Donachricha v. D'Antoni
This text of 270 So. 2d 149 (Donachricha v. D'Antoni) 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.
Opinion
Anthony DONACHRICHA, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Frank J. D'ANTONI, d/b/a Satellite Motors and Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*150 E. Clark Gaudin (Smith & Gaudin), Baton Rouge, for defendants-appellants.
J. R. Coxe, III (Coxe & Coxe), Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before SARTAIN, BLANCHE and EVERETT, JJ.
SARTAIN, Judge.
This is an action in redhibition arising out of the sale of a used 1964 Chevrolet to plaintiff, Anthony Donachricha, by Frank J. D'Antoni, doing business as Satellite Motors of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
The City Court of Baton Rouge awarded judgment for plaintiff rescinding the sale and ordered refund of the purchase price and all costs incidental to the sale for a total judgment of $834.00, from which judgment defendants bring this appeal.
The automobile was purchased September 28, 1971, for a price of $595.00 by plaintiff for the use of his son, Anthony D. Donachricha. The sale was consummated at the office of City Credit in Baton Rouge, which company financed the purchase. Present in the office at the time of the sale were Anthony Donachricha, Mrs. Anthony Donachricha, Anthony D. Donachricha, Frank J. D'Antoni, and Lester E. Dees, the manager of City Credit Corporation.
Plaintiff's son, Anthony D. Donachricha, testified that he had gone to Satellite Motors on two occasions prior to the sale, once alone and once accompanied by his mother, to look over the car. Anthony and his mother both testified that Mr. D'Antoni told them that the car was in good running condition. Plaintiff, Mr. Donachricha, testified that when he first saw the auto outside the office of City Credit on the day of the sale, Mr. D'Antoni told him the car was in good condition.
Defendant, Mr. D'Antoni, denies having made any representations to the Donachrichas as to the condition of the auto. He stated that he had just purchased the car himself and did not know what kind of shape it was in. Both Lester E. Dees and his brother, Robert N. Dees, who were present outside the office of City Credit when plaintiff first saw the car, testified that they remember Mr. D'Antoni stating that he did not know how much oil the car would use.
On the day of the sale plaintiff noticed that the auto was smoking but went through with the sale when assured that the car was in good condition. Plaintiff's son stated that the smoking worsened on the day after the sale, and upon examining the oil level and finding it low he added some oil. The auto continued to smoke, and during the next few days consumed oil at the rate of one to two quarts per day reaching a total of twelve (12) quarts of oil in 300 miles driven, according to plaintiff and his son.
Seven days after the sale, on October 5, 1971, plaintiff took the vehicle to Istrouma Motors with complaints of excessive use of oil, smoking, and engine noise. John L. Alford of Istrouma Motors testified that he gave plaintiff an estimate that it would cost around $392.00 to replace the motor and put it in "first-class condition." Plaintiff then requested defendant to have the repairs made or assist in paying for these repairs. D'Antoni refused and the repairs were never undertaken.
A few days later plaintiff's son began hearing noises in the rear end of the car, and by the second week after the sale the auto was completely inoperable due to the *151 loss of the transmission. The auto was again taken to Istrouma Motors and Mr. Alford stated that the transmission was inoperable due to the breakage of a carrier bearing cap in the rear end. Alford testified that it is highly unusual for these to break on their own and that as far as he knew popping the clutch or backing up and then putting the car in forward without stopping would be needed in order to break one of these caps. He estimated that it would cost $156.50 to correct this problem.
At this point plaintiff retained legal counsel and on October 11, 1971, a formal tender of the automobile to defendant was made by certified mail in return for a refund of the purchase price. The defendant refused and this litigation was begun. The automobile has remained inoperable during this litigation.
Defendant-appellant contends that the trial court erred in finding any redhibitory defect in the vehicle and in finding that the sale was made with warranty.
Louisiana Civil Code Article 2476 imposes upon the seller of things an obligation of warranty against hidden defects of the thing sold or its redhibitory vices. This action is founded upon Louisiana Civil Code Articles 2520 and 2530 relative to the vices which give rise to the action in redhibition. LSA-C.C. Art. 2520 provides:
"Redhibition is the avoidance of a sale on account of some vice or defect in the thing sold, which renders it either absolutely useless, or its use so inconvenient and imperfect, that it must be supposed that the buyer would not have purchased it, had he known of the vice."
LSA-C.C. Art. 2530 provides:
"The buyer who institutes the redhibitory action, must prove that the vice existed before the sale was made to him. If the vice has made its appearance within three days immediately following the sale, it is presumed to have existed before the sale."
These provisions relative to redhibitory vices have been held applicable to sales of automobiles, and it is settled that in such an action where complicated machinery is involved the buyer need only prove that a defect exists without having to prove the underlying cause of the defect which makes the thing sold unfit for its intended use. Stumpf v. Metairie Motor Sales, Inc., 212 So.2d 705 (4th Cir. La. App.1968).
Appellants contend that the evidence adduced by the purchasers was insufficient to establish their claim by a preponderance of the evidence and therefore the trial court erred in finding redhibitory defects to exist in the vehicle. In support of this contention they rely primarily on the case of Cosey v. Cambre, 204 So.2d 97 (1st Cir. La.App.1967) in which an action in redhibition was based on an alleged defect in the motor of an auto and on an alleged faulty transmission. In Cosey plaintiff and her son testified that the gears on the car would not function even after a mechanic attempted to repair the auto. However, this testimony was rebutted by that of the mechanic who tested the car after plaintiff asserted that the gears would not function and found the auto and its transmission to be in working order. The court based its ruling that plaintiff had failed to prove her case on this testimony of the disinterested mechanic.
In the instant case there was no such rebuttal testimony on the part of defendant-appellant. In fact the mechanic who testified indicated that if the car was using the amount of oil which plaintiff and his son stated it was using, then at the very least the car probably had an oil leak and probably would not run.
It is firmly established in our jurisprudence that the purchaser of an automobile should receive a vehicle which will meet his needs and a car which is not in running condition is not fit for the purposes intended by the buyer. Reech v. *152 Coco, 223 La. 346, 65 So.2d 790 (1953); Stumpf v. Metairie Motor Sales, Inc., supra.
It is the position of plaintiff-appellee that the prohibitive use of oil is a redhibitory defect in this vehicle which renders it unfit for the purposes intended by the buyer, thereby entitling him to a rescission of the sale.
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