Frazier v. Consolidated Equipment Sales, Inc.

670 P.2d 153, 64 Or. App. 833, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 710, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3661
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 5, 1983
Docket78-2639-L-1; CA A23993
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 670 P.2d 153 (Frazier v. Consolidated Equipment Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Consolidated Equipment Sales, Inc., 670 P.2d 153, 64 Or. App. 833, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 710, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3661 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

*835 ROSSMAN, J.

This is an action for damages alleged to have resulted from breaches of warranties in the sale of a used bulldozer. At the close of plaintiffs case, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of evidence. Plaintiff appeals from the ensuing judgment. We reverse as to the claims for breaches of the express warranties and the implied warranty of merchantability.

In reviewing a ruling on a motion for involuntary non-suit (presently identified as motion for judgment of dismissal, ORCP 54B.(2)), in favor of a defendant, the question on appeal is not what was found to have occurred but what a jury, viewing the evidence and all inferences in the light most favorable to plaintiff, might have found, if the case had been submitted to it. Brewer v. Erwin, 287 Or 435, 454, 600 P2d 398 (1979); Yunker v. Kaiser Foundation, 46 Or App 165, 168, 611 P2d 314 (1980). Viewed in that light, the facts may be summarized as follows.

Defendant is a sales and service agent for Allis-Chal-mers heavy equipment. Plaintiff is a roadbuilder. In 1976, he was engaged in the construction of logging roads. In the spring of that year, he decided to replace his D-8 Caterpillar tractor with a larger, more efficient tractor with more horsepower. To that end, plaintiff and Wayne Robertson, a salesman from defendant’s Medford office, traveled at company expense to defendant’s San Diego agency to see a used Allis-Chalmers HD21-B tractor.

Extensive work was being done on the tractor. Defendant’s employes told plaintiff that new rollers and rails would be installed and that “anything that needed to be replaced would be replaced.” They said that “They’d go into the final drive and put it up in a like new condition”; all “necessary” repairs to the undercarriage would be done and that it would be in “very good condition”; the engine had been “overhauled and kitted” and since then had been run for only “two to three hundred hours”; and it would be in “like new condition” when repairs were completed.

On June 3, 1976, plaintiff and Robertson signed a sales contract for “one used HD21 B Allis Chalmers crawler tractor.” The price was $68,750 less a trade-in allowance of *836 $28,000 for plaintiffs D-8 Caterpillar. On the back of the agreement under the heading “Warranty” is a printed paragraph purporting to provide certain warranties and exclude others. At the bottom under the heading “Warranty Detail” are listed the terms of four categories of warranty: “new,” “rebuilt equipment,” “fifty-fifty” and “as-is.” The terms of each are different. (“As-is” means no warranty at all.) At the top of the front page the same categories are noted, each with a box to be checked if the equipment to be sold is covered by that particular warranty. On plaintiffs “customer copy” none of the boxes was checked. There was no discussion of what warranties, if any, would apply to the sale. Plaintiff did not read the back of the form. Both Robertson and plaintiff believed that the signature of Elmer Lewis, the manager of defendant’s Medford office, was required before the contract of sale would be binding. The “office copy” of the June 3,1976, agreement is signed by Lewis and the “50-50” warranty box is checked.

The HD21-B was shipped to Medford for further work. Lewis and other employes told plaintiff that they thought that when the work was complete “it would be in as good as new condition.” Joe Pauley, defendant’s district manager, explained the “capabilities” of the HD21-B to plaintiff, i.e., that “the 21-B will out-do the old D-8, it will just walk right around it, push more dirt, it’s a faster machine.” Lewis told plaintiff the same thing.

On June 23, 1976, Lewis, Robertson and a representative of the company financing the purchase came to plaintiffs home to conclude the sale. Plaintiff and his wife had by this time read the warranty provisions of the June 3, 1976, agreement and were concerned that there was no written warranty, although several times between June 3 and 23, Lewis and Robertson had told them, “Don’t worry, we’ll stand behind the machine.” Plaintiffs wife described the discussion that occurred concerning the warranty during the June 23, 1976, meeting as follows:

“Well, I was still upset because there was nothing in writing about the warranty, and Elmer and Les and Wayne and I all discussed it, and at that time they still kept assuring me there was a warranty, and I didn’t even want him to sign unless they put it in writing, but they just kept assuring us that there was no problem, that we have the warranty like on a rebuilt *837 machine, which they said was 90 days, and we specifically talked about it, because I was upset because it wasn’t on there.
<<* * * * *
“We never got anything in writing. It was just on their word.” (Emphasis supplied.)

On the back of the June 3 sales agreement is printed the following:

“Rebuilt equipment - 500 hours after the equipment is first placed in operation by purchaser or 90 days whichever comes first.”

The HD21-B was delivered July 12, 1976. The next day, the fuel pump seal blew. Thereafter, the HD21-B was plagued by numerous mechanical problems involving the engine, hydraulics, transmission and brakes. Plaintiff testified, “When I started having these breakdowns with the diesel leak [one month after the sale] and all that sort of thing leaking into the crankcase and stuff and I was down, then I was getting disgusted with it bad.” It was down for repairs a total of 463 hours during the time plaintiff owned it. When the tractor was running, it was “short on power” and “knocked.” It was later discovered that three of the six pistons had been installed backwards, causing them to strike the valves during operation and resulting in loss of power. An employe of plaintiff, who had worked with both plaintiffs D-8 Caterpillar and the HD21-B, testified that the HD21-B was broken down about 45 percent of the time, that the D-8 would “work circles around it” and push more dirt and that it could not move stumps that the D-8 could take out.

Defendant repaired or attempted to repair the tractor without charge for approximately 90 days. It continued to repair it after November, 1976, but charged plaintiff for the work. According to his wife, toward the end of 1976 or the first part of 1977, plaintiff told Lewis that he was “upset about the cat” and “all the down time and the repairs” and that “it wasn’t doing the job it was supposed to do and he wished he had his 8 back and they would just take the thing back.” Similar conversations occurred between plaintiff and company representatives thereafter. In a December, 1977, letter to defendant’s Texas office, plaintiff detailed the repairs for which he had been charged, explained that the mechanical failures had caused “many hours of down time on our jobs” and *838 requested that defendant pay some of those expenses. He testified that, until then, “I just kept trying and trying and kept working, just like they kept working on that machine.” In June, 1978, plaintiff sold the HD21-B for $40,000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pagliaroni v. Mastic Home Exteriors, Inc.
310 F. Supp. 3d 274 (District of Columbia, 2018)
Thorson v. State
15 P.3d 1005 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2000)
Dickerson v. Mountain View Equipment Co.
710 P.2d 621 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
670 P.2d 153, 64 Or. App. 833, 37 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 710, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-consolidated-equipment-sales-inc-orctapp-1983.