On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 45A03-1309- ' CT-385
Even when a plaintiff proves a predicate crime under the Crime Victims Relief Act (CVRA), the trial court has discretion not to award exemplary damages when it thinks the conduct is not egregious enough to warrant punishment. And when a plaintiff pleads several alternative grounds for relief, the trial court has similar discretion not to impose CVRA liability at all, even when it awards compensatory damages under a different theory. According
Background Facts and Procedural History
This case comes before us again after our decision last year affirming in part and remanding for additional findings. Johnson v. Wysocki,
When the Johnsons sold the home, Barbara as trustee signed a Seller’s Residential Real Estate Sales Disclosure Form stating there were no building code violations, no work had been performed without any required permits, and there were no foundational, structural, moisture, water, or roof problems. The Wysockis made a purchase offer contingent on an independent inspection, and their inspection revealed no problems, so they accepted the property as-is and closed on their purchase in July 2006.
But shortly after moving in, the Wysock-is discovered water leaks in the garage and over the front porch, structural problems with the front porch overhang and the foundation of the screened porch, and grossly substandard electrical -wiring to the swimming pool. They spent $1,200 to bring the pool wiring up to code and about $3,500 to fix the roof; and they obtained estimates of about $2,800 and $6,300 to fix the porches’ structural problems. They sued the Johnsons for fraudulently failing to disclose those defects on the disclosure form. (Another count was resolved on summary judgment and is not at issue here.) After a bench trial, the trial court awarded $13,805.95 in compensatory damages, but not attorney fees, costs, or exemplary damages under the CVRA:
12. This Court finds that the damages that should be allocated to those repairs are as follows:
(a) $1,200 ... for the cost to repair electrical service lines below the screened-in-deck [sic] and to run a dedicated circuit to the pool;
(b) $3,494.74 ... for repairs to the roofing of the front porch; and
(c) The costs as indicated by an estimate the Wysockis obtained ... to repair the front beam in the amount of $2,786.67, and to repair the rear screened-in room support beams in the amount of $6,324.54.
14. With regard to the Wysockis’ request that the defendant should be liable to them for payment to [their expert witness], as well as for attorney’s fees and additional damages pursuant to I.C. 34-24-3-1 [the CVRA], this Court concludes that the same should be denied.
15. The Wysockis have incurred damages in the amount of $13,805.95.
Its order specifically relied on common-law fraudulent misrepresentation, quoting Vanderwier v. Baker’s statement that “sellers can be held liable for errors, inaccuracies, or omissions on the Sales Disclosure Form if the seller has actual knowl
The Wysockis moved to correct error, arguing that the court was required to make some award for fees and costs because they had established the CVRA predicate crime of deception, Ind.Code § 34-24-3-1 (2008). They sought $1,000 in expert witness fees and $12,500 in attorney fees, but the trial court denied the motion, stating in relevant part:
7. Although the original award referenced specific items for which recovery should be given, it was the intent of the Court that the amounts for each of such items would include any and all expenses in receiving a judgment for them.
8. Accordingly, the Court concludes that the plaintiffs have received the full measure of relief to which they are entitled, and their Motion to Correct Errors should be denied.
The Johnsons appealed the judgment, and the Wysockis cross-appealed the denial of fees and costs. The Court of Appeals reversed in a memorandum decision, finding that the Wysockis had failed to show the Johnsons had actual knowledge of the defects.
On transfer, we agreed with the trial court that “seller[s] may be liable for [a] fraudulent mis-representation[ ] made on the [Sales] Disclosure Form” when they have “actual knowledge that the representation was false” at the time they completed the form. Johnson,
On remand, the trial court specifically found that the defects were “clearly” within the Johnsons’ actual knowledge, but otherwise reaffirmed its judgment—including its denial of fees and costs to the Wysockis. The Wysockis again appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Wysocki v. Johnson,
We disagreed with the Court of Appeals’ interpretation of the CVRA and granted transfer to reiterate and clarify several principles of CVRA liability. But like the Court of Appeals, we affirm the trial court.
Standard of Review
Before trial, the Johnsons filed, and the Wysockis joined, a motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law under Indiana Trial Rule 52(A). We therefore apply a two-tiered review, and affirm when the evidence supports the findings, and when the findings support the judgment. Marion Cnty. Auditor v. Sawmill Creek, LLC,
Discussion and Decision
I. Given a Choice Between Several Alternative Remedies, the Trial Court Had Discretion to Decline CYRA Relief-Disclosure Statute Violations Do Not Necessarily Warrant Quasi-Criminal Punishment.
On transfer, the Wysockis ask this Court to adopt a bright-line rule that every knowing misrepresentation on a Sales Disclosure Form constitutes criminal deception, and thus gives rise to CVRA liability. And because an award of costs and reasonable attorney fees is mandatory when liability is imposed under the CVRA, Browning v. Walters,
The Court of Appeals concluded that the Wysockis had failed to prove criminal deception, because the elements of that offense are not the same as the elements of common-law fraud. Wysocki,
Here, the trial court’s amended findings that the statements on the written Disclosure Form were false, and that the John-sons had actual knowledge of their falsity, appear to support the first two elements of the crime: “knowingly or intentionally mak[ing] a false ... written statement.” Id. And as we held in Johnson, the Disclosure Form “is a -list of features that are most significant and therefore most material for the average buyer,”
But it did not. To the contrary, the court’s original order expressly premised its judgment on common-law fraud, and it just as expressly refused to award any additional damages under the CVRA. Then it reiterated its refusal in denying the motion to correct errors, and yet again on remand. And in these circumstances, it was well within its discretion to impose
Even when a court awards compensatory damages under the CVRA, we have recognized that “it is highly appropriate for the trial court to weigh any equities before deciding the amount, if any, owed” as exemplary damages, White v. Ind. Realty Assocs. II,
In our view, the trial court’s judgment reflects precisely that choice. The Wysockis’ open-ended complaint encompassed multiple alternative theories of liability. The relevant count of their complaint was simply captioned “Fraud”; they pleaded all the elements of common-law fraudulent misrepresentation; and their prayer for relief was expressly “not ... limited to” the CVRA:
Wherefore, the Wysockis, by counsel, respectfully request that this honorable Court ... afford them complete relief which would include but not be limited to an amount reasonably calculated to compensate the Wysockis for their damages, treble damages allowed under the [CVRA], reasonable attorneys and expert fees, costs of this action, pre-judgment and post-judgment interest, and for any and all other relief that this honorable Court finds just and proper.
(emphases added). Though the CVRA creates a civil remedy, its reliance on proof of a predicate criminal offense makes it inherently quasi-criminal. So just as the “heinousness” of the defendant’s conduct may properly factor into the factfinder’s decision whether to award exemplary damages under the CVRA, the court’s inchoate sense of the defendants’ criminal culpability is a permissible factor in assessing whether the CVRA predicate offense has been proven. Accordingly, when the pleadings give the trial court a choice between an intentional tort and the quasi-criminal CVRA, the court necessarily has discretion to choose tort liability and reject quasi-criminal liability—even when, as here, the criminal offense and civil tort are so closely related.
Our conclusion does not undermine the mandatory nature of awarding costs and attorney fees under the CVRA. Browning,
We therefore reject the Wysockis’ invitation to adopt a bright-line rule imposing CVRA liability in all cases involving a knowing misrepresentation on a Sales Disclosure Form—at least where the claimants plead other grounds for liability in the alternative. Plaintiffs are free to choose, by their pleadings, to place all their eggs in the CVRA basket and take their chances on the factfinder’s assessment of criminality in exchange for the assurance of recovering costs and attorney fees if they prevail. But they are also free, as here, to plead other remedies in the alternative to the CVRA to hedge against being shut-out from compensatory damages if the trial court is reluctant to impose quasi-criminal liability. In those circumstances, the trial court has discretion over which remedies to award. Accordingly, the trial court was within its discretion to award compensatory damages for common-law fraudulent misrepresentation, while declining relief under the Wysockis’ alternative CVRA theory.
II. A CVRA Claim Requires Proving the Elements of a Criminal Offense, But Only by the Civil Preponderance Standard; and It Does Not Depend on Whether the Defendant Has Been Charged with or Convicted of any Criminal Offense.
The Court of Appeals also stated that the CVRA could not apply because the underlying offense of criminal deception, “as with all crimes, [requires] the State ... to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt,” and “because the Johnsons were not charged with [fraud] ..., much less convicted of it in a court of law.” Wysocki,
Conclusion
A knowing misrepresentation on a Sales Disclosure Form is an intentional tort. But not every intentional tort is necessarily “so heinous as to require exemplary damages,” Citizens Nat. Bank,
