Bryant v. Walt Sweeney Automotive, Unpublished Decision (5-31-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 2002
DocketAppeal No. C-010395, C-010404, Trial No. A-9903067.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bryant v. Walt Sweeney Automotive, Unpublished Decision (5-31-2002) (Bryant v. Walt Sweeney Automotive, Unpublished Decision (5-31-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. Walt Sweeney Automotive, Unpublished Decision (5-31-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION.
Defendant-appellant Walt Sweeney Automotive, Inc. ("Sweeney") appeals the judgment of the trial court entered upon a jury's verdict in favor of plaintiffs-appellees Elizabeth and Richard Bryant ("the Bryants") on a claim of fraud in connection with the sale of a used motor vehicle. The Bryants, as cross-appellants, challenge the trial court's calculation of their award of attorney fees. We consider these two appeals together for purposes of this deci sion.

Prior to purchasing a new car, the Bryants saw a Sweeney advertisement in an auto magazine picturing a 1991 Lincoln Continental described as "immaculate, 1 owner, loaded! Leather . . . $5,995." At the bottom of the advertisement was a cash voucher in the amount of $500 towards the down payment on any car on Sweeney's lot. In smaller print, located at the bottom of the voucher, it stated that the $500 was already included in the advertised price. On January 4, 1998, the Bryants went to evaluate the Lincoln and took it for a test drive. The Bryants testified that one of Sweeney's salespersons told them that an empl oyee of the dealership had previously owned the car.

The Bryants decided to purchase the vehicle for the advertised price of $5,995. Although they traded in their van for an $800 credit and made a $3,000 down payment, the Bryants still had to finance $5,576.73 due to the associated products and services that they purchased from Sweeney. These items were as follows: a service contract for $1625; a $15 credit-application fee; a $99 fee for a "VIP card"; a $450 fee for Gap protection; a $200 fee for Safe Guard, a security device; and a $477.84 fee for title registration. The Bryants also purchased credit life and disability insurance from Sweeney in the amount of $435.64, which was added to the price of the sales contract.

The Bryants testified at trial that, when deciding whether to purchase the service contract for the Lincoln, they had expressed a desire for a "warranty" to cover everything, particularly the air-ride suspension. They asserted that Mike Vaughn, Sweeney's finance manager, told them that the service contract they bought did cover everything they wanted. The Bryants were given the opportunity to review the service contract, and both signed it and the purchase agreement.

Once the Bryants took possession of the car, mechanical problems began to occur. The check-engine light came on the next day, and two months later the brakes had to be replaced. Because the Bryants did not get approval from the service-contract provider for the work on the brakes, that expense was not covered. In April, the rack-and-pinion steering needed to be repaired. The Bryants had Sweeney do the work, but one of its mechanics damaged a power-steering line that then had to be replaced at the Bryants' cost. In October, the air conditioning and the rear air-ride suspension failed. When the Bryants brought the car to Sweeney's repair shop, they were told that the damage to the air conditioner had also ruined the condenser, and that while the air conditioner was covered under the service contract, the condenser was not and would cost $500 to repair. The Bryants also learned that the air-ride suspension was not covered under the service contract, and that the cost to repair it would be $1200. At that point, the cost of repairs was more than the value of the car, so the Bryants attempted to trade-in their Lincoln to Sweeney for a 1993 Toyota Camry with 97,000 miles and a cracked sunroof. The Bryants eventually cancelled this transaction when they realized that Sweeney was requiring them to pay off the Lincoln as well as to pay the purchase price for the Camry.

After the brakes failed and before their first loan payment was due on the car, Mr. Bryant called Sweeney to complain that they had not yet received title to the Lincoln, and that he did not want to make a loan payment on the car if he did not have title to it. Mr. Bryant testified that he asked Tim Sweeney, the manager, to cancel the purchase, and that Tim told him he could not do that, but that Sweeney would deliver the title soon. The title was delivered forty-seven days from the date the Bryants had purc hased the Lincoln.

Because of all the mechanical problems with the Lincoln and their dealings with Sweeney, the Bryants filed suit, alleging breach of contract, fraud and various violations of the Consumer Sales Practices Act, the Motor Vehicle Sales Rule and Consumer Act, the Credit Services Act and Consumer Act, and the Title Defect Act. They also sought punitive damages for the alleged fraud. A jury trial followed, with a verdict in favor of the Bryants in the following amounts:

Consumer Sales Practices Act $11,400

Motor Vehicle Sales Rule and $1500

Consumer Act

Fraud $8700 in compensatory damages

$100,000 in punitive damages

Credit Services Act and $200

Title Defect Act $200

The jury found in favor of Sweeney on the breach-of-contract claim.

Following the verdict, a separate hearing was held on attorney fees. The trial court awarded the Bryants $25,128.75 in fees. Sweeney then filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict ("JNOV") or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The trial court denied the motion. In Sweeney's appeal, it now asserts seven assignments of error challenging the award of compensatory and punitive damages for fraud and the award of attorney fees. The Bryants assign as error on cross-appeal the cal culation of the attorney-fee award.

Sweeney's first four assignments of error relate to the trial court's denial of Sweeney's motion for JNOV or, in the alternative, for a new trial. When reviewing a denial of a JNOV, we must construe the evidence most strongly in favor of the nonmoving party and, without weighing the evidence or considering the credibility of the witnesses, determine whether reasonable minds could only come to a conclusion adverse to that party.1 When reviewing whether the trial court erred in failing to grant a new trial pursuant to Civ.R. 59(A), we must determine whether the court abused its discretion in assessing the weight of the evidence. And if the basis for the motion was a question of law such as the sufficiency of the evidence, we must determine whether the trial court's ruling was erroneous as a matter of law.2

In Sweeney's first, second and third assignments of error, respectively, it asserts that the trial court erred in refusing to enter JNOV or to order a new trial, when the court had erroneously charged the jury on the standard of proof necessary to award punitive damages for fraud; when the court had erroneously charged the jury that it could base an award of punitive damages upon a mere finding of fraud; and when there was no clear and convincing evidence that any act of fraud committed by Sweeney was either egregious or malicious. Since the trial court could not enter JNOV based upon the weight of the evidence or for improper jury instructions, the court's only alternative in these respects was to order a new trial. Therefore, the failure to grant the JNOV motion was not erroneous, and we are left to review only the trial court's denial of Sweeney's motion for a new trial. For the following reasons, we hold that the jury instruction regarding punitive damages was erroneous as a matter of law, and, on that basis, we reverse the award of punitive damages and remand for a new trial on that issue.

The issue at trial was whether R.C. 2315.21 was applicable to this action. R.C. 2315.21 sets forth the standard upon which punitive damages may be awarded in a tort action:

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Bryant v. Walt Sweeney Automotive, Unpublished Decision (5-31-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-walt-sweeney-automotive-unpublished-decision-5-31-2002-ohioctapp-2002.