We granted certiorari to determine whether or not the doctrines of merger by deed and caveat emptor should bar these homeowners’ claim against their builder for breach of the building construction provisions of the written sales contract and their claim for negligent construction of the roof. The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court that had dismissed the homeowners’ complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
Holmes v. Worthey,
Fraud was not alleged. The complaint alleged breach of contract and negligent construction in that after the closing of the sales contract and the delivery and acceptance of the deed, the roof leaked, damaging certain components of the home and certain of its contents, and requiring work to be performed on the roof to prevent recurrence of the leaks.
The builder-seller of the house insists that the “build” as well as the “sale” provisions of the contract for construction of the house and for conveyance of the house and lot merged into the warranty deed that was accepted by the homeowners, thereby precluding claims for breach of contract and negligent construction of the roof. The builder-seller also contends that the doctrine of caveat emptor bars the claims because the purchasers not only were permitted but were required by the “build” provisions of the agreement to inspect the construction of the house for their own protection, and because there were no express or implied warranties pertaining to the construction of the house.
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1. The decision of the Court of Appeals in the present case is not in conflict with the decisions of this court in the cases of
Jordan v. Flynt,
Contracts for the sale of land often contain obligations which are not performed by delivery and acceptance of the warranty deed.
Scott v. Lester,
2. Although we recently have reaffirmed the inapplicability of implied warranty concepts to build-sell agreements for new homes, we reaffirmed in the same case the “passive concealment doctrine” under which the homeowner may be permitted to recover for latent building construction defects about which he did not know and in the exercise of ordinary care would not have discovered, which defects either were known to the builder or in the exercise of ordinary care by the builder would have been known to him.
P. B. R. Enterprises v. Perren,
supra. Our decision in
P. B. R.
was a reaffirmation of
Wilhite v. Mays,
We hold that our decisions in P. B. R. and Wilhite did not foreclose the Court of Appeals from recognizing the existence of a negligence claim which depends for its existence upon a comparison of the knowledge and expertise of the builder-seller with that of the purchaser. Even the dissenting Justices in P. B. R. thought it worthy of comment that the purchaser in that case was aware of proper home construction techniques because of his occupation.
3. Accordingly, neither caveat emptor nor merger by deed is a viable defense by a builder-seller against a homeowner’s tort-negligence and breach of contract claims seeking recovery for latent building construction defects about which the purchaser-homeowner did not know and in the exercise of ordinary care would not have discovered, which defects either were known to the builder-seller or in the exercise of ordinary care would have been discovered by him.
Judgment affirmed.
