Freeman v. State-Wide Carpet Distributors, Inc.

112 N.W.2d 439, 365 Mich. 313, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 328
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1961
DocketDocket 55, Calendar 48,897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 439 (Freeman v. State-Wide Carpet Distributors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. State-Wide Carpet Distributors, Inc., 112 N.W.2d 439, 365 Mich. 313, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 328 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

*315 Souris, J.

Plaintiffs’ bill of complaint was dismissed on motion for misjoinder. Their claim of appeal was filed in August of 1960 and dismissed by this Court, on motion, in February of 1961 for plaintiffs’ failure to perfect their appeal. It was subsequently reinstated in May of 1961, and the attorney general then intervened in this Court in behalf of the people.

There were originally 83 plaintiffs, others were added by petition to intervene, and still others had filed petitions to intervene at the time the bill was dismissed. It appears that 300 or 400 persons, some asserting claims as husband and wife, seek relief in this single suit against State-Wide Carpet Distributors, Inc.; Wear-Ever Carpet Distributors, Inc.; Earl Serap, doing business as Tri-State Wholesale Carpet Distributors Co.; Boyce Management Co., a copartnership consisting of Balph Boss, Chris Mullay, and Barton Frisbee; and The Michigan Bank. The bill alleges that plaintiffs are the victims of defendants’ fraudulent misrepresentations whereby they were induced to purchase carpeting and to finance such carpet purchases by promissory notes discounted by the defendant bank. It is alleged that State-Wide, Wear-Ever, Tri-State, and Boyce Management were all controlled by Earl Serap and his associates and engaged in a fraudulent scheme to sell inferior carpeting at exorbitant prices by offering gift premiums and cash payments to purchasers for referrals to other customers. The misrepresentations attributed to these defendants were alleged in the bill as follows:

“(a) That the carpeting would be furnished at no cost to plaintiffs, which representation was and is false;
“(b) That the carpeting was worth $20 per yard and was high-grade ‘commercial’ carpeting made of 100% virgin Australian wool from sheep of the high *316 mountains only; which is a false representation of material fact;
“(c) That the carpeting was commercial carpeting, superior to that used in residences, and was being newly introduced into the residential field, which statements were and are false, in that it is low-grade, cheap and defective, inferior material.
“(d) That the carpeting was now being used in the Ford Rotunda, General Motors Futurama vans, Sears and Roebuck stores, downtown Detroit theaters, Howard Johnson diners, the Ford Motor Company engineering staff building, downtown Detroit hotels, and the Michigan Bell Telephone Company headquarters building in Detroit, all of which statements of material facts were and are false;
“(e) That the loans to' be made by the Michigan Bank were interest free if paid in 90 days, which statement of material fact was and is false;
“(f) That installation would be made without tacks, with water soluble paste and would not damage the floor, which statement of material fact was and is false;
“(g) That the carpet-backing is of 1/2 inch neoprene which statement of material fact was and is false;
“(h) That the carpeting would not fade or mat, and the nap would spring right back up if crushed by furniture, which statements of material facts were and are false;
(i) That the carpeting installed would be the same as the samples shown to plaintiffs, which statement of material fact was and is false;
“(j) That the carpeting was made of individual loops knotted into neoprene and would not ravel or pull, which statements of material facts were and are false ;
“(k) That State-Wide had been in business since 1872, which statement of material fact was and is ■false;
“ (1) That the warranties given by State-Wide and Wear-Ever were false and fraudulent and part of *317 the scheme to deceive plaintiffs and in violation of the -uniform sales act, CL 1948, § 440.12 et seq. (Stat Ann 1959 Rev § 19.252 et seq.), and for the breach of warranties, plaintiffs do rescind in accordance with CL 1948, § 440.69 (Stat Ann 1959 Rev § 19.309) and demand back the price paid ;
“(m) Defendants Wear-Ever and State-Wide intentionally and wrongfully over-measured the square yard requirements of plaintiffs’ floors and overcharged them based upon such measurements at the rate of $20 per yard;
“(n) Defendants Wear-Ever and State-Wide falsely represented that they had double AA-1 top Dun and Bradstreet ratings which representation was and is false.”

By amendment to the bill of complaint plaintiffs charged defendant bank with constructive fraud in the following respects:

“(a) The Michigan Bank entered into an agreement or understanding with defendant carpet sellers, to receive and discount notes to be obtained by them and presented by defendants, their agents, servants, and employees, after having knowledge or information that some of the defendants had been cut off from negotiating notes at other financial institutions because of wide-spread complaints that said defendants were selling inferior and defective carpeting to innocent homeowners by means of false advertising, unlawful trade practices, and fraudulent inducements ;
“(b) Defendant bank had actual notice that defendant, Earl Serap, president of State-Wide was also president of Wear-Ever and had formerly worked the same sales schemes under the assumed name, Tri-State Wholesale Carpet Distributors and that 1 of the prime reasons for changing his name from Tri-State to Wear-Ever was to conceal himself from complaining homeowners who were seeking redress for the frauds he had perpetrated upon them;
*318 " “(e) Defendant bank knew that the aforesaid Earl Scrap changed his business name again from Wear-Ever to State-Wide because Wear-Ever had sold much defective carpeting and engaged in serious overcharges to customers and Wear-Ever’s reputation was bad and the new name, State-Wide was being used to escape the consequences of the misrepresentations practiced upon plaintiffs and the public ■by Wear-Ever and still the bank eagerly accepted notes presented by both Wear-Ever and State-Wide;
“(d) Defendant bank had numerous complaints from plaintiffs and other members of the public that the notes were based upon contracts both of which were induced by material misrepresentations of facts to the homeowners;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 439, 365 Mich. 313, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-state-wide-carpet-distributors-inc-mich-1961.