Ashton v. Chrysler Corporation

261 F. Supp. 1009, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6893
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 25, 1965
DocketCiv. A. 61-C-362
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 261 F. Supp. 1009 (Ashton v. Chrysler Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashton v. Chrysler Corporation, 261 F. Supp. 1009, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6893 (E.D.N.Y. 1965).

Opinion

MISHLER, District Judge.

Plaintiffs state three claims arising out of the failure to consummate a Dodge-Plymouth dealership at Wrights-town, New Jersey.

The first claim is based upon the wrongful refusal “to grant the plaintiffs the agency as promised and agreed upon” (par. Sixth); the second claim is based upon a false and fraudulent statement that Wrightstown “was not to be classified as an open point” (par. Eleventh); the third claim is based upon the negligent and careless representation that Wrightstown “was an open point * * when later said defendant declared that it was not an open point” (par. Fifteenth). 1

FACTS

On January 24, 1957, plaintiff, Harry Ashton, as Vice President of Dix-McGuire Motors, Inc., executed an “Application For Sales Agreement” together with other supporting papers — all being forms composed by defendant and customarily used by its applicants for dealerships — characterized as an application package. Dix-McGuire Motors, Inc. was organized by plaintiffs for the purpose of entering into a sales agreement with defendant granting a franchise for the sale of Dodge and Plymouth motor vehicles and service of the same. The application provided as follows:

IT IS UNDERSTOOD that this application is not binding upon us nor does it obligate the Chrysler Corp., in any way to enter into a Dodge-Dodge Truck Plymouth Agreement with us. Any options on real estate or investments of any kind made by us in contemplation of the acceptance of this application are done solely on our own responsibility and do not obligate the Chrysler Corp., or any of its representatives in any way.

IT IS ALSO UNDERSTOOD that the execution of a Dodge-Dodge Truck Plymouth Agreement between the Chrysler Corp., and us is the only manner by which the Chrysler Corp. may accept this application. We admit that no representations or statements have been made to us in behalf of the Chrysler Corp., which would in any way tend to change or to modify the terms of this application. (Ex. 3)

On January 25, 1957, a proposed sales agreement was executed by Dix-McGuire Motors, Inc. which by its terms express *1011 ly provided that the agreement was not effective unless signed by a duly authorized officer at defendant's principal office in Detroit, Michigan.

Plaintiffs then advised defendant, at its zone office in Philadelphia, that the proposed location was changed. A new proposed sales agreement, showing the change in location of the plaintiffs’ business, was executed on February 6th. It duplicated mutatis mutandis the agreement originally executed by plaintiffs and to be executed by a duly authorized officer of defendant.

Plaintiffs deposited $30,000 in a cor-porated bank account as required by the terms of application package (Ex. 6, 39). Dix-McGuire Motors, Inc. entered into an agreement for the purchase of property in which the corporate business was to be conducted. A wholesale line of credit was not obtained until March 1, 1957 (Ex. 7, 41).

The application eventually won approval from the zone and regional offices in Philadelphia and the eastern area office in New York. When it was received in Detroit, a market study was made. During this study, defendant’s representative, Ray C. Ayer, had occasion to view the proposed facilities for the Wrights-town dealership and to interview plaintiffs. His report disapproved the dealership in Wrightstown and the proposed location. He orally reported to Arthur Nielsen, vice-president of defendant, his disapproval of plaintiffs’ proposed corporate structure and business enterprise. Based upon this report, Mr. Nielsen, vested with authority to grant or decline the application for the franchise, chose to decline it.

Subsequently, at plaintiffs’ insistence, a newly appointed regional manager of defendant’s Philadelphia office, James R. Jarvis, gave plaintiffs a letter stating that the application had been denied because Wrightstown was not an “open point.”

The complaint, however, is founded upon events that transpired prior to plaintiffs execution of the application package. Plaintiffs rely upon statements made, and acts performed, by the following representatives of defendant:

Howard W. Bradberry, dealer planning and placement manager in the Philadelphia zone office — 1956-1958.

Charles J. Kelchner, regional assistant new car and truck manager in the Philadelphia office — 1956-May 1960.

Charlie M. Keller, regional sales manager for Dodge Division in the Philadelphia office — 1956-April 1957.

James R. Jarvis, regional manager for Dodge and Plymouth Divisions in the Philadelphia office from April 15, 1957.

Ray C. Ayer, manager of market research department for Chrysler Motors Corp. — 1957.

Arthur H. Nielsen, — vice-president of Chrysler Motors Corporation — 1957.

Plaintiffs were employed in managerial positions by Marathon Motors, Inc., Brooklyn, New York, during the years 1954 through 1956. Howard Brad-berry, in 1954, was district manager for Plymouth Motor Division of Chrysler Motors Corp. in Brooklyn, New York. During the course of this employment, Bradberry met the plaintiff Bages; they had frequent business and social contacts during 1954-1955. In June 1956, Bages became interested in Wrightstown as a location for the operation of a new car dealership. Bages then contacted Brad-berry, who by that time had been transferred to the Philadelphia zone office, and outlined his ideas concerning a proposed dealership in Wrightstown.

Bradberry, in November of 1956, telephoned Bages to tell him that Wrights-town was an “open point.” 2 During the *1012 course of this conversation he also explained some of the preliminary requirements Bages would have to meet to qualify. Bages in turn replied that the dealership would be too big for him to handle alone and he mentioned Ashton, who was familiar to Bradberry due to Ashton’s association with Marathon Motors, Inc., when it was a DeSoto-Plym-outh dealer, as a possible business associate. Thereafter, Bages, Ashton and Bradberry met at Hamilton House in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. They discussed the possibility of establishing a Dodge-Plymouth dealership in Wrightstown, a point, according to Bradberry, declared to be “Open” by defendant. Bradberry advised them that he would arrange for a meeting with other representatives of .defendant at which time the requirements for a dealership in Wrightstown would be more specifically discussed.

In late December of 1956, plaintiffs met with Bradberry, Keller and Kelch-ner at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City. It was explained to plaintiffs that they must comply with certain requirements before they could be considered for a franchise, i. e., suitable premises, •capital requirements, business organization, wholesale line of credit. Plaintiffs •explained their qualifications to Keller and Kelchner, whom they had just met, and set forth the manner in which they proposed to carry on the dealership when •obtained.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blanton Enterprises, Inc. v. Burger King Corp.
680 F. Supp. 753 (D. South Carolina, 1988)
Ingvoldstad v. Estate of Young
19 V.I. 115 (Virgin Islands, 1982)
Reprosystem, BV v. SCM Corp.
522 F. Supp. 1257 (S.D. New York, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 F. Supp. 1009, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashton-v-chrysler-corporation-nyed-1965.