Bagalio v. Hoar

110 A.2d 719, 118 Vt. 384, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 4, 1955
Docket1829
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 110 A.2d 719 (Bagalio v. Hoar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bagalio v. Hoar, 110 A.2d 719, 118 Vt. 384, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 98 (Vt. 1955).

Opinion

Cleary, J.

This is an action of contract. The defendant pleaded the general issue. Hearing was had, findings of fact were made and judgment was for the plaintiff. The case is here on the defendant’s exceptions: A. to the findings of fact; B. to the failure of the court to find facts as requested by the defendant; C. to the exclusion of evidence offered by the defendant; and D. to the judgment.

The court found the following facts. The plaintiff was born on September 16, 1932 and during the summer of 1953 was still a minor; from February 1952 to July 25, 1953 he was the owner of a Chevrolet automobile; the defendant was then selling automobiles using the name of Central Motors; on July 24, 1953 the plaintiff drove to the defendant’s place of business, became interested in having an Oldsmobile automobile and talked with the defendant’s salesman named Ferry about trading his Chevrolet and the amount he might get for it as a trade-in; the next day July 25, 1953, Ferry called on the plaintiff relative to trading cars and took the plaintiff’s Chevrolet to Central Motors, leaving the plaintiff an Oldsmobile; later the same day the plaintiff drove to Central Motors in the Oldsmobile and there saw the defendant; the defendant asked, “How old are you?” the plaintiff replied that he was not quite twenty-one. Whereupon the defendant said, “I can’t do any business with you. If your father or *386 mother want to buy an automobile, that’s a different case.” A “used car order,” a duplicate conditional sale contract and a conditional sale note were drawn up by the defendant and his salesman took them to the plaintiff’s mother, Dorothy G. Bagalio. So far as appeared in the evidence, she signed these papers without ever having examined the Oldsmobile described therein. In connection with the preparation of the conditional sale papers submitted to Dorothy G. Bagalio, ‘the defendant told the plaintiff that he would allow the plaintiff $450 for his Chevrolet, and the papers were drawn on that basis. Having obtained the signature of the plaintiff’s mother on a “used car order” and the conditional sale contracts and note, the defendant had the plaintiff sign the transfer to his Chevrolet on the back of the plaintiff’s registration certificate. The defendant testified that he understood that the Chevrolet belonged to the plaintiff’s mother; such an understanding was neither justified nor correct. The plaintiff then was provided by the defendant with a “transfer of registration” for the Oldsmobile, registering the car in the plaintiff’s name. The plaintiff was delivered possession of the Oldsmobile and at the same time turned over his Chevrolet to the defendant. The plaintiff had not had the Oldsmobile more than a month or two before it was repossessed by the sheriff, acting for the defendant, and sold at sheriff’s sale; so that the plaintiff, having had a $450 Chevrolet on July 25, 1953, found himself with no car at all in some sixty days from the time of his first dealings with the defendant. Some time during August 1953, the plaintiff “tried to get his money back” from the defendant, without success. Meanwhile the defendant, in the course of his business, had sold the Chevrolet formerly belonging to the plaintiff, and so did not have it to return to the plaintiff, had he decided to do so. The plaintiff brought this suit seeking to disaffirm by a writ dated October 28, 1953. “The sale and transfer of the Chevrolet to the defendant by the plaintiff, while a minor, having been disaffirmed within'a reasonable time after the plantiff became of age on September 16, 1953, the plaintiff is entitled to recover of the defendant the equivalent of the fair market value of the Chevrolet, which the court finds to be $450.”

*387 The defendant claims that the contract on which this action is based was one between the defendant and the plaintiff's mother and not between the defendant and the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s mother is not a party here. The declaration alleges that on July 25, 1953, the plaintiff was a minor, the owner of the Chevrolet of the value of $450. and agreed with the defendant whereby the Chevrolet was given the defendant in exchange for the Oldsmobile; that the plaintiff on becoming 21 years of age had disaffirmed the agreement; that he was willing to and would return the Oldsmobile to the defendant but was prevented from doing so because the defendant had already repossessed the Oldsmobile; and that the plaintiff had demanded the return of the Chevrolet or the $450 but the defendant refused to either return the Chevrolet or pay the $450.00. It has always been the law in this state that contracts made by a minor during infancy, if not for necessaries, may be avoided by him if disaffirmed within a reasonable time after arriving at full age. Pool v. Pratt, 1 D. Chip 252, 253; Bigelow v. Kinney, 3 Vt 353, 358; Abell v. Warner, 4 Vt 149, 152; Price v. Furman, 27 Vt 268, 270, 271; Person v. Chase, 37 Vt 647, 648; Bromley v. School District, 47 Vt 381, 385; Hoyt v. Wilkinson, 57 Vt 404, 406; Bombardier v. Goodrich, 94 Vt 208, 209, 110 A 11, 9 ALR 1028; McNaughton v. Granite City Auto Sales, 108 Vt 130, 131, 183 A 340.

The defendant briefs seven of his exceptions to the findings of fact, numbers 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 12. Number 1 is to the finding that so far as appeared in the evidence Dorothy G. Bagalio signed the papers without ever having examined the Oldsmobile described therein. This finding is immaterial to any issue in the case, as claimed by the defendant, and can be disregarded without affecting the result of the material findings. Turner v. Bragg, 113 Vt 393, 398, 35 A2d 356; Gould v. Towslee, 117 Vt 452, 467, 94 A2d 416. An exception to an immaterial finding is not for consideration. Turner v. Bragg, 113 Vt 393, 398, 35 A2d 356; Fuller v. Watkins, 117 Vt 257, 261, 90 A2d 444; Cole v. Cole, 117 Vt 354, 359, 91 A2d 819.

Exception number 2 is to the finding that “In connection with the preparation of the conditional sale paper *388 submitted to Dorothy G. Bagalio the defendant told the plaintiff that he would allow the plaintiff $450 for his Chevrolet, and the papers were drawn on that basis” as unsupported by the evidence. The court had previously found without exception that the defendant was doing business under the name of Central Motors; that the plaintiff was the owner of the Chevrolet and talked at Central Motors with the defendant’s salesman about the amount he might get for it as a trade-in. The plaintiff testified that he entered negotiations on July 25th at Central Motors for disposing of his Chevrolet and that the value Central Motors allowed him for his Chevrolet when he made the trade was $450. The defendant’s salesman Ferry testified that he talked with the plaintiff with regard to taking his Chevrolet in exchange for a car of Central Motors, that on July 25th the discussions were with the defendant on the value of the Chevrolet and the value allowed was $450.

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Bluebook (online)
110 A.2d 719, 118 Vt. 384, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagalio-v-hoar-vt-1955.