Borne v. Mike Persia Chevrolet Co., Inc.

396 So. 2d 326, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 3732
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 1981
Docket11683
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 396 So. 2d 326 (Borne v. Mike Persia Chevrolet Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borne v. Mike Persia Chevrolet Co., Inc., 396 So. 2d 326, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 3732 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

396 So.2d 326 (1981)

Autry BORNE et al.
v.
MIKE PERSIA CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC. et al.

No. 11683.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 19, 1981.
Rehearing Denied April 20, 1981.

*328 Christopher M. Smith, Slidell, for plaintiffs. Bernard, Cassisa, Babst & Saporito, Walter M. Babst, Metairie, for General Motors Corp.

Sessions, Fishman, Rosenson, Boisfontaine & Nathan, Harvey L. Strayhan, New Orleans, for Mike Persia Chevrolet Co., Inc.

Before REDMANN and SCHOTT, JJ., and EDWIN R. HUGHES, J. Pro Tem.

REDMANN, Judge.

General Motors Corporation appeals from a judgment on jury verdict (1) against it and its dealer in solido awarding $200 as a reduction in the price of a defective automobile it manufactured (with judgment over for its dealer against itself) and (2) against it alone for $1,500 attorney fees. Plaintiff purchaser answers the appeal, asking increase in quantum and additional attorney fees for the appeal. We affirm.

The principal issues raised by the manufacturer are whether La.C.C. 2545's provision for attorney fees against a "seller, who knows the vice of the thing he sells and omits to declare it" authorizes fees against a manufacturer charged by law with knowledge and, if so, whether the provision as applied to a manufacturer affords due process and equal protection of law. Included in these arguments by the manufacturer is the complaint that the $1,500 award is excessive. Another issue is procedural: may a dismissed co-plaintiff appeal against a defendant by answer to that defendant's appeal from an award in favor of another co-plaintiff?

The manufacturer does not make an issue of whether the defect was proven to exist, nor of the quantum of reduction ordered, nor of its dealer's judgment over against itself.

Facts

The record supports a conclusion that the pulley on the automobile's power steering pump was visibly out of plane with the pulley on the front of the crankshaft by about 3/8", as a consequence of which the belt between those two pulleys entered at a slight angle. The belt would jump off the pulley at times leaving the car without power steering and therefore hard to steer. Plaintiff purchaser took the car to defendant dealer and explained the trouble on at least two occasions, but the defect was not remedied. Plaintiff purchaser testified that he personally replaced many belts that the car had lost or destroyed.

Proper alignment of the pulleys can be accomplished by adjusting the power steering pump's mounting or by relocating the pump's pulley on its shaft at a cost of no more than $50.

The defect remained uncorrected and finally occasioned an accident. The purchaser's daughter-in-law and son were rounding a highway curve when the belt broke, the son lost control, and the car left the road, damaging its left rear fender and allegedly the daughter-in-law and son. The purchaser, his daughter-in-law and son thereafter filed this suit.

Effect of Answer to Appeal

The answer to the appeal, mentioned at the outset, also urged the dismissed personal injury claims of the daughter-in-law and son. (The jury verdict found that they had assumed the risk.) We conclude *329 that their claims are not brought before us by the answer to General Motors's appeal because they are not appellees. It is only an "appellee," C.C.P. 2133, who can appeal against an appellant by answer to that appellant's appeal. Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed.) defines appellee as "one against whom an appeal is taken," and Black's Law Dictionary (rev. 4th ed.) defines appellee as "The party in a cause against whom an appeal is taken; that is, the party who has an interest adverse to setting aside or reversing the judgment."

As to the losing co-plaintiffs, the daughter-in-law and son, General Motors could not take an appeal, and the success of any appeal by General Motors could not affect them. This case is thus unlike Monk v. Veillon, La.App. 3 Cir. 1975, 309 So.2d 377, in which the plaintiff's appeal from a judgment giving him damages against two defendants, but dismissing two others, could have sought increased damages from the two defendants cast notwithstanding plaintiff's attempt to "limit" his appeal so as to affect only the two defendants dismissed.

Quantum of Price Reduction

Complaining of the award of $200 as a reduction in the price of the car, plaintiff argues that the jury's answers to interrogatories show an intent to award him $1,000. We disagree. The only anomaly was the interrogatory how much "plaintiff's award [should be] reduced" because of his use of the car. That question, which the jury answered, was not phrased, as would have been preferable, to the effect that if the jury found that the sale should be avoided and the price returned to the purchaser, whether and by how much the use of the car should offset the return of the price. But the jury's answer shows only that, had it held the sale avoidable, it would have awarded plaintiff a net of $1,200 ($6,000 price —$4,800 for use), and plaintiff would have had to return to defendants the car, which was then only 32 months old. The jury thus cannot have intended to award $1,000 to plaintiff and let him keep the car because that would require a belief that the 32-month-old car was worth only $200.

Because repair of the defect would cost only a few dollars and the lost belts cost but a few dollars each, the jury's award of $200 was not inadequate.

Applicability of C.C. 2545

Defendant manufacturer understates the law in conceding that, in view of Media Pro. Consult., Inc. v. Mercedes-Benz of N.A., Inc., 1972, 262 La. 80, 262 So.2d 377, "it is not at all certain that this [intermediate appellate] Court has the authority to seriously entertain this particular issue" of whether a manufacturer is governed by La.C.C. 2545. The manufacturer suggests that its attack on the constitutionality of the interpretation of that law by Media authorizes us to reject that interpretation in favor of one that would avert the constitutional questions. We do not have that authority, although we do have not merely the authority, but the obligation, U.S.Const. Art. 6, to invalidate state law that denies due process or equal protection.

We add that the manufacturer's position that it is not a seller ignores that it does indeed sell its automobiles to its dealers and in a true sense, through its national advertising campaigns and the good repute it has, it sells to the public, though through its dealers. It is no detraction from the good name of Mike Persia Chevrolet Company to say that it is rather the Chevrolet than the Persia that attracts customers and sells them automobiles. And, though the manufacturer argues it did not conceal the defect, it did "omit to declare it."

We summarize the statutory and jurisprudential rules. C.C. 2545 makes the "seller, who knows the vice of the thing he sells and omits to declare it" liable for the buyer's reasonable attorney fees "besides the restitution of price," thus expressly governing a redhibition or avoidance of the sale. C.C. 2544, however, subjects an action for a reduction in price "to the same rules and to the same limitations as the redhibitory action." Thus plaintiff's obtaining only *330 a reduction in price does not defeat his claim for his reasonable attorney's fees for his alternative action to reduce the price. Finally, notwithstanding that the heading of the Civil Code paragraph containing art. 2545 is "Of the Vices ... which the Seller has

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396 So. 2d 326, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 3732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borne-v-mike-persia-chevrolet-co-inc-lactapp-1981.