Bolling v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.

129 S.E.2d 54, 204 Va. 4, 1963 Va. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1963
DocketRecord 5517
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 129 S.E.2d 54 (Bolling v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolling v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 129 S.E.2d 54, 204 Va. 4, 1963 Va. LEXIS 108 (Va. 1963).

Opinion

Carrico, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

General Motors Acceptance Corporation, the complainant, filed a bill in equity under the provisions of Code, § 55-91, against Viking Coal Co., Inc., Clarence Bolling and Gary Neil Bolling, the defendants. The bill sought the enforcement of a conditional sales contract dated May 9, 1960, covering a 1960 Chevrolet truck, entered into between Beaty Chevrolet Co., Inc., and the defendants and assigned by Beaty to the complainant.

The chancellor heard the evidence ore tenus and entered a decree awarding judgment against the defendants in the sum of $7,272.60 and ordering the sale of the truck to satisfy the judgment if not paid within fifteen days. We granted the defendants an appeal.

The evidence discloses that in the spring of 1960, Gary Bolling, trading under the name of Viking Coal Co., Inc., a corporation not yet then formed, was associated with his father, Clarence, in the mining of coal in Wise County. The Bollings were interested in purchasing a truck to haul their coal from the mine to a tipple. They discussed such a purchase with a representative of the Beaty company and on April 14, 1960, signed an order for the purchase, from Beaty, pf a Chevrolet truck.

*6 Upon delivery of the truck, the conditional sales contract in question was executed by the Beaty company and the defendants. Under the terms of the contract, title to the truck was to be retained by Beaty until the balance of the purchase price, $10,267.20, payable'in 24 monthly installments of $427.80 each, was fully satisfied. Upon the application of Gary Bolling, a certificate of tide was issued showing title to the truck in the name of Viking Coal Co., Inc.,, subject to the lien for the unpaid balance of the purchase price.

On May 17, 1960, Beaty assigned the contract to the complainant, for value, and the defendants were notified thereof and directed to make the installment payments to the complainant.

The first two payments due under the contract,, those for June and July, were paid to the complainant. The August payment was not made when due, and a notice of the default was mailed by the complainant to Gary Bolling on September 15, 1960. In response thereto, the complainant received a letter dated September 19, 1960, on the letterhead of Viking Coal Co., Inc., as follows:

“Gentlemen,
In regard to your letter to Gary N. Bolling of Pound Va. about the payment on the truck, we have taken this truck over, and would appreciate it very much if we could get these payments set up to the regular date due. We will start paying these off. Hope this will be satisfactory.
Your truly
Viking Coal Co Inc. /s/Pearl Bolling Pres.”

Pearl Bolling, whose name was signed to the above letter as president of the corporation, was the wife of Clarence and the mother of Gary Bolling.

Acting upon the request in this letter, the complainant extended the time for the August payment for 60 days, and also extended each succeeding payment a like amount of time. The October, November and December payments were made, but Viking Coal Co., Inc., requested an extension of the payment due in January, 1961. Pursuant to this request, the January payment and those coming due in the succeeding months were extended by the complainant for 60 days; Payments were made in March and April of 1961, but thereafter no *7 further payments were made and in August of that year the present proceedings were instituted.

The Bollings first contend that the chancellor erred in denying them a jury trial on the issues raised by their “pleas.”

Gary Bolling filed an “answer and cross-claim” to the bill filed by the complainant. In this pleading he admitted the contract upon which the suit was based, but alleged that Beaty’s agent had “represented that . . . what he had for sale for his company was just what was needed and reasonably fit for said purpose” of hauling defendants’ coal, and that because of the “defects in the construction and materials” of the truck he had been damaged in the sum of $10,000.00, “which sum should be deducted from the purchase price” and which he prayed “be offset against the same.” Clarence Bolling filed an “answer and cross-claim” to the bill in language identical with that of Gary’s pleading except that Clarence alleged that he was damaged in the sum of $8,500.00.

At the hearing, after complainant’s first witness was sworn, had taken the stand and was asked a question, counsel for the defendants inquired, “Do we have a jury?” He was advised by the court that there was no jury. He then demanded that a jury be empanelled because, “I think the court would want a jury to assess the damages if we should prevail.” The chancellor denied the request.

The Bollings base their assertion that they were entitled to a jury trial on their “pleas” on the provisions of Code, § 8-213, which reads as follows:

“Trial by jury on plea in equity.—A plaintiff in equity may take issue upon a plea, and either party may have such issue tried by a jury.”

Section 8-213 requires that the pleading filed by a defendant, upon which the plaintiff may take issue and as to which either party may then demand a jury trial, be, in form and in substance a plea, and not merely an answer or, as in the case before us, an answer and cross-claim.

The pleadings filed by the Bollings, were not, in form, pleas as contemplated by § 8-213. They were not so styled,, but instead bore the tide of “Answer and Cross-Claim.”

The language used in the pleadings was not that of a plea, but that of an answer and cross-claim. Section 8-213 was not mentioned in the pleadings, nor was any demand for a jury trial contained there? in. The pleadings were not sufficient to put the complainant, or the *8 chancellor, on notice that the defendants intended them to be anything other than that which they were styled, or to invoke the duty imposed upon the chancellor under § 8-213. Bankers Ins. Co. v. Henderson, 196 Va. 195, 204, 83 S. E. 2d 424.

Nor were the pleadings, in substance, pleas as contemplated by the code section. A proper plea in this respect is one which presents “a single set of facts (although possibly made up of numerous circumstances), as a defense to the plaintiff’s suit.” Lile’s Equity Pleading And Practice, 3d Ed., § 199, p. 114‘.

The office of such a plea is “to present a simple issue of fact which operates as a bar to the plaintiff’s right of recovery. The fact put in issue by the plea constitutes in itself a complete defense to the bill, or to that part of the bill to which it is pleaded.” Merwin, Equity and Equity Pleading, § 972, p. 559.

The advantage of such a plea over an answer is that “it shortens the litigation, reducing the issue, as it does, to a single point.” When issue is taken on such a plea and judgment is entered on the jury’s favorable verdict thereon, the case is at an end. Campbell v. Johnson, 203 Va. 43, 47, 122 S. E. 2d 907; Elmore v. Maryland, Etc.,

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E.2d 54, 204 Va. 4, 1963 Va. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolling-v-general-motors-acceptance-corp-va-1963.