General Elec. Credit Corp. v. Alford & Assoc.

374 So. 2d 1316
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 7, 1979
Docket77-272
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 374 So. 2d 1316 (General Elec. Credit Corp. v. Alford & Assoc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Elec. Credit Corp. v. Alford & Assoc., 374 So. 2d 1316 (Ala. 1979).

Opinion

374 So.2d 1316 (1979)

GENERAL ELECTRIC CREDIT CORPORATION, a corporation,
v.
ALFORD & ASSOCIATES, INC., a corporation, and Fred B. Alford.

77-272.

Supreme Court of Alabama.

April 6, 1979.
As Modified On Rehearing September 7, 1979.

*1318 John B. Givhan of Albrittons & Givhan, Andalusia, Albert E. Ritchey of Ritchey & Ritchey, Birmingham, Euel A. Screws, Jr. of Hobbs, Copeland, Franco & Screws, Montgomery, for appellant.

Earl V. Johnson, Andalusia, Jack Crenshaw, Joe T. Booth III, Montgomery, for appellees.

PER CURIAM.

General Electric Credit Corporation, Appellant, initiated this lawsuit by filing a three-count complaint against Alford & Associates, Inc., and Fred B. Alford, Appellees. On the first count for detinue, claiming nine mobile homes, the jury returned a verdict for G.E.C.C., assessing a total of $19,400 as the alternate value of the mobile homes and awarding damages of $6,570 for wrongful detention. On the second and third counts—for $17,889.47 under a wholesale financing agreement and for $50,537.11 under a retail financing agreement—the jury returned a verdict in favor of Appellees.

Appellees filed their answer and counterclaimed for loss of business, libel, and for money had and received. The jury found for Appellees on all three counterclaim counts, assessing damages against G.E.C.C. as follows: 1) $1.00 for loss of business; 2) $1.00 nominal damages and $65,000 punitive damages for libel; and 3) $23,569.91 on the claim for money had and received, which the trial Court, on order of remittitur, reduced to $12,006.80.

I. The Facts

In 1971, Alford started a mobile home sales business. G.E.C.C. contacted Mr. Alford and separate agreements were reached whereby G.E.C.C. would provide both wholesale and retail financing. The financing plans operate as follows:

Wholesale Plan: Alford would purchase a mobile home from the manufacturer and G.E.C.C. would lend money to cover both the purchase of the unit and the floor planning until Appellees sold the unit. The "wholesale financing agreement" was accompanied by a revolving credit promissory note. The wholesale agreement provides that G.E.C.C. is granted a security interest in all of Appellees' inventory now owned or hereafter acquired, together with all proceeds thereof, to secure payment of the Revolving Credit Promissory Note, or any other indebtedness or liabilities of Appellees, whether now existing or arising hereafter. G.E.C.C. contends that, at the time *1319 of this lawsuit, Alford owed $17,889.47 under the wholesale financing agreement.

Retail Plan: Because most mobile homes are sold on a time-payment basis, an agreement was reached between Appellees and G.E.C.C. whereby G.E.C.C. would purchase valid retail sales contracts from Appellees. The retail financing agreement provides for the establishment of reserves by G.E.C.C.

The agreement gives G.E.C.C. the right to establish "a time sales security reserve or such other reserve or reserves as [G.E.C.C.] deems necessary." These reserves are explicitly stated to be held as security for, and not in lieu of performance by Alford. Although the details of the reserve plan are not readily apparent from the record, it is clear that G.E.C.C. established two types of reserves: 1) a participating reserve and 2) deferred certificates.

In March, 1975, Alford made a demand, pursuant to the terms of the retail financing agreement, for an accounting of amounts charged to the participating reserve, and for an accounting (as well as demanding payment) of past-due deferred certificates. This statement, received May 1, 1975, showed a balance, but contained no breakdown of charges and credits and no payment of deferred certificates.

On June 1, 1975, Appellees received a monthly billing from G.E.C.C., showing the amount owed under the inventory financing account as of May 30, 1975. This statement, as later corrected, showed no previous unpaid installments due. It showed that $2,067.67 was currently due, and that the total amount owed by Appellees under the wholesale financing agreement was over $30,000. At this point, Appellees informed G.E.C.C. they were not going to pay G.E.C.C. on the wholesale agreement unless Appellees received an accounting and payment of any amounts due under the reserve provisions of the retail financing agreement.

On June 23, 1975, Alford received notice that the wholesale agreement was cancelled. Alford also received notice that several manufacturers would be notified to repurchase certain mobile homes that were financed under the wholesale financing agreement. At this point in time, G.E.C.C. mailed to Alford's suppliers, Champion Mobile Homes and Fair-Moore Mobile Homes, notices to repurchase the mobile homes held by Alford. In these notices, it was stated:

"Dealer continually fails to meet financial obligations to G.E.C.C."

Two of these notices contained a statement that merchandise had been repossessed. This, admittedly, was not true.

At the time the notices were sent, Alford claims that only $2,067.67 was owed by them to G.E.C.C. and that G.E.C.C. held $3,000 in matured deferred certificates under the retail plan; and, therefore, statements contained in these notices were false and libelous. G.E.C.C. asserts that Alford owed $17,889.47 and that nothing was owed by G.E.C.C. on the deferred certificates, because these were merely one form of reserves authorized by the retail financing agreement, payable at G.E.C.C.'s sole discretion.

Alford further contends that the amounts of $2,735.85 and $2,739—proceeds from the sale of the "Hilton" and "Patrix" retail sales contracts—were wrongfully withheld.[1] G.E.C.C. contends that these amounts, representing proceeds from the sale of inventory, were properly applied under the wholesale plan in reduction of Appellees' indebtedness to G.E.C.C. In other words, G.E. C.C. says that the amount of $17,889.47, the alleged debt of Appellees under the wholesale financing agreement, had already taken into account the proceeds of the "Hilton" and "Patrix" sales.

II. The Libel Claim

G.E.C.C. raises numerous issues concerning Appellees' right to recover under their claim of libel. There can be little doubt that, if untrue, the statement, "[d]ealer continually fails to meet financial obligations ....", and a statement to *1320 the effect that merchandise has been repossessed, are defamatory, and thus actionable, when published to Alford's suppliers. See, e. g., Harrison v. Burger, 212 Ala. 670, 103 So. 842 (1925) ("In many of the cases it is said that words charging nonpayment of debts or insolvency are actionable without special damage being shown, when they refer to merchants, tradesmen, or others in occupations where credit is essential.").

The initial inquiry, then, is whether the statements made by G.E.C.C. were, in fact, untrue. Mr. Bob Williamson testified as follows:

"Q. You made a false statement in there? All right. Now, typewritten in there, you put it in, `dealer continually fails to meet financial obligations to G.E.C.C.'. Now, this was at a time, wasn't it, when he owed you two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) and you owed him three thousand dollars ($3,000.00)?

"A. Right.

"Q. What obligation was it that you told his manufacturer he had continually failed to meet?

"A. Well, he was slow usually each month on paying the billing. Never really past due.

"Q. Mr.

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