Ann R. WEBB
v.
John LECLAIR and John Leclair d/b/a Leclair Appraisal.
Supreme Court of Vermont.
*178 Present: REIBER, C.J., DOOLEY, JOHNSON, SKOGLUND and BURGESS, JJ.
ENTRY ORDER
¶ 1. Plaintiff Ann Webb appeals a summary judgment for defendant John Leclair on her claims of negligent misrepresentation, fraud, consumer fraud, and negligence arising from defendant's appraisal of a home she purchased. The appraisal was done on behalf of plaintiffs mortgage lender. Plaintiff argues that the superior court erred in both requiring privity between defendant and her before she could sue for damages caused by errors in the appraisal, and in dismissing her consumer fraud count. We hold that, on the facts before the superior court at summary judgment, plaintiff failed to show that defendant owed her a duty with respect to her common law claims, and that plaintiff's consumer fraud claim is in fact an assertion of malpractice that is outside the scope of our consumer fraud law. We therefore affirm.
¶ 2. Recitation of the facts in this case first requires resolution of plaintiff's cry of procedural foul. Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c)(2) requires a party moving for summary judgment to attach to its motion a "separate, short, and concise statement of the material facts as to which the moving party contends that there is no genuine issue to be tried." The rule provides that the party opposing summary judgment "shall":
include with [its] affidavits and memorandum . . . 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. All material facts set forth in the statement required to be served by the moving party will be deemed to be admitted unless controverted by the statement required to be served by the opposing party.
V.R.C.P. 56(c)(2) (emphasis added).
¶ 3. In this case, plaintiff failed to file a statement of contested facts in response to defendant's motion for summary judgment and statement of undisputed facts. Instead, she filed a forty-six-page memorandum of law with accompanying exhibits.
¶ 4. Discrete statements of undisputed and disputed facts have been required for more than ten years now. See Reporter's Notes to 1995 Amendment, V.R.C.P. 56. As the Reporter's Notes state, this provision was intended to focus summary judgment arguments and allow courts to more readily determine the material facts at issue. Id. Plaintiff recognizes in her appellate *179 brief that we have consistently enforced the rule that a plaintiff's failure to controvert facts in a counter statement requires that the moving party's undisputed facts be taken as true. Gallipo v. City of Rutland,
¶ 5. In Gallipo, Boulton, and Richart, both parties submitted at least some form of a factual statement; the error was in the opposing party's failure to respond completely. Gallipo,
¶ 6. The requirements, and consequences, of Rule 56(c)(2) are plain from its text. Forcing courts to sift through nearly fifty pages of narrative in order to find contested and uncontested facts is precisely the type of "needle in a haystack" search the rule is meant to avoid. The trial court correctly took defendant's submitted facts which are supported in the record as true. We do as well.
¶ 7. Accordingly, the undisputed facts are as follows. In July 2003, plaintiff, with the help of her real estate broker, entered into a purchase and sale agreement for a home in Essex, Vermont for $310,000. The purchase and sale agreement contained the following appraisal contingency:
If the property fails to appraise at or above purchase price, Purchaser shall have the right to terminate the agreement. Appraisal to be arranged and paid for by Purchaser on or before September 10, 2003. If this contract is subject to financing . . . such appraisal must be acceptable to Purchaser's mortgage lender.
The record, however, contains no evidence that the sellers ever signed this contingency agreement.
¶ 8. To finance a portion of the purchase price, plaintiff applied for a loan from Spruce Mortgage ("Spruce") for $110,000. Spruce hired defendant, a licensed Vermont appraiser, to appraise the property in order to determine whether there was sufficient equity to cover the loan. A loan officer at Spruce faxed defendant the request for the appraisal and included plaintiff's purchase and sale agreement, a copy of the "Multiple Listing Service" (MLS) sheet for the property, and a copy of the deed for the property. Plaintiff did not make arrangements to have any other appraisal done before the closing.
¶ 9. In the course of his appraisal, defendant inspected the property, reviewed the listers' files for the Town of Essex, which contained evidence that the home was built in 1978, and reviewed sales data for other properties in the Essex-area market. Based on his "research, education and experience," defendant valued the house at $310,200 on August 28, 2003. He was not encouraged by employees of Spruce or *180 anyone else to appraise the house at a value equal to or greater than the contract price.
¶ 10. Defendant's appraisal report stated that "[t]he function of the appraisal is to assist the above-named Lender in evaluating the subject property for lending purposes." Defendant submitted his report to Spruce, which subsequently sent it on to the underwriter of the loan. Defendant had no agreement with plaintiff or her real estate broker with respect to the appraisal. His client was Spruce, and he had no conversations with plaintiff or her broker until plaintiff called him several weeks after the closing date of September 30, 2003.
¶ 11. At an unknown date between September 23, 2003 and the closing on September 30, 2003, plaintiff allegedly had a conversation with the Spruce loan officer in which the loan officer stated that the appraisal "numbers had been met" and that it was "clear sailing." The loan officer did not recall this conversation. At the closing, plaintiff reimbursed Spruce for a portion of the costs of defendant's appraisal. She did not receive or review a copy of defendant's appraisal report until it was sent to her by Spruce weeks later. Plaintiff conceded in her deposition that the first time she became aware that defendant had estimated that the house was twenty-five years old was after the closing when she first read his report.
¶ 12. This suit arose months after the closing when the house was appraised by different appraisers who valued it at considerably less than defendant had. Specifically, plaintiff alleged in her complaint that one appraiser valued the house at $255,000, while another valued it at $252,000 despite an appreciating real estate market and improvements made by plaintiff. Plaintiff further asserted that the Essex land records show that the house was constructed in 1966, and that despite being marketed as a twenty-six year old home, it was in fact thirty-seven years old. Based on the discrepancy in appraisals, plaintiff sued defendant for: (1) negligent misrepresentation, (2) fraud, (3) consumer fraud, (4) negligence, and (5) fraudulent concealment.
¶ 13. Defendant successfully moved for summary judgment on all counts. The trial judge concluded that defendant owed no common law or statutory duty to plaintiff. Regarding the negligent misrepresentation claim specifically, the court relied on Hedges v. Durrance,
¶ 14. This Court reviews an award of summary judgment using the same standard as the trial court; the familiar inquiry is whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether any party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Kremer v. Lawyers Title Ins. Corp.,
¶ 15. Plaintiff largely frames the issue in this case as whether we should adopt the holding of Larsen v. United Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n,
It is enough that [the purchaser] be a third party whom the negligent provider of the information knew would utilize it. Even though the appraisal might be made primarily for the benefit of the lending institution, the appraiser should also reasonably expect the home purchaser, who pays for the appraisal and to whom the results are reported (and who has access to the written report on request), will rely on the appraisal to reaffirm his or her belief the home is worth the price he or she offered for it.
Id. at 287.
¶ 16. We declined to adopt the Larsen rationale in Behn because we held that even under that approach the plaintiff, the seller of the home, would not prevail against the defendant, the appraisal company. We stated:
Thus, for a legal duty to arise under Larsen and the Restatement [(Second) of Torts § 552 (1977)], there must be both (1) the requisite intent or knowledge by [defendant], and (2) "justifiable reliance" by [plaintiff]. We find both lacking. There is no evidence that [defendant] intended to supply the appraisal report to the plaintiffs or that they knew the Bank or the prospective purchaser would supply it to the plaintiffs. Similarly, the record does not support plaintiffs' claim of reasonable reliance on the appraisal report. Thus, plaintiffs' attempt to come within the limited rule announced in Larsen is to no avail.
¶ 17. Our analysis of Behn is reinforced by two more recent decisions. In Bovee v. Gravel,
¶ 18. Bovee was followed a year later by Hedges,
¶ 19. Finally, we note that the Behn holding is consistent with Fuller v. Banknorth Mortgage Co.,
¶ 20. Based on the record before us, we conclude that plaintiffs case is precluded by Behn. Defendant owed no duty to plaintiff on which plaintiff could rest a negligence or negligent misrepresentation claim. Again, we do not have to determine whether we would follow the Iowa Supreme Court decision in Larsen on different facts.
¶ 21. The only remaining issue is whether the court erred in granting judgment for defendant on plaintiff's consumer fraud claim. The court dismissed this claim for a number of reasons, the primary one being that professional opinions of value by appraisers, even if erroneous, cannot constitute consumer fraud. In reaching that conclusion, the court relied on the decision of the United States District Court for the District of Vermont in Kessler v. Loftus,
¶ 22. Kessler predicted that our Court would not consider an erroneous legal opinion negligently given by a lawyer as falling within the scope of Vermont's Consumer Fraud Act.
¶ 23. We now expressly adopt the Kessler court's interpretation, based on Winton. that although certain representations may give rise to a malpractice claim, they are generally not actionable under the Consumer Fraud Act if they are the product of the defendant's "professional judgment based upon his legal knowledge and skill." Kessler,
¶ 24. This is not to say that expressions of professional opinion are never actionable as fraud. For example, we have held that expressions of opinion may be so actionable where the defendant misrepresents his opinion as part of a "scheme to defraud" the plaintiff, such as where he intentionally misstates an estimate of cost in order to induce the plaintiff to hire him. Winey v. William E. Dailey, Inc.,
¶ 25. Here, although plaintiff urges us to question defendant's motives in rendering an appraisal so close to the purchase price of the home, the record of undisputed facts makes clear that we must treat this as a fairly routine malpractice case where defendant relied on his "research, education and experience," but nevertheless came to an erroneous value. Plaintiff's theory is not that defendant misrepresented specific facts in reaching his appraised value because plaintiff did not see his factual analysis prior to the closing. Nor is it that defendant *184 misrepresented his opinion; no submitted facts support such a claim. Instead, plaintiff's assertion, based on the facts before the court at summary judgment, is that defendant's opinion was wrong because it arrived at the wrong value. Not every alleged wrong against a consumer is actionable under the Consumer Fraud Act; here, plaintiff fails to state a viable claim under the Act.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[*] We recognize that the situation would arguably be different if the purchase and sale agreement for the house contained a binding appraisal contingency and the appraisal at issue was expected to fulfill that condition. We do not address the result in those circumstances here.
