GJP, Inc. Richard D. Herting Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney v. Avijit Ghosh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 2008
Docket03-04-00611-CV
StatusPublished

This text of GJP, Inc. Richard D. Herting Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney v. Avijit Ghosh (GJP, Inc. Richard D. Herting Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney v. Avijit Ghosh) 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.

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GJP, Inc. Richard D. Herting Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney v. Avijit Ghosh, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-04-00611-CV

GJP, Inc.; Richard D. Herting; Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney, Appellants

v.

Avijit Ghosh, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 2 OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. 268,925, HONORABLE J. DAVID PHILLIPS, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

This appeal concerns a dispute arising from the purchase of a used 1967 Jaguar sports

car by appellee, Avijit Ghosh, from appellants GJP Inc. and Richard D. Herting. Complaining that

he had been misled regarding the Jaguar’s condition, Ghosh filed suit against appellants and two

other defendants, alleging violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, among other

claims. His claims were tried to a jury. Based on the jury’s favorable findings on Ghosh’s DTPA

claims, the trial court rendered judgment against all defendants, jointly and severally, for $11,500

in actual damages and $112,500 in attorney’s fees; $20,000 in additional damages against appellants,

jointly and severally, based on findings of knowing conduct; plus another $3,000 in damages against

GJP. Appellants bring twenty-seven points of error challenging, among other things, the trial court’s

personal jurisdiction over them, its refusal to apply South Dakota law, the jury charge, and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings regarding liability and actual damages. For

the reasons explained herein, we will affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

According to the evidence presented at trial, GJP is a South Dakota-based company

principally engaged, at relevant times, in the plastering business. At pertinent times, GJP was

owned by Gerald Johnson, a South Dakota resident.1 Johnson testified that the company, in addition

to its primary business focus, also held title to approximately a dozen Jaguar automobiles. Johnson

explained that acquiring and restoring Jaguars was a hobby of his and that he found it “convenient”

to place the cars’ title in his company. Richard Herting, a longtime friend of Johnson and fellow

South Dakota resident, was an authorized agent of GJP who handled various business dealings of

the company. He also shared Johnson’s interest and work with his Jaguar collection. Appellants

concede that, at all relevant times, Herting was acting within his authority as an agent of GJP.

Among the Jaguars in the collection was a red 1967 E-type Jaguar convertible. When

purchased by GJP in 1999, this vehicle had been partially disassembled and was missing bumpers,

door handles, most of the interior, and parts of the engine. Johnson and Herting reassembled it and,

among other work, repainted it red, installed an interior and top, cleaned out and “redid” the gas

tank, got “most of the wiring to work,” and installed new wheels and tires. Johnson explained that

he later chose to resell the 1967 E-type because he was restoring a 1968 E-type and “just didn’t need

two of them”; he added that he had lost interest in the 1967 vehicle once the “puzzle” of repairs had

1 “GJP” apparently stands for Gerald Johnson Plastering.

2 been completed. GJP had not previously sold one of its Jaguars, and Johnson denied that he had

purchased the car with the intent to resell it. At trial, Ghosh questioned this explanation, suggesting

that appellants had chosen to sell the car because they were aware of problems with it.

Herting advertised the red Jaguar on three websites around the world where, he

testified, such vehicles were sold or traded—eBay, based in California; Jag-Lovers, based in Bergen,

Norway; and Classic Jaguar, an Austin-based company that specialized in restorations of E-type

vehicles. Herting explained that he chose Classic Jaguar because it was well-known and well-

respected among Jaguar enthusiasts worldwide; there was also evidence that Herting and GJP had

previously purchased parts from Classic Jaguar for use in their restorations, including the red Jaguar.

Classic Jaguar is owned by Dan Mooney. Herting emailed information regarding the car to Mooney,

who crafted, and Herting approved, an advertisement that Mooney placed on a portion of the Classic

Jaguar website dedicated to similar “for sale” postings. The ad displayed two photographs of the red

E-type and stated, “Believed low mileage (30,000) matching number car,” “Strong mechanicals,”

and “New floors, sills, paint, interior (less seats), windshield, wiring, brakes, suspension, tyres2 and

wheels.” It listed an asking price of $38,000 and directed inquires to Herting’s South Dakota

telephone number, also providing Herting’s email address.

In the meantime, Ghosh, a Houston resident, had been searching websites with an

interest in purchasing a used E-type Jaguar. Ghosh explained that since his boyhood in Great

Britain, he had harbored dreams of some day owning an E-type Jaguar and that these dreams had

2 Mooney, other Classic Jaguar personnel, and Ghosh had lived in Great Britain before emigrating to the United States. Their spellings of various words in their written correspondence in evidence reflected their geographic origins.

3 been rekindled by his spotting an E-type at a Houston car wash. Ghosh began searching websites.

There was evidence that before purchasing the car at issue in this case, Ghosh negotiated the

purchase of a Jaguar on the East Coast and even had it inspected before the deal fell through. Ghosh

found the Classic Jaguar website, and inquired with Classic and Mooney about a blue Jaguar featured

in one of the site’s “for sale” ads. During a discussion about the blue car and the difficulty of finding

reasonably priced E-types in general, Ghosh claims that Mooney mentioned, “Well, actually, there’s

an excellent car on our website right now,” and referred him to appellants’ ad for the red Jaguar.

Ghosh testified that Mooney vouched for Herting’s experience and capability as a

Jaguar restorer and his work on the red Jaguar in particular, indicating that Herting had used parts

purchased from Classic Jaguar. Relying on Mooney’s remarks about Herting and the car, Ghosh

called Herting at his South Dakota phone number. The parties gave differing accounts of ensuing

events. Ghosh testified that he called Herting four to five times before the Jaguar came to Texas.

Herting testified that he received several calls from Ghosh, among a “few dozen” he received

inquiring about the car. Ghosh claimed that during their first call, Herting made various

representations echoing the statements in the website ad, explained the work he had done to the car,3

and stated that the car drove well and was in fine running order,4 that it was “rust-free,” and that he

had been storing the car in a heated garage. Ghosh claimed that he was impressed by Herting’s

apparently extensive knowledge of Jaguars and the fact that he had maintained and worked on so

3 This work included, according to Ghosh, improvements to the cooling system, suspension, brakes, electrical system, and interior. 4 Herting, according to Ghosh, added that he regularly drove the Jaguar to car shows and displayed it there.

4 many other Jaguars in the GJP collection. Ghosh gained further confidence in Herting, he testified,

because Herting made apparently forthcoming acknowledgments that the hood “didn’t fit exactly

right,” the seats had not been replaced, and the right rear quarter of the car was not original. After

their first phone conversation, Herting emailed Ghosh approximately twenty photographs of the red

Jaguar.

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GJP, Inc. Richard D. Herting Classic Jaguar, Inc. and Dan Mooney v. Avijit Ghosh, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gjp-inc-richard-d-herting-classic-jaguar-inc-and-d-texapp-2008.