Stikeleather Realty & Invs. Co. v. Broadway ( 2015 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA14-1136
    Filed: 19 May 2015
    Mecklenburg County, No. 14-CVD-9222
    STIKELEATHER REALTY & INVESTMENTS CO., Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ELISHA BROADWAY, Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal by plaintiff from judgment entered 18 July 2014 by Judge Matt Osman
    in Mecklenburg County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 18 March 2015.
    Law Offices of James W. Surane, PLLC, by Ross S. Sohm, for plaintiff-
    appellant.
    No brief filed on behalf of defendant-appellee.
    HUNTER, JR., Robert N., Judge.
    Stikeleather Realty & Investments Co. (“Plaintiff-Landlord”) appeals from a
    bench trial judgment awarding trebled rent abatement and attorney’s fees to Elisha
    Broadway (“Defendant-Tenant”) on claims of breach of the implied warranty of
    habitability and unfair and deceptive trade practices. We reverse.
    I. Factual & Procedural History
    On 19 March 2014, Plaintiff-Landlord initiated a summary ejectment action
    against Defendant-Tenant for breach of a residential lease agreement for failure to
    pay rent for the month of March. On 31 March 2014, Defendant-Tenant filed an
    answer and asserted the defense of retaliatory eviction pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    42-37.1, as well as counterclaims for (1) breach of the implied warranty of habitability
    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42, (2) unfair and deceptive trade practices pursuant
    to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-1.1 et seq., (3) unfair debt collection practices pursuant to N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 75-50 et seq., (4) negligence, and (5) negligence per se.
    On 22 April 2014, Plaintiff-Landlord filed an amended complaint, alleging
    Defendant-Tenant also breached the lease by keeping an unauthorized pet. On 2
    May 2014, Defendant-Tenant filed an amended answer and counterclaim, which
    contained no substantive changes pertinent to this appeal. On 8 May 2014, the
    magistrate entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff-Landlord on the primary claim of
    possession and in favor of Defendant-Tenant on his counterclaim of breach of the
    implied warranty of habitability only, awarding him $1,000.00 in damages. Plaintiff
    appealed to the district court.
    On 30 June 2014, the case was heard in Mecklenburg County District Court
    before the Honorable Matt Osman. At that time, Defendant-Tenant had already
    surrendered possession of the property. Therefore, the sole issue before the trial
    judge was Defendant-Tenant’s counterclaim for breach of the implied warranty of
    habitability. The transcript of this bench trial, as well as the record on appeal, reveals
    the following pertinent facts.
    In May 2010, Defendant-Tenant entered into a residential lease to rent a home
    located at 2600 Catalina Avenue in Charlotte (“the property”) for $500 per month. At
    this time, the property was neither owned nor managed by Plaintiff-Landlord. The
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    lease contained a page signed by Defendant-Tenant stating that a “Carbon/Smoke
    Detector”   1   existed in the home and that it was in good working condition when
    Defendant-Tenant took possession of the property. The lease also provided that
    Defendant-Tenant shall make requests for repairs in writing.
    On 4 June 2013, Mr. Kluth, a real estate broker, visited the property to obtain
    general information to list the house. On 10 June 2013, Mr. Kluth returned to the
    property for another inspection, this time bringing an interested buyer, Mr.
    Stikeleather, managing partner of Plaintiff-Landlord, a limited liability corporation
    in the business of buying and selling residential properties.
    During this second pre-sale inspection, Mr. Stikeleather asked Defendant-
    Tenant if the property had a smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm. Defendant-
    Tenant responded that it did not. Mr. Kluth then went to his truck and returned
    with a smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm for Defendant-Tenant to put in the
    property.
    On or around 26 June 2013, Plaintiff-Landlord purchased the property and
    sent a letter to Defendant-Tenant notifying him that Plaintiff-Landlord was the new
    owner and property manager. The letter also directed Defendant-Tenant to call
    1While the word “detector” appears throughout the record on appeal, this Court uses “alarm”
    synonymously, in order to reflect amendments by the N.C. General Assembly to this same effect. See
    2012 N.C. Sess. Laws 350, 350-52, ch. 92, § 1-4 (replacing the word “detector” with “alarm”
    throughout provisions of the Residential Rental Agreements Act).
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiff-Landlord to set up an inspection of the property and to put any requests for
    repairs in writing.
    On or around 24 September 2013, Mr. Stikeleather went by the house to do an
    inspection, but it had to be “quick” because of the presence of an unauthorized pet on
    the premises. During this inspection, Mr. Stikeleather testified that he observed an
    alarm in the living room, plugged into an electrical outlet in the wall, but he admitted
    he did not verify whether it was working properly.
    Near the middle of March 2014, Defendant-Tenant called Mr. Stikeleather and
    told him he would be late with March’s rent; Mr. Stikeleather responded that he
    would file eviction papers, which he did on 19 March 2014. Two days after the parties
    appeared in small claims court near the end of March 2014, Plaintiff-Landlord sent
    his repairman to install a smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm in the premises.
    Defendant-Tenant felt it was unfair to be evicted for being only a few days late on
    rent, so he went to City Code Enforcement, which issued an inspection report that
    does not mention any issue with the property’s smoke alarm and carbon monoxide
    alarm. Defendant-Tenant did not pay rent for the months of March, April, or May
    2014.
    The day after the bench trial, on 1 July 2014, the trial judge entered a
    judgment containing the following pertinent findings of fact, whose order has been
    reorganized by this Court in an effort to improve clarity:
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    3. [Defendant-Tenant] lived at 2600 Catalina, Charlotte,
    NC (“the property”), for four years and three months.
    ....
    43. [Defendant-Tenant’s] son, Ronald Broadway (RB),
    lived with his father at the property.
    ....
    4. At the time [Defendant-Tenant] took possession of the
    property in 2010 it was owned and managed by a different
    landlord than the Plaintiff in this action.
    ....
    65. [Mr.] Stikeleather is the managing partner of the LLC
    that is [Plaintiff-Landlord].
    ....
    76. [Plaintiff-Landlord’s] LLC owns approximately 200
    properties and manages another 300 properties.
    ....
    55. Mike Kluth is a real estate broker in Charlotte and he
    sold the property to [Plaintiff-Landlord].
    56. Prior to selling the house, Mr. Kluth visited the
    property in June 2013 to obtain general information to list
    the house.
    ....
    58. During a second pre-sale inspection of the property in
    June 2013, [Defendant-Tenant] told Mr. Kluth and [Mr.
    Stikeleather] about the flooding in the basement. The
    basement was dry when Mr. Kluth and [Mr. Stikeleather]
    saw it.
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    59. During the second inspection [Mr. Stikeleather] asked
    [Defendant-Tenant] about a Smoke/Carbon detector.
    [Defendant-Tenant] said there was not one present in the
    property.
    60. Mr. Kluth then went to his car and got a Smoke/Carbon
    detector to place in the house.
    61. Mr. Kluth does not know whether the detector, which
    was not new, was operational. The detector could be
    plugged into the wall and could also be run on batteries.
    62.    [Defendant-Tenant] testified that the detector
    provided by Mr. Kluth did not work.
    ....
    38. In June 2013, [Plaintiff-Landlord] notified [Defendant-
    Tenant] in writing that the property had been sold and that
    [Plaintiff-Landlord] was the new owner and property
    manager. Plaintiff[-Landlord] admitted Plaintiff’s Exhibit
    2, a letter dated June 26, 2013, detailing the change in
    ownership.
    39. In addition to telling [Defendant-Tenant] about the
    new management company, Plaintiff[-Landlord’s] Exhibit
    2 also directed [Defendant-Tenant] to put any requests for
    repair in writing and asked [Defendant-Tenant] to call
    [Plaintiff-Landlord] to set up an inspection.
    ....
    66.  The only potential repair issue that [Plaintiff-
    Landlord] was aware of at the time of the purchase was the
    basement and the flooding.
    ....
    2. The parties have also stipulated to the existence of a
    lease        between        [Defendant-Tenant]       and
    Plaintiff[-]Landlord. . . .
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    ....
    21. The lease contains a page signed by [Defendant-
    Tenant] stating that the property had a “Carbon/Smoke
    Detector” in the unit and that it was in good working
    condition when [Defendant-Tenant] took possession in
    2010.
    ....
    29. Paragraph 17 of the lease states that [Defendant-
    Tenant] shall make a request for repair in writing.
    ....
    70. After taking ownership of the property, [Mr.
    Stikeleather] went by the house in the fall of 2013 to do a
    quick inspection. It was a quick inspection due to the
    presence of [Defendant-Tenant’s] dog.
    71. [Mr. Stikeleather] testified that the dog was not
    permitted at the property[.]
    72. [Mr. Stikeleather] did observe a detector that was
    plugged in during [the] fall 2013 inspection but did not
    verify whether it was working properly.
    ....
    32. [Defendant-Tenant] called [Mr. Stikeleather] to tell
    him that he would be late with the March [2014] rent and
    [Mr. Stikeleather] said that he would file eviction papers.
    ....
    75. [Plaintiff-Landlord] sent his repairman to install a
    detector after the first hearing in small claims court in late
    March 2014.
    ....
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    22. [Defendant-Tenant] and [Defendant-Tenant’s] son[,
    RB,] were present when a new detector was installed by
    [Plaintiff-Landlord’s] employee in 2014.
    ....
    47. RB testified that the property did not have a
    Smoke/Carbon detector upon initial[] occupancy. There
    [was] a blank spot where it appeared one had previously
    been with a painted[-]over bracket.
    48. RB was present when [Plaintiff-Landlord’s] staff came
    out and installed a Smoke/Carbon detector, a few days
    after the first court appearance in 2014. RB watched the
    installation and [Plaintiff-Landlord’s] staff did not remove
    an old detector prior to installing a new one.
    ....
    33. [Defendant-Tenant] did not think it was fair to be
    evicted for being seventeen days late on the rent so he went
    to City Code Enforcement.
    ....
    40. The city inspected the property and issued a list of code
    violations.     Plaintiff[-Landlord] admitted the Code
    Enforcement report as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3.
    41. The Code Enforcement report does not list the
    carbon/smoke detector.
    ....
    68. [Mr. Stikeleather] told [Defendant-Tenant] several
    times to put repair requests in writing, as required by the
    lease.
    69. [Mr. Stikeleather] testified that he never received any
    written or verbal repair requests from [Defendant-Tenant].
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    ....
    78. [Mr. Stikeleather] testified that he has made numerous
    requests for access and for a key to the Property, including
    by certified mail, so that he could do an inspection and
    make repairs to the property. [Defendant-Tenant] never
    responded to those requests.
    79. [Defendant-Tenant] did not introduce any portion of
    the Charlotte City Housing Code.
    ....
    1. [Defendant-Tenant] did not pay rent for March, April or
    May 2014, and that the monthly rent was $500.
    Based upon these findings, the trial judge concluded the following as a matter
    of law:
    2. [Defendant-Tenant] has failed that [sic] show that
    [Plaintiff-Landlord] breached the implied warranty of
    habitability for the issues related to the flooded basement,
    broken step, inoperable and broken windows and faulty
    electrical system because [Defendant-Tenant] failed to
    provide proper written notice of these issues and also failed
    to provide reasonable access to [Plaintiff-Landlord] to
    permit an inspection to determine if there were any
    structural or electrical issues;
    3. Where [Plaintiff-Landlord] knew on or about June 26,
    2013, that the property did not have a smoke alarm or
    carbon monoxide detector and did not verify that the
    previously used device provided on or about that date by
    Mr. Kluth was operable, [Plaintiff-Landlord] violated the
    Residential Rental Agreement[s] Act which requires
    provision of an operable smoke alarm and carbon monoxide
    detector. [Defendant-Tenant] is therefore entitled to rent
    abatement;
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    ....
    6. [Defendant-Tenant] is entitled to rent abatement of $150
    per month;
    7. [Plaintiff-Landlord’s] continued collection of rent
    without verifying that [Defendant-Tenant] had been
    provided an operable smoke alarm and carbon monoxide
    detector constituted an Unfair and Deceptive Trade
    Practice;
    8. Because [Plaintiff-Landlord] has committed an Unfair
    and Deceptive Trade Practice, [Defendant-Tenant’s]
    damages shall be trebled;
    9. [Defendant-Tenant’s] damages shall be offset by an
    abatement credit of $350 for March 2014 where
    [Defendant-]Tenant did not pay rent but before the new
    detector was installed and $500 per month for April and
    May 2014 where [Defendant-]Tenant did not pay rent but
    after the new detector was installed for a total abatement
    credit of $1350.
    Based upon the foregoing, the trial judge entered the following judgment:
    1. Defendant[-]Tenant’s claim for rent abatement and
    Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices is granted;
    2. Defendant[-]Tenant is awarded damages in the amount
    of $2250 ($1200 in rent abatement, trebled to $3600
    pursuant to Chapter 75 minus tenant’s abatement credit of
    $1350);
    3. Defendant-[Tenant] is entitled to reasonable attorney
    fees, pursuant to Chapter 75. [Defendant-Tenant] shall
    submit an affidavit for attorney fees and [Plaintiff-
    Landlord] shall have an opportunity to respond;
    4. All other counterclaims filed by [Defendant-Tenant] are
    denied.
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiff-Landlord appeals.
    II. Analysis
    Plaintiff-Landlord contends the trial court erred by (1) granting Defendant-
    Tenant’s counterclaim for rent abatement under the Residential Rental Agreements
    Act (“RRAA”), (2) improperly calculating the damage award under the RRAA, (3)
    concluding the alleged RRAA violation constituted a breach of North Carolina’s
    Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“UDTP”), and (4) awarding Defendant-
    Tenant reasonable attorney’s fees under UDTP. Because we agree the trial court
    erred in concluding Plaintiff-Landlord violated the RRAA, the damages awarded for
    rent abatement, which were trebled under UDTP, as well as the attorney’s fees
    awarded under UDTP, must necessarily be reversed.
    A. Standard of Review
    “The standard of review on appeal from a judgment entered after a non-jury
    trial is whether there is competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of
    fact and whether the findings support the conclusions of law and ensuing judgment.”
    Cartin v. Harrison, 
    151 N.C. App. 697
    , 699, 
    567 S.E.2d 174
    , 176 (2002) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). “In all actions tried without a jury, the trial
    court is required to make specific findings of fact, state separately its conclusions of
    law, and then direct judgment in accordance therewith.” Cardwell v. Henry, 145 N.C.
    App. 194, 195, 
    549 S.E.2d 587
    , 588 (2001) (internal quotation marks and citations
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    omitted). The trial court’s findings of fact must include “specific ultimate facts . . .
    sufficient for the appellate court to determine that the judgment is adequately
    supported by competent evidence.” Montgomery v. Montgomery, 
    32 N.C. App. 154
    ,
    156-57, 
    231 S.E.2d 26
    , 28 (1977). Put another way, the trial court must make “specific
    findings of the ultimate facts established by the evidence, admissions and
    stipulations which are determinative of the questions involved in the action and
    essential to support the conclusions of law reached.” Quick v. Quick, 
    305 N.C. 446
    ,
    452, 
    290 S.E.2d 653
    , 658 (1982). “Ultimate facts are the final resulting effect reached
    by processes of logical reasoning from the evidentiary facts.” In re Anderson, 151 N.C.
    App. 94, 97, 
    564 S.E.2d 599
    , 602 (2002) (citation omitted).          The trial court’s
    conclusions of law are reviewed de novo, wherein this Court “considers the matter
    anew and freely substitutes its own judgment for that of the lower tribunal.” State v.
    Williams, 
    362 N.C. 628
    , 632-33, 
    669 S.E.2d 290
    , 294 (2008) (internal quotation marks
    and citations omitted).
    B. Violation of the RRAA
    Plaintiff-Landlord first contends the trial court erred in granting Defendant-
    Tenant’s claim for rent abatement in violation of the RRAA. We agree.
    Specifically, Plaintiff-Landlord challenges the trial court’s conclusion of law
    No. 3, which states:
    3. Where [Plaintiff-Landlord] knew on or about June 26,
    2013, that the property did not have a smoke alarm or
    carbon monoxide detector and did not verify that the
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    previously used device provided on or about that date by
    Mr. Kluth was operable, [Plaintiff-Landlord] violated the
    Residential Rental Agreement[s] Act which requires
    provision of an operable smoke alarm and carbon monoxide
    detector. [Defendant-Tenant] is therefore entitled to rent
    abatement[.]
    This singly-enumerated conclusion actually contains two legal conclusions:
    first, that Plaintiff-Landlord violated the RRAA; second, that Defendant-Tenant is
    entitled to rent abatement. We therefore discuss each conclusion separately.
    Pursuant to the RRAA, codified at N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 42-38 to -49 (2013), “a
    landlord impliedly warrants to the tenant that rented or leased residential premises
    are fit for human habitation. The implied warranty of habitability is co-extensive
    with the provisions of the Act.” Miller v. C.W. Myers Trading Post, Inc., 
    85 N.C. App. 362
    , 366, 
    355 S.E.2d 189
    , 192 (1987) (citation omitted). The RRAA requires landlords
    to provide fit premises and imposes upon them the following duties:
    (a) The landlord shall:
    (1) Comply with the current applicable building and
    housing codes[] . . . to the extent required by the operation
    of such codes[.]
    (2) Make all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put
    and keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition.
    (3) Keep all common areas of the premises in safe condition.
    (4) Maintain in good and safe working order and promptly
    repair all electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating,
    ventilating, air conditioning, and other facilities and
    appliances supplied or required to be supplied by the
    landlord provided that notification of needed repairs is
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    made to the landlord in writing by the tenant, except in
    emergency situations.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42(a)(1)-(4) (2013). It is well established that the RRAA provides
    an affirmative cause of action to a tenant for recovery of rent due to a landlord’s
    breach of the implied warranty of habitability. See, e.g., Cotton v. Stanley, 86 N.C.
    App. 534, 537, 
    358 S.E.2d 692
    , 694 (1987) (“Tenants may bring an action for breach
    of the implied warranty of habitability, seeking rent abatement, based on their
    landlord’s noncompliance with [N.C. Gen. Stat.] § 42-42(a)” (citation omitted)); see
    also Allen v. Simmons, 
    99 N.C. App. 636
    , 644, 
    394 S.E.2d 478
    , 482 (1990) (“Tenants
    may bring an action seeking damages for breach of the implied warranty of
    habitability and may also seek rent abatement for their landlord’s breach of the
    statute.”).
    The purpose of the restitutionary remedy of rent abatement is to compensate
    tenants for defective conditions of a premises which render it unfit for human
    habitation. See 
    Miller, 85 N.C. App. at 368
    , 355 S.E.2d at 193 (noting that rent
    abatement is “in the nature of a restitutionary remedy[]”). This Court has held:
    [A] tenant may recover damages in the form of a rent
    abatement calculated as the difference between the fair
    rental value of the premises if as warranted (i.e., in full
    compliance with [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 42-42(a)) and the fair
    rental value of the premises in their unfit condition for any
    period of the tenant’s occupancy during which the finder of
    fact determines the premises were uninhabitable, plus any
    special or consequential damages alleged and proved.
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    
    Id. at 371,
    355 S.E.2d at 194 (citations omitted). However, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42(a)
    also imposes duties upon landlords which are not necessarily related to a premises’
    fitness for human habitation. Pertinent to the instant case, the RRAA requires
    landlords:
    (5) Provide operable smoke alarms[] . . . and install the
    smoke alarms in accordance with either the standards of
    the National Fire Protection Association or the minimum
    protection designated in the manufacturer’s instructions,
    which the landlord shall retain or provide as proof of
    compliance. The landlord shall replace or repair the smoke
    alarms within 15 days of receipt of notification if the
    landlord is notified of needed replacement or repairs in
    writing by the tenant. The landlord shall ensure that a
    smoke alarm is operable and in good repair at the
    beginning of each tenancy. . . .
    ....
    (7) Provide a minimum of one operable carbon monoxide
    alarm per rental unit per level[] . . . and install the carbon
    monoxide alarms in accordance with either the standards
    of the National Fire Protection Association or the minimum
    protection designated in the manufacturer’s instructions,
    which the landlord shall retain or provide as proof of
    compliance. A landlord that installs one carbon monoxide
    alarm per rental unit per level shall be deemed to be in
    compliance with standards under this subdivision covering
    the location and number of alarms. The landlord shall
    replace or repair the carbon monoxide alarms within 15
    days of receipt of notification if the landlord is notified of
    needed replacement or repairs in writing by the tenant.
    The landlord shall ensure that a carbon monoxide alarm is
    operable and in good repair at the beginning of each
    tenancy. . . .
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42(a)(5), (7) (2013) (emphasis added). Breaches of provisions of
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    the RRAA such as these, while technically included within the implied warranty of
    habitability, are not necessarily best remedied by retroactive rent abatement,
    particularly without proof that a tenant has suffered actual damage. We conclude
    that a landlord’s violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 42-42(a)(5) or (7), without more, cannot
    sustain an action for rent abatement.
    In the instant case, in reviewing the trial court’s decision de novo, we hold its
    findings of fact do not support its conclusions that Plaintiff-Landlord breached the
    RRAA nor that Defendant-Tenant is entitled to rent abatement.             Therefore we
    reverse.
    First, as to the alleged breach of the implied warranty of habitability, it is true
    the RRAA imposed upon Plaintiff-Landlord a duty to verify the property had an
    operable smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm once it became the new property
    owner and manager on 26 June 2013. However, the trial court never made any
    specific findings of the ultimate facts essential to conclude that Plaintiff-Landlord
    violated the RRAA. For instance, the trial court failed to make any findings as to the
    current applicable building and housing codes and which, if any, of the codes were
    violated. Nor did the trial court make any findings as to how verifying the operability
    of an alarm would put or keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition, or how
    doing so would keep the safety of the premises. Not only did the trial court fail to
    make findings of whether Plaintiff-Landlord knew or had reason to know the alarm
    provided by Mr. Kluth was not new or in good or safe working order, but also it made
    -16-
    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    no findings as to how failing to verify the operability of an alarm rendered the
    premises unfit for human habitation, or how this unfitness devalued the fair rental
    value of the property such that Defendant-Tenant should be entitled to rent
    abatement.
    Second, as to the award of rent abatement, the trial court did not articulate its
    rationale with any specificity in declaring how Plaintiff-Landlord’s alleged failure to
    verify the property had an operable smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm—
    without more—entitles Defendant-Tenant to a restitutionary remedy such as rent
    abatement. The trial court made no finding that the premises was uninhabitable
    during the period in which Defendant-Tenant paid rent. There was no finding that
    the premises was unfit or of the value of the premises in its “uninhabitable” state.
    Without a finding that the property was unfit for human habitation, or of the fair
    rental value of the property in its unwarranted condition as required by our case law,
    an award of rent abatement cannot be sustained.
    In summary, lacking these and other specific findings of the ultimate facts
    essential to support its conclusions that Plaintiff-Landlord breached the RRAA or
    that Defendant-Tenant is entitled to rent abatement, the trial court’s judgment is
    unsupported by competent evidence. Furthermore, our independent review of the
    record fails to disclose any evidence to support the trial court’s conclusions or its
    ensuing judgment. Therefore it must be reversed.
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    STIKELEATHER REALTY AND INVESTMENTS CO. V. BROADWAY
    Opinion of the Court
    Because we conclude that Plaintiff-Landlord never breached the RRAA,
    Defendant-Tenant’s claims for rent abatement and UDTP, as well as the award of
    trebled damages and attorney’s fees pursuant to UDTP, necessarily fail.
    III. Conclusion
    Based upon the foregoing and our review of the record, we reverse the trial
    court’s judgment.
    REVERSED.
    Judges STEPHENS and TYSON concur.
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