Darcars Motors of Silver Spring, Inc. v. Borzym

841 A.2d 828, 379 Md. 249, 2004 Md. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 2004
Docket33, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 841 A.2d 828 (Darcars Motors of Silver Spring, Inc. v. Borzym) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darcars Motors of Silver Spring, Inc. v. Borzym, 841 A.2d 828, 379 Md. 249, 2004 Md. LEXIS 28 (Md. 2004).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

Darcars Motors of Silver Spring, Inc., petitioned this Court to review an award for punitive damages in favor of Marcin Borzym, who prevailed in a jury trial on a claim of conversion against Darcars. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding that actual malice motivated the tort. Further, we hold that Borzym had no duty to present evidence of Darcars’ financial condition in support of his pursuit of a punitive damage award.

*255 I. Background

In late March of 2000, Marcin Borzym, who was 21 years old at the time, visited Darcars several times to consider purchasing a 1999 BMW 323i, which he had seen advertised in a newspaper for $27,500. The first of these visits took place on Sunday, March 26, when Borzym met with a salesperson, Juste Bahula, and test drove the BMW. Borzym returned to Darcars the following Monday to negotiate the purchase of the car. Again, he met with Bahula, who discussed various aspects of the potential purchase and accepted a personal check for $3,000 from Borzym as a symbol of his willingness to negotiate seriously. 1 Two days later, Borzym stopped by Darcars for further negotiations after Bahula telephoned him. Borzym and Bahula discussed a lower purchase price of $26,000 because there was a scratch on one of the wheel rims, and Darcars permitted Borzym to take the BMW for inspection by another dealer. On Thursday, after the inspection was completed without any problems discovered, Borzym returned the BMW to Darcars. Borzym then informed Darcars that he would come back to the dealer the next day to purchase the BMW.

Borzym returned to purchase the car during the evening of Friday, March 31. To complete the purchase, Borzym met with a finance manager of Darcars, Douglas Quander, who was responsible for negotiating the amount of the down-payment and other payment terms, including financing rates. Borzym handed $2,500 in cash to Quander as a down-payment. In addition, Quander had Borzym complete and sign several documents, including (1) a credit application, (2) a purchase order, (3) a retail installment contract, (4) a supplementary agreement to a conditional sales contract, (5) an application for a certificate of title, and (6) an agreement to provide accidental physical damage insurance. 2 Borzym, however, did not *256 leave with the BMW that night, because he was unable to provide information about a State Farm automobile insurance policy that he believed would cover the BMW. When he returned, once again, to the dealer early Saturday morning, he provided the insurance information and left with the BMW. On Sunday, Borzym realized that he had not received any documents reflecting the BMW purchase, so he returned to Darcars, picked up copies of the paperwork, and left -without incident.

On Monday morning, Darcars representatives began to question the accuracy of some of the information contained in the sales documents. That day, Robin Stein, a financial services manager from Darcars, and Quander contacted Borzym by phone to tell him that there was a problem with his automobile insurance information and that he needed to provide information of a different policy. Borzym responded to their requests by obtaining a new policy and informing Stein about that policy information on Tuesday morning. Later that afternoon, Stein called back several more times, however, complaining of further discrepancies in the paperwork and asking Borzym to return to Darcars as soon as he could so they could resolve the issue.

Quander also called Tuesday afternoon in hopes of persuading Borzym to meet with him as soon as possible to address the discrepancies in the paperwork. He was so eager to meet Borzym that he offered him a $500 car service credit if Borzym would come into the dealership. In addition, Quander told Borzym that he was willing to meet him on Tuesday at 10:00 p.m. at Borzym’s health club. No meeting took place on Tuesday, however.

Borzym had no further contact with Darcars until the morning of Thursday, April 6, when he walked to the garage where he had parked the BMW and was surprised to see a truck from a repossession company towing the car from the *257 garage. Borzym asked the driver why the BMW was being repossessed, and the driver told him that there was a “problem” with the “dealership” and that he should go there to resolve it. Inside the BMW when it was repossessed were, according to Borzym, his laptop computer, which he valued at approximately $1500, and his collection of music CDs, which he valued at $300.

Borzym called Darcars immediately and spoke to Stein. When he asked why the BMW had been repossessed, she refused to give him a reason over the phone but told him to come to the dealer to discuss the matter. Borzym complied, making it to Darcars later that evening to meet with Stein and two other representatives of Darcars, a sales manager and the head of Darcars security. One of the Darcars representatives told Borzym that the car had been repossessed because Borzym “didn’t pay anything.” Borzym insisted that he had paid $2,500. He asked for the return of either the BMW with his belongings, the laptop and CDs, or the return of his deposit and his belongings. One of the Darcars representatives replied, “Forget about it. Get out of here.... [C]all your attorney.” The representative told Borzym that the BMW had been taken to a different lot, and as for the laptop and CDs, he should “|j]ust forget about it, just get out of the office, [and] get lost.”

Followed by Darcars staff, Borzym walked outside, where he met his father. When Borzym’s father learned what had happened with the BMW and his son’s belongings, he became upset and confronted Darcars staff. One of the personnel who had met with Borzym began “waving goodbye and making fun” of the Borzyms. This prompted Borzym’s father to walk closer to the staff member, but a security officer stepped in the way. The staff member then began “cursing out” the Borzyms, accusing them of being “thieves.” Darcars did not return the $2,500 cash down-payment, nor did Borzym recover the laptop and CDs that had been taken during the repossession.

*258 Alleging causes of action for breach of contract, conversion, fraud, illegal repossession and punitive damages, Borzym sued Darcars on May 8, 2000, in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The Circuit Court dismissed his claims of fraud, illegal repossession and punitive damages, and Borzym amended his complaint to allege only breach of contract, conversion, punitive damages, and illegal repossession. Before trial, the court granted summary judgment to Darcars on the illegal repossession claim, and, during trial, Borzym abandoned his claim of breach of contract. Only Borzym’s claim that Darcars converted Borzym’s $2500 down-payment, laptop, and CDs went to the jury, which on April 3, 2001, returned a $4,300 verdict 3 in favor of Borzym and made a specific finding *259 that Darcars had acted with actual malice, warranting punitive damages.

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Bluebook (online)
841 A.2d 828, 379 Md. 249, 2004 Md. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darcars-motors-of-silver-spring-inc-v-borzym-md-2004.