Feagins v. Tyler Lincoln-Mercury, Inc.

277 S.W.3d 450, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 721, 2009 WL 259353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2009
Docket06-08-00043-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 277 S.W.3d 450 (Feagins v. Tyler Lincoln-Mercury, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feagins v. Tyler Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., 277 S.W.3d 450, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 721, 2009 WL 259353 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION 1

Opinion by

Chief Justice MORRISS.

When Perry Feagins bought a new Honda Civic from Tyler 2 Lincoln-Mereury, Inc., d/b/a Jack O’Diamonds 3 (Dealer), he opted to have the purchase financed. To accomplish his purchase and financing, Feagins signed a preprinted, multipage “Retail Installment Sale Contract” prepared by Dealer.

The contract sets out the terms of an installment sale by Dealer to Feagins and bears an assignment of the contract by Dealer to Household Automotive Finance Corporation, a third-party lender, to which *453 Feagins was to make payments. Among various terms and disclosures, the contract discloses that the rate of interest, termed the “annual percentage rate,” on the financed balance is 12.89 percent. On the contract, a charge of $81.34 is labeled “Dealer’s Inventory Tax Paid to Seller,” and a charge of $50.00 is labeled “Documentary Fee ... Paid to Seller.”

Feagins sued Dealer, alleging misrepresentations-both affirmative statements of fact and fraudulent nondisclosures-related to the “Dealer’s Inventory Tax,” the rate of interest, Dealer’s gain on the resale of the contract to the third-party lender, and the “Documentary Fee.” He sought to establish causes of action that these various affirmative representations and nondisclo-sures constituted fraud, violated the Texas Finance Code, and triggered a right to injunctive relief under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA).

Dealer filed a motion for summary judgment, combining both traditional and no-evidence motions for summary judgment. Dealer argued that there was no evidence to support at least one element of each of the causes of action and that its summary judgment evidence proved conclusively that no cause of action was viable. The trial court granted Dealer’s motion.

Feagins contends on appeal 4 that Dealer did not provide summary judgment evidence sufficient to support a traditional motion, that Feagins provided sufficient evidence to defeat a no-evidence motion, and that his DTPA cause of action was not addressed by either motion. Thus, Feag-ins argues, the judgment should be reversed. We affirm the summary judgment because we hold that (1) summary judgment on the causes of action under the Texas Finance Code was proper, (2) no fact issue exists on the alleged affirmative misrepresentations, and (3) Dealer had no duty regarding the alleged fraudulent nondisclosure.

(1) Summary Judgment on the Causes of Action Under the Texas Finance Code Was Proper

First, analyzing the allegations as attempts to state causes of action solely under the Texas Finance Code leads us to conclude the trial court properly included in Dealer’s summary judgment the alleged causes of action under the Code.

The “Dealer’s Inventory Tax”: An entry on the contract makes a charge for “Dealer’s Inventory Tax Paid to Seller” in the amount of $31.34. Feagins alleges that the entry was misleading because the amount was not a tax and was payable to the State, not by Feagins, but by Dealer. Whether those aspects of that entry are misrepresentations is addressed below, but, as we explain below, those allegations do not make out a violation of the Texas Finance Code.

The Texas Consumer Credit Commissioner issued an advisory letter dated December 22,1993, and an interpretation dated January 24, 1994. Both documents conclude that the “Dealer’s Inventory Tax” is a tax and that the law authorizes passing it on to a customer along with a “meaningful caption” such as “Dealer’s Inventory Tax” — precisely what Dealer did in Feag-ins’ transaction.

*454 Title 4 of the Texas Finance Code— entitled the Texas Credit Title and spanning sections 301.001-371.306 — is not violated if the challenged action “conforms to an interpretation of’ Title 4 by the Consumer Credit Commissioner under Section 14.108 of the Texas Finance Code, so long as the interpretation is in effect at the time of the challenged act or omission. Tex. Fin.Code Ann. § 303.401 (Vernon 2006). Because of that statutory authority of the Consumer Credit Commissioner and the above-referenced rulings, we hold that the Texas Finance Code was not violated by the entry charging the “Dealer’s Inventory Tax.”

The Rate of Interest: Feagins alleges, not that the rate of interest exceeded some lawful maximum rate, but that it was misrepresented as being the best rate Feagins could get from the third-party lender. Feagins points to no provision of the Texas Finance Code that would make such a representation a violation of the Texas Finance Code. We find no violation of the Code in this respect.

Dealer’s Gain on the Resale of the Contract: Feagins alleges that, from the interest rate margin between that charged on the contract and the effective rate earned by the third-party lender, Dealer reaped a profit of $556.20 and fraudulently concealed that profit from Feagins. Again, Feagins fails to point out any provision of the Texas Finance Code that this practice allegedly violates. In fact, Section 348.301 of the Texas Finance Code applies to this type of transaction and provides that neither a dealer nor a third-party lender has the obligation to disclose to the customer the terms of the assignment of a contract to the third-party lender. We find no violation of the Code in this respect.

The “Documentary Fee”: Feagins alleges that the $556.20 Dealer made in selling Feagins’ contract to a third-party lender at a premium is a charge to Feagins for “documentation” — citing the deposition of James Bragg — and is, therefore, an improper addition to the maximum $50.00 elsewhere charged to Feagins for “Documentary Fee ... Paid to Seller,” thus violating the Texas Finance Code. There are two reasons why we disagree.

First, the charge to Feagins that resulted in this profit to Dealer was contract interest at 12.89 percent, as to which there is no allegation of any violation of the Texas Finance Code. There was no charge to Feagins in the amount of $556.20; that sum was collected by Dealer from the third-party lender as a consequence of the contract resale transaction.

Second, it seems clear to us that the Texas Finance Code contemplates that the “documentary fee” is for documentation needed in every transaction, most notably doing the papeiwork to get a certificate of title properly applied for and issued to the buyer. It is chargeable whether or not there is any loan documentation to be done. We find no rule that a “documentary fee” is chargeable only when a vehicle is being purchased by way of installment sale financing. That confirms to us that the “documentary fee” is chargeable even in cash sales. And that, as a matter of law, distinguishes the “documentary fee” from any financing charges or profits related to financing.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W.3d 450, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 721, 2009 WL 259353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feagins-v-tyler-lincoln-mercury-inc-texapp-2009.