Brown v. Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc.

452 A.2d 984, 52 Md. App. 687, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 4, 1982
Docket188, September Term, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 452 A.2d 984 (Brown v. Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc., 452 A.2d 984, 52 Md. App. 687, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 361 (Md. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Gilbert, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal arises under a Consumer Protection Law originally enacted in Maryland by Laws 1941, Ch. 851 and codified as then Md. Ann. Code art. 83, § 111.

We are asked to answer two questions, namely: 1) Did the buyers of a motor vehicle sold to them on a Conditional Sales Contract receive an exact copy of the contract signed by the seller? 2) Does the hand printing of the name of the seller on a line designated "Type Seller’s Name” constitute the signature of the seller?

THE FACTS —

William Joseph Brown, one of the appellants, 1 purchased a 1978 Dodge Pick-up truck from the appellee, Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc., trading as "Doug Griffith Dodge City Honda.” The truck sold for $10,142. Brown was allowed $1,514 as a trade in on a 1977 Honda. The Dodge was financed over a period of 48 months at $286.64 per month. The deferred purchase price, including credit life insurance and health insurance, taxes and transfer costs totaled $15,312.72.

*689 Inasmuch as William Brown’s credit rating was "weak,” he was required to have his parents act as guarantors. The three Browns executed, in quadruplicate, the Conditional Sales Contract on May 3, 1978. The Browns received the third, or yellow copy, of the contract. The "Conditional Sales Contract” used by the appellee was printed in blank and bound at the top in sets of four copies with carbon paper inserted between the copies. The first or white colored copy was designated in red print "BANK COPY,” the second, blue colored copy was also designed in red print, "BANK COPY,” the third, a yellow colored copy, was styled in red ink as the "CUSTOMER’S COPY,” and the fourth, a pink colored copy was entitled "DEALER COPY.” The designations of the copies appeared at the foot of the obverse side of each of the four leaves constituting the set.

The following is the pertinent part of the contract received by the Browns:

The blue or "Bank Copy,” as well as the pink or "Dealer Copy” contained additional information on the line above the printed legend "Seller’s Signature” and on the line above the words bearing the legend "Type Name and Title.” Mr. *690 Thomas E. Saunders, the then Sales Manager of the appellee, signed his name "T.E. Saunders” on the line for the Seller’s signature and printed "Thomas E. Saunders S/MGR” on the line where name and title was to appear. 2 The contract, on its face, was assigned "to The Equitable Trust Company in accordance with the terms of the Assignment on the reverse side” of the contract, "subject to full recourse . .. unless checked and initialed on the reverse side hereof.” The Bank’s copy and the Dealer’s copy are "checked and initialed.” Each of those copies bears the initials "TES.”

William Brown made eighteen payments on the truck, for a total of $5,159.52. Of course, those payments were in addition to the "down payment” of $1,554. The vehicle was repossessed by Equitable, who sold it at public auction. The sale resulted in a deficiency of $3,311.60, which had not been paid at the time of trial in the instant case.

All three appellants 3 sued Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc., in the Circuit Court for Carroll County. The Browns’ declaration alleged that the conditional sales contract between them and Doug Griffith Dodge City was not executed by the defendant and was, pursuant to the Md. Com. Law Code Ann. § 12-605 (1975), null and void.

The matter was heard non-jury. In testimony, Thomas E. Saunders disclosed tliat his duties as Sales Manager for the appellee were "[t]o oversee the Sales Department, contracts, bill of sales [sic], supervise.” Mr. Saunders said that he was required to approve all contracts, and that he was authorized to sign the contracts on behalf of Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc. Saunders, in describing the "general procedure,” related that

"a bill of sale was made up .. ., the order, and that would be approved by myself and the customer. Once that’s signed, the financing was available, then a contract was drawn up by the finance man *691 ager. The parties involved would sign it, it would be brought to me, I would sign it, then it would be given to the customer, his copy, and we kept a copy, and a copy went to the bank.” [4]

Saunders then told the trial judge that the same practice was used in the matter sub judice. He testified that the contract, including the acknowledgements at the end of the obverse side of the contract, was signed by the Browns before the contract was taken to him for signature. Mr. Saunders said, "I won’t sign a contract until everybody else had signed it.” The witness remembered the Brown transaction because "it was the most expensive vehicle we had there, and that stands out in my mind. I remember that specifically. It was red and black and had everything on it. — I think.”

Mr. Saunders explained to the court that it was possible his signature did not appear on the "customer’s copy” because "the carbon paper could’ve been folded up or turned up before ... [he] signed it.” Saunders was not asked, nor did he explain why his initials do not appear on the reverse side of the "customer’s copy,” where carbon paper would play no part, and yet do appear on the "Bank” and "Dealer” copies. Mr. Saunders conceded on cross-examination that it was possible, but not probable, that the customer’s copy of the contract was removed before Saunders signed the contract on behalf of the appellee.

Jim Laughter also testified on behalf of the appellee. Mr. Laughter was a salesman for Doug Griffith Dodge City, Inc., when the pick-up truck was sold to Brown. He, too, remembers this particular sale because "in that time I just couldn’t comprehend selling a car for $10,000, and we were, you know, shocked.”

The trial judge, in reliance upon In re Horvath, 1 UCC Rep. Serv. 624, a United States District Court Bankruptcy proceeding, decided in July 1963, declared that "We find as a fact that [the hand printed] words 'Doug Griffith Dodge City Honda’ constituted Defendant’s signature on the Condi *692 tional Sales Agreement. There has, consequently, been no violation of § 12-605 of the Retail Installment Sales Act.”

I.

We commence our discussion by noting that there are two issues before us. If the trial judge is correct that the hand printed words "Doug Griffith Dodge City Honda” are a signature, the other issue falls of necessity. Therefore, we shall first determine whether those hand printed words are a signature within the meaning of the statute.

The appellee points to the trial judge’s fact finding and reminds us that in a non-jury trial, the judgment of the trial court is not to be set aside unless it is clearly erroneous. Md. Rule 1086.

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452 A.2d 984, 52 Md. App. 687, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-doug-griffith-dodge-city-inc-mdctspecapp-1982.