Anderson v. Automobile Fund

391 A.2d 642, 258 Pa. Super. 1, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3016
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 12, 1978
Docket1910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 391 A.2d 642 (Anderson v. Automobile Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Automobile Fund, 391 A.2d 642, 258 Pa. Super. 1, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3016 (Pa. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The six Judges who decided this case being equally divided, the order is affirmed.

VAN der VOORT, J., files an opinion in support of affirmance and remand in which CERCONE and PRICE, JJ., join. SPAETH, J., files an opinion in support of reversal in which JACOBS, President Judge, and HOFFMAN, J., join. WATKINS, former President Judge, did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.

*6 OPINION IN SUPPORT OF AFFIRMANCE AND REMAND

VAN der VOORT, Judge:

On June 2, 1971, appellant Elizabeth Kutna and her husband John met with representatives of appellee Avco Financial Services, Inc. and Springfield Dodge, Inc. to finance and take possession of a car which the Kutnas had previously agreed to purchase. Avco was one of at least seven lenders to whom Springfield regularly referred prospective car buyers, referrals being made (according to Springfield’s answers to interrogatories) to the lender who would provide the buyer with the best terms for the amount of money and the year of car involved. Springfield had provided Avco prior to June 2 with the information needed by Avco for a credit check of the Kutnas, and Avco’s representative arrived at Springfield’s place of business on June 2nd prepared to consummate the loan. The final loan agreement was signed by Avco and the Kutnas, and a check for the purchase price less the down payment, made payable either to the Kutnas alone or to the Kutnas and Springfield as co-payees, 1 was presented to the Kutnas. The Kutnas endorsed the check, completed their purchase, and proceeded to drive the car home. On the way, the car began to smoke and buck and otherwise misbehave; the next day the car refused to run at all.

Unable to obtain satisfaction from Springfield Dodge, the Kutnas, after making only two payments to Avco, refused to make any further payments and instituted an action in equity against Avco and Springfield. Plaintiffs alleged in the complaint that Avco and Springfield had conspired to process and had processed the loan under the Consumer *7 Discount Company Act (C.D.C.A.) 2 and the Small Loan Act 3 rather than under the Motor Vehicle Sales Finance Act (M.V.S.F.A.) 4 in order to obtain higher interest rates, cut off personal defenses of borrowers, and avoid certain disclosure requirements of the M.V.S.F.A. Plaintiffs also alleged various violations by Avco and Springfield of the Truth in Lending Act. 5 For violation of the M.V.S.F.A. and the Truth in Lending Act, the Kutnas demanded recission of the loan and car purchase agreements, return by Springfield of the Kutnas’ $200.00 down payment, compensation by Springfield in the amount of $45.00 for out-of-pocket car expenses, return by Avco of payments made under the loan agreement, money damages, and injunctive relief. Avco counterclaimed for $792.00 (the unpaid portion of the loan) plus “interest on the unpaid but due portions from September 2, 1971.” On motion by the Kutnas for partial summary judgment, the lower court, by Order of April 22, 1975, found against Springfield Dodge on the Truth in Lending claims, but in favor of Springfield on the Motor Vehicle Sales Finance Act claims. These findings for or against the Kutnas and Springfield are not involved in this appeal. The court also found in favor of Avco against the Kutnas. Avco moved for partial summary judgment on Avco’s counterclaim against the Kutnas, and the lower court granted the motion on July 24, 1975, and entered judgment against the Kutnas in the amount of $792.00 plus interest. (The question of interest will be dealt with later in this opinion. Elizabeth Kutna brought this appeal from the Order of July 24, 1975.

Appellant first argues that since Springfield Dodge rather than the Kutnas arranged for financing of the automobile, the transaction was, in purpose and effect, an install *8 ment sale, and as such came within the terms of the M.V.S. F.A. Section 3(10) of the M.V.S.F.A. defines “installment sale contract” as “any contract for the retail sale of a motor vehicle, or which has a similar purpose or effect under which part or all of the price is payable in two or more scheduled payments subsequent to the making of such contract, or as to which the obligor undertakes to make two or more scheduled payments or deposits that can be used to pay part or all of the purchase price . . . .” The loan agreement between Avco and the Kutnas was not a contract for the retail sale of a motor vehicle. Although it is possible that Avco would not have loaned money to the Kutnas for any other purpose than to buy a car from Springfield Dodge, the loan contract itself did not mention the use to which the proceeds were to be put, and Avco did not even take a security interest in the car. On the face of the loan contract then, a straight loan, not an installment sale, was involved. Three members of our court, however, would “collapse” the loan agreement between the Kutnas and Avco and the purchase agreement between the Kutnas and Springfield into one transaction, would find that this “collapsed” transaction had a purpose or effect similar to that of the usual installment sale contract, and would thus bring the total transaction within the § 3(10) definition of “installment sale contract”. In Waterbor, Inc. v. Livingood, 179 Pa.Super. 610, 616, 117 A.2d 790 (1956), our court ruled that the M.V.S.F.A. was to be strictly construed. 6 Collapsing the two contracts into one would not constitute a mere failure to construe the M.V.S.F.A. strictly, it would require us to stretch the definition of “installment sale contract”.

Another definition that would have to be extended is Section 3(4)’s definition of “seller”. That section defines a “seller” as a “person engaged in the business of selling, hiring or leasing motor vehicles under installment sale contracts or any legal successor in interest to such person.” Although Avco could not reasonably be termed a “seller” *9 under this definition (Avco was not involved in selling the car and did not succeed to any legal interest of Springfield), Springfield was in the business of selling cars and would come within the definition. Unless the definition of “seller” were distorted to include Avco, the anomalous situation would exist in which Springfield, the seller, could be convicted of violating § 19 of the M.V.S.F.A. for imposing excessive finance charges, and could be ordered to pay a fine or even have some employees imprisoned, while Avco, the lender, the party actually imposing the finance charges, would not be subject to these criminal penalties.

Whether or not the definition of “installment sale contract” might be stretched to include the transaction in the case before us, Section 2 of the M.V.S.F.A.

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Bluebook (online)
391 A.2d 642, 258 Pa. Super. 1, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-automobile-fund-pasuperct-1978.