Eckrich v. Hogan Brothers

263 N.W. 308, 220 Iowa 755
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketNo. 43098.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 N.W. 308 (Eckrich v. Hogan Brothers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eckrich v. Hogan Brothers, 263 N.W. 308, 220 Iowa 755 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

The defendant Hogan Brothers on August 28, 1933, was a partnership, located at Iowa City, Iowa, engaged in the business of selling automobiles. On the above date the plaintiff, who was then a minor of the age of twenty years — he having reached his majority on the 17th day of June, 1934— was the owner of a Ford V8 roadster, which he had purchased in January, 1933, and driven about 7,000 miles. After negotiations with the defendants at their place of business in Iowa City, a tentative agreement was reached, by which the plaintiff was to trade his Ford car and give a note and conditional sale contract for the sum of $300, $30 to be paid in October, $30 in November, and the balance in one year, in exchange for a Rockne car. Before closing the deal, plaintiff asked that he be allowed to take the car home to show the same to his father and mother. He returned and said it was all right and signed up the note and conditional sale contract and took away the Rockne car, which he was to receive in exchange at a valuation of $650. The regular price of the Rockne car was $715, but it had been used some as a demonstrator and was traded in at $650. Nothing was paid upon the note except the sum of $10. At the time the trade was made there was still due from the plaintiff on the Ford car to the Ford dealer a small balance which Hogan Brothers paid, and which was afterwards repaid to them by the mother of the plaintiff.

A few days later — plaintiff giving the time as two or three days, and defendants as three weeks — the plaintiff, accompanied *757 by his mother, returned the Rockne car to the defendants’ garage and left it with the employees, with the request that Hogan Brothers return the Ford car, Mrs. Eckrich leaving word at the garage for Mr. Hogan to come and see her, that Carl could not pay for the car, and he would have to give up the deal. That same day, or the following day — there is a dispute in the record — Mr. E. P. Hogan, who made the deal originally, drove to the country home of the plaintiff. He found Carl and his father working on a building and the mother in the house. He talked to Carl and the father first, and the father said he didn’t know anything about the deal at all; that Hogan would have to talk to the mother. Hogan asked Mrs. Eckrich what the trouble was, and she told him that she didn’t think Carl was able to pay for the ear; that he should not have bought it. Hogan assured her that they would not have anything to worry about; that he would not crowd Carl on his payments. Mrs. Eckrich further said that Carl was not of age. Hogan said that that was the first information he had that Carl was not of age; that he asked Carl whether he was of age at the time the deal was made, and Carl told him that he was. He said to Mrs. Eckrich, “Carl told me he was of age,” and turning to Carl he said, ‘ ‘ Carl, didn’t you tell me you was of age?” and Carl admitted that he did “and hung his head very shamefully.” Carl and Mrs. Eckrich have a little different version of this conversation. Mrs. Eckrich says that Hogan said he would make some trouble. “He said if we didn’t make the deal he would make us trouble because Carl wasn’t of age. He didn’t say there that day that Carl told him he was of age. * * * The conversation occurred out in the yard. (Mr. Hogan) didn’t say that Carl told him he was of age at the time he made the deal for the car. I didn’t hear Carl say yes I told Mr. Hogan that. I didn’t hear him say that.” Carl’s version is at variance with his mother’s: “Mr. Hogan, when my mother and I told him I was not of age, said he would make some trouble for me because I had told him I was of age and I hadn’t. He told me he would make some trouble for me if I took the Ford car back because he said I told him I was of age and I hadn’t. I told him I hadn’t told him I was of age. That was stated in the presence of my mother. When I told him I was not of age he didn’t say very much that I remember of. He said he would give me plenty of time to pay for the car but there was *758 no danger of them taking the car away from me. He took me aside outside of the hearing of my mother and told me I had better go through with the contract.' That my mother would get over her mad spell in a few days and would help me pay for the ear. After that conversation I went back and got the Rockne car and kept it until May 10th or 12th, 1934. Hogan Bros, came and got it. * ? * I heard Mr. Hogan say in the presence of my mother and my presence that I told him I was of age when he was out to our place. I remember him making the statement. ’ ’

At Christmas time, 1933, the plaintiff drove the Rockne car on a trip to Kansas, and on the way back had an accident, ran into the back end of a truck, damaged the front end of his ear. On that trip he had difficulty with his pistons sticking, and when he returned home he drove into the Hogan garage and told them about it and wanted them to take care of the trouble. Hogan told him he would take the car down, and it id showed it was the car’s fault that he would take care of it for him; otherwise he should pay for it. Plaintiff was not satisfied with this arrangement and wrote to the factory about the trouble, and they informed him that it was impossible to stick pistons after you have traveled six or seven thousand miles if they had plenty of oil, unless something happened; water' or something got into the cylinder. The car was never repaired. Plaintiff put it in storage the first of January, 1934, and never used it afterwards, and in May, 1934, Hogan Brothers repossessed the car under their conditional sale contract. When they tore it down they found that the block had been cracked on the inside of one of the valve chambers and water was getting into the cylinder, diluting the oil and causing the pistons to stick. There is some conflict in the evidence as to what was the probable cause of this crack. The defendants’ testimony is all to- the effect that nothing except freezing could cause the block to crack on this particular make of car, while there was evidence on the part of the plaintiff to the contrary; the witness for the plaintiff claiming that in view of the fact that the radiator was not injured by freezing, it would indicate that the block was not injured by freezing. In response to this in rebuttal, the testimony of the defendants is to the effect that because of the peculiar construction of the radiator, it would expand before cracking, and that the block would freeze up *759 and crack before the radiator would. “For that reason they put in soft plugs in the block two on the side and one on the end, and about 50% of the time that plug will blow out, leaving room for expansion so freezing won’t break the block, but you can’t always depend on that. We have a car now that froze, block is cracked, and radiator is O. K. Same type of radiator as Rockne. In this type the block will freeze more readily than the radiator. ”

After repossessing the car, the defendants repaired the same at an expense of at least $175. There was also a repair bill upon the Ford in the neighborhood of $10. The Ford car was disposed of at a price of $350. The Rockne car was disposed of at a price of $495, after it had been repaired. It is strenuously argued by the appellant that the result of the decision of the trial court is to enrich the defendants.

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Related

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73 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)

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263 N.W. 308, 220 Iowa 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckrich-v-hogan-brothers-iowa-1935.