This 'action seeks damages for the alleged defective construction of a house. The complaint contains two causes of action, one for breach of implied warranty that the house
The house in question was constructed by respondents and completed in September 1972. It is located in a subdivision owned and developed by respondents and was built for “speculative” sale, i. e., not pursuant to any contract with a purchaser. In April 1973, respondents sold the house to Kenneth M. and Kathleen S. Johnson. In March 1976, the house evidenced substantial settlement, and respondents, upon being advised of the condition, paid to the Johnsons the sum of $230.18, receiving in return a “Receipt and Release.” The Johnsons undertook to remedy some of the damage caused by the settlement of the house.
Thereafter, on July 23, 1976, appellants purchased the house from the Johnsons. Within a short period of time after the purchase by appellants, the house evidenced additional substantial settlement of its foundation. Cracks began to appear in the sheetrock walls of the house; the floor began to sink away from the interior • walls; doors would not close properly; the brick veneer on the exterior of the house began to crack and separate at the mortar joints; and, upon closer inspection, pillars underneath the house were sinking away from the supporting beams of the floor. An inspection and evaluation by qualified experts indicates that the footings of the house were built on “fill dirt”. Estimates to repair the existing damage and remedy all of the cause of the settlement ranged from $5,916.00 to $22,978.73.
The answer of respondents acknowledged that they constructed the house, that they had been advised by the John-sons (the original purchasers) of the settlement of the house,
The trial judge, after meticulously analyzing our case law, concluded the reasons expressed in
Rutledge v. Dodenhoff,
254 S. C. 407,
The central issue in this case is whether or not a subsequent purchaser of a house may pursue a cause of action .in contract or tort against a home builder for a reasonable period after the dwelling’s construction. We follow the import and holdings of our previous decisions and the precedents of other jurisdictions to deny the respondent-builder’s motion for summary judgment and allow the case to proceed to a trial on the merits.
The extension of implied warranties to subsequent purchasers is based upon sound legal and policy considerations.
We also disagree with the conclusion of the trial judge that an equal bargaining position existed between the buyer and the builder because three years was sufficient time for latent defects to come to light. The length of time for latent defects to surface, so as to place subsequent purchasers on equal footing should be controlled by the standard of reasonableness and not an arbitrary time limit created by the Court.
The aforementioned policy considerations aside, the literal holdings of our precedents require reversal of the trial judge on the question of privity. In
Lane, supra,
we held that when a “new building is sold, there is an implied warranty of fitness for its intended use which springs from the sale itself.” Recently, we overruled a privity objection and allowed a suit by a subsequent purchaser of a warehouse against a manufacturer of materials used in its construction. See
JKT Company, Inc. v. Hardwick et al.,
S. C.
The lower court additionally held that the plaintiffs had no remedy in tort. We disagree.
We have previously allowed the imposition of tort liability to a third party as a result of contractual obligations despite the absence of privity between the tortfeasor and the third party. See
Edward’s of Byrnes Downs v. Charleston Sheet Metal Company,
253 S. C. 537,
As we said in
Lane, supra,
our objective is to protect the innocent purchaser from latent defects. The reasoning, which would arbitrarily interpose a first buyer as an obstruction to someone equally as deserving, is incomprehensible. See
Moxley v. Laramie Builders, Inc.,
Wyo.,
Judgment is accordingly reversed and the case remanded for trial.
