America Scale Mfg. Co. v. Zee

235 P.2d 361, 120 Utah 402, 1951 Utah LEXIS 220
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1951
DocketNo. 7529
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 P.2d 361 (America Scale Mfg. Co. v. Zee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
America Scale Mfg. Co. v. Zee, 235 P.2d 361, 120 Utah 402, 1951 Utah LEXIS 220 (Utah 1951).

Opinions

COWLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff brought this suit in claim and delivery to recover 19 coin operated weighing scales which plaintiff sold to the defendant under a title-retaining contract. In the alternative, plaintiff prayed for the value of said scales in the sum of $2,328.45 in the event possession could not be had.

Defendant answered and counterclaimed asking for rescission of the contract on the grounds of fraud; that defendant be granted judgment of $837.90, together with interest, and thereupon the defendant would redeliver the scales to the plaintiff. The sum of $837.90 represents the down payment the defendant made to the plaintiff at the time the written contract was entered into by the parties. [404]*404The fraud alleged by the defendant in his answer and. counterclaim and relied on by him was to the effect that, plaintiff’s agent who sold the scales to the defendant induced him to buy said scales as a result of the agent’s-representation that he was to receive the exclusive agency for three western states as plaintiff’s sales representative. The alleged exclusive agency contract was to be reduced to writing on a separate form than the title retaining sales contract and mailed to defendant within two weeks. Defendant does not contend that the 19 scales were not as represented, so the matter of their quality and suitability is not in issue. Defendant did not receive the alleged territorial contract and therefore refused to make the installment payments on the 19 scales as provided in said contract.

The material facts are these: Defendant operates a motel in Salt Lake City and during the middle of August, 1947, plaintiff’s sales agent, one Charlie Grote, stayed at defendant’s motel for about four days. Mr. Grote was traveling by automobile but had with him the 19 scales in question on a truck with separate driver. Mr. Grote interested the defendant in the scales and after two days negotiation defendant signed the contract on the third day and received the scales. He made a down payment of $837.90 and was to pay the balance in monthly installments.

During the two day period of negotiation, the agent promised to appoint defendant the Company’s exclusive sales representative for the three western states of Utah, Idaho and Nevada. At the time defendant signed the contract for the purchase of the 19 scales he protested that nothing was said about the territorial rights and Grote informed him that such a contract had to be on a separate form which he did not have with him but would sent it from Colorado within two weeks. Mr. Grote made his head-qarters in Florida but was enroute to Colorado. The Company’s main office is Washington, D. C. Defendant still insisted that Grote give him something in writing on the promised territorial rights until he received the regular [405]*405form contract. Mr. Grote then presented defendant with a printed card which represented him as Vice President of plaintiff company and reminded defendant that they belonged to the same fraternal organization. Defendant then agreed to allow the agent two weeks time in which to send the territorial contract and thereupon signed the contract for the 19 scales and received possession of them. Agent Grote was not the vice president of plaintiff company and had never held any office with sáid company other than his position as salesman. The printed card therefore was a deliberate misrepresentation but it is probable that Grote and defendant were members of the same fraternal organization. Furthermore, the agent did not have the authority to grant defendant the exclusive agency defendant contends was promised. Defendant did not receive from Mr. Grote or the plaintiff the alleged territorial contract, and therefore, according to him, did not make the monthly installment payments on the 19 scales, and this suit resulted.

The lower court held

“That plaintiff did not make any misrepresentations or fraudulent representations to the defendant, as alleged in defendant’s answer and counterclaim, or at all”

and rendered judgment for the plaintiff as prayed. The case was tried before the court without a jury. Defendant prosecuted this appeal.

Defendant assigns this finding as error and contends that the issue of fraud as alleged in his answer and counterclaim was proven by clear and convincing evidence and asks for a reversal.

The only witness called to testify on the issue of fraud was the defendant Zee himself and his testimony stands on the record uncontradicted. Plaintiff’s agent, Charlie Grote, did not appear as a witness at the trial, nor was his deposition taken. He had left the employ of the plaintiff a few months before trial and was not available, although [406]*406he was in plaintiff’s employ for some two years after this transaction was entered into and for about six months after the answer and counterclaim were filed raising the fraudulent inducement issue, so plaintiff could have made the agent available or at least his testimony available by deposition had plaintiff deemed it necessary. Plaintiff, however, chose to rely solely on the written contract for the sale of the 19 scales as the entire contract or transaction and exclude testimony on the fraudulent issue as immaterial. Plaintiff objected to such testimony but was properly overruled by the court. The deposition of the president of plaintiff company was received in evidence but it merely established plaintiff’s cause of action under the written contract for the return of the 19 scales.

The summary of the facts outlined in this decision bearing upon the issue of fraud is taken from the testimony of defendant Zee. As stated, there was no testimony in opposition to it.

At the conclusion of the case, the trial judge rendered an oral decision from the bench wherein he said:

“You may take this on the record, Miss Reporter: I don’t disagree with the contention of the defendant, that, if the evidence were clear and convincing that the contract Exhibit A was induced by a fraudulent misrepresentation of existing material facts, which — except for which the defendant would not have entered into the contract, that the defendant might have avoided the contract by making such proof, but I’m not able to say that this evidence so appeals to my mind in a clear and convincing way, such as to preponderate in favor of the defendant or his affirmative defense, and, as I have heretofore indicated, Mr. Zee is a man of intelligence and business acumen, and if he made this mistake in failing to have that contract or some evidence of his agreement in writing, and went ahead and signed this other contract, that was his error, and we find ourselves in a situation here with respect to the efidence, that we are not able to say that it convinces me of the facts necessary for the defense, and I — my analysis of it leads me to the conclusion, and under the facts and the law as I understand them, it is necessary to bind Mr. Zee on this contract that he signed, and so the judgment will be in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, and such will be the order.”

[407]*407From this oral decision, we agree with the trial judge in his interpretation of the law, but apparently he did not believe that the affirmative defense and counterclaim had been established by clear and convincing evidence as required by law to establish an issue of fraud and misrepresentation.

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Bluebook (online)
235 P.2d 361, 120 Utah 402, 1951 Utah LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/america-scale-mfg-co-v-zee-utah-1951.