Court Opinion

ID: 4084010
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-10-07 23:50:39.841293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:45:23.931042
License: Public Domain

Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Niagara County (Catherine R. Nugent-Panepinto, J.), entered September 21, 2012. The order, among other things, denied the cross motion of defendants Bruce D. Inglis, Kathy I. Benton and Lori I. Sessa for summary judgment dismissing the amended complaint against them.
 

  It is hereby ordered that the order insofar as appealed from is unanimously reversed on the law without costs and defendants-appellants’ cross motion seeking summary judgment dismissing the amended complaint against them is granted.
 

  Memorandum: Plaintiffs and defendants-appellants (defendants) entered into a contract for the sale of residential real property owned by defendants. Pursuant to the contract defendants agreed, inter alia, to convey to plaintiffs good and marketable title and to deliver to plaintiffs a warranty deed at closing, which took place on April 30, 2007. More than four years after closing, plaintiffs commenced this action alleging that the bricks on the exterior of the residence are defective and have been progressively deteriorating during the period of their ownership
   
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  of the property. The amended complaint asserts three causes of action against defendants, for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment in the contract and the deed, and unjust enrichment.
 

  Supreme Court erred in denying that part of defendants’ cross motion seeking summary judgment dismissing the first cause of action against them, for breach of contract arising from defendants’ alleged failure to convey marketable title. Defendants are correct that, “because title to the property had closed and the deed was delivered, the doctrine of merger extinguished any claim [plaintiffs] may have had regarding the contract of sale”
  
   (Simone v Homecheck Real Estate Servs., Inc.,
  
  42 AD3d 518, 521 [2007];
  
   see Arnold v Wilkins,
  
  61 AD3d 1236, 1236 [2009]). Even assuming, arguendo, that plaintiffs raised a triable issue of fact whether the parties intended that the provision concerning marketable title would survive the transfer of title
  
   (see Cerand v Burstein,
  
  72 AD3d 1262, 1264-1265 [2010];
  
   cf. Arnold,
  
  61 AD3d at 1236-1237), we agree with defendants that the presence of the allegedly defective exterior bricks does not implicate their agreement to convey marketable title, because “such a situation affects the property’s value, not one’s right to unencumbered ownership and possession”
  
   (Cone v Stranahan,
  
  44 AD3d 1145, 1147 [2007] [internal quotation marks omitted];
  
   see generally Bank of N.Y. v Segui,
  
  91 AD3d 689, 690-691 [2012]).
 

  The court also erred in denying that part of the cross motion seeking summary judgment dismissing the second cause of action, for breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment in the contract and the deed. The same analysis for the first cause of action applies to the second with respect to the breach of the covenant in the contract. With respect to the deed, although that covenant is contained therein and thus survives closing, it “ 6can be broken only by an eviction, actual or constructive, from the premises conveyed, or some portion thereof’ ”
  
   (Rajchandra Corp. v Tom Sawyer Motor Inns,
  
  106 AD2d 798, 801 [1984],
  
   appeal dismissed
  
  65 NY2d 784 [1985],
  
   appeal dismissed
  
  65 NY2d 925 [1985], quoting
  
   Scriver v Smith,
  
  100 NY 471, 477 [1885]). A constructive eviction may be found where property is subject to an easement, as in
  
   Scriver,
  
  a servitude, as in
  
   Raj chandra Corp.,
  
  or a restrictive covenant
  
   (see Tomanek v Shumway,
  
  248 AD2d 927 [1998]), each of which substantially impairs the value of the property and the use or enjoyment thereof
  
   (see generally White v Long,
  
  204 AD2d 892, 894 [1994],
  
   mod on other grounds
  
  85 NY2d 564 [1995]). In those situations, however, the owner’s possession is disturbed by the actions of someone with a superior right to use the property, whether the grantor or a
   
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  third party. The presence of a defective condition on the property is not equivalent to the impairment of the value of the property based on the existence of such superior rights
  
   (see id.).
  
  Here, defendants established that there was no such actual or constructive eviction, and plaintiffs failed to raise an issue of fact
  
   (see generally Dave Herstein Co. v Columbia Pictures Corp.,
  
  4 NY2d 117, 120 [1958],
  
   rearg denied
  
  4 NY2d 1046 [1958]).
 

  Finally, we conclude that the court also erred in denying that part of the cross motion seeking summary judgment dismissing the third cause of action, for unjust enrichment. Unjust enrichment arises from an obligation that the law imposes in the absence of an agreement between the parties
  
   (see Goldman v Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
  
  5 NY3d 561, 572 [2005]). Here, the respective obligations of the parties are defined in the deed and by those provisions in the contract, if any, that the parties intended to survive transfer of title
  
   (see Hunt v Kojac,
  
  245 AD2d 858, 858-859 [1997]). Recovery is not available to plaintiffs under their unjust enrichment cause of action inasmuch as that cause of action merely duplicates the breach of contract causes of action
  
   (see Corsello v Verizon N.Y., Inc.,
  
  18 NY3d 777, 790-791 [2012],
  
   rearg denied
  
  19 NY3d 937 [2012];
  
   Clark-Fitzpatrick, Inc. v Long Is. R.R. Co.,
  
  70 NY2d 382, 388-389 [1987]). Present— Scudder, EJ., Centra, Lindley, Sconiers and Valentino, JJ.