Defendant first assigns error to the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. He contends the following finding of fact was erroneous:
“The garage was built on a concrete slab on top of the ground and extended northwardly from the north wall of the basement and waterproofing could not be applied to the entire length of the outside of the north wall of the basement.”
The testimony in the record is to the effect that the garage was in fact built on a slab abutting the north wall of the house. There was, in addition, testimony that the men attempting to
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waterproof the basement wall were unable to get to the entire length of the wall beneath the carport. Where jury trial is waived — as it was in this case — the court’s findings of fact are conclusive if supported by any competent evidence and will be affirmed on appeal.
Nichols v. Insurance Co.,
Defendant’s next group of assignments of error presents to this Court a case of first impression, i.e., whether there is an implied warranty of fitness or habitability in a sale of residential real estate between a builder-vendor and a buyer. Our research reveals no case in the appellate courts of this State which have spoken to this issue. In
Lindstrom v. Chesnutt,
The majority of jurisdictions continue to apply the rule of
caveat emptor
to sales of dwellings by builder-vendors. Annot.
Several jurisdictions have adopted the so-called “English Rule” recognizing implied warranties of fitness or habitability, but limiting their application to cases where the house was under construction at the date of the contract and completed later. In
Miller v. Cannon Hill Estates, Ltd.,
2 K.B. 113 (1931), plaintiff purchased a house under construction, but was forced to abandon it because of the excessive moisture he discovered following completion of the house. In holding that there are implied warranties in the sale of an uncompleted house, the King’s Bench distinguished the cases dealing with a house completed prior to the contract for sale. The very nature of the transaction, said the Court, makes it clear that the purchaser intends to use the house built for him as a dwelling upon its completion, whereas the purchaser of a completed dwelling may have many purposes for the building. Since the house is completed, he is, unlike the purchaser of an uncompleted dwelling, able to notice obvious defects and to protect himself with an express warranty. Thus, reasoned the Court, the buyer of an uncompleted dwelling is entitled to rely upon an implied warranty that the house will be completed in a manner to make it suitable for habitation. Among the decisions adopting the English rule in this country are
Glisan v. Smolenske,
While the gradual acceptance of the English rule in the past two decades represents a departure from the firmly entrenched majority rule of
caveat emptor
in the sale of dwelling house, recent decisions in several states have expanded the English rule — extending the application of implied warranties of habitability to houses completed prior to contract of sale. Among the leading cases in this recent line is
Carpenter v. Donohoe,
*498 “That a different rule should apply to the purchaser of a house which is near completion than would apply to one who purchases a new house seems incongruous. To say that the former may rely on an implied warranty and the latter cannot is recognizing a distinction without a reasonable basis for it.” Id. at 83.
The English rule has likewise been extended in the following cases:
Bethlahmy v. Bechtel,
We agree that a completed house can be inspected, to a limited extent, for defects by a purchaser before he signs the contract to buy. However, looking at the situation in a practical way, we are of the opinion that most potential homeowners lack the competency to do their own inspections. Even if he were skilled, there is little he could uncover, because most litigation is over defects which are found in the home’s foundation. This can only be checked effectively at a time when none of the building proper has been constructed. It would seem to us, therefore, that the purchaser of a completed house is relying much more heavily on the superior skill and knowledge of the builder than is the purchaser of a house under construction.
Another anomalous outcome is the situation where a developer is constructing more than one house in a subdivision. One who purchases one of the houses one day before it is completed gets the benefits of an implied warranty that the house is free from structural defects and fit for habitation. The one who buys the house next door two days later — one day after completion — buys without implied warranty.
Although the majority of jurisdictions continue to adhere to the rule of caveat emptor in the sale of residential real estate by a builder-vendor, we feel that the recent trend recognizing implied warranties of fitness and habitability is the better reasoned view. We, therefore, hold that in the sale of a house by a builder-vendor, there is an implied warranty that the house has been or will be completed in an efficient and workmanlike manner and that it will be upon completion suitable for habitation. This implied warranty applies irrespective of the status of the house relative to completion.
Since defendant’s assignments of error to the denial of his motions for directed verdict are predicated upon the fact that *499 the implied warranty of fitness and habitability has not heretofore been recognized in North Carolina, these assignments are overruled. Likewise is the assignment of error to the conclusion that there existed an implied warranty overruled.
Defendant next assigns error to the court’s allowing opinion testimony as to the fair market value of the house as well as the expenses incurred by plaintiff in travel and repairs occasioned by the flooding. It is defendant’s position that the court misapplied the measure of damages by allowing recovery for both the diminished value of the land and the expenses incurred.
This position is not well taken. The measure of damages in an action based on breach of warranty is the difference between the fair market value of the article as warranted and as delivered, together with such special damages as were within the contemplation of the parties.
Insurance Co. v. Chevrolet Co.,
No error.
