Ethridge-Atkins Corporation v. Abraham

160 So. 817, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 257
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1935
DocketNo. 5045.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 So. 817 (Ethridge-Atkins Corporation v. Abraham) 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.

Bluebook
Ethridge-Atkins Corporation v. Abraham, 160 So. 817, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 257 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MILLS, Judge.

On September 27, 1930, John Abraham, a resident of Natchitoches parish, purchased from the Ethridge-Atkins Corporation of Rapides parish a new Dodge sedan for a consideration of $1,297. On the 8th day of October, 1931 (more than a year after the purchase), the balance having-been reduced to $456, Abraham gave his note, secured by *818 chattel mortgage on the car, for that amount, with 8 per cent, per annum interest from maturity, and 25 per cent, attorney’s fees, payable in twelve monthly installments of $38 each.

On October 23, 1933, the vendor filed suit on the note, alleging the nonpayment of the three last installments, totaling $114; and for the further sum of $225.55 alleged to be due on open account for merchandise and repairs.

Defendant answered, acknowledging the execution of the note, but setting up the defense that the car was unconditionally guaranteed to be mechanically perfect, whereas the motor was so defective that a new one was installed, without improvement, and that the operating expense of the car was excessive. He does not seek to set aside the sale, but alleges that the trouble and expense caused him by the defective condition of the car exceeds the balance on the note many times over, which, if not allowable as an offset or compensation, is pleaded in reconvention up to the amount due on the note. As to the open account, defendant alleges that a charge of $104.60 is an overcharge of $60.60, as it is for work on a truck agreed to be done for $44, and that nothing is owing on this item because the repairs were so improperly made that the truck broke down on the way home and was useless thereafter; that he is entitled to a credit of $50 for casings, tubes, rims, and bolts, and $12 for a generator left with plaintiff and never returned;' and that the repair charges on the Dodge were made under the obligation of plaintiff’s warranty and are not chargeable to defendant; that any balance above these items has been paid. His prayer is that the balance due on the notes be compensated by the damages, and that, in reconvention, he have judgment for $62, the value of the casings, etc., left with plaintiff.

There was judgment below rejecting the demands of plaintiff and allowing defendant judgment in reconvention for $62, with legal interest from judicial demand, and costs; from which plaintiff has appealed, and defendant has answered, asking that Lhe amount allowed in reconvention be increased to $246.

The car was sold under the following guaranty: • “We warrant it to be free from defect in material and workmanship under normal use and service, our obligation under this warranty being limited to making good at our factory any part or parts thereof, including all equipment or-trade accessories, except tires! supplied by us, which shall, within ninety days after making delivery of such vehicle to the original purchaser, or before such vehicle has been driven 4000 miles, whichever event shall first occur, be returned to it with transportation charges, prepaid, and which its examination shall disclose to its satisfaction to have been thus defective; this warranty being expressly in lieu of all other warranties expressed or implied, and of all other obligations or liabilities on its part, and it neither assumes nor authorizes any other person to assume for it any liability in connection with the sale of our vehicle. This warranty shall not apply to any vehicle which shall have been repaired or altered outside of an authorized Dodge service station in any way so as, in the judgment of our manufacturer, to affect its stability or reliability, nor which has been subject to misuse, negligence or accident.”

In addition, seller’s agent admits that he promised that any time the car would not run he would see that it was fixed, provided the trouble was not due to vehdee’s negligence.

After about seven months, the car having made about 6,000 miles, new pistons were put in by plaintiff without charge. Three or four months later, the speedometer showing 9,000 miles, an entire new engine was installed, plaintiff charging $25 for the labor. Defendant complained of the excessivé consumption of oil and gasoline, but bests .made by plaintiff showed that on good roads it made 13 or 14 miles per gallon of gas, a good mileage for an eight-cylinder car. After the new engine was put in, defendant continued to complain, but plaintiff made no further concession. No other part of the car gave any trouble.

Unquestionably, something was wrong with the original motor, else the makers would not have supplied a new one. The car was purchased, according to defendant, in September, 1930. The new motor was installed about Easter, 1931. The note sued on for the balance of the purchase price was given October 8, 1931, and since that date defendant has paid nine of the monthly installments, up to July, 1932. Certainly this was done with full knowledge on his part of the car’s condition. His chauffeur says that the sedan was in use at the time of trial. Though a mechanic named Red Lashley, described as a “high mechanic,” worked on the car about four months before the trial, neither he nor any other mechanic is offered as a witness to its condition. We are not impressed with the testimony of defendant. He says the price was $1,495, while the mortgage shows $1,297. *819 Though not pleaded or substantiated, lie claims payment. After admitting the execution of the note in his answer and making nine payments on it, he swears that it is a forgery. Though no witness testifies to any trouble with the car except the motor, he testifies that the only thing right about it was that the radiator had not begun to leak.

As to the truck, it is admitted that a price of $44 was put upon its repair.' After examination, this was raised to $104.60. Defendant swears he never authorized this increase, yet his nephew, Jacob Abraham, who took the truck in, testifying for defendant, says that he called defendant up, told him of the increase, and was authorized by defendant to have the work done. Defendant claims that the truck broke down at Boyce on the way home and was worthless thereafter. Yet he testifies that the man sent to bring the truck back could not get farther than Boyce because”he was drunk. His counsel contends that this is an error in the transcript; that the statement made was that the car was junk. There was no effort made to correct the record, so we will’haive to consider it as made up. Lawrence Poche, a mechanic who repaired the truck afterward, found nothing wrong but a broken piston. It was not taken back to plaintiff. The man who drove the truck does not testify. It is shown that he is at a O. O. O. camp, but his testimony could have been taken. In fact, the ease was left open for that purpose..

Considering the terms of the guaranty, the fact that the motor alone was defective and that it was replaced with a new one after the guaranty had expired, that the note sued on was executed and nine payments made thereon long after the alleged defects were known to defendant, and that the ear was iñ use at the time of trial, more than three years after its purchase, we consider that plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the note. We think that the testimony also fails to sustain the defense to the open account.

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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 817, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ethridge-atkins-corporation-v-abraham-lactapp-1935.