
    Roberts v Saffell,
    No. 137749.
   Summary Disposition June 17, 2009:

Pursuant to MCR 7.302(G)(1), in lieu of granting leave to appeal, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals. Plaintiffs unknowingly purchased a termite-infested house from defendants. Under the Seller Disclosure Act (SDA), MCL 565.951 et seq., defendants were required to prepare a seller’s disclosure statement (SDS) regarding “the condition and information concerning the property, known by [sellers.]” MCL 565.957(1). In response to the question concerning whether the house had a “history of infestation ... (termites, carpenter ants, etc.),” defendants, “based on [their] knowledge at the signing of this document,” answered “no” on the SDS. Id. Once plaintiffs subsequently discovered a termite problem, they initiated a claim for innocent misrepresentation, which requires a showing that defendants: (1) made a false statement in a transaction with plaintiff, (2) without knowledge of that statement’s falsity, (3) which statement actually deceived plaintiffs, and (4) on which plaintiffs detrimentally relied, with the benefit inuring to defendants. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co v Black, 412 Mich 99, 116 (1981). However, the SDA provides that a seller is “not liable for any error, inaccuracy, or omission in any information delivered pursuant to this act if the error, inaccuracy, or omission was not within the personal knowledge of the transferor . . . .” MCL 666.966(1). Thus, because a claim for innocent misrepresentation requires that a defendant make a false statement without knowledge of its falsity, the Court of Appeals correctly held that innocent misrepresentation does not constitute a viable cause of action under the SDA. Whether defendants did or did not possess personal knowledge of the infestation is a matter not before this Court as a result of plaintiffs’ abandonment of their fraudulent misrepresentation claim and their exclusive focus on their innocent misrepresentation claim.

Reported below: 280 Mich App 397.  