Campbell & Setzer v. Clark & Melia, Inc.

29 A.2d 350, 150 Pa. Super. 635, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 230
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1942
DocketAppeal, 41
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 A.2d 350 (Campbell & Setzer v. Clark & Melia, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell & Setzer v. Clark & Melia, Inc., 29 A.2d 350, 150 Pa. Super. 635, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 230 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Hirt, J.,

Opinion by

In this action for damages for the conversion of a truck by defendant, Commercial Banking Corporation, the court entered judgment on the verdict for $1,432 in favor of Arlington Setzer, plaintiff. This defendant seeks a new trial.

On August 12, 1935, Jack J. Campbell entered into a lease agreement with Clark & Melia, Inc., the intent and purpose of which was the purchase of a truck, for a total consideration of $2,774, which included $352, *637 financing charges and the cost of fire, theft and collision insurance. The cost of the truck excluding the payment of financing and other charges, which did not add to its value, was $2,422. On November 13, 1935, the unpaid balance was $1,488, and on that date Campbell sold his interest in the truck to Setzer. A new lease then was entered into with Melia & Clark as lessor (in which Campbell was required to join as a lessee although he no longer had any interest in the truck) reciting $2,774 as the total rental with a credit of $1,286 (the amount paid by Campbell) and providing for payment of the above balance in monthly instalments. The lease was assigned on the same day. by Clark & Melia to Commercial Banking Corporation which financed the transaction. Two days later Setzer made the November payment of $93 reducing the unpaid balance to $1,395. On December 2, 1935, the truck, while negligently operated by Setzer’s driver, was wrecked in a collision and was removed to Clark & Melia’s Garage. There was collision insurance in force at the time, for the benefit of both the finance company and Setzer. Because of the extensive and serious damage to the truck it was a question whether it was worth repairing. Clark & Melia estimated the cost of repair at about $2,100; another garageman offered to do the work for $1,312.11. Setzer attempted to get possession of the truck for repair by the latter but Clark & Melia refused to deliver it to him. Setzer, nevertheless, understood that the finance company had arranged with Clark & Melia to do the. work and he testified that W. C. Atkinson, vice-president of the finance company, told him “you won’t have to make any payments until it is repaired and on the road again; you go home and don’t worry about that.” He testified further, that, relying upon this waiver he did not make the payment of $93 when it became due on December 13, 1935. On December 21, 1935, the finance *638 company notified Setzer that it bad repossessed tbe truck under its reservation of title in tbe lease because of Setzer’s default in tbe payment due December 13. Tbe truck never was repaired. After repossession, tbe finance company settled with tbe insurance company for $1,047.50 and credited tbis amount on Setzer’s obligation. It sold tbe truck as junk for $250 and charged tbe remaining balance of $97.50, due it, to Clark & Melia. After notice of repossession, Setzer, on December 23, went to tbe office of tbe finance company and paid tbe December instalment of $93. He was given a receipt signed by a clerk in tbe employ of defendant. On tbe same day tbe finance company attempted to return tbe payment to Setzer by registered mail but delivery was refused by him.

Tbe original statement of claim charged Clark & Melia and Commercial Banking Corporation with conspiracy to convert tbe truck. Tbe amended statement charged tbe finance company alone with tbe conversion and by stipulation at tbe trial, tbe issue was restricted to Setzer’s claim against tbe defendant, Commercial Banking Corporation. Tbe effect of tbe stipulation was to eliminate plaintiff Campbell and Clark & Melia defendant, as parties to the action. There is no merit in tbe contention that there is a variance between the averments of the statement of claim and the proofs.i

If the finance company, through its vice-president, waived payments on the lease, pending repair, it could not repossess the truck on' December 21 because of Setzer’s non-payment of tbe instalment due on December 13. It is conceded that Atkinson, defendant’s vice-president, had the authority to bind tbe defendant by such waiver but Atkinson denied that be ever agreed to tbe postponement of payments until tbe repair of tbe truck was completed. If timely payment of tbe December 13 payment was waived, there was no forfeiture; tbis was an issue of fact for tbe jury. In tbis *639 connection the court properly charged: “The case practically turns on whether or not you believe that statement, because if Mr. Atkinson gave that assurance and made that statement to the plaintiff, then the plaintiff committed no default in not paying the $93 on December 13th. He had a right to rely on the word of Mr. Atkinson......”

The difficulty is that we cannot assume that the jury imposed liability on the defendant on a finding that timely payment of the December 13 payment was waived. The jury may have resolved that issue of fact against Setzer but because of an erroneous, instruction that his payment of $93 on December 23, in any event, cured the breach, may have charged the defendant with conversion of the truck on that ground. The facts as they appear are that Setzer, one hour before defendant’s office was open for business on December 23 induced Smith, an employee of defendant, to receive the payment on the plea that he was in a hurry and could not wait. Defendant’s testimony is that Smith was alone in the office; the cashier had not arrived; that Smith was a discount clerk and accepted the money wholly as an accommodation to Setzer but that he was without authority to receive payments on behalf of the company or to bind it by any receipt given by him. The trial judge charged: “What about this payment of $93 on December 23, 1935? This payment was received by an employee of the company at the office of the company. True, Mr. Smith was not the Cashier, but the money was received by an employee in the office of the company, and a receipt given for it. In my opinion, that is just as effective as if it had been received by the President or the Vice-president or the Cashier. The fact that a tender was made to return the money would not change that status, the money was received and therefore the payment for December was made. I hold that that amounts to a waiver of *640 the right to have that payment made on December 13th, the date called for in the lease.”

The circumstances as to this payment presented a question of fact for the jury and not one of law for the court. If the payment had been made or even tendered before the finance company had terminated the lease the breach would have been healed and the tenancy saved. Valicenti v. Central Motors, Inc., 115 Pa. Superior Ct. 74, 174 A. 799. Acceptance of a payment after it becomes due, but before an affirmative act of forfeiture, is a waiver of the default, an affirmation of the contract and an election to treat the bailment as still existing. Road Roller Co., v. Schlimme, 220 Pa. 413, 417, 69 A. 867. But the defendant on December 21, had taken action in the matter and had notified Setzer that it had repossessed the truck. If the defendant was justified in declaring the lease forfeited because of the failure to pay the instalment of rent when it came due on December 13, it was not obliged to accept the payment of December 23 and to reinstate the lease after it had repossessed the truck under the forfeiture provision.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 A.2d 350, 150 Pa. Super. 635, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-setzer-v-clark-melia-inc-pasuperct-1942.