This civil action was brought by the plaintiffs, Irving E. and Lita A. Sousa, against Arthur Albino, Jr., and Joseph E. Amaral to recover damages incurred by the defendants’ alleged breach of an implied warranty of habitability. A justice of the Superior Court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the suit pursuant to Super. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). From that judgment the plaintiffs have appealed to this court.
In their one-count complaint, plaintiffs allege that defendants sold them a house which was unsuited for its intended use as a family residence because its heating system was inadequate. Additionally, plaintiffs aver that since defendants are “dealers in real estate” 1 they are in a position *462 of superior expertise with respect to the condition of the house and that they knew or should have known the house in question was unsuited for a family dwelling. The issue before us is whether the implied warranty of habitability applies to the sale of a used home where the vendor was not the builder.
The sole function of a 12(b)(6) motion is to challenge the sufficiency of the complaint.
Palazzo
v.
Big G Supermarkets, Inc.,
In
Padula
v. J.J.
Deb-Cin Homes, Inc.,
Ill R.I. 29,
The question of whether the implied warranty of habitability should apply to the sale of a house by a builder-vendor wherein there had been an intervening tenancy for less than 1 year was answered in
Casavant
v.
Campopiano,
“Compelling public policy discussed in Padula favors implying such warranties in appropriate cases, and this court will not allow [that] policy to be defeated solely because of an intervening tenancy, particularly where the builder-vendor created such intervening tenancy for the purpose of promoting the sale of the property.”
The plaintiffs argue that the rules established in Padula and Casavant should be applied and extended to the facts in the instant case. In support of their position they contend that because defendants are “dealers in real estate,” they are in a much stronger bargaining position than plaintiffs and that they knew or should have known of the defective condition of the heating system. We cannot agree.
While the thrust of Padula Casavant rules was to afford protection to home buyers from the overreaching of knowledgeable and unscrupulous builder-vendors, it is our opinion that the instant case is outside the purview of those holdings because plaintiffs have failed to allege in the complaint that defendants were builder-vendors of a new house. 2
Our research discloses that the numerous courts which have recognized and invoked the implied warranty of habitability have almost uniformly limited its application to actions by buyers of new homes against builder-vendors.
See
Annot.,
Whatever the trend may be towards recognizing the implied warranty of fitness for habitability with regard to new or uncompleted dwellings, there is no basis here to extend the warranty to cover the sale of a used home by a nonbuilder-vendor.
Coburn
v.
Lenox Homes, Inc.,
Accordingly, we hold that the implied warranty of habitability does not apply to a used house sold by a nonbuilder. We have found no support for the proposition that the implied warranty doctrine should be expanded. Therefore, in order for plaintiffs to successfully invoke the doctrine, they should allege that the house, in question, is new and that it was purchased from a builder-vendor.
The plaintiffs’ appeal is denied and dismissed, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Notes
In the complaint the plaintiffs allege that the defendants are “dealers in real estate.” In their brief and during oral argument, the plaintiffs asserted that the *462 phrase was used to connote that the defendants regularly purchased and reconditioned used residential property for resale to the general public. The trial justice found that the defendants were merely real estate agents.
During oral argument, the plaintiffs conceded that the house in question was “a very old house.”
