FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
KARL L. MULVANEY EUGENE M. FEINGOLD
NANA QUAY-SMITH STEVEN P. KENNEDY
CANDACE L. SAGE Law Offices of Eugene M. Feingold
Bingham Summers Welsh & Spilman Munster, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
R. STEVEN RYAN
DAVID M. AUSTGEN Barce & Ryan
Austgen & Decker Kentland, Indiana
Crown Point, Indiana
THE FIRST BANK OF WHITING )
n/k/a CENTIER BANK, )
)
Appellant-Cross-Appellee-Defendant )
)
vs. ) No. 56A03-9705-CV-142
)
THOMAS SCHUYLER, )
)
Appellee-Cross-Appellant-Plaintiff )
drains and into the Building. Storm water also came in the Building through the north door,
but management was able to stop that water after a very short period of time by using simple
barriers. Because management was unable to stop the sewer backup, approximately 12 of
the 15 racquetball courts were damaged and had to be replaced. After the flood, management
discovered that during construction of the Building the architect had failed to install a check
valve designed to prevent water backflow on the sewer line. A check valve was then
installed and no other backups were experienced during the Building's operation as a
racquetball club. In the years following the 1981 flood, racquetball club members recall
viewing evidence of minor seepage and moisture in the Building, the origin of which was
unknown. Aside from the minor seepage, the Building experienced no serious water
problems after the 1981 flood.
In the Spring of 1985, the Bank foreclosed on the Building, the racquetball facility
was closed, and the Building remained vacant until 1987. In 1987, Schuyler, a commercial
real estate developer, arranged to tour the Building with the idea of buying the Building and
converting it into office space. Before one of Schuyler's visits to the Building, bank
employee Herb Southworth had discovered that the carpet in the lower level of the building
had become wet and that several of the racquetball floors had become damaged. Southworth
investigated the cause of the damage and discovered that a hot water heater had rusted and
was leaking in the lower level. Southworth immediately contacted the water department and
had the water shut off and had drying crews brought in to dry the carpet. Thereafter,
Schuyler met with Southworth to tour the Building. At the time Schuyler toured the
Building, he observed the damp carpeting and warped racquetball floors. When Schuyler
inquired as to the cause of this visible water damage, Southworth explained to him that the
damage was caused by the broken hot water heater. Schuyler made no further inquiries of
Southworth about any water problems in the history of the Building. Prior to his purchase
of the Building, Schuyler was given blue prints of the entire Building, inspected the Building,
and viewed all sump pumps and drains.
In 1988, Schuyler purchased the Building for $550,000.00 and proceeded to remodel
the Building for use as office space. Subsequent to its purchase by Schuyler, the Building
experienced a number of externally-generated water problems whereby water either flowed,
seeped, or backed-up into the building. Schuyler suffered substantial expense in repairing
the damages suffered to the Building and eventually lost the Building to foreclosure.
Thereafter, Schuyler filed his complaint against the Bank alleging that it had
committed actual fraud when it sold the Building to him without disclosing the history of
water problems experienced at the racquetball facility. Schuyler sought both compensatory
and punitive damages for his alleged injuries. The Bank denied Schuyler's allegations and
filed a Motion for Summary Judgment which was granted by the trial court. In response to
a Motion to Correct Error filed by Schuyler, the trial court reversed its original entry of
summary judgment and reinstated Schuyler's claims. The case proceeded to trial by jury.
The jury found in Schuyler's favor and awarded Schuyler $223,000.00 in compensatory
damages and $800,000.00 in punitive damages. Thereafter, in response to a Motion to
Correct Error filed by the Bank, the trial court vacated the punitive damage award and
ordered a new trial on that issue. This appeal and cross-appeal ensued.
party from making a thorough inspection. For, if in addition to his
silence, there is any behavior of the seller which points affirmatively to
a suppression of the truth or to a withdrawal or distraction of the
parties' attention to the facts, the concealment becomes fraudulent.
Id. Indeed, a seller cannot be permitted to partially disclose the facts as he knows them to
be, so as to deliberately create a false impression in the mind of the buyer by failing to fully
reveal the true state of affairs. Thompson v. Best, 478 N.E.2d 79, 84 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985).
Although both Perry and Thompson involved the sale of residential property rather
than commercial property, we find a review of the facts of those cases instructive here. In
Perry, the purchasers of a new home brought a fraud claim against the seller for damages
arising out of their purchase of the home. At the time of the sale the seller/bank knew that
the home had serious structural defects and was, in fact, sliding down a hill to a river.
Among other things, walls had cracked, pillars had become detached, and water had flowed
through the house ruining the carpet. Although the bank could have made adequate repairs
costing $1,900.00, the bank chose instead to spend only $550.00 in making what may be
described as cosmetic repairs. Upon inspection of the home by the buyers and their realtor,
the buyers discovered the wet carpet and a detached pillar. The evidence revealed that when
the buyers inquired as to the cause of the damage, the bank affirmatively misrepresented the
cause of the wet carpet and the detached pillar and assured the buyers that the defects would
be cured. There was additional evidence that the inside of the house had been repainted to
cover up the water marks. We concluded that such acts amounted to sufficient
misrepresentation to impose a duty on the bank and its representative to disclose the whole
truth. Id. at 432.
Similarly, in Thompson v. Best, 478 N.E.2d 79 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985), prior to the
purchase of a home, the buyer and seller entered into a discussion regarding the presence of
a sump pump in the basement of the house and the drainage tiles around the house. The
buyer specifically asked the seller if he had had a water problem with the house and the seller
responded that he had not. Following his purchase of the home, the buyer discovered a
second sump pump which had been previously covered up by the seller's belongings. After
another inquiry to the seller regarding any water problems and the need for a second pump,
the seller again denied that the house had any drainage problems. To the contrary, the
evidence showed that seller experienced severe drainage difficulty in the home's basement
while residing in the home. As a result of the drainage problems, the buyer experienced
flooding of major proportions in the basement. Based upon this evidence, we concluded that
"once [the seller] took it upon himself to explain the house's drainage situation, vis a vis
describing the tasks of the sump pump and the tiles, he was required to disclose the entire
situation, not just those portions that would not spoil a sale of the house." Id. at 84.
The facts of the instant case do not rise to the level of either Perry or Thompson, and
are insufficient to support a fraud claim. The circumstances surrounding the parties' relevant
dealings with one another are not in dispute. While touring the Building with Bank
representative Southworth, Schuyler inquired into the visible water damage he noticed to the
lower level of the Building. Southworth responded that the water damage was caused by a
broken water heater. There is no evidence to suggest that Southworth's explanation of the
cause of the visible damage was inaccurate, and Schuyler asked nothing further.
Unlike in Perry, the Bank made no misrepresentation regarding the cause of the
visible damage to the lower level of the Building. Southworth answered fully and honestly
the question posed to him. There is no evidence that the Bank, or Southworth as its
representative, engaged in deceptive conduct in an attempt to conceal any material facts
regarding the Building's water history.
Moreover, unlike the "partial" disclosure in Thompson, Southworth did not undertake
to explain the sewer/septic system of the Building, the drainage capabilities of the Building,
or the Building's experience seven years earlier during the 1981 flood. Southworth merely
explained the damage caused by the broken water heater, the only damage which Schuyler
had inquired about. Schuyler, an experienced commercial real-estate developer, made no
inquires regarding whether the Building had experienced any externally-generated water
problems such as seepage or sewer backup or, in fact, whether the Building had any
problems whatsoever other than the visible damage he viewed upon touring the Building.
We disagree with Schuyler that the evidence supports that the Bank somehow misled him
into believing that the broken water heater was the "only" problem involving water that the
Building had ever experienced. Such an inference from Southworth's representation is
unreasonable and unsupported by case law.
As a matter of law, the Bank had no duty to disclose the Building's entire water
history to Schuyler. In the absence of a duty, mere silence is not actionable fraud. Perry,
467 N.E.2d at 431. There was insufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict on the issue
of fraud, and judgment on the evidence is appropriate. Accordingly, Schuyler is not entitled
to compensatory damages for his fraud claim.See footnote
2
Moreover, because compensatory damages
are a prerequisite to an award of punitive damages, Sullivan v. American Cas. Co. of
Reading, PA., 605 N.E.2d 134, 140 (Ind. 1992), Schuyler is similarly not entitled to punitive
damages on this issue. Thus, the need for a new trial on punitive damages has been obviated.
The judgment is vacated and the cause is remanded with instructions to enter
judgment for the Bank.
HOFFMAN, J. and STATON, J. concur.
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