PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 94-2859
Complete Title
of Case:
RONALD D. TYM and
CONSTANCE B. TYM,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
HELEN M. LUDWIG, f/k/a
HELEN M. HOOD, and
HILLER & FRANK, S.C.,
Defendants-Respondents.
Submitted on Briefs: June 29, 1995
COURT COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion Released: August 9, 1995
Opinion Filed: August
9, 1995
Source of APPEAL Appeal from a judgment
Full Name JUDGE COURT: Circuit
Lower Court. COUNTY: Ozaukee
(If
"Special", JUDGE: Warren A. Grady
so indicate)
JUDGES: Anderson, P.J., Brown and Nettesheim, JJ.
Concurred:
Dissented:
Appellant
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the plaintiffs-appellants, the cause was
submitted on the briefs of Ronald D. Tym, pro se.
Respondent
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the defendants-respondents, the cause was
submitted on the brief of Stephen P. Juech and Pamela M. Schmidt
of Whyte Hirschboeck Dudek, S.C. of Milwaukee.
COURT
OF APPEALS DECISION DATED
AND RELEASED August
9, 1995 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.
See § 808.10 and Rule
809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 94-2859
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN
COURT OF APPEALS
RONALD
D. TYM and
CONSTANCE
B. TYM,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
HELEN
M. LUDWIG, f/k/a
HELEN
M. HOOD, and
HILLER
& FRANK, S.C.,
Defendants-Respondents.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the circuit court for Ozaukee County: WARREN A. GRADY,
Judge. Reversed and cause remanded
with directions.
Before
Anderson, P.J., Brown and Nettesheim, JJ.
BROWN,
J. This
is a slander of title action brought by homeowners Ronald D. and Constance B.
Tym against the lawyers for the contractor who substantially built their home, Helen
M. Ludwig and the Hiller & Frank law firm. The Tyms allege that by filing
an unlawful lien against their home, the lawyers caused the Tyms to take the
home off the market. By the time the lien was removed, the market was depressed
and the Tyms had to sell their home for less.
The trial court granted judgment to the lawyers as a matter of law,
holding that damages for slander of title can only be proven by loss of a sale
to a particular purchaser or purchasers.
We reverse and hold that, depending on the facts found in a case,
damages may also be proven by loss of a market that would otherwise have been
available. We remand for the trial
court to determine if this is such a case.
The
Tyms entered into a building construction contract with Lemel Homes, Inc. for
the construction of a home. The Tyms
moved into the newly constructed home in April 1989, but notified Lemel that
items remained to be completed under the construction contract and retained
final payment. Subsequently, in August
1989, the parties entered into an agreement amending the construction
contract. The amended contract provided
that Lemel would complete the items and the Tyms would then pay Lemel $35,209
as full and final payment. At the
request of Lemel's attorney, Harvey Jay Goldstein, a partner at Hiller &
Frank, the Tyms made a partial payment of $20,000.
In
November 1989, the Tyms, through their attorney, sent letters stating that
Lemel had not worked on their home since August 31, 1989, and that the work
remained incomplete under the parties' amended contract. Several months later, Goldstein forwarded a
letter from Lemel requesting an opportunity to complete the work. The Tyms responded that since Lemel had not
completed the items under their amended contract, they had completed the work
themselves.
In
May 1990, the Tyms put their home up for sale in anticipation of moving to New
Mexico. Then, in July, Lemel sent a
Notice of Intent to File Claim for Lien in the amount of $26,838.94 to the
Tyms. Shortly thereafter, the Tyms withdrew
their home from the market. In August,
the Tyms sent a letter to Goldstein stating that Lemel had not performed work
on their home for at least eleven months and, therefore, Lemel was not
entitled, as a matter of law, to a lien.
The letter also alleged that if the claim for lien was based on work
performed on the air-conditioning system, this was warranty work which did not
extend the statutory six-month time limit for filing the lien.
In
September 1990, Ludwig, one of the lawyers at Hiller & Frank, filed a claim
for lien against the Tyms' home in the amount of $26,838.94 at the direction of
Goldstein. Eventually, as part of an
arbitrated settlement, the Tyms obtained a release of the lien claim. Then, they filed this slander of title
action against Ludwig and Hiller & Frank (collectively, the law firm),
claiming that Ludwig had knowingly filed the claim for lien more than six
months after furnishing labor and materials by Lemel, in violation of § 779.06,
Stats., and for more than the
total amount due—$15,209—upon complete performance under the amended contract.
The
law firm filed a summary judgment motion on the grounds that (1) the Tyms had
produced no evidence of the loss of a specific sale to a specific purchaser
caused by the claim for lien and therefore there were no facts of record
showing compensable damages in the slander of title action, and (2) they were
protected against liability by a conditional privilege of qualified
immunity. The trial court granted the
motion based on the first ground, did not address the second ground, and
dismissed all of the Tyms' claims, awarding costs to Ludwig.
We
review the issue under summary judgment methodology. Summary judgment will be granted where “there is no genuine issue
as to any material fact and ¼ the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter
of law.” Section 802.08(2), Stats.
Whether a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law is a question
of law which we review de novo. Smith
v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 192 Wis.2d 322, 328-29, 531
N.W.2d 376, 379 (Ct. App. 1995).
Section
706.13(1), Stats., provides that:
any person who
submits for filing, docketing or recording, any lien, claim of lien ¼ relating to the
title in real ¼ property, knowing the contents or any part of the
contents to be false, sham or frivolous, is liable in tort to any person
interested in the property whose title is thereby impaired, for punitive
damages of $1,000 plus any actual damages caused thereby. [Emphasis added.]
This section codified the common law slander of title
cause of action, which as our supreme court stated in Kensington Dev.
Corp. v. Israel, 142 Wis.2d 894, 902, 419 N.W.2d 241, 244 (1988),
required an individual to show a publication which in pertinent part “plays a
material or substantial part in inducing others not to deal with the plaintiff”
and “results in special damage.”
(Emphasis added.) Thus, special
damages or, as the statute calls it, actual damages, is one of the elements of
a cause of action for slander of title.
See id.
Here,
the Tyms seek special damages based on the difference between the value of
their home immediately before the filing of the claim for lien and the sale
price of the home after the claim was released. Before the Tyms took their home off the market, it had been
appraised at $435,000. The realtor who
listed the house before the Tyms took it off the market gave deposition
testimony that she could have sold the home above appraised value, for at least
$445,000. The Tyms eventually sold
their home in September 1991 for $415,000.
The
Tyms allege that the notice of claim for lien forced them to take their home
off the market and that while their home was off the market they were deprived
of potential purchasers. Then, they
argue, the intervening Gulf War and recession in the United States economy
affected the real estate market and decreased the fair market value of their
home. Thus, they contend that when they
reentered the market, they were forced to sell their home at a price $20,000 to
$30,000 less then what they could have prior to the decline in the market. Based on the foregoing, the Tyms contend
that they have alleged sufficient facts of record to support compensable
damages and to sustain their cause of action.
Conversely,
the law firm argues that evidence of a general decrease in marketability is not
sufficient and that the general rule is:
to recover in a slander of title action a plaintiff must allege the loss
of a specific sale to a specific potential purchaser. See, e.g., McNichols v. Conejos-K Corp., 482
P.2d 432, 435 (Colo. Ct. App. 1971); Ellis v. Waldrop, 656 S.W.2d
902, 904-05 (Tex. 1983); A.H. Belo Corp. v. Sanders, 632 S.W.2d
145, 146 (Tex. 1982); Shell Oil Co. v. Howth, 159 S.W.2d 483, 490
(Tex. 1942).
This
particular issue has not been addressed in Wisconsin case law and is subject to
much division of authority elsewhere.
However, we determine that the appropriate answer to this issue is to
follow the Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 633 (1976). The Restatement
provides in § 633(2)(a) that pecuniary loss may either be established by proof
of the loss of a sale to a particular purchaser, see also id.
at cmt. c, or, in § 633(2)(b), by the loss of sales to unknown persons whom it
is impossible to identify, see also id. at cmt. g, h. Under subsec. (2)(b), where plaintiffs can
show with reasonable certainty that wide publication of a slanderous statement
deprived them of a market that would otherwise have been available, then the
rule requiring the identification of specific purchasers is relaxed and recovery
is permitted for the loss of the market.
See id. at cmt. h.
Teilhaber
Mfg. Co. v. Unarco Materials Storage, 791 P.2d 1164 (Colo. Ct. App. 1989), states the less narrow rule:
Currently, the plaintiff is required to be particular
only if it is reasonable to expect him to be so. If it is not a practical possibility to show specific losses,
damages may then be proved by evidence similar to that used to prove lost
profits resulting from a breach of contract.
Consequently, if a plaintiff can present sufficient evidence, using
detailed statistical and expert proof, to exclude the possibility that other
factors caused the loss of general business, recovery is allowed.
Id. at 1168 (citations omitted).
The Colorado Court of Appeals stated that this rule is guided by the
principle that the law requires “[a]s much certainty and particularity ¼, both in pleading
and proof of damages, as is reasonable, having regard to the circumstances and
to the nature of the acts themselves by which the damage is done.” Id. (quoted source omitted).
We
conclude that this more reasonable rule is consistent with Wisconsin case law
defining special damages. Special
damages are those occurring as a natural consequence of the wrongful conduct,
but not so necessarily foreseeable as to be implied in law.[1] See Univest Corp. v. General
Split Corp., 148 Wis.2d 29, 42, 435 N.W.2d 234, 239 (1989). Special damages may or may not be present
as the result of the wrongful act—the proof depends on the factual
circumstances of the case at hand. State
v. Boffer, 158 Wis.2d 655, 660, 462 N.W.2d 906, 908-09 (Ct. App.
1990). We hold that, when determining
the necessary proof for special damages, the trial court must consider whether it
is reasonable under the factual circumstances to expect the plaintiff to show
that a slander of title prevented a particular sale. And, if such a requirement is not reasonable under the
circumstances, the trial court must then determine the degree of particularity
required. Therefore, we hold that the
law firm was not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the grounds relied
upon by the trial court and reverse the dismissal of the Tyms' cause of action
on this basis.
Having
determined the proper application of the law, we hold that it is not for this
court to decide whether the facts of this case require the Tyms to prove a loss
of a specific sale or whether the less narrow view should be used. We are satisfied that there are disputed
issues of material fact which must be resolved by the trier of fact before the
determination can be made. We note that
if there are disputed issues of material fact, they should be decided by the
fact finder at trial, not by the appellate court. See Landreman v. Martin, 191 Wis.2d 788,
801, 530 N.W.2d 62, 67 (Ct. App. 1995).
Here,
the Tyms allege that if they had left their home on the market, they would have
had to disclose the cloud on their title to prospective purchasers. They contend that it was not reasonable
under the circumstances to require them to:
wait
for an unsuspecting prospective purchaser to submit an offer to purchase based
on the assumption that the [Tyms] had good and marketable title, and then,
after the offer to purchase was submitted, spring on the hapless prospective
buyers the news that there was a cloud on the title and wait for the buyers to
inevitably withdraw their offer or offer a lower purchase price ¼.
The Tyms argue that the law does not require “such an
exercise in futility.”
However,
the law firm contends that the claim for lien had no bearing on the eventual
sale price of the Tyms' home. The firm
argues that the Tyms removed their home from the market, not because of the
lien claim, but to facilitate their move to New Mexico. It also argues that there is no evidence
that the Tyms would have received any offers during the time the Tyms had their
home off the market during the fall and winter months, considering that during
this time of the year, “house sales are typically slow.”
We
conclude that the parties' arguments present material issues of fact relating
to whether it was reasonable to expect the Tyms to show the loss of a specific
sale. The Tyms must prove to the fact
finder that they withdrew their home from the market because of the lien claim
and that other unrelated factors were not the reasons for the lower sale price
of their home. The Tyms must present
sufficient evidence that it was not a “practical possibility to show specific
losses,” see Teilhaber, 791 P.2d at 1168, and that
withdrawing their home from the market was necessary and reasonable under the
circumstances.
Both
parties have briefed and argued a second issue, not decided by the trial court,
concerning whether the law firm was privileged against liability for the
validity of the lien claim. The
defendant in a slander of title action under § 706.13, Stats., is protected against liability for the truth of
statements made in a lien claim by the conditional privilege stated in Kensington
Dev., 142 Wis.2d at 903, 419 N.W.2d at 244. The protection is subject to two conditions: “(1) the pleader must have a reasonable
ground for believing the truth of the pleading, and (2) the statements made in
the pleading must be reasonably calculated to accomplish the privileged
purpose.” Id. at 904, 419
N.W.2d at 245. The issue the parties
dispute relates to the first condition—whether there was a reasonable ground
for Lemel's attorneys to believe the truth of the claim for lien.
To
be valid, a construction lien must be filed within six months of the last day
labor or materials are furnished by the lien claimant. Section 779.06(1), Stats. Warranty or
repair work on an original installation does not extend the time for filing a
construction lien. See Brown
& Haywood Co. v. Trane, 98 Wis. 1, 4, 73 N.W. 561, 562 (1897). Thus, the time for filing the lien claim is
measured from the date of the original installation, not from the date of the
later repair work.
The
law firm contends that before Ludwig filed the claim for lien, Goldstein
contacted Lemel twice to verify the information contained in the claim and was
told that work was performed on the Tyms' home on May 15, 1990, four months
before filing the claim, and that such work was not warranty work. However, the Tyms argue that Goldstein's
factual investigation and reliance on his client's statements were inadequate
in light of their letters to him that Lemel had not performed any work since August
1989.
Under
§ 802.05(1)(a), Stats., the person signing the pleading warrants
that on knowledge and “belief, formed after reasonable inquiry,” the pleading
is “well-grounded in fact.” How much is
reasonable depends on the circumstances and is a determination within the trial
court's discretion. Riley v.
Isaacson, 156 Wis.2d 249, 256, 259, 456 N.W.2d 619, 622, 623 (Ct. App.
1990). Under a proper exercise of
discretion, the trial court must examine the relevant facts. Id. at 256, 456 N.W.2d at 622.
The Tyms contend that the trial court's
dismissal of their action deprived them of the opportunity to develop the facts
pertaining to this issue.[2] We agree and hold that whether Goldstein
conducted a reasonable inquiry and whether he had a reasonable basis for
believing the lien claim turns on facts not yet fully developed, and, as a
matter of trial court fact-finding and discretion, is a determination to be
made by the trial court, not the court of appeals. We remand to the trial court so that the fact finder can
determine what Goldstein knew about the dates work was performed and whether
that work was a repair of an original installation. Then upon the development of the relevant facts, the trial court
can make its discretionary determination about whether Goldstein reasonably
relied on his client's statements.
As
a practical matter, the trial court may want to determine the qualified
immunity issue first. If the trial
court decides that Goldstein did not have a reasonable basis for believing the
validity of the lien claim, then the fact finder can hear the facts pertinent
to the damages issue discussed at the outset of this opinion.
By
the Court.—Judgment reversed
and cause remanded with directions.
[1] In contrast,
general damages are “necessarily implied from the wrong ¼ [and] necessarily result from the injury regardless of
its special character.” State v.
Boffer, 158 Wis.2d 655, 660, 462 N.W.2d 906, 908 (Ct. App. 1990)
(quoted source omitted).
[2] Goldstein had
refused to comply with discovery requests on matters relating to the content of
conversations between Lemel and its attorneys about the last day of furnishing
labor and materials to the Tyms' home and about the amount due under the
amended construction contract, citing attorney-client privilege. Prior to the dismissal of their case, the
Tyms filed a motion to compel discovery; the trial court granted the Tyms'
motion.