¶ 1. Plaintiff Henry Johnson appeals from the grant of defendant Jennifer Harwood’s motion for summary judgment on his claims for breach of an express oral agreement, unjust enrichment, and constructive trust. We reverse.
¶ 3. Plaintiff commenced suit in March 2005 by a verified foreclosure complaint. 1 In addition to the verified complaint, in which plaintiff made oath to the truth of the allegations in the pleading, plaintiff took the unusual step of signing and filing a separate affidavit in which plaintiff attested that he had read and reviewed the verified complaint and that the facts therein were “true and accurate to the best of [his] knowledge.” The complaint alleged that the parties had express agreements to jointly pay their shared debts and to share the equity in the house if they broke up. Plaintiff also averred in the complaint that defendant had been unjustly enriched. The initial complaint also included claims for foreclosure, partition, and a deficiency judgment, but those claims were deemed waived by the trial court and plaintiff does not seek to pursue them on this appeal. After limited discovery, defendant filed a motion on March 23, 2006, for judgment on the pleadings, V.R.C.P. 12(c), and summary judgment, V.R.C.P. 56. The motion was accompanied by a statement of undisputed material facts, and was not supported by affidavit. See V.R.C.P. 56(b) (defending party may move for summary judgment “with or without supporting affidavits”). The “undisputed” facts set out in defendant’s motion included the assertions that plaintiff contributed no collateral for the construction loan to build the Waterbury house, that plaintiffs work to construct the house was substandard, that the “parties did not execute any written agreement with each other regarding [the Waterbury house or land],” and that the Waterbury house “was not to be conveyed to Plaintiff as either a gift or as a purchase.”
¶ 4. Plaintiff opposed the motion, arguing that questions of material fact remained in dispute, and that defendant was not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Plaintiff also filed a statement of disputed facts, as required by Rule 56(c)(2), which referred to specific paragraphs from his verified complaint to rebut defendant’s version of the facts. Although plaintiff did not support either his opposition or his statement of disputed facts with a new affidavit, his statement of disputed facts referred specifically to factual allegations in the detailed, verified complaint and the attached exhibits. The trial court — citing Rule 56 and two of our cases interpreting it — found that plaintiff’s citation of his complaint was insufficient to rebut defendant’s statement of facts.
¶ 5. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same
L
¶ 6. Our inquiry begins with whether the trial court was correct to disregard plaintiffs verified complaint in evaluating his opposition to summary judgment.
2
The trial court offered several bases for this conclusion. First, it cited Rule 56(e) for the proposition that “an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the adverse party’s pleading, but the adverse party’s response, by affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule, must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Second, the court noted our holding in
Baldwin v. Upper Valley Services, Inc.,
that “[ojpposing allegations must have sufficient support in specific facts to create a genuine issue of material fact.”
¶ 7. The trial court’s reliance on
Spargo
was misplaced. In
Spargo,
we held that a nineteen-page verified complaint that was “substantially a jumble of unrelated facts” was insufficient to survive a motion to dismiss.
Id.
(quotations omitted). The complaint claimed that the plaintiff, Spargo, had been wrongfully discharged from his employment, but did not allege that the defendant was in any way responsible for the firing. The only wrongful conduct alleged to have been committed by the defendant was failing to give the plaintiff a letter of recommendation after he was fired. Further, we noted that even if we had treated
the verified complaint as an affidavit, it would have been untimely filed
¶ 8. We have cited
Spargo
only twice in the three decades since it was decided.
Middlebury Am. Legion Post No. 27 v. Peck,
¶ 9. To the extent that our brief entry order in
Spargo
and our subsequent cursory citations of it support the trial court’s reading, we take this opportunity to overrule them and join the many federal and state courts that allow verified complaints — when referred to specifically in a party’s concise statement of disputed facts — to oppose Rule 56 motions. See, e.g.,
Gayle v. Gonyea,
¶ 10. The logic of these cases, contrary to the trial court’s reading of Spargo, is that Rule 56’s purposes are served equally well by sworn statements other than affidavits, provided that those statements meet the rule’s other requirements. Where, as here, the nonmoving party’s original complaint was sworn to under oath — and was accompanied by an independent affidavit attesting to the complaint’s truth — the broader purposes of the rules are not served by requiring the nonmoving party to resubmit in affidavit form the sworn statements already before the court in the verified complaint. See V.R.C.P. 1 (“[The rules] shall be construed and administered to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action.”). When the nonmoving party opposes summary judgment by filing a “separate, short, and concise statement of the material facts as to which it is contended that there exists a genuine issue to be tried,” see V.R.C.P. 56(c)(2), and that statement refers to the verified complaint filed in the same suit, the trial court should evaluate the statement in the same manner as if it referred to an affidavit. Plaintiff here filed just such a short and concise statement, and accordingly has fully complied with the requirements of Rule 56(c)(2).
II.
¶ 11. Taking into account plaintiff’s verified complaint, and giving plaintiff the benefit of all reasonable doubts and inferences,
City of Burlington v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
¶ 12. First, plaintiff disputes defendant’s contention that plaintiff gave no collateral for the construction loan. Plaintiff asserts, on this point, that “[w]ithout plaintiff, there would have been no loan for construction.” In his statement of disputed facts, plaintiff cites several specific paragraphs in his verified complaint in support of this position. Those paragraphs, however, support only the proposition that plaintiff and defendant were both personally liable on the construction loan and other subsequent loans, and do not raise a genuine issue as to whether he contributed collateral for any of the debts. See Black’s Law Dictionary 278 (8th ed. 2004) (defining collateral as “[pjroperty that is pledged as security against a debt; the property subject to a security interest or agricultural lien”). Further, plaintiff explicitly admitted, in response to defendant’s interrogatories, that he contributed no collateral for the loan:
49. Admit that you did not contribute any collateral for the construction loan.
ANSWER: Admitted.
50. Who did contribute the collateral?
ANSWER: [Defendant] pledged the land and the bank relied upon my credit history.
Credit history is not collateral. There was no genuine issue of material fact as to whether plaintiff contributed collateral for the construction loan.
¶ 13. Next, plaintiff contends that the parties had an express agreement to convey the Waterbury property to him after his divorce was finalized. In support of this contention he cites several paragraphs in his verified complaint and his divorce decree, which refers to his “equitable interest” in the property. The complaint alleged as follows:
22. Throughout their relationship, [defendant] wrote letters and other documentspromising to convey the land to both parties once one or more mortgages were obtained once Plaintiff was divorced finally from his wife.
24. At the time of conveyance [from defendant’s parents], Plaintiff understood that the real property was to be conveyed to both him and [defendant] once his divorce . . . was finalized.
25. In fact, . . . [defendant’s divorce stipulation] specifically stated that Henry had “obtained an equitable interest in and to [the Waterbury property] ....
26. Defendant Harwood knew of [the divorce stipulation], and approved of [it].
27. Defendant Harwood specifically told Plaintiff that the real property would be conveyed to both of them once Plaintiff was divorced from his wife.
75. The parties agreed that should their partnership dissolve, the parties’ home . . . would be sold, equity to be equally shared.
The fact that plaintiff’s divorce decree reflects plaintiff’s belief that he had an equitable interest in the Waterbury property — whether defendant knew of that expectation or not — does not raise a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to defeat summary judgment.
¶ 14. Plaintiff also asserted in the complaint, however, that defendant wrote “letters and other documents promising to convey the land” to him. This assertion, as defendant notes, is arguably contrary to plaintiff’s own discovery responses.
21. By what specific terms did you and defendant agree to “benefit from whatever equity or assets were accumulated and appreciated”? Produce any and all written documentation that demonstrates that agreement.
ANSWER: We promised one another that we would live there together forever; there was no written agreement.
27. Do you assert that you were to receive the property as a gift or a purchase?
ANSWER: Neither.
A party opposing summary judgment cannot create a genuine issue of material fact via reference to an unsworn pleading that contradicts that party’s sworn testimony,
Demarle,
¶ 15. Further, plaintiffs sworn pleadings, referred to in his Rule 56(c)(2) statement, raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether defendant was unjustly enriched by her representations to plaintiff regarding the debts they incurred during their relationship. A claim for unjust enrichment must allege that a benefit was conferred on defendant, that defendant accepted the benefit, and that it would be inequitable to allow defendant to retain the benefit.
Center v. Mad River Corp.,
¶ 16. On this point, the trial court concluded that there was “no evidence at all of any mutual expectation by the parties that [plaintiff] would receive payment for work he did on the house, or that he would receive any payments from [defendant] if the relationship failed.” Further, the court held that there was “nothing to suggest that [plaintiffs] work or financial contributions (including taking on joint debts) were offered for any reason other than the parties’ intimate relationship.” But these conclusions contradict the facts alleged in plaintiffs verified complaint, which the trial court erroneously disregarded. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that “[t]he parties agreed that should their partnership dissolve, the parties’ [Waterbury property] would be sold, equity to be equally shared,” and that “[defendant] wrote letters and other documents promising to convey the land to both parties once one or more mortgages were obtained once plaintiff was divorced.” Plaintiff further alleged that the parties “combined [their] earnings and [their] indebtedness and agreed to use [their] earnings to pay the expenses of living together and satisfying [their] joint and individual financial obligations.” What impact these oral agreements, letters, and documents may have had on plaintiff’s conduct remains in dispute, as does their very existence.
¶ 17. Accordingly, on remand, the parties should conduct further discovery and, if warranted, a trial on the merits of plaintiffs breach-of-express-agreement and unjust-enrichment claims.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The lien sought to be foreclosed in the complaint was recorded in the Waterbury land records on February 2, 2004, and stated that defendant owed plaintiff $95,000 for materials, labor, and payments relating to work he had done constructing a house on the Waterbury land. See 9 V.S.A. § 1921.
Although defendant’s motion for summary judgment was unsworn and unaccompanied by affidavits, plaintiff did not oppose the motion on this basis, but instead disputed the facts contained in the unsworn statement by reference to his own verified complaint. In light of our disposition of the appeal, the deficient form of the summary-judgment motion is of no moment.
