the trial court erred in its application of Adcock to this case. We agree. Without adopting Adcock, we note that the trial court’s application of it is inconsistent with later interpretations of Adcock, including those of the authoring court and of this court.
In
Adcock,
the defendants moved for a directed verdict both at the close of the plaintiffs’ case and at the close of all the evidence because the plaintiffs had not presented any evidence of diminution in value of the real property. The First District Court of Appeals reversed the directed verdict that was granted, in response, by the trial court. As it relates to plaintiffs’ presentation of evidence of diminution in value,
Adcock
merely stands for the proposition that the plaintiffs can survive a motion for directed verdict even without presenting evidence of diminution in value. See
Charlson v. Cincinnati
(Sept. 10, 1986), Hamilton App. No. C-850702, unreported,
Adcock
did not eliminate consideration of the element of diminution in value when determining damages to real property intended by the injured party to be used as a home. To the contrary, the court noted that “[t]he diminution in overall value
is
relevant to the issue of damages.” (Emphasis added.)
Adcock,
We decline to adopt the trial court’s interpretation of
Adcock
in this district. As a matter of law, diminution in the value of real property is a limiting factor on the damage award for the injury to that property. See
Ohio Collieries Co.,
Because the trial court awarded restoration costs as damages without considering diminution in value of the property, Riley’s assignment of error is sustained. The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and this cause is remanded to the trial court for the redetermination of damages in accordance with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
. In
Hague
we determined that, in any event,
Adcock
did not apply because the property in question was commercial property.
Id.
at 7,
Dissenting Opinion
The trial court, the litigants, and the majority of this court have all engaged in an extensive and rather impressive debate over the effect of Adcock on Ohio Collieries. Unfortunately, the entire debate was unnecessary.
Because the harm caused herein and the damages that flowed therefrom are different in kind from those suffered in Ohio Collieries, the rule for damages set forth in Ohio Collieries does not apply. Campbell v. Senich (Jan. 23, 1980), Summit App. No. 9398, unreported (noting that damages resulting from fraud are governed by a different rule from damages resulting from negligence). Ohio Collieries and virtually all of its progeny, including Adcock, involved situations where the plaintiffs real property was directly harmed or injured by the defendant’s tortious conduct. For instance, in Ohio Collieries, the plaintiff sued the defendant for improperly removing coal from under her property, causing the earth to crack, and thereby damaging her house and barn. In the instant case, however, there is no allegation that the appellee did anything to cause appellants’ basement to flood. Instead, the only harm caused by appellee’s fraud is that appellants lost the benefit of their bargain. Appellants bargained for, and assumed they had purchased, a house with a dry basement. However, due to appellees’ fraud, appellants did not get that for which they bargained. This case is therefore distinguishable from Ohio Collieries and Adcock.
The correct rule for damages in cases of fraud was set forth in
Brewer v. Brothers
(1992),
“Where there is fraud inducing the purchase or exchange of real estate, Ohio courts have held that the proper measure of damages is the difference between the value of the property as it was represented to be and its actual value at the time of purchase or exchange. This is known as the ‘benefit-of-the-bargain’ rule.” See, also,
Noble v. Mandolin
(1995),
As noted above, under the benefit-of-the-bargain rule, damages are measured solely by the difference between the value of the property as it was represented to be and its actual value at the time of purchase or exchange. However, “[cjourts have also held that the cost of repair or replacement is a fair representation of damages under the benefit of the bargain rule and is a proper method for measuring damages.”
Brewer, supra,
In this case, although the trial court incorrectly relied on
Adcock,
it properly used the cost of repair to measure damages. Because the trial court arrived at the correct result under the benefit-of-the-bargain rule, we are precluded from reversing the judgment simply because the trial court gave the wrong reasons.
State ex rel. Carter v. Schotten
(1994),
